d
da
db
dc
dd
de
df
dg
dh
di
dj
dk
dl
dm
dn
do
dp
dr
ds
dt
du
dw
dx
dy
dz
Перевод: demagogue
[существительное] демагог
Тезаурус:
- The Senator was a gifted demagogue, with particular skill in manipulating press and television.
- First, there was no public prosecutor at Athens, so like the Roman informers, the delatores , men like the demagogue Kleon took it on themselves to bring prosecutions for such offences as peculation of public money.
- "The most gifted demagogue ever bred on these shores", McCarthy's biographer, Richard Rovere, wrote of him.
- Years ago, on Microdisney's "Bluerings", he tagged himself "Scum condensed of Irish bog/Ruffian, traitor, demagogue - that's me," and, though the music's changed radically, the persona's stayed the same, highly strung and highly sprung.
- Though Mosley was represented to future generations as if he had been no more than a gutter politician and demagogue, the truth was that he had first attracted sympathy - if not support from many political figures who were subsequently to disown him.
- (This makes it hard to draw any line between old and "new", i.e. post-Periclean, politicians in terms of social standing; similarly we now know that the later and much-vilified demagogue Kleophon was the son of a man high enough up the social ladder to have served as a general: ML 21.)
- In the late 1060s and 1070s Hildebrand, later Pope Gregory VII (1073-;85), gave more consistent support to the last and most effective of the Patarine leaders, Erlembald, a noble demagogue; and Milan became a theatre of war between the pope and the Emperor Henry IV.
- The greatest demagogue in history no longer had an audience.
- Newcastle is not remembered as a radical demagogue.
- Only after Pericles' death did the rot set in, when the people insisted on following so-called demagogue revealing word - like Cleon, who evidently did not know how to behave, but curried favour with the rabble by calculated populist gestures: He was the first, wrote Aristotle, to indulge in shouting and scurrilous abuse from the rostrum, and to address the people with his clothes tucked up like a common labourer, whereas all his predecessors had spoken with dignity and properly dressed.
- Athenagoras, the Syracusan demagogue, is made by Thucydides (vi.38) to say that Syracuse "is only rarely in a state of internal peace".
- Pederson-Krag argues that such conditions can foster "the development of the passive individual, the tool of the demagogue, both directly among its workers and indirectly among all those whom it benefits".
- For any would-be telegenic demagogue, Mr Bruce offers a lot of practical advice, most of it garnered when he was the Tories' director of communications.
|
|
LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов
|
|