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1 disapprove
[disə'pru:v](to have an unfavourable opinion (of): Her mother disapproved of her behaviour.) neatzīt (par labu); nosodīt- disapproving
- disapprovingly* * *neatzīt, nepiekrist, nosodīt -
2 censorship
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3 stream
[stri:m] 1. noun1) (a small river or brook: He managed to jump across the stream.) strauts; upīte2) (a flow of eg water, air etc: A stream of water was pouring down the gutter; A stream of people was coming out of the cinema; He got into the wrong stream of traffic and uttered a stream of curses.) straume; kustība; rinda3) (the current of a river etc: He was swimming against the stream.) straume4) (in schools, one of the classes into which children of the same age are divided according to ability.) klase (ar skolēnu dalījumu pēc spējām)2. verb1) (to flow: Tears streamed down her face; Workers streamed out of the factory gates; Her hair streamed out in the wind.) plūst; (par matiem u.tml.) plīvot2) (to divide schoolchildren into classes according to ability: Many people disapprove of streaming (children) in schools.) iedalīt skolēnus pēc viņu spējām•- streamer- streamlined* * *upe, strauts; straume; klase; plūst, tecēt; plīvot; izveidot klasi -
4 at the risk of
(with the possibility of (loss, injury, trouble etc): He saved the little girl at the risk of his own life; At the risk of offending you, I must tell you that I disapprove of your behaviour.) riskējot (ar) -
5 frown on/upon
(to disapprove of (something): My family frowns (up) on smoking and drinking.) nosodoši izturēties
См. также в других словарях:
Disapprove — Dis ap*prove, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Disapproved}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Disapproving}.] [Pref. dis + approve: cf. F. d[ e]approuver. Cf. {Disapprobation}.] 1. To pass unfavorable judgment upon; to condemn by an act of the judgment; to regard as wrong,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
disapprove — I (condemn) verb admonish, animadvert, belittle, berate, brand, call to account, cast aspersions on, cast blame upon, castigate, cavil, censure, chastise, chide, criticize, debase, declaim against, decry, denounce, denunciate, deprecate,… … Law dictionary
disapprove of — index decry, discriminate (treat differently), regret Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
disapprove — late 15c., disprove; as the reverse of approve it is first attested 1640s. See DIS (Cf. dis ) + APPROVE (Cf. approve). Related: Disapproved; disapproving … Etymology dictionary
disapprove — disapprove, deprecate mean to feel or to express an objection to or condemnation of a person or thing. Dis approve implies an attitude of dislike or distaste on any good grounds (as social, ethical, or intellectual) and an unwillingness to accept … New Dictionary of Synonyms
disapprove — [v] condemn blame, censure, chastise, criticize, damn, decry, denounce, deplore, deprecate, detract, disallow, discommend, discountenance, disesteem, disfavor, dislike, dismiss, dispraise, expostulate, find fault with, find unacceptable, frown on … New thesaurus
disapprove — ► VERB ▪ have or express an unfavourable opinion. DERIVATIVES disapproval noun disapproving adjective … English terms dictionary
disapprove — [dis΄ə pro͞ov′] vt. disapproved, disapproving 1. to have or express an unfavorable opinion of; consider (something) wrong; condemn 2. to refuse to approve; reject vi. to have or express disapproval (of) disapprovingly adv … English World dictionary
disapprove */ — UK [ˌdɪsəˈpruːv] / US [ˌdɪsəˈpruv] verb [intransitive] Word forms disapprove : present tense I/you/we/they disapprove he/she/it disapproves present participle disapproving past tense disapproved past participle disapproved to not approve of… … English dictionary
disapprove — dis|ap|prove [ ,dısə pruv ] verb intransitive * to not approve of someone or something: She wanted to confide in Alan, but was frightened he might disapprove. disapprove of: Why do you always have to disapprove of everything I do? strongly… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
disapprove — v. 1) to disapprove completely, strongly, thoroughly, utterly 2) (D; intr.) to disapprove of (they disapproved strongly of my proposal) * * * [ˌdɪsə pruːv] strongly thoroughly utterly to disapprove completely (D; intr.) to disapprove of (they… … Combinatory dictionary