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Перевод: worldliness
[существительное] суетность
Тезаурус:
- Indeed in Webb's opinion, by the beginning of the 1840s sect, party and worldliness all undermined the antislavery movement as a whole.
- The Primitive Methodists, whose work was mostly amongst working people, admitted with a sorrow they could not hide that "the growing worldliness of men needs a faithful and independent ministry; the increased educational facilities and the advance of science challenge us to put the best talent we can produce into the pulpit".
- Taglioni recognised his daughter Marie's quality of other worldliness in La Sylphide ; Perrot discovered Carlotta Grisi's unique qualities as an actress-dancer in Giselle ; Fokine exposed Tamara Karsavina's many-sided brilliance in such works as The Firebird, Le Carnaval and Petrushka ; Ashton fostered Margot Fonteyn's varied personality.
- She was still slightly in awe of Violette, her worldliness, her sharp tongue.
- In time he would seek a solution to this problem by envisaging a brotherhood of painters living self-sufficiently, away from the worldliness of towns and thus uncontaminated by modern fevers and distractions.
- This is a double alienation and for the Christian a curious kind of worldliness of mind.
- But they embrace the worldliness and materialism of advanced industrialism and even declare it good!
- There is very much a pattern of "holy worldliness" about Christian discipline.
- Romeo has none of his friend's worldliness, and one of Timothy Welton's best moments in the part is the animal way he leans and pushes at Richard Hague's Benvolio in trying to do dying Tybalt further hurt; another is his early gaucheness approaching Juliet.
- Pray for a spirit of humility, separation from worldliness, deliverance from power-seeking among Christian leaders.
- When such temptation comes, it should be seen as an amber light to warn of the worldliness of mind into which we are slipping.
- There are still a few speeches in Greenaway's house-style of inert paradox and cod worldliness - notably a digression by the Cook (Richard Bohringer) about black food and the price structure of restaurant meals - but the story, for better or worse, stands relatively clear of verbiage.
- This worldliness, as Os Guinness has recognised, is precisely, for Christians, what the process of secularisation is all about (Guinness 1983: chs 3, 7).
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