|
Перевод: notoriety
[существительное] дурная слава; человек, пользующийся дурной славой; известность ; знаменитость
Тезаурус:
- Polanski, on the other hand, was, in Jack Nicholson's view, the recipient of Western justice: "His situation is a very interesting case of what notoriety can do to you.
- And it gained some notoriety for obduracy on female sufferance while the rest of the developed world was gradually seeing sense.
- But it seems that their notoriety was such that no waste disposer would take them, albeit Europe disposes of some 20000 tonnes of lethal chemicals a year, most not nearly so well wrapped.
- In the team's acclimatisation tour of Latin America, he kicked his way into the public's imagination and sowed the seeds of notoriety which eventually led to his life ban.
- In the last year of a brief life at the heart of a kind of doting celebrity that knew the value of success, he fell into notoriety of the sort that is just as American as his life.
- He began to etch into local notoriety via a series of small ads in the music press seeking to swap info with fellow New York Dolls fans.
- The reason for their notoriety is that they are complicated by a number of factors others than real changes in the levels of crime.
- More or less equal to Spurgeon in fame, and surpassing him in notoriety (for Spurgeon avoided party politics and was in many ways sui generis ) was the Congregationalist, Joseph Parker.
- One reason for visiting Ingolstadt is its several claims to religious fame, or notoriety.
- He was told that soon after the official ceasefire in Europe in 1945, a Nazi of some notoriety was escaping through the pass and it was decided to try to annihilate him, the only means available being bombing.
- Easy going and charming, he made friends easily; adventurous and audacious, his exploits brought both fame and notoriety during his lifetime; intelligent but irresponsible, he made and squandered a fortune in a few years; all in all, he was an eccentric who lived life to the full.
- Stephen Gold, who gained notoriety for his part in hacking into the Duke of Edinburgh's Prestel mailbox, said that the law would not be enforceable.
- The frank accounts of two early love affairs, adding some notoriety to a political autobiography, make honest and sympathetic reading; but of far greater substance is his analysis of British politics from Wilson to Major.
|
|
|