-
21 sane
-
22 sensitive
['sensitiv]1) ((usually with to) strongly or easily affected (by something): sensitive skin; sensitive to light.) občutljiv2) ((usually with about or to) easily hurt or offended: She is very sensitive to criticism.) občutljiv, dovzeten3) (having or showing artistic good taste: a sensitive writer; a sensitive performance.) občutljiv•- sensitiveness
- sensitivity* * *[sénsitiv]adjectivezelo občutljiv, preobčutljiv, senzitiven; dražljiv, lahko razburljiv; (lahkó) spremenljivsensitive market economy omahljivo, negotovo tržišče -
23 stomach
1) (the bag-like organ in the body into which food passes when swallowed, and where most of it is digested.) želodec2) (the part of the body between the chest and thighs; the belly: a pain in the stomach.) trebuh•* * *I [stʌmək]nounželodec; trebuh; figuratively apetit, tek, poželenje po jedi; figuratively želja, nagnjenje ( for k, za); razpoloženje; obsolete hrabrost, pogum, srčnosthigh stomach, proud stomach figuratively ošabnost, nadutost, domišljavostmy stomach rises — slabo mi postaja, vzdiguje se mithat goes against my stomach — to se mi upira (studi, gabi)to have no stomach for — ne imeti poguma (želje, teka)to stick in one's stomach figuratively colloquially čutiti odpor (stud, gnus) (do)to turn s.o.'s stomach — želodec komu obračati, povzročiti komu stud (gnus)II [stʌmək]transitive verb(po)jesti (s tekom), pogoltniti, prebaviti; figuratively prenašati, (pre)trpeti (žalitev); sprijazniti se z; obsolete biti užaljen, jezento stomach an insult (an affront) figuratively požreti žalitev -
24 subject
1. adjective((of countries etc) not independent, but dominated by another power: subject nations.) podrejen2. noun1) (a person who is under the rule of a monarch or a member of a country that has a monarchy etc: We are loyal subjects of the Queen; He is a British subject.) podložnik2) (someone or something that is talked about, written about etc: We discussed the price of food and similar subjects; What was the subject of the debate?; The teacher tried to think of a good subject for their essay; I've said all I can on that subject.) tema3) (a branch of study or learning in school, university etc: He is taking exams in seven subjects; Mathematics is his best subject.) predmet4) (a thing, person or circumstance suitable for, or requiring, a particular kind of treatment, reaction etc: I don't think her behaviour is a subject for laughter.) vzrok5) (in English, the word(s) representing the person or thing that usually does the action shown by the verb, and with which the verb agrees: The cat sat on the mat; He hit her because she broke his toy; He was hit by the ball.) osebek3. [səb'‹ekt] verb1) (to bring (a person, country etc) under control: They have subjected all the neighbouring states (to their rule).) podvreči2) (to cause to suffer, or submit (to something): He was subjected to cruel treatment; These tyres are subjected to various tests before leaving the factory.) izpostaviti•- subjective
- subjectively
- subject matter
- change the subject
- subject to* * *I [sʌbdžikt]1.nounpodložnik, podanik, državljan; predmet (stvar) pogovora, téma; učni predmet; music téma; razlog, povod, vzrok, motiv ( for za); človek, oseba; grammar osebek, subjekt; philosophy ego; poskusni predmet (oseba, žival); mrlič (za seciranje); medicine oseba, pacienton the subject of — gledé, kar se tiče, kar zadevacompulsory (optional, additional) subject — obvezen (izbiren, dodaten) učni predmeta nervous subject — živčna oseba, živčneža ticklish subject — kočljiv, delikaten predmetto wander from the subject — oddaljiti se od predmeta;2.adjectivepodvržen, podložen, podrejen (to komu, čemu), odvisen (to od); nesamostojen (država itd.); občutljiv (to za), nagnjen (to k), izpostavljen (to čemu)subject to — pogojèn z, s pogojem; odvisen od (česa), s pridržkomsubject to your approval — s pogojem (pridržkom), da vi odobritethe treaty is subject to ratification — pogodba mora biti ratificirana, da postane veljavnato hold subject — imeti v podložnosti, v odvisnostiII [səbdžékt]transitive verbpodvreči, podrediti; podjarmiti; napraviti odvisno (to od); izpostaviti (to čemu); obrzdati; napraviti dovzetnega zato subject o.s. to ridicule — izpostavljati se posmehuto subject s.o. to a test — preskusiti koga -
25 target
1) (a marked board or other object aimed at in shooting practice, competitions etc with a rifle, bow and arrow etc: His shots hit the target every time.) tarča2) (any object at which shots, bombs etc are directed: Their target was the royal palace.) tarča3) (a person, thing etc against which unfriendly comment or behaviour is directed: the target of criticism.) tarča* * *[tá:git]nountarča; cilj; figuratively tarča (predmet) posmehovanja; heraldry okrogel ščit; railway kretnični signaltarget practice — streljanje v tarčo; military strelske vajetarget shooting sport streljanje v tarčotarget date — določen čas, termin (za neko stvar)to hit the target — zadeti tarčo, cilj -
26 textual
[tékstjuəl]adjective ( textually adverb)teksten, ki je v tekstu; ki je natančno po tekstu; dobeseden, tekstualen; skladen s tekstom, sloneč na tekstu -
27 thick-skinned
adjective (not easily hurt by criticism or insults: You won't upset her - she's very thick-skinned.) debelokožen* * *[míkskind]adjectivedebelokožen; neobčutljiv -
28 venomous
1) ((of snakes etc) poisonous: venomous reptiles.) strupen2) ((of people, their words etc) full of ill-feeling: a venomous speech.) strupen* * *[vénəməs]adjective ( venomously adverb)strupen; figuratively strupen; žolčen, jedek, zloben, hudoben, sovražen; pogubonosenvenomous criticism — zlobna, strupena kritika -
29 verbal
1) (of, or concerning, verbs: verbal endings such as `-fy', `-ize'.) glagolski2) (consisting of, or concerning, spoken words: a verbal warning/agreement.) usten* * *[vɜ:bəl]1.adjective ( verbally adverb)beseden, verbalen, izražen z besedami, usten; dobeseden; linguistics glagolski, verbalenverbal translation — dobeseden prevod;2.nounglagolnik -
30 overreact
-
31 sensibilities
noun plural (feelings that can be easily hurt by criticism etc: Do try not to offend her sensibilities.) preobčutljivost -
32 shrug off
(to dismiss, get rid of or treat as unimportant: She shrugged off all criticism.) odmisliti -
33 take to heart
1) (to be made very sad or upset by: You mustn't take his unkind remarks to heart.) k srcu si gnati2) (to pay attention to: He's taken my criticism to heart - his work has improved.) k srcu s vzeti
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Criticism — is the judgement of the merits and faults of the work or actions of an individual or group by another (the critic). To criticize does not necessarily imply to find fault, but the word is often taken to mean the simple expression of an objection… … Wikipedia
criticism — criticism, critique, review, blurb, puff are comparable when meaning a discourse (as an essay or report) presenting one s conçlusions after examining a work of art and especially of literature. None of these terms has a clearly established and… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Criticism — Crit i*cism (kr?t ? s?z m), n. 1. The rules and principles which regulate the practice of the critic; the art of judging with knowledge and propriety of the beauties and faults of a literary performance, or of a production in the fine arts; as,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
criticism — CRITICÍSM s.n. 1. Denumire dată de Kant şi de adepţii săi propriei lor doctrine filozofice, care considera că orice filozofie şi orice cunoaştere trebuie precedată de o critică a capacităţii de cunoaştere însăşi. 2. Tendinţă exagerată de a… … Dicționar Român
criticism — in everyday use means ‘finding fault’, although strictly criticism can be favourable as well as unfavourable. The sense is more neutral in terms such as literary criticism and textual criticism … Modern English usage
Criticism of C++ — Criticism of the C++ programming language refers to critical commentary directed at the C++ programming language, an evolution of the C programming language. Some of the criticism of the C programming language is relevant to C++ as well. Legacy C … Wikipedia
criticism — I noun abuse, accusation, admonition, adverse comment, analysis, animadversion, aspersion, blame, carping, caviling, censure, charge, chiding, commentary, complaining, complaint, condemnation, contravention, critical examination, critical remarks … Law dictionary
criticism — [n1] interpretation, analysis appraisal, appreciation, assessment, comment, commentary, critique, elucidation, essay, estimate, evaluation, examination, exposition, judgment, notice, observation, opinion, pan*, rating, rave*, review, reviewal,… … New thesaurus
criticism — c.1600, action of criticizing, from CRITIC (Cf. critic) + ISM (Cf. ism). Meaning art of estimating literary worth is from 1670s … Etymology dictionary
criticism — ► NOUN 1) expression of disapproval; finding fault. 2) the critical assessment of literary or artistic works … English terms dictionary
criticism — [krit′ə siz΄əm] n. 1. the act of making judgments; analysis of qualities and evaluation of comparative worth; esp., the critical consideration and judgment of literary or artistic work 2. a comment, review, article, etc. expressing such analysis… … English World dictionary