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Перевод: sentence
[существительное] приговор ; предложение; сентенция ; изречение; [глагол] осуждать; приговаривать; приговорить
Тезаурус:
- I have never been disturbed by the apparent anomaly that the death sentence remains in our law as the penalty for treason: I see no parallel or analogy between the punishment of crime within a society and the self-defence of a society against its enemies.
- Where is the natural pause as you say this sentence?
- Your practice partner makes the list (which you do not see in advance) and then gives the short descriptive sentence which provides a clue to the way in which the key word has been used.
- Not all life sentence prisoners follow the same "career path" through prison but most spend three to four years in two initial centres, then progress to training prisons and - possibly - open prisons before a final release date is in sight.
- The unchanging first part of the sentence is always: What country or people do you think of when the conversation is about?
- A sentence in the loser's statement to the effect that "the last time I saw my watch was when I put it in my locker at work" or "I placed my purse in my shopping basket" shows that he had possession or control of the property,
- Jinny was so amazed that she stopped speaking in the middle of a sentence and let him say goodbye and make their apologies all over again.
- I'll read a sentence, then you repeat it.
- The English conventions for punctuation for instance, may have some advantages for some purposes, although disambiguating "sentence" units should not necessarily be taken as a significant one.
- A further small point: we may have been taught at school to avoid ending written sentences with a preposition, but the above sentence, apart from replacing "commence" by "begin", sounds more natural if we do in fact end it with the preposition.
- I HOPE the Attorney-General is ashamed of himself in allowing the sentence of rapist Dr Thomas Courtenay to stand.
- Can it be justified to send to prison people too poor to pay fines - and there are more such persons during times of economic crisis - not only when the original crime of which they were convicted did not warrant a prison sentence, but when their crime is trivial in the extreme in comparison with corporate crimes which we lack the political will to tackle directly by socialist remedies?
- Also, the scale of the problems tends to be smaller; for example, there are, typically, far fewer anaphors than phonemes in a sentence, and fewer focused candidate referents for a pronoun than (in a large-vocabulary application) candidate words to be considered for a given portion of speech.
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