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1 corruption
n. bozulma, bozma, çürüme; ahlaksızlık, fesat, rüşvetçilik, rüşvet; yozlaştırma,* * *bozulma* * *[-ʃən]1) (the act of corrupting.) ayart(ıl)ma; rüşvetçilik2) (a word that has changed considerably from its original form: Caterpillar is probably a corruption of the Old French word `chatepelose' meaning `hairy cat'.) bozulmuş biçim -
2 smack
adv. şap diye, şapır şupur, doğruca, tam olarak, tümüyle————————n. şamar, tokat, şaplak, şapırtı, şapırdama, şapır şupur öpüş, hafif tad, lezzet, tutam (tuz vb.), iz, tek direkli balıkçı teknesi, canlı balık tutan tekne, şap, şak, şapırt————————v. şapırdatmak, şaplak atmak, şaplatmak, şaklatmak, şamar atmak, tokatlamak, şapır şupur öpmek* * *1. tokat at (v.) 2. tokat (n.)* * *I 1. [smæk] verb(to strike smartly and loudly; to slap: She smacked the child's hand/bottom.) tokatlamak, şamar vurmak2. noun((the sound of) a blow of this kind; a slap: He could hear the smack of the waves against the side of the ship.) tokat, şamar3. adverb(directly and with force: He ran smack into the door.) anîden; hızlaII 1. [smæk] verb((with of) to have a suggestion of: The whole affair smacks of prejudice.) kokmak, belirtisi olmak2. nounThere's a smack of corruption about this affair.) belirti, emare
См. также в других словарях:
corruption — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ endemic, massive, rampant, rife, widespread ▪ Corruption was rife before the election. ▪ gross, serious … Collocations dictionary
corruption — corrupt ► ADJECTIVE 1) willing to act dishonestly in return for money or personal gain. 2) evil or morally depraved. 3) (of a text or computer data) made unreliable by errors or alterations. 4) archaic rotten or putrid. ► VERB 1) make corrupt. 2) … English terms dictionary
corruption — cor‧rup‧tion [kəˈrʌpʆn] noun [uncountable] 1. LAW the crime of giving or receiving money, gifts, a better job etc in exchange for doing something dishonest or illegal: • He denies twelve counts of corruption. • The Chamber of Deputies voted to… … Financial and business terms
corruption — I noun abuse of public trust, act of bribing, act of profiteering, baseness, breach of faith, breach of trust, bribery, complicity, conduct involving graft, corrupt inducement, corruptela, corruptibility, corruptio, crime, criminality, debasement … Law dictionary
corruption — noun 1) political corruption Syn: dishonesty, unscrupulousness, double dealing, fraud, fraudulence, misconduct, crime, criminality, wrongdoing; bribery, venality, extortion, profiteering, payola; informal graft, grift, crookedness … Thesaurus of popular words
Corruption Perceptions Index — UK US noun [S] (ABBREVIATION CPI) GOVERNMENT, POLITICS, LAW ► a list of the countries of the world showing how much corruption is thought to exist among its public officials and politicians, published by Transparency International … Financial and business terms
corruption — noun 1 (U) dishonest, illegal, or immoral behaviour, especially from someone with power: The Chief Executive is being investigated for alleged corruption. 2 (countable usually singular) a changed form of something, for example a word: The word… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
corruption — noun 1) political corruption Syn: dishonesty, unscrupulousness, double dealing, fraud, misconduct, bribery, venality; N.Amer. payola; informal graft, sleaze 2) his fall into corruption Syn: immorality … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
corruption — noun a) The act of corrupting or of impairing integrity, virtue, or moral principle; the state of being corrupted or debased; loss of purity or integrity; depravity; wickedness; impurity; bribery. It was necessary, by exposing the gross… … Wiktionary
corruption — mid 14c., of material things, especially dead bodies, also of the soul, morals, etc., from L. corruptionem (nom. corruptio), noun of action from pp. stem of corrumpere (see CORRUPT (Cf. corrupt)). Of public offices from early 15c.; of language… … Etymology dictionary
corruption — noun Date: 14th century 1. a. impairment of integrity, virtue, or moral principle ; depravity b. decay, decomposition c. inducement to wrong by improper or unlawful means (as … New Collegiate Dictionary