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41 гражданское неповиновение
Russian-english psychology dictionary > гражданское неповиновение
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42 неповиновение
ср.( непослушание) disobedience, non-obedience, ( неподчинение) insubmission- демонстративное неповиновение
- открытое неповиновение подростков
- открытое неповиновение -
43 непослушание
ср.disobedience, insubmission, rebelliousness -
44 неповиновение
с.( неподчинение) insubordination; ( непослушание) disobedience -
45 непослушание
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46 ослушание
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47 неповиновение
к.сп. -
48 F91
рус Расстройства поведенияeng Conduct disorders. Disorders characterized by a repetitive and persistent pattern of dissocial, aggressive, or defiant conduct. Such behaviour should amount to major violations of age-appropriate social expectations; it should therefore be more severe than ordinary childish mischief or adolescent rebelliousness and should imply an enduring pattern of behaviour (six months or longer). Features of conduct disorder can also be symptomatic of other psychiatric conditions, in which case the underlying diagnosis should be preferred. Examples of the behaviours on which the diagnosis is based include excessive levels of fighting or bullying, cruelty to other people or animals, severe destructiveness to property, fire-setting, stealing, repeated lying, truancy from school and running away from home, unusually frequent and severe temper tantrums, and disobedience. Any one of these behaviours, if marked, is sufficient for the diagnosis, but isolated dissocial acts are not. (Excludes: ) mood (affective) ( F30-F39 -
49 F91.3
рус Вызывающее оппозиционное расстройствоeng Oppositional defiant disorder. Conduct disorder, usually occurring in younger children, primarily characterized by markedly defiant, disobedient, disruptive behaviour that does not include delinquent acts or the more extreme forms of aggressive or dissocial behaviour. The disorder requires that the overall criteria for F91.- be met; even severely mischievous or naughty behaviour is not in itself sufficient for diagnosis. Caution should be employed before using this category, especially with older children, because clinically significant conduct disorder will usually be accompanied by dissocial or aggressive behaviour that goes beyond mere defiance, disobedience, or disruptiveness. -
50 неподчинение
insubordination* * ** * ** * *contumacydisobediencedisobediencesnon-compliancenonconformityrecusancy -
51 непокорность
recalcitrance, rebelliousness; insubordination (неподчинение); unruliness (своенравность)* * ** * *recalcitrance, rebelliousness; insubordination* * *disobediencedisobediencesrecalcitrancerecalcitrancesrecusancyrefractoriness -
52 ослушание
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53 гражданское неповиновение
Юридический русско-английский словарь > гражданское неповиновение
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54 неповиновение
сущ.disobedience;insubordination- неповиновение решению суда
- гражданское неповиновение
- умышленное неповиновение -
55 умышленное неповиновение
Юридический русско-английский словарь > умышленное неповиновение
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56 непослушание
/nʲɪpəsɫʊˈʂanʲɪ(j)ə/
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57 гражданское неповиновение
Русско-английский юридический словарь > гражданское неповиновение
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58 неповиновение
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59 умышленное неповиновение
Русско-английский юридический словарь > умышленное неповиновение
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60 преслушание
( противопоставление человеком своей свободной воли воле Божией) disobedience [contimacy] to the will of God
См. также в других словарях:
Disobedience — Dis o*be di*ence, n. Neglect or refusal to obey; violation of a command or prohibition. [1913 Webster] He is undutiful to him other actions, and lives in open disobedience. Tillotson. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
disobedience — index anarchy, bad faith, breach, contempt (disobedience to the court), defiance, disloyalty, disregard (lack of respect) … Law dictionary
disobedience — c.1400, from O.Fr. desobedience, from V.L. *disobedientia (replacing L. inobedientia) from L. dis (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + obedientia (see OBEDIENCE (Cf. obedience)). The English word replaced earlier desobeissance in this sense, and inobedience (c … Etymology dictionary
disobedience — [n] misbehavior; noncompliance with rules defiance, dereliction, disregard, indiscipline, infraction, infringement, insubmission, insubordination, insurgence, intractableness, mutiny, neglect, nonobservance, perversity, rebellion, recalcitrance,… … New thesaurus
disobedience — [dis΄ō bē′dē əns, dis΄ə bē′dē əns] n. [ME < OFr desobedience: see DIS & OBEDIENCE] refusal to obey; failure to follow rules, commands, etc.; insubordination … English World dictionary
disobedience — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ civil ▪ He called for a campaign of civil disobedience. ▪ the threat of mass civil disobedience ▪ wilful/willful VERB + DISOBEDIENCE ▪ … Collocations dictionary
disobedience — n. 1) willful disobedience 2) civil disobedience 3) disobedience to (disobedience to orders) * * * [ˌdɪsə biːdjəns] civil disobedience willful disobedience disobedience to (disobedience to orders) … Combinatory dictionary
Disobedience — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Disobedience >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 disobedience disobedience insubordination contumacy Sgm: N 1 infraction infraction infringement Sgm: N 1 violation violation noncompliance Sgm: N 1 nonobservance nonobservance … English dictionary for students
disobedience — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Refusal to obey Nouns 1. disobedience, insubordination, contumacy; infraction, infringement; naughtiness; violation, noncompliance; recusancy; nonobservance. Slang, behavishness, orneriness. See… … English dictionary for students
disobedience — [[t]dɪ̱səbi͟ːdiəns[/t]] N UNCOUNT Disobedience is deliberately not doing what someone tells you to do, or what a rule or law says that you should do … English dictionary
disobedience — See civil disobedience civil disorder … Black's law dictionary