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Перевод: partisan
[прилагательное] слепо верящий; фанатичный; партизанский; узкопартийный; [существительное] приверженец ; сторонник ; партизан ; протазан [ист.] ; алебарда
Тезаурус:
- As far as it goes, the book is a useful catalogue of the havoc wrecked by Reagan, but it is openly partisan and should be read as such.
- They are partisan accounts furthering the cause of certain strands in the common tradition, by developing and producing new or newly recast arguments in their favour.
- In general, the less objective the perception and the more it was influenced by partisan factors, the greater the influence of the press and the less the influence of television.
- In the partisan book Line has been Leonid's woman, and has gone with Mendel.
- Fourteen types of shafted weapons carried by Barbarossa's campaigning armies; military flails (1, 6, 7), marteau (2); battle axe (3), fauchards (4, 8), corcesque (5), military fork (9), halberd (10), partisan (11) and guisarmes (12, 13).
- These figures not only lead to partisan squabbles and gerrymandering but also affect the amount of money that states and local jurisdictions receive from the federal government.
- You should stress that your concern for human rights is not in any way politically partisan.
- But in political science departments, normally among the bitchier and more partisan realms of academe, they respect the fairness and intelligence of the chairman of Labour's commission on electoral systems.
- By contrast, perceptions that verge on being attitudes are likely to be more resistant to change and more dependent upon individuals' partisan backgrounds - their pre-existing sense of party identification, and their use of partisan news sources such as right-wing (or leftwing) papers.
- Her later career, from the time of her marriage to Darnley in the summer of 1565, inevitably gave rise to writing of a very different and much more partisan nature.
- In partisan terms, people reacted against television news, alleging antagonistic bias; but they reacted Very differently towards the press.
- They only reached Azzano, where a partisan leader, fearful of the kind of publicity the Italians would receive if they handed over their ex-Duce to the Allies, had them put up against a wall and shot.
- Clearly party and leader images were dominated by personal partisan prejudice and that domination increased towards the end of the campaign.
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