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Перевод: discourse
[существительное] лекция ; речь ; трактат ; рассуждение; проповедь ; высказывание; [глагол] ораторствовать; излагать в форме лекции; излагать в форме речи; рассуждать
Тезаурус:
- In this sense professionals have already attempted to break down the norms of public discourse to bring on the clients of welfare who have suffered in silence.
- Lawyer B, however, tried to resolve the issue in the terms of the presenting, everyday, discourse.
- He held her arm lightly just below the cobalt blue cape sleeve, and steered her through a small group of women who had chosen to prolong their discourse by the door.
- Since psychological discourse is centred on a concept of its object as an autonomous and purely psychological subject, its secondary meanings involve unbounded, extrapsychological, social objects.
- Although the presence and stature of labouring poets within public discourse are themselves questions of considerable interest, this group of poets may be judged by their actual contribution to that discourse.
- By contrast it has been argued that lawyers' characteristic and specific practice is translation into a discourse which they both use and create.
- More important, however, than changing the relation between the labouring class and literature as a commodity, the success of Stephen Duck altered by degree the conditions of public discourse.
- The relationship between meaning and structure is different for language and discourse.
- Here are the principal themes of the populist discourse wielded by the labour leadership of West Ham in the dying hours of the war that was to inform much of the course of politics in the ensuing years.
- I am here giving an account of just one (influential) strand in feminist discourse.
- A discussion in our house on (let's say) the necessity of buying a new fridge will move swiftly to the education system (via the rival claim of school fees to the purchase of the fridge) and whether a move to another area might obviate the need for paying them, taking in a quick discourse on the immorality of contributing to the divisive education system in this country anyway; this will lead to the if-we-sold-our-suburban-villa-we-could-buy-a-Georgian-manor-house-in-the-country conversation; which will in its turn move on quite quickly to the horrors of British Rail and the greatly increased subjection to them that such a move would entail; then we get to leaving all our friends behind, and to debating whether having them to stay at the weekends would not be perfectly satisfactory; which will remind us that two or more of them are coming to dinner that very night and we'd better get down to the off-licence; then it's shall-we-get-Muscadet-or-the-Chardonnay- again and for-heaven's-sake-get-enough which will get us back to the fridge, on account of last time we got the Chardonnay, I didn't put it in it soon enough.
- These changing patterns of allegiance can be analysed within the broad concept of "parallelism": a concept which explores the extent to which newspapers reflect or fail to reflect the breadth of the party political discourse.
- As is becoming apparent, sign language is a language at risk; a language which may be dominated by the learner to the extent that a distorted view of discourse with a native signer will be obtained.
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