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1 disregard
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2 airy
1) (with plenty of (fresh) air: an airy room.) erdvus2) (light-hearted and not serious: an airy disregard for authority.) lengvabūdiškas -
3 bring about
(to cause: His disregard for danger brought about his death.) būti priežastimi, sukelti -
4 contempt
[kən'tempt]1) (very low opinion; scorn: She spoke with utter contempt of her husband's behaviour.) panieka2) (disregard for the law.) nepaisymas•- contemptibly
- contemptuous
- contemptuously -
5 typify
(to be a very good example of: Vandalism at football matches typifies the modern disregard for law and order.) būti tipišku atstovu/pavyzdžiu
См. также в других словарях:
AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!! - A Reckless Disregard for Gravity — Aaaaa! Разработчик Dejobaan Games Издатель … Википедия
disregard — I (lack of respect) noun affront, aloofness, bad manners, belittlement, callousness, contempt, contemptousness, contumely, depreciation, discourtesy, disdain, disesteem, disfavor, dishonor, disobedience, disregardfulness, disrespect, heedlessness … Law dictionary
disregard — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ complete, total, utter ▪ blatant, flagrant ▪ callous, cavalier, cynical … Collocations dictionary
disregard — dis|re|gard1 [ˌdısrıˈga:d US a:rd] v [T] to ignore something or treat it as unimportant ▪ He ordered the jury to disregard the witness s last statement. ▪ Mark totally disregarded my advice. disregard 2 disregard2 n [singular, U] when someone… … Dictionary of contemporary English
disregard — I n. 1) to show disregard 2) willful disregard 3) disregard for II v. (K) we cannot disregard his coming late to work so often * * * [ˌdɪsrɪ gɑːd] (K) we cannot disregard his coming late to work so often to show disregard willful disregard… … Combinatory dictionary
disregard — dis|re|gard1 [ ,dısrı gard ] verb transitive to not consider something important or pay any attention to it: Please disregard my previous message. disregard dis|re|gard 2 [ ,dısrı gard ] noun singular or uncount the attitude of someone who does… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
disregard — I UK [ˌdɪsrɪˈɡɑː(r)d] / US [ˌdɪsrɪˈɡɑrd] noun [singular/uncountable] the attitude of someone who does not respect something or consider it important disregard of/for: What we are seeing is disregard of the law. complete/blatant/reckless disregard … English dictionary
disregard — 1 verb (T) to ignore something or treat it as unimportant: The judge ordered the jury to disregard the witness s last statement. 2 noun (U) the act of ignoring something that other people think is important: complete/total/blatant disregard for:… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
disregard — [[t]dɪ̱srɪgɑ͟ː(r)d[/t]] disregards, disregarding, disregarded VERB If you disregard something, you ignore it or do not take account of it. [V n] He disregarded the advice of his executives... [V n] Critics say he allowed the police and security… … English dictionary
disregard — 1. noun The act or state of deliberately not paying attention or caring about. The governments disregard for the needs of disabled people is outrageous. 2. verb To ignore … Wiktionary
disregard — 1. verb Annie disregarded the remark Syn: ignore, take no notice of, pay no attention/heed to; overlook, turn a blind eye to, turn a deaf ear to, shut one s eyes to, gloss over, brush aside, shrug off; informal sneeze at See note at neglect Ant:… … Thesaurus of popular words