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Перевод: punishment
[существительное] наказание; взыскание; кара ; грубое обращение; суровое обращение
Тезаурус:
- At the climax of the episode Dr Kate ministered to this Miss Havisham figure (" She needs help, not punishment"), while hubby was out doing an OK Corral number with the mods and rockers down at the village dance.
- Ajax join English clubs in European exile, as UEFA bans the club for the next two years they qualify for Europe, as punishment for the previous week's crowd trouble, when the Austria Vienna goalkeeper was felled by a metal spike.
- That view is reinforced by the Newsons, who say: "The measures that stand out as the most predictive of criminal record before 20 years are having been smacked or beaten once or more a week at 11, and having a mother with a high commitment to formal physical punishment at that age."
- "What if it is beginning already, what if my punishment is already beginning?
- Israel welcomed the plan as a placebo to Palestinian restiveness, a subsidy to its own administration of the territories, and a useful accessory in Israel's own policy of reward and punishment.
- The word appears twice in Dostoevsky's letter to Katkov outlining Crime and Punishment , in the phrase "unsteadiness of ideas" - which is natural since a drama of reflection is about to unfold: thinking is Raskolnikov's work, as he tells the maid Nastasya.
- The Elton Committee recommended avoidance of the punishment of whole groups, and this is consistent with the view of a judge in one recent case, who said that "Punishment should not be indiscriminate.
- For a man who was leading the campaign for sanctions against South Africa, when that was still a hopeless liberal cause, he has been notably diffident about such things as collective punishment and detention without trial in the Israeli-occupied territories.
- There is no parallel here with punishment for attempts and other inchoate offences, because there is no proof that the defendant was aiming to do something harmful: the harmfulness of the action is supposedly constituted by the indecent motive, not by anything actually done, or about to be done, to the victim.
- Only once, in 1966 when there had been a lot of discussion on the ethics of capital punishment, did a Gallup poll find that American support for death as the punishment for murder had fallen below 50%.
- It's up to you, he's saying, to satisfy the hunger which the letter to Katkov and the Crime and Punishment notebooks rationalize as the criminal's moral demand.
- He suggests that, since most Britons have a taste for the rope, politicians have a "democratic" duty to reintroduce capital punishment.
- While Mr David Waddington does not intend to use his office to promote capital punishment, and will maintain the tradition of a free vote for MPs, his intervention in a renewed debate would provide the most passionate support for it from the Government front bench since it was abolished in 1965.
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