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Перевод: disrespect speek disrespect


[существительное]
неуважение; непочтительность ;
[глагол]
относиться непочтительно


Тезаурус:

  1. Norman Tebbit's Disraeli lecture in 1985 spelt out his distaste for the "valueless values of the permissive society", of the 1960s and 1970s - represented by legalized abortion and homosexuality, fewer constraints on what is portrayed in the media and theatre, and growing disrespect for authority.
  2. The Wedding Present have shown a refreshing disrespect for convention and largely won admiration for it.
  3. "No disrespect to a 20-handicapper.
  4. Its courting of chaos, its materialism, its abuse of, and disrespect for, its resources, its spendthrift gluttony would be intolerable in any delicately-balanced and naturally-harmonious social order, the kind of world we need to seek out!
  5. "If we change the name, we show disrespect for all of the good things the party has done for Poland."
  6. It is with no disrespect to her that I give him preference.
  7. "I am ambitious, and without any disrespect to the Vauxhall Conference, I don't want to remain a non-League manager for ever."
  8. A magical tale, which tells of man's disrespect for the natural world around him, as seen through the eyes of an elderly recluse and two young children on the Isles of Scilly at the outbreak of the First World War.
  9. I mean no disrespect to the geriatric branch of the hospital service nor to the domiciliary services or the rapidly increasing old people's houses and homes provided by local housing, health and welfare authorities when I say that I believe we are still groping and fumbling with this problem - all of us, social scientists and politicians alike.
  10. If your skiing is normally ruined by disrespect for British queueing principles or by surly shepherds doing winter duty as lift attendants, these matters will weigh heavily.
  11. Much as he mistrusted almost every Irishman with whom he came in contact on the Continent (Bishop Clement for his disrespect of patristic authority, the priest Sampson for his cavalier attitude to the baptismal rite, Virgil of Salzburg for sowing dissension between himself and the duke of Bavaria as well as for believing that the world was round), Boniface's establishing of monasteries as the learned back-up to missionary work and his devotion to the papacy and to Rome both owed something to the Irish background in England.
  12. After hearing that he meant no disrespect, but had not felt emotionally and intellectually up to trying the case, Judge Robert Lymbery accepted Clarke was partly a "victim of the system".

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