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1 ascription
as·crip·tion[əˈskrɪpʃən]nthe \ascription of human feelings to animals is quite common Tieren werden häufig menschliche Gefühle zugeschrieben* * *[ə'skrIpSən]nZuschreibung fdifficulties arising from the ascription of emotions to animals — Schwierigkeiten, die sich ergeben, wenn man Tieren Gefühle zuschreibt
* * *the ascription of his failure to me is not fair es ist nicht fair, mir sein Versagen zuzuschreiben -
2 ascription
as·crip·tion [əʼskrɪpʃən] nthe \ascription of human feelings to animals is quite common Tieren werden häufig menschliche Gefühle zugeschrieben -
3 attribution
noun* * *at·tribu·tionnthe \attribution of this painting to Picasso has never been questioned dass man dieses Bild Picasso zuschreibt, ist nie in Zweifel gezogen worden* * *["trI'bjuːSən]n1) no plthe attribution of this play to Shakespeare — (die Tatsache,) dass man Shakespeare dieses Schauspiel zuschreibt
the attribution of the accident to mechanical failure — (die Tatsache,) dass man den Unfall auf mechanisches Versagen zurückführt
* * *attribution [ˌætrıˈbjuːʃn] s1. scholars do not agree about the attribution of this quotation to Shakespeare die Gelehrten sind sich nicht darüber einig, ob dieses Zitat Shakespeare zugeschrieben werden kann2. Zurückführung f (to auf akk)3. obs zuerkanntes Recht, (erteilte) Befugnis* * *noun* * *n.Beilegung f.Zuschreibung f.
См. также в других словарях:
Ascription — As*crip tion, n. [L. ascriptio, fr. ascribere. See {Ascribe}.] The act of ascribing, imputing, or affirming to belong; also, that which is ascribed. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
ascription — I noun accusal, accusation, alleging, animadversion, appropriation, aspersion, assignment, attribution, blame, citation, complaint, charge, derivation, imputation, innuendo, insinuation, obloquy, reference, reflection, reproach, slur,… … Law dictionary
ascription — (n.) 1590s, action of adding in writing; c.1600, attribution of authorship or origin, from L. ascriptionem (nom. ascriptio) an addition in writing, noun of action from pp. stem of ascribere (see ASCRIBE (Cf. ascribe)) … Etymology dictionary
ascription — [ə skrip′shən] n. [L ascriptio < pp. of ascribere, ASCRIBE] 1. the act of ascribing or being ascribed 2. a statement that ascribes; specif., a prayer or text ascribing glory to God … English World dictionary
ascription — noun Etymology: Late Latin ascription , ascriptio, from Latin, written addition, from ascribere Date: 1598 1. the act of ascribing ; attribution 2. arbitrary placement (as at birth) in a particular social status … New Collegiate Dictionary
ascription — /euh skrip sheuhn/, n. 1. the act of ascribing. 2. a statement ascribing something, esp. praise to the Deity. Also, adscription. [1590 1600; < L ascription (s. of ascriptio) a written addition. See A 5, SCRIPT, ION] * * * … Universalium
Ascription — The words used at the end of a sermon, beginning, And now to God the Father, etc. During the Ascription the people stand and at the end respond, Amen … American Church Dictionary and Cyclopedia
ascription — ascribe ► VERB (ascribe to) 1) attribute (a particular cause, person, or period) to. 2) regard (a quality) as belonging to. DERIVATIVES ascribable adjective ascription noun. ORIGIN Latin ascribere, from scribere write … English terms dictionary
ascription — noun The act of ascribing a quality or characteristic to … Wiktionary
ascription — (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun The act of attributing: assignment, attribution, credit, imputation. See GIVE … English dictionary for students
ascription — In allocating roles and statuses , or imputing allegedly natural behaviours, cultures make varying use of kinship, age, sex, and ethnicity. Such ascribed characteristics cannot be changed by individual effort, although social movements and states … Dictionary of sociology