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Перевод: pejorative
[прилагательное] уничижительный; бранный; [существительное] бранное слово; пейоративное слово [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- Here are two more highly pejorative explanations of soil erosion:
- The more pejorative epithets have disappeared in the post-colonial literature, except for one or two extreme examples like Kon Muang Nan (1978) who holds the view that the shifting cultivation practised by tribal people in northern Thailand is the most dangerous national problem and one which undermines national security.
- Rescue the word "pretentious" (all it means, after all, is aspiring to something) and turn "unpretentious" into a pejorative.
- For all the pejorative talk of her being an "ideologue", however, she is a practical Conservative.
- He writes about it in unforgettably dramatic terms and with the sublime egoism (to use the word purely, with no pejorative sense) of a man alone with God.
- In response to my attempts to historicize perversion it has been said: "OK, we see how you might want to rescue homosexuality from the pejorative category of a perversion, but surely not incest or bestiality?"
- The flaw - the quantitative fallacy - results from the all-pervading relativism of the age, and the attempt to replace value judgements by objective, scientific evaluation (for a time, in the 1960s the phrase "value judgement" was the pejorative put-down).
- The orthodox gave the latter term a pejorative sense; the apocryphal texts were correctly seen as an attempt to replace the books accepted by the mainstream communities and included in their church lectionary as authentic representatives of the apostolic tradition of faith.
- It should be clear from the preceding chapters that the Free Presbyterian Church is no ordinary evangelical sect (using that term in its sociological rather than pejorative sense).
- "After 1949," wrote Betty Friedan, "Career Woman suddenly became pejorative, denoting a ball-busting, man-eating harpy, a miserable neurotic witch from whom man and child should flee for very life."
- As Jonah Barish (1969) has pointed out, embedded in our language is a common usage of artistic metaphors of which the dramatic ones are unambiguously pejorative.
- However, one also suspects that other researchers have underplayed the difficulties of their field-work in order to avoid pejorative assessments of their results.
- Their views frequently are less innovative (not necessarily in a pejorative sense) than the next generation over whom they have considerable control.
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