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Перевод: wedlock speek wedlock


[существительное]
брак ; супружество
[существительное]


Тезаурус:

  1. Examples here are typifications of judges ("hard", "soft", "fair"), solicitors ("clever", "stupid"), rape victims ("pure", "asking for it", "good-time girls"), the typification "common-law job" for children born out of wedlock, and "old dear" for friendly female pensioners.
  2. Wedlock was not only a solution to urgent physical needs, it was a social duty.
  3. Although her satire on wedlock was not published for more than a century after her death, its composition elicited an immediate rebuke from her brother Samuel, who admonished her thus: Repent, renounce all wicked wit:
  4. Now at last this has been achieved, first in Scotland by the Law Reform (Parent and Child) (Scotland) Act 1986, and then in England and Wales by the Family Law Reform Act 1987, with the result that in law there is now no distinction made between those born in and those born out of wedlock.
  5. This has a clear relationship with Pius XI's teaching, eight years earlier on the same subject: "the very fountainhead from which the State draws its life, namely, wedlock and the family" (1929: 14), and with the dispositions of the then current Code of Canon Law which had come into effect in 1917: "The marriage of baptized persons is governed not only by divine law but also by church law.
  6. "A child born out of wedlock can't be chief."
  7. Our songs are the sighs of the maidens in love, the tenderness of wedlock, the dreams of our children."
  8. A baby born out of wedlock was a great sin, then, and a huge embarrassment to the family.
  9. Although two thirds of the children born out of wedlock are registered by both parents, and illegitimacy is on the increase, we in Britain have not reached the position arrived at in Sweden where, since I January 1988, partners who live together outside marriage are afforded the same legal rights as those who are married.
  10. Burns had fourteen known children, half of them born out of wedlock.
  11. By the Adoption Act 1958, property of adopter and adoptee is to devolve in all respects as if the adoptee were the child of the adopter, born in lawful wedlock.
  12. This is the inexorable increase in the proportion of children born out of wedlock (see chart on previous page).
  13. The tangle of behaviours Wilson discusses consists of crime rates, teenage pregnancy, female heads of families, welfare dependency, and out of wedlock births.

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