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Перевод: conscience
[существительное] совесть ; сознание [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- In considering the development of a conscience in the newborn child, the first thing is to acknowledge that, as far as is known, he is not born with any such facility.
- The conduct of the War required fiscal policies sufficiently egalitarian to appease the conscience of even the most austere socialist.
- The conscience, in common with all things associated with life, grows from small beginnings.
- But again it was Conlon, the slightly wild-eyed Irish poet of the quartet, articulate, flamboyant - remember that extraordinary exit through the front door of the Old Bailey - who cut deep into the collective conscience.
- This will be the first time that the chief of the US central bank, effectively head-keeper of the capitalist conscience, has visited the Soviet Union.
- No one can say that the scientists showed no conscience at that moment.
- I would appeal to people to take this opportunity to vote with their conscience - to vote for the future and for life."
- If they are strongly and exclusively attached to domineering parents who set impossibly high standards and are deeply "hurt" when their offspring fail to live up to them, it is probable that they will acquire a sense of conscience so severe and restrictive that their spontaneity and emotional life will be crippled and much of their creative energy will remain unused.
- He chose to do nothing, and for a time remained in a distant castle as a virtual prisoner of conscience.
- Instead, they have their cattlemen's lobby, still with the power to put US beef on the American table, and a rugged individualist pull on the national conscience.
- It was in this atmosphere of craven piety that Lillian Hellman, the playwright who had carte blanche in Hollywood to write what pictures she liked, administered a cold douche to the nation's conscience by stating unequivocally that she refused to inform on anybody else but herself.
- In what is heralded as a vote of conscience, any conscience ought to be deeply troubled by the agonising choice between respecting human embryos from their earliest moments and responding to the plight of infertile couples.
- The 1990s began with a dramatic upturn of the fortunes of thousands of prisoners of conscience across eastern and central Europe.
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