p
pa
pb
pc
pd
pe
pf
pg
ph
pi
pk
pl
pm
pn
po
pp
pr
ps
pt
pu
pv
pw
px
py
Перевод: pillory
[существительное] позорный столб; [глагол] выставить на осмеяние; поставить к позорному столбу; пригвоздить к позорному столбу
Тезаурус:
- The Act also attempted to deal with the problem of the tendency of defence lawyers to pillory a woman if she had had any non-marital sexual experience.
- To pillory a car like the Escort - and it is Britain's single most important model - is plainly asking for trouble.
- Not only were the standard nineteenth-century British sanctions of fine, imprisonment and whipping commonly used during the eighteenth century, but the early British courts also punished offenders with branding, the pillory, banishment and the confiscation of property, all familiar punishments in Dutch and Kandyan times.
- It may appear harsh to criticize the Library Association for not pursuing possible cases of professional misconduct and it may seem even harsher to pillory members of the Association for putting personal interests first and professional interests second, but censorship, and being party to censorship.
- Our media is never too squeamish to expose and pillory offending white people, from lager-louts and football hooligans to neo-Nazis and drunken drivers.
- like a pillory, features
- Those for 1650 include "for whipping Alice Piper 6d, for walling under the pillory 2d".
- EAST HENDRED - PC CHARLTON'S BEAT: CHAPEL SQUARE APPROPRIATELY BOASTED A PILLORY AND GALLOWS.
- The gardens contain many trees and a large collection of orchids, as well as old tombstones, Manueline windows and a fifteenth-century pillory.
- There's an EMI Tchaikovsky Fourth Symphony which he described as an incomparably fluid act of musical improvisation; the recording of Le Sacre which Stravinsky tried to pillory and which Gould thought the most imaginative and, literally, "inspiring" recording to date; and one of your recordings of Strauss's Metamorphosen .
- IT'S a little unfair to pillory Norman Lamont so much over his credit card bill.
- Liskeard had its pillory and the town's records during the reign of Charles 1st shown for 1635, "paid for amending the pillory and cage, 2s.8d".
|