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Перевод: falsehood
[существительное] ложь ; неправда ; ложность ; фальшь ; лживость ; вероломство [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- However, Stanley Baldwin, who was once the target of a harsh newspaper campaign, said of his "press baron" opponents - "Their methods are direct falsehood, misrepresentation, half-truths, the alteration of the speaker's meaning by putting sentences apart from the context, suppression and editorial criticism of speeches which are not reported in the paper
- We suppose that when somebody says something to us, it is meant to be informative, has some warrant in fact and is not a deliberate obfuscation or falsehood (for further detail and discussion see Grice 1975; Levinson 1983; Sperber and Wilson 1986).
- He would tell them some story - precisely what, he had not decided - and in due course they would check and discover its falsehood.
- He described General George Marshall, the revered Defence secretary, as "a man steeped in falsehood, always and invariably serving the policy of the Kremlin".
- Certainly the references to truth and falsehood can be taken at the simple level of telling the truth and avoiding lies.
- The media regularly feed off each other's stories: a practice which may be defensible where the original story is an accurate one but which can otherwise lead to the dissemination of a falsehood.
- "Discernment involves clarity of vision discerning, discriminating, judging between truth and falsehood."
- In this there is a kind of truth (for Tolkien was kind-hearted about things like the "evacuation" of Minas Tirith and the survival of Bill the pony), but also an evident falsehood.
- On this level of mere temperamental affinity (not considering its truth or falsehood) we feel Lewis to be a man who would be most happy in Christian garb.
- "Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to his neighbour, for we are all members of one body" (Eph. 4:25).
- A tense story of fear, falsehood and a Full English Breakfast.
- The treachery and falsehood he uses to advance his cause he calls prudence, and the path by which he attains his ends, however crooked, he calls straight, whatever he says is lawful."
- Miss Halford, 51, one of only four women assistant chief constables, was suspended on full pay in December, 1990, over allegations of neglect of duty, discreditable conduct and falsehood.
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