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Перевод: desertion speek desertion


[существительное]
дезертирство; оставление; уход ; заброшенность


Тезаурус:

  1. Mackay fell back on Stirling, having lost three-quarters of his men on the battlefield or through desertion.
  2. In the last few years the courts have contrived in effect to extend the substance of a right of occupation to a mistress who has lived on an originally permanent basis with a man, but who has now lost her partner either through death or as a result of some form of desertion.
  3. Be there when our enforcement officers finally hand Arni Sacknussen the writ for desertion and five years back payments for maintenance.
  4. They poured out tales of two-timing and desertion to DJ Steve Penk at Piccadilly Key 103 station in Manchester.
  5. But, as we shall see, the death or Edward I led to an increasing alienation of Amanieu VII from the Plantagenet regime, which was to culminate in his desertion of Edward II for Charles IV of France during the War of St Sardos.
  6. To leave the smoking club feels like a desertion.
  7. Here in particular one can find an increase which merely reflects new legislation affecting causes for divorce - for example, the Matrimonial Causes Act of 1937 which introduced desertion, cruelty and incurable insanity as further grounds for divorce, adultery having previously been the only one.
  8. He was never a favourite character of mine, as I do not approve of the British partition and subsequent desertion of India, mismanaged by Mountbatten against a horrific background of massacres.
  9. In Liverpool William Rathbone extracted figures from the muster roles which Clarkson used as the basis for the statistics on mortality, disease and desertion amongst seamen engaged in the slave trade and which apparently impressed the Privy Council committee.
  10. In the summer of 1101, faced with Robert's landing in England and the immediate prospect of widespread desertion, Henry went so far as to promise a general obedience to the papal decrees, and it seems likely that Anselm's activity on his behalf, secured by this promise, turned the tide in his favour, and brought Duke Robert's invasion to a halt.
  11. Divorce of this kind was first introduced into English law by the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857, and from then until 1969 it was based upon the doctrine that some matrimonial offence (such as adultery or desertion) must have been committed by one spouse before the other could obtain relief.
  12. America's desertion of its former protg, in favour of its former enemy, sent a clear signal of its impatience with UNITA's behaviour.
  13. Many of the indicators chosen are suspect, as Macnicol has shown for earlier periods, in that they simply count contact with state agencies, and it is a commonplace observation that the poor are more likely to be in contact with social workers because they are poor (Becker, 1988); young drug-takers in inner cities are more visible than wealthy socialites but drug-taking and drinking stretch across social groups (O'Bryan, 1989; Plant, 1989); desertion of women by husbands and the choice to remain unmarried are not restricted to the poor; and so on and so on.

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