e ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey

Перевод: emergence speek emergence


[существительное]
выход ; появление; возникновение; всплытие; выявление
[существительное]


Тезаурус:

  1. Hope of maintaining this detached attitude, however, declined after the emergence of the Tractarians and Ritualists.
  2. This chapter will look at this emergence in three parts.
  3. If the only way to give the drama momentum is to allow through (1) an emergence of crude competition between the teacher and pupils or through the even cruder "I'm the baddy not to be trusted" approach of (4), then she may have to abandon altogether her intention to open up (2), the recognition by the townsfolk that here is an official who cannot know and indeed who does not want to know what the cost of this decision will be to those of us who are faced with it.
  4. Nevertheless, Mosley's fascist movement merited concern and attention, not least because its emergence seemed to mirror events in Europe.
  5. The Emergence of an Institution
  6. Two volumes of collected essays by Clement Greenberg document the critic's emergence as the most influential champion of modernism during its American ascendance after World War II: volume 3 of The Collected Essays and Criticism is titled Affirmations and Refusals, 1950-;56, volume 4 Modernism with a Vengeance, 1957-;1969 (each 23.95, 29.95).
  7. Now as a traditional climber I find the emergence of these new activities such as sport abseiling and sport climbing somewhat sterilised and regulated, but I suppose there is plenty of room in Britain for all offshoots and variations of the parent activity, and we must accept these developments with open arms as we did bolts and competitions.
  8. The place of its emergence into daylight will be seen on the return journey.
  9. "Although we were disappointed at losing to Japan the emergence of Tony Stanger plus Ian Corcoran, Cameron Glasgow and Adam Buchanan-Smith emphasises the value of touring," Munro said.
  10. The report of Domingue and Ingram (1978), for the USA, indicates the emergence of the profession both in terms of status and in concerns for interpreter efficiency, and it is on this basis that we begin to look at the processes involved, comparing signed with spoken interpretation.
  11. In the waters of the monsoon pools of East Africa it is as if man sees a baboon in the mirror, for the development of baboon societies in the very regions in which human social life must have also evolved seems to reflect in extraordinarily detailed ways the emergence of features otherwise unique to human life.
  12. Frank Laczko and Chris Phillipson show how the emergence of retirement in the twentieth century created a sharp dividing line between those who were seen to be actively part of the community and those who were not.
  13. The study now reported began with the author recognising from an examination of the name "Forsey" that although the second syllable had obviously developed from the Anglo-Saxon haeg (with the noun prefix ge ) and the Middle English hei/hey , meaning enclosure, it seemed unlikely that the first syllables fors and furs were descended from the same root word, and the fact that Dr Reaney had cited widely separated counties for their (rather late) emergence was a further slight pointer.

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