VGAsoft logo

VGAsoft | Разработка программного обеспечения

HomeContact us


English ⇔ Russian
 
LMBomber
Dictionary
Speech
Download
Forum

Перевод слова


Перевод: voter speek voter


[существительное]
избиратель ; участник голосования


Тезаурус:

  1. The message was clear, the Conservative Party would have to broaden its policies in order to attract the newly enfranchised working-class voter and remain in power.
  2. It may well be that in some metropolitan areas Labour is suffering the kind of adverse voter reaction noted in the London boroughs, but the issue of the poll tax appears itself to have had very little substantive impact on the differences in electoral behaviour between authorities.
  3. Even the slowest-witted voter has, however, an inkling that the NHS is not funded with fairy money, but with his own hard-earned bunce.
  4. DESPITE the bewildering razzmatazz of modern electioneering - its photo-opportunities, spin doctors, voter metering, and "image consultants" - one feature of British general elections remains essentially unchanged.
  5. He promised to demystify the all-powerful presidency and make it more accountable to congress and the voter.
  6. The US has alleged intimidation by turbas divinas - pro-Sandinista thugs and claims to have evidence of voter intimidation by the army.
  7. I think we can eliminate blacks, women, and the younger voter from our enquiries.
  8. Voter registries
  9. Mr Kinnock looked uncomfortable when Alec Dunn, a 20-year-old first-time voter, asked where he stood on proportional representation.
  10. But the city has also revealed something about the American voter, something that belies the conventional wisdom that all that counts is the big-buck campaigns with their television adverts and "issues" tailored to every fractured constituency.
  11. Above all, the language barriers render true debate impossible, and they make the workings of the Parliament opaque to the ordinary voter.
  12. a vote given solely to one candidate at an election when the voter has the right to split his vote between two or more candidates (hence the phrase "to plump for").
  13. Armed with a transcript, Mr Patten, Tory Party chairman, and Mr Heseltine, Environment Secretary, launched into a carefully-rehearsed re-enactment of the Labour leader's encounter with 20-year-old Alec Dunn, a first-time voter from Bolton.

MAGIA Site Design

    Copyright © 1986-2024 VGAsoft. All rights reserved.

About USPrivacy