i ia ib ic id ie if ig ih ii ik il im in io ip iq ir is it iu iv iw ix

Перевод: inimical speek inimical


[прилагательное]
враждебный; недружелюбный; неблагоприятный; вредный


Тезаурус:

  1. As we saw with the pre-sexological theories of perversion, condensation and displacement are strangely enabled by the view of perversion as an inimical threatening absence.
  2. Because still in 1988, under the pressure of social instability and political crises, homosexuality could be regarded as a kind of privation or error, an "inverted positivity", an inimical, pernicious, inauthenticity always threatening to return from within the true and the authentic.
  3. But the whole discourse of noise-as-threat is bankrupt, positively inimical to the remnants of power that still cling to noise.
  4. At last the government recognised what many researchers had been saying for years: that corporal punishment did not address the causes of bad behaviour, caused resentment among older pupils in particular, and was "inimical to the quality of relationships between teachers and pupils upon which good behaviour is based".
  5. The recent attempt by Clive Pearman, the chief superintendent in charge of Notting Hill, to persuade the two local councils to cut off funds to voluntary orgnanisations which he considered inimical was an example of an approach whose shortcomings have come to be appreciated at the Yard.
  6. What is not often recognized is the extent to which this theological sense of perversion as the negative agency at the heart of privation, hence an inverted positivity, survives into the "modern" sense of perversion/homosexuality as a profoundly inimical, vitiating lack (of normality, of truth).
  7. Similarly, "inversion" could signify reversal of position and/or reversal of direction, both being inimical to effective government and social control.
  8. And in all of them homosexuality echoes Augustinian privation - the more pernicious for being deeply, inherently inadequate, a kind of non-being and inauthenticity: an inimical absence which provokes paranoia and on to which is projected the fear of difference inherent within sexual difference.
  9. But the form as a whole should be recognized as inimical to protestants, especially when pursued in the arena of politics.
  10. The first two autobiographies, that is to say, are the kind of book to which a tradition of literary interpretation has been inimical, imagining for itself a literature of impersonality, in which autobiography is subsumed, invisible.
  11. Here I focus on the genealogy of two aspects of discrimination already addressed by this study, namely displacement between the political and the sexual, and the idea of perversion as an inimical absence.
  12. It has not always been easy for those working class voters who see the Greens as an undisciplined bunch, inimical to the interests of industrial society, to keep up with the SPD's enthusiastic appetite for environmental matters.
  13. My continuing work is convincing me that there are probably no inimical remedies when LM's are used, that Lycopodium can probably follow Sulphur, and that LM potencies can be repeated often and safely in weak patients and in patients with serious tissue pathology.

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