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Перевод: excision speek excision


[существительное]
вырезание; отрезание; иссечение; удаление; вырезка ; вырезывание; отлучение от церкви


Тезаурус:

  1. Even the excision of the entire limbic brain would not suffice to remove aggression.
  2. Improvements in the difficult techniques involved in its excision are one of the laboratory's most notable triumphs.
  3. Like all actors with reviews, he checked through it for quotability, and decided that, with only slight injustice to the meaning, and the excision of a comma, he could come up with the very serviceable sentence, "Charles Paris grows in stature through the evening."
  4. From time to time the Tanganyika government proposed excision of parts of Masailand for the use of other tribes, and Masai District Officers could be relied on to oppose these proposals.
  5. Nor can you get away from Hegel by simply removing him, like the excision of Trotsky from the side of Lenin in certain official Soviet photographs.
  6. Chilling of the cotyledonary petiole (line 2) and excision of the cotyledon after chilling (line 3) do not induce detectable systemic pin activity.
  7. Later she came to depend more upon excision, upon the evocation of what she called "the thing not said"; castigating Balzac for delivering an excess of information, she praised the hint, the pared-down suggestion.
  8. The only possible excuse for her behaviour is that my temporary excision has gone to her head.
  9. But even if he knew he was speaking with his own voice, rachmaninov, the eternal doubter, wasn't happy with his structural abilities: he authorised the excision of three of the variations and the coda.
  10. Unwounded seedlings subjected to these conditions (lines 1-;3) also did not exhibit any systemic electrical signal, either spontaneously or on excision of the cotyledon.
  11. Percivall, in his 1834 introductory lecture, says one of the first operations performed by Vial at the College was the excision of two redundant or accessory feet which grew from the fetlocks of the forelegs of a foal.
  12. Mr James Drife, professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at Leeds General Infirmary, says society views mastectomy as "unacceptably mutilating" when all it involves is "excision of a redundant gland and a pad of fat".
  13. For Pound undoubtedly made the poem more obscure by asking for the excision of some transitional and bridging passages where the language was not at full pressure, but on the other hand he caused to be removed some extended sections which, being plainly extraneous, could only have added to readers' bafflement.

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