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Перевод: immoral speek immoral


[прилагательное]
аморальный; безнравственный; распущенный; распутный


Тезаурус:

  1. There is nothing illegal nor immoral in a club chairman's demonstration of ball skills but the contrast, in a day, between the image of a shy, reclusive, multi-millionaire property tycoon and that of a terrace tearaway was too sudden to digest.
  2. Her frequent denunciations of high levels of taxation and public expenditure, of big government, and of the diminution of individual freedom and choice are passionate and deeply felt; they are expressed in attacks on the baneful, almost "immoral", effects of inflation and of governments which debase the currency, or borrow rather than "balance" their income and expenditure.
  3. Gandhi regards it as both inhuman and immoral to maintain that the naked, poor, and starving millions are fulfilling their karma, or reaping the consequences of evil deeds sown in previous existences.
  4. Parliament discarded the phrase "those whose minds are open to such immoral influence", with its overtones of whether or not a gentleman would let his servants read such and such a book, since the words "deprave and corrupt" already carried the sense of "immoral influence", together with a tacit assumption that writings or other works of the imagination could have the effect of tending to make men wicked.
  5. I am referring to a level of promiscuity which even the most liberal heterosexual would regard as immoral.
  6. Indeed none of these things is immoral in itself, but the degree of time and money we spend on them is surely the key.
  7. Are you suggesting I think she s immoral?
  8. Similarly, although Rank turned down Sydney Box's first independent feature, 29 Acacia Avenue (1945), on the grounds that the innocuous story about an aborted premarital romp was "immoral", and offered him 40,000 to put the film on the shelf, he was later to give Box the job of running Gainsborough's production programme.
  9. These offered a variety of recreational activities, swimming, sports, dancing and so on in addition to basic victualling, and borrowed from the ordinary pub the opprobium of encouraging immoral behaviour.
  10. Although several European countries have legal controls on such activities, in the U.K. the law has not been extended in this way, though there may be legal remedies in some cases for those who believe they have been harmed by the use to which the surreptitiously collected information has been put: if, for example, unauthorised entry on to property has occurred, or if there has been breach of confidence or copyright, or if conspiracy to commit a crime, civil wrong, public mischief or some outrageously immoral act can be proved.
  11. Commenting on his sexual abstinence Erik Erikson writes: "It is of importance here that he gave up sexual intimacy for a wider communal intimacy and not just because sexuality seemed immoral in any Calvinistic sense.
  12. It seemed downright immoral to torment the poor woman with questions now just for the sake of proving the Jaguar's brakes were faulty or Fanshawe driving over the seventy limit.
  13. Gould, in fact, saw the objections to tape-editing as being rooted much more deeply in the assumption that man is his own best advocate - the most unwarranted assumption of the post-Renaissance era, Gould adds - with a consequent belief that such technological sleight of hand was, if not immoral, then certainly dehumanizing.

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