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Перевод: regimentation
[существительное] формирование полка; свед`ение в полк или полки; распределение по категориям; классификация ; систематизация ; строгая дисциплина и единообразие; строгая регламентация жизни
Тезаурус:
- The old colonial system stood in the way of any attempt to replace an empire based on bullion imports by a mercantilist empire la Colbert, reserved for Spanish products and feeding the prosperity of the mother-country; regimentation had failed when interlopers and smugglers had turned the Castilian monopoly into a fiction, when "Spain kept the cow, the rest of Europe drank the milk".
- Some left-wing accounts of liberal corporatism see it as enhancing the economic and political bargaining power of labour by comparison with its economic disorganization under competitive capitalism or its political regimentation under state socialism (Crouch 1975, 1982).
- Webb describes the drill sergeant approach of the secondary modern teacher, with his inflexible regime of parade ground regimentation and uncompromising obedience.
- He rolled his eyes and tugged at his collar and blew on his finger-nails; and then Erika felt a sensation she had never known before; one that in all her life of order, regimentation, structures, and of love and caring, too, it had never occurred to her that she might have.
- John and I rebelled at this kind of regimentation but Andrew and Ernest just smiled and said nothing.
- The Labour leadership, fully committed to the Churchill coalition, tended to see pressure from below more as a threat to the orderly regimentation of the people, than as a source of constructive initiative.
- Careful to avoid the regimentation and overcrowding that characterized the camps of its competitors and anxious to compete in terms of cost, the Association opened the 500 capacity Rogerson Hall camp near Lowestoft in 1938.
- Taking it seriously he was accepted on a degree course in Photography at Nottingham but soon found the kind of dogmatic regimentation which he was subjected to counter-productive.
- After 1931, and especially after the outbreak of full-scale war with China in 1937, social regimentation in Japan became more obtrusive.
- It does mean forgoing regimentation.
- The reasons for this phenomenon are varied: the tightening bonds of serfdom and the greater degree of social regimentation introduced by Peter the Great meant that a number of previously innocent practices (tree-felling, salt-gathering, trespass, begging, vagrancy, and so on) were criminalized and punished with hard labour and exile; popular protest against the proliferating powers of the state in the form of minor revolts, mass insurgencies (for example, Bulavin, Pugachev), large-scale banditry and escalating rates of petty crime were similarly dealt with; the abolition of capital punishment for criminal offences in 1753 led to its replacement with "civil execution" (public flogging and mutilation followed by perpetual katorga); and laws passed in 1766 and 1769 changed the usual place of penal servitude from Rogervik and other locations in European Russia to the silver mines and factories around Nerchinsk.
- For short voyage men payment by seamen of 1 on each occasion (and larger sums for stewards, carpenters and mates) was especially hard, while the twenty-two offences for which a seaman might be logged and fined by masters seemed, although such a system already existed, the thin end of the wedge of regimentation.
- She writes that it was "one of the best, but it did not suit John, as he was accustomed to follow his whims, and invent or discover for himself, and therefore did not like the regimentation of doing things at a given time.
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