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1 refusal
noun I was surprised at his refusal to help me; When we sent out the wedding invitations, we had several refusals.) atsisakymas, nesutikimas, atmetimas -
2 civil disobedience
noun (a refusal by a large number of people to pay taxes or obey certain laws in a nonviolent way in order to protest against the government, its policies etc.) pilietinis nepaklusnumas -
3 manhood
1) ((of a male) the state of being adult, physically (and mentally) mature etc: He died before he reached manhood.) brandus amžius2) (manly qualities: He took her refusal to marry him as an insult to his manhood.) vyriškumas -
4 non-violence
(the refusal to use any violent means in order to gain political, social etc aims.) nesmurtiniai veiksmai -
5 no
[nəu] 1. adjective1) (not any: We have no food; No other person could have done it.) joks, nė vienas2) (not allowed: No smoking.) draudžiama, negalima3) (not a: He is no friend of mine; This will be no easy task.) joks, ne toks jau2. adverb(not (any): He is no better at golf than swimming; He went as far as the shop and no further.) ne, nė kiek ne3. interjection(a word used for denying, disagreeing, refusing etc: `Do you like travelling?' `No, (I don't).'; No, I don't agree; `Will you help me?' `No, I won't.') ne4. noun plural( noes)1) (a refusal: She answered with a definite no.) neigiamas atsakymas, nesutikimas, ne2) (a vote against something: The noes have won.) balsas prieš•- nobody5. noun(a very unimportant person: She's just a nobody.) niekas, visiškas nulis- no-one- there's no saying
- knowing -
6 boycott
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7 failure
[-jə]1) (the state or act of failing: She was upset by her failure in the exam; failure of the electricity supply.) nesėkmė, gedimas2) (an unsuccessful person or thing: He felt he was a failure.) nevykėlis3) (inability, refusal etc to do something: his failure to reply.) ko nors nepadarymas -
8 firm
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9 mutiny
['mju:tini] 1. plural - mutinies; noun((a) refusal to obey one's senior officers in the navy or other armed services: There has been a mutiny on HMS Tigress; The sailors were found guilty of mutiny.) maištas2. verb((of sailors etc) to refuse to obey commands from those in authority: The sailors mutinied because they did not have enough food.) sukelti maištą- mutineer- mutinous -
10 offer
['ofə] 1. past tense, past participle - offered; verb1) (to put forward (a gift, suggestion etc) for acceptance or refusal: She offered the man a cup of tea; He offered her $20 for the picture.) (pa)siūlyti2) (to say that one is willing: He offered to help.) pasisiūlyti2. noun1) (an act of offering: an offer of help.) (pa)siūlymas2) (an offering of money as the price of something: They made an offer of $50,000 for the house.) kainos siūlymas•- offering- on offer -
11 rebellion
[rə'beljən]1) (an open or armed fight against a government etc.) maištas, sukilimas2) (a refusal to obey orders or to accept rules etc.) priešinimasis, nepasitenkinimas -
12 rebuff
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13 refuse
I [rə'fju:z] verb1) (not to do what one has been asked, told or is expected to do: He refused to help me; She refused to believe what I said; When I asked him to leave, he refused.) atsisakyti, nesutikti2) (not to accept: He refused my offer of help; They refused our invitation; She refused the money.) atmesti, atsisakyti3) (not to give (permission etc): I was refused admittance to the meeting.) atsakyti•- refusalII ['refju:s] noun(rubbish; waste material from eg a kitchen.) atliekos, šiukšlės- refuse collection vehicle
См. также в других словарях:
refusal — Ⅰ. refuse [1] ► VERB 1) state that one is unwilling to do something. 2) state that one is unwilling to grant or accept (something offered or requested). 3) (of a horse) decline to jump (a fence or other obstacle). DERIVATIVES refusal noun refuser … English terms dictionary
refusal — re‧fus‧al [rɪˈfjuːzl] noun give/offer someone first refusal to let someone be the first to decide whether they want to buy something you are selling before you offer it to other people: • If you ever sell the business I d like to be offered… … Financial and business terms
refusal — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ absolute, adamant, blank (BrE), blunt, complete, flat, outright, point blank, utter ▪ the panel … Collocations dictionary
refusal — I noun abjuration, abnegation, ban, debarment, declination, declinature, defiance, denial, disallowance, disapprobation, disapproval, disavowal, disclaimer, discountenance, enjoinment, exclusion, incompliance, interdiction, negation, negative… … Law dictionary
refusal — noun (C, U) 1 an act of saying or showing that you will not do something that someone has asked you to do: refusal to do sth: His refusal to pay the fine got him into trouble. | point blank refusal (=an immediate direct refusal) 2 an act of not… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
refusal — noun 1) we had one refusal to our invitation Syn: nonacceptance, no, dissent, demurral, negation, turndown; regrets 2) you can have first refusal Syn: option, choice, opportunity to purchase 3) … Thesaurus of popular words
refusal — noun 1) we had one refusal to our invitation Syn: non acceptance, no, rejection, rebuff, turndown; informal knock back 2) the refusal of planning permission Syn: withholding, denial • Ant … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
refusal — noun Date: 15th century 1. the act of refusing or denying 2. the opportunity or right of refusing or taking before others … New Collegiate Dictionary
refusal — noun a) the acting of refusing b) (civil engineering) depth or point at which well or borehole drilling cannot continue Syn: repudiation, abnegation, declination See Also: refuse … Wiktionary
refusal */*/ — UK [rɪˈfjuːz(ə)l] / US [rɪˈfjuz(ə)l] noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms refusal : singular refusal plural refusals the act of refusing to do something She gave a firm refusal. refusal to do something: The protesters considered several… … English dictionary
refusal — re|fus|al [ rı fjuzl ] noun count or uncount ** the act of refusing to do something: She gave a firm refusal. refusal to do something: The protesters considered several options, including a refusal to pay taxes. a. the act of refusing to accept… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English