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Перевод: cognizance speek cognizance


[существительное]
отличительный знак; знание; узнавание; компетенция ; юрисдикция ; подсудность ; герб


Тезаурус:

  1. Suffice it to say that, in the absence of a sufficiently "mature", well-educated civil society in Siberia, Speranskii sought to design a structure of bureaucratic agencies and offices in which power was vested in institutions rather than personalities, which took full cognizance of individual regions' peculiar human and material needs and circumstances (both Russian and native), and which laid down proper codes of administrative procedures, legal practices and economic policies.
  2. And that in modernity (probably Giddens is clearest in this statement) social actors can take cognizance of, and reflect rationally on, rules that had previously been only implicit for them.
  3. The model of pediplanation served to extend knowledge about the earth surface; to introduce greater cognizance of world landscapes because in his later papers King correlated surfaces from Australia, Africa and South America and in the Morphology of the Earth in 1962 embraced landscapes from the northern hemisphere as well; and to include earth movement in the form of cymatogenic arching as well as exogenetic processes as an integral part of the cycles of landscape development.
  4. Two centuries later, the Enlightenment returns: but not at all as a way for the West to take cognizance of its present possibilities and of the liberties to which it can have access, but as a way of interrogating it on its limits and on the powers which it has abused.
  5. Germany, moreover, had been comparatively little touched by the Renaissance and so by even the limited Renaissance cognizance of Greece.
  6. In the administration of Section V of the production Code, the Production Code Administration may take cognizance of the fact that the following words and phrases are obviously offensive to the patrons of motion pictures in the United States and more particularly to patrons of motion pictures in foreign countries: Chink, Dago, Frog, Greaser, Hunkie, Kike, Nigger, Spic, Wop, Yid.
  7. The court which would normally have taken cognizance was that over which the lord presided; and although it was in the lord's court that the vassal made his defiance, it was usually done, not in person, but by messenger or herald, and the vassal could not at that stage accept any ruling of the court.
  8. From that time, a long series of rigorous studies were developed in cognizance of the methodological problems, many of the recent ones using the WFS surveys and computerized data processing and analytical techniques (see for example, Wray, 1971; Fedrick and Adelstein, 1973; Wolfers and Scrimshaw, 1975; Spiers and Wang, 1976; Gray, 1981; Baldion, 1981; Swenson, 1981; Carlaw and Vaidya, 1983; Fortney and Higgins, 1983; Hobcraft, et al, 1983; Martin et al, 1983; Cleland and Sathar, 1984; De Sweemer, 1984; Palloni and Tienda, 1986).
  9. References in three separate contexts in Ali suggest that the lowest kadiliks of which the hierarchy normally took cognizance were those at the 25 -akce level; and these would thus seem to be equivalent to the 20-akce medreses in being the level at which a fully-trained medrese student would expect to receive his first appointment.
  10. In a sense the development of such petitions is of far greater interest to the ecclesiastical historian in respect of its consequences rather than its origins; for what this system entailed was public cognizance, and a public memory, of grievances; when these complaints were directed at the church, parliament inevitably served to institutionalize and to unify countless discontents, and thus to provide kings and others with ideas, excuses and encouragement for actions against the church which might otherwise have remained unrealized.
  11. It is important to emphasise that there are two types of "inside information" of which the law must take cognizance.
  12. Grilly's attempts to adjudicate the question had failed, and Pierre Flote was deputed to bring the affair to the cognizance of the court of France.
  13. As time went on it became the custom for an armiger to display his cognizance on his seal, which thus became tantamount to his signature.

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