o oa ob oc od oe of og oh oi ok ol om on oo op or os ot ou ov ow ox oy oz

Перевод: obscene speek obscene


[прилагательное]
неприличный; непристойный; непотребный; грязный; матерный


Тезаурус:

  1. We who are brought together by such an obscene act, like to think of ourselves as the vast majority.
  2. The muscling of the shoulders and especially the thighs is almost obscene but the small-boned carcass and large body produce an abundance of lean meat.
  3. Social perceptions of what is or is not obscene or indecent may change but the legislation may remain to trap the unwary in a much more liberal climate; and just because the legislation has not been used in many years that does not mean it will not be applied again.
  4. The 1940s and war made seditious literature a vital concern; the 1950s and anti-communism made left-wing literature seem so threatening; the 1960s and permissiveness eventually caused us to think we could go too far with "indecent" and "obscene" books; and the 1970s and 1980s and the move towards a more multicultural society and the assertiveness of nationality made us conscious of the damage of racist and religiously intolerant literature.
  5. He held a knife to her throat, sexually assaulted her and dragged her outside to the garden where she was forced to perform obscene acts.
  6. That does not mean that the law should change with every passing fancy - crimes such as theft, fraud, murder, etc. will never become fashionable - but "social" crimes such as publishing indecent or obscene material are dependent on society's perception of what is or is not indecent or obscene at the time, and the legislation of one period may be inappropriate in another period of time, to the extent that resorting to the courts to deal with the matter may be quite inappropriate and ineffective.
  7. The result is that there are books on many library shelves which have at one time been declared obscene or indecent and may be so categorized again.
  8. Much of the Press coverage of library censorship tends to be concerned with attempts to censor so-called obscene and indecent literature.
  9. In fact to judge the book as a whole in determining if it was obscene had generally been the practice in law for the hundred years since the Hicklin case.
  10. Some earlier critics of the deprave-and-corrupt test had suggested a return to a test based on "outrage", with the Longford Report proposing in 1972 that an article might be deemed to be obscene "if its effect, taken as a whole, is to outrage contemporary standards of decency or humanity accepted by the public at large".
  11. Thus in R v Stanley (1965), Lord Chief Justice Parker explained the meaning of the terms "indecent" and "obscene" by suggesting that they both convey the same idea, "namely, offending against recognised standards of propriety, indecent being at the lower end of the scale and obscene at the upper end".
  12. "He bends over for the SS," said the mummy's cap-wearing friend, making an obscene fist, "you can tell.

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