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Перевод: generosity
[существительное] великодушие; благородство; щедрость
Тезаурус:
- She started to read and for a moment lost her rigid self-consciousness in admiring delight at her own writing, its clarity and generosity.
- altruism , which represents acts of kindness, generosity, sympathy and service to others;
- Generosity, however, was not an emotion that could be found in many Palestinian hearts in Lebanon, and the hatred that burned in 1948 was eagerly taken up by a new generation.
- Mr Sisulu's generosity and warmth did not waver during his time in the maximum security prison of Robben Island, where other inmates deferred to him as a charismatic senior statesman of what has been called "the government-in-exile".
- The House of Mowbray was, after all, of the ancient nobility - unlike the Woodvilles themselves who, by virtue of her marriage and the late king's generosity, had only recently attained the highest appointments in the land.
- Her will included legacies of twenty pounds each to her Frome cousins, Mary and Sarah, the daughters of her uncle John Titford; she was not to know that Mary would die just two months before she did, though Sarah, as we shall see, survived for another five years, long enough to bless the generosity of her Surrey cousin.
- Mrs Dibble experienced Lena's generosity when the ribber attachment she had bought from a mail order company would not work on her machine.
- Sincere thanks to all the walkers and especially to the many sponsors for their generosity, also to the support team.
- The Rosary was recited and later Bernard Connelly, the organiser, told the story of Walsingham and the generosity of Charlotte Boyd, re-establishing the Slipper Chapel to become the national Shrine of Our Lady.
- But the British could avoid turning such disputes into personal grievances with a generosity not available to those who would ultimately be their victims.
- It is through the generosity of the 11th Duke that the Duke's Barn Countryside Centre, a marvellous study and conference centre on the Chatsworth estate, was presented to the school in 1986.
- She had, apparently, spent little of the money on herself, had been a dependable benefactress of the few eccentric charities of which she approved, had remembered them in her will, but without egregious generosity, and had left the residue of her estate to him without explanation, admonition or peculiar protestations of affection, although he had no doubt that the words "my dearly beloved nephew" meant exactly what they said.
- Care of the unfortunate was a general duty which people met with generosity and tenderness, and they were not surprised when the state did the same.
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