h ha hb hc hd he hf hg hh hi hl hm ho hp hq hr hs ht hu hw hy hz

Перевод: hooligan speek hooligan


[существительное]
хулиган ; безобразник


Тезаурус:

  1. "All the North Bank the Highbury hooligan end care about is their team and the other end and that's all there is to it."
  2. And for plenty of people, now as then, Emily Davison was not a martyr but an obsessive fanatic whose activities brought no credit to her cause and whose action on Derby Day 1913 was that of a hooligan, not a heroine.
  3. Having perfected this petulant stance, all he can do is reiterate it - with a self-deprecating acknowledgement of the onset of self-parody: "Stop Me if You Think You've Heard This One Before", "Sweet and Tender Hooligan", where the chorus is simply "et cetera, et cetera"
  4. Away supporters, especially those from clubs with "hooligan" reputations, try to drive home supporters from their traditional end.
  5. Alongside the late entry of capitalism into sport, which is bringing Britain closer to the commercialism of the Tour de France or the Superbowl - both of which significantly have begun to attract British audiences in sizeable numbers in the later 1980s - there lie two pressing issues: the decline of live audiences for sport and the rise of a hooligan subculture.
  6. Even under vastly different social conditions there are striking continuities between the violent interruptions to pre-industrial fairs and festivals, and the customary eruptions during modern Bank Holidays or the weekly carnival of misrule at contemporary football games - where the football rowdy, with his territorial edginess, mascots, emblems and choral arrangements in the "rough music" tradition, must seem like the incarnation of the unruly apprentice, or the late Victorian "Hooligan".
  7. Here it is important to make a distinction between different types of hooligan.
  8. "Everyone from our side of the bar used to steam round an' kick fuck out of the Pakis", remarked one hooligan approvingly.
  9. "Hardness" is what much of hooligan behaviour is about.
  10. Will a person's accent, dress or skin colour indicate the potential terrorist or, for that matter, football hooligan or drug pusher?
  11. Pakistanis have the added stigma in the eyes of the white hooligan of tending to be better off, linguistically separate, less physical, and less interested in football.
  12. But do these totals prove that hooligan behaviour of a kind broadly comparable with the present day was widespread before the First World War?
  13. At the turn of the century, the very time when Pearson documents the coinage of the term "hooligan" to portray a supposedly new breed of youthful folk-devil, there is found in other sources a mood of contemporary congratulation about the long-term conquest of the problem of order.

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