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Перевод: manhood
[существительное] возмужалость ; мужественность ; зрелость ; зрелый возраст; мужское население страны; мужская половая потенция
Тезаурус:
- On attaining manhood this was formally exchanged for the toga virilis or pura , a white garment.
- This was a rejection of Arnold's view that the change from "childhood to manhood ought to be hastened" in favour of that expressed by Warden Sewell of Radley College: "How I dread mannikizing a boy
- Although often seen singly, small parties are rather more often seen than with Goosanders; the largest recorded was of 22 at Manhood End in early February 1956.
- the organization of native pastimes and the promotion of athletic fitness as a means to create disciplined, self-reliant, national-minded manhood which takes conscious pride in its heritage of unrivalled pastimes and splendid cultural traditions as essential factors in the restoration of full and distinct nationhood.
- Much of his childhood, after the death of his father, and early manhood was spent wresting himself away from the embrace of his mother.
- In the 1960s psychiatry was attacked for being a form of social policing which, with the aid of pseudo-scientific categories, mystified socially desirable behaviour as natural, and undesirable behaviour as the result of abnormal psychosexual development (a deviation from "The Way to Healthy Manhood").
- He didn't appreciate slurs on his manhood - even jokey ones.
- Throughout his young manhood, while he was making his way in the world, the upper-class male had to satisfy his physical needs with casual encounters and women of the street.
- But hold on, you could be thinking by now, don't impugn all British manhood just because a few sexually (or excrementally) repressed junior accountants get a kick out of shag jokes.
- They can't meet the standards of manhood.
- Not least in the sexual, for both projected a red-blooded response to their manhood which goes beyond the merely sexual or corporeal, claiming - demanding ! - the full world of nature and manhood as their proper spheres: nothing was to be too sacred, for all is sacred - a Blakeian conception which predates Blake in its patent Jewishness by millennia, not centuries.
- He was experiencing the limited pleasures and drawbacks of early manhood.
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