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1 dubious
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2 dubious
[ˈdjuːbɪəs] adjective1) doubtful:شاكُّ، مُشْتَبِهI am dubious about the wisdom of this action.
2) probably not honest:مُشْتَبَه فيه، مَشْكوكٌ فيهdubious behaviour.
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3 dubious
مَشْكُوك فيه \ doubtful: causing doubt: This is a doubtful question. dubious: causing doubt; uncertain; undecided: The plan is rather dubious. -
4 dubious
مُرِيب \ doubtful: feeling or causing doubt: I’m doubtful of your chances; This is a doubtful question. dubious: having or causing doubt; uncertain; undecided: The plan is rather dubious. shady: dishonest; nearly criminal: shady business dealings. suspicious: causing doubt: a suspicious noise in the night. \ See Also مرتاب (مُرْتَاب)، مشكوك فيه (مَشْكوك فيه) -
5 dubious
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6 dubiøs
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7 dúbio
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8 עסקה מפוקפקת
dubious transaction -
9 תענוג מפוקפק
dubious pleasure, doubtful pleasure -
10 сомнительная репутация
Русско-английский политический словарь > сомнительная репутация
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11 сомнительная сделка
dubious deal, shady dealРусско-английский политический словарь > сомнительная сделка
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12 сомнительное алиби
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13 mistænkelig
dubious, fishy, suspicious* * *adj suspicious, suspicious-looking. -
14 підозріла особа
dubious character, shady character, suspect, suspicious character, suspicious person -
15 сумнівна практика
dubious practice, questionable practicesУкраїнсько-англійський юридичний словник > сумнівна практика
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16 сумнівний доказ
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17 сумнівне алібі
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18 сумнівні активи
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19 pochybující
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20 efins, hikandi
См. также в других словарях:
Dubious — Du bi*ous, a. [L. dubius, dubiosus, fr. duo two. See {Two}, and cf. {Doubt}.] 1. Doubtful or not settled in opinion; being in doubt; wavering or fluctuating; undetermined. Dubious policy. Sir T. Scott. [1913 Webster] A dubious, agitated state of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Dubious Brothers — were a hip hop duo based in Hamilton, New Zealand, formed in 2000. Members were Chris Macro (born Christopher Shaw, beatmaker/engineer/producer) and Tyna Keelan (guitars/bass/emcee). While New Zealand/Aotearoa hip hop at the time (led by Che Fu… … Wikipedia
dubious — [do͞o′bē əs, dyo͞o′bē əs] adj. [L dubiosus, doubtful < dubius, doubting, uncertain < du < or akin to duo, TWO + IE base * bhu , *bheu , to BE] 1. causing doubt; ambiguous; vague [a dubious remark] 2. feeling doubt; hesitating; skeptical… … English World dictionary
Dubious Trumpet-eared Bat — Conservation status Data Deficient (IUCN 2.3) Scientific classification … Wikipedia
Dubious Dtella — Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia Phylum … Wikipedia
dubious — [adj1] doubtful arguable, chancy, debatable, diffident, disputable, dubitable, equivocal, far fetched, fishy*, fly by night*, hesitant, iffy*, improbable, indecisive, moot, mootable, open, perplexed, problematic, questionable, reluctant, shady,… … New thesaurus
dubious — I adjective ambiguous, anceps, arguable, chancy, conditional, confusing, confutable, contestable, contingent, controversial, controvertible, debatable, dependent, disputable, doubtful, dubitative, dubius, equivocal, fallible, hazy, in dispute, in … Law dictionary
dubious — 1540s, from L. dubiosus doubtful, from dubium doubt, neuter of dubius vacillating, moving two ways, fluctuating; figuratively wavering in opinion, doubting, doubtful, from duo two (see TWO (Cf. two)), with a sense of of two minds, undecided… … Etymology dictionary
dubious — *doubtful, questionable, problematic Analogous words: suspicious, skeptical, mistrustful, uncertain (see corresponding nouns at UNCERTAINTY): hesitant, reluctant, *disinclined Antonyms: cocksure (state of mind, opinion): reliable (of things in… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
dubious — ► ADJECTIVE 1) hesitating or doubting. 2) not to be relied upon. 3) of questionable value; suspect. DERIVATIVES dubiously adverb dubiousness noun. ORIGIN Latin dubiosus, from dubium a doubt … English terms dictionary
dubious — du|bi|ous [ˈdju:biəs US ˈdu: ] adj [Date: 1500 1600; : Latin; Origin: dubius, from dubare to be unable to decide ] 1.) probably not honest, true, right etc ▪ The firm was accused of dubious accounting practices. ▪ Many critics regard this… … Dictionary of contemporary English