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121 поколебать доверие
1) General subject: (чьё-л.) shatter confidence2) Economy: shatter confidence3) Makarov: dent credibilityУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > поколебать доверие
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122 политическая реальность
1) General subject: political realities2) Military: political credibility, political reality3) Advertising: political entityУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > политическая реальность
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123 полное доверие
1) General subject: absolute trust2) Mathematics: full credibility3) Advertising: unreserved confidence4) Mass media: solid confidence5) Business: implicit confidence6) Makarov: implicit trust -
124 пользоваться доверием
1) General subject: (чьим-л.) be in the confidence of, enjoy somebody's confidence (кого-либо), (чьим-л.) to be in the confidence of, (чьим-л.) enjoy confidence, be trustworthy (AD), enjoy confidence, have credibility2) Jargon: rate with (someone)3) Business: have to one's credit4) Makarov: (чьим-л.) enjoy confidence, enjoy the confidence, find credenceУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > пользоваться доверием
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125 постепенно уменьшать доверие
Makarov: chip away at credibilityУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > постепенно уменьшать доверие
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126 потерять доверие
1) General subject: lose credit, lose credibility2) Economy: lose confidence, run out of credit3) Accounting: discredit4) Mass media: lose faith -
127 правдивость
1) General subject: faithful representation, faithfulness, honesty, trueness, truth, truthfulness, veracity, verity (утверждения и т.п.)2) Law: credibility3) Literature: verisimilitude4) leg.N.P. verity -
128 правдоподобие
1) General subject: believability, credibility, plausibility, probability, truthlikeness, actualness2) Computers: likelyhood3) Philosophy: (жизненное) realism4) Mathematics: verisimilitude5) Information technology: likelihood6) Business: appearance7) Makarov: nature
См. также в других словарях:
Credibility — refers to the objective and subjective components of the believability of a source or message. Traditionally, modern, credibility has two key components: trustworthiness and expertise, which both have objective and subjective components.… … Wikipedia
credibility — I noun appearance of truth, auctoritas, believability, believableness, credibleness, faithfulness, fides, integrity, plausibility, probity, rectitude, reliability, tenability, tenableness, trustworthiness, truthfulness, uprightness, veracity,… … Law dictionary
Credibility — Cred i*bil i*ty (kr[e^]d [i^]*b[i^]l [i^]*t[y^]), n. [Cf. F. cr[ e]dibilit[ e].] The quality of being credible; credibleness; as, the credibility of facts; the credibility of witnesses. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
credibility — 1590s, from M.L. credibilitas, from L. credibilis (see CREDIBLE (Cf. credible)). Credibility gap is 1966, Amer.Eng., in reference to official statements about the Vietnam War … Etymology dictionary
credibility — ► NOUN 1) the quality of being credible. 2) (also street credibility) acceptability among fashionable young urban people … English terms dictionary
credibility — [n] believeableness believability, chance, integrity, likelihood, plausibility, possibility, probability, prospect, reliability, satisfactoriness, solidity, solidness, soundness, tenability, trustworthiness, validity; concepts 650,725 Ant.… … New thesaurus
credibility — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ great, high ▪ real ▪ moral, political, professional, scientific ▪ personal … Collocations dictionary
credibility — credence, credit, credibility 1. In general use, credence means ‘belief, trustful acceptance’, and is used mainly in the expression to give (or lend) credence to, which means ‘believe, trust’: • The radicality of these changes…had lent credence… … Modern English usage
credibility — cred|i|bil|i|ty [ˌkredıˈbılıti] n [U] 1.) the quality of deserving to be believed and trusted damage/undermine sb s credibility (as sth) ▪ The scandal has damaged his credibility as a leader. credibility of ▪ There are serious questions about the … Dictionary of contemporary English
credibility — n. 1) to establish credibility 2) to lose one s credibility 3) (misc.) a credibility gap * * * [ˌkredə bɪlɪtɪ] (misc.) a credibility gap to establish credibility to lose one s credibility … Combinatory dictionary
credibility — cred|i|bil|i|ty [ ,kredı bıləti ] noun uncount * qualities that someone has that make people believe or trust them: The jury had doubts about the credibility of some of the witnesses. gain/lose credibility: The government is losing credibility by … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English