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Перевод: irremovable speek irremovable


[прилагательное]
неустранимый; несменяемый; постоянный


Тезаурус:

  1. Judges were as irremovable in the colonies as in England, but colonial assemblies could apply pressure to them by declining to vote their annual salaries.
  2. Official posts could be held by four principal types of tenure: durante bene placito , or during the King's pleasure, which was the least secure; quam diu se bene gesserit , or during good behaviour, which placed the holder a little more firmly in the saddle; for life, which made him virtually irremovable from his office, although he could, for flagrant misdemeanours, be suspended from its functions; and hereditary tenure, which converted the post to a transmissible freehold property.
  3. Their ministers (if such a term can be used of the great officials such as the treasurers and hetmans of Poland and Lithuania) were irremovable; and the principle of the liberum veto meant that any of the two hundred or so members of the Diet (Seym) could nullify the work of an entire session by recording a single dissenting vote.
  4. There is a very strong case for limiting periods of service in the voluntary sector, for it is frequently the irremovable elements which convey that wearying taint of backward-looking petrification.
  5. judges were to be irremovable, trials were to be held in public, juries were to adjudicate serious criminal cases, and elected justices of the peace were to hear minor criminal and civil cases.
  6. It was these two issues that would remain as seemingly irremovable areas of tension across the next twenty years.
  7. But it is equally justifiable to eat meat whilst being concerned about current abuses in its production and preparation, none of which, given time and energy, are thought by bodies like the RSPCA, to be irremovable.
  8. The inability of the Party substantially to improve its image despite the personal sacrifices frequently shown by individuals in, for instance, the NSV (the Party's welfare organization), had its roots in the unpopularity of so many manifestations of the Party's social and political role during the 1930s: the alienation produced by the attacks on the Christian Churches, the overbearing arrogance of the "little Hitlers", the hooliganism and loutish vulgarity of the organized mobs, and the irremovable taint of corruption and venality.

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