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41 r-ep
Сокращение: rational-emotive psychology -
42 r-et
Сокращение: rational-emotive psychotherapy -
43 ret
1) Общая лексика: hum. сокр. Rational Emotive Therapy2) Медицина: ретикулоцит3) Американизм: Renewable Energy Technology4) Военный термин: reliability evaluation test5) Техника: radio echo transmitter, return relay, ring-emitter transistor6) Телекоммуникации: Returning8) Университет: Resources For Educational Technology9) Физиология: Retention10) Вычислительная техника: Resolution Enhancing Technology, Report Engine Technology (CA, DB), Resolution Enhancement Technology (HP), resolution enhancement technology11) Нефть: retainer12) Глоссарий компании Сахалин Энерджи: Resident Engineering Team13) Сетевые технологии: Reality Emulation Technology14) Программирование: Return from Procedure15) Яхтенный спорт: yacht retired -
44 definition
[ˌdefɪ'nɪʃ(ə)n]сущ.1) определение, формулирование ( процесс); дефиниция, формулировкаa persuasive definition — стимулирующее, побуждающее определение
to formulate / give / provide / write a definition — дать определение
In any "persuasive definition" the term defined is a familiar one, whose meaning is both descriptive and strongly emotive. — В любом "стимулирующем определении" термин является общеизвестным, но к его описательному определению добавляется эмотивное значение.
Stipulative definition refers to a meaning a speaker attaches to a word, expression, or symbol that usually doesn't already have an established use in the sense intended. — Условное определение - это значение, которое говорящий сам приписывает слову, выражению или знаку, это значение "по определению"; до этого данное слово или выражение в таком значении не употреблялось.
Real definition provides a statement of the nature or essence of a thing. — Реальное определение описывает предмет через его существенные свойства.
Syn:2) отчётливость, разборчивость; ясность, понятностьSyn:3) радио; тлв. резкость, чёткость -
45 RET
сокр. от rational emotive (behaviour) therapy; психол.; = REBT -
46 affective
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47 emotional
эмоциональный имя прилагательное: -
48 soulful
душевный имя прилагательное:задушевный (sincere, soulful, cordial)душещипательный (soulful, heart-piercing) -
49 belles-lettres\ style
embracing numerous and versatile genres of imaginative writing (V.A.K.)••The purpose (the cognitive function) is not to prove but only to suggest a possible *interpretation of the phenomena of life by forcing the reader to see the viewpoint of the writer.- features of belles-lettres styleSource: I.R.G.See: functional style, stylistic deviceEnglish-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > belles-lettres\ style
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50 climax
a semantically complicated parallel construction, in which each next word combination (clause, sentence) is logically more important or emotionally stronger and more explicit (V.A.K.)Three types:- logical climax- emotive climax
- quantitative climaxWe were all in all to one another, it was the morning of life, it was bliss, it was frenzy, it was everything else of that sort in the highest degree. (Ch.Dickens)
I am firm, thou art obstinate, he is pig-headed. (B.Charlestone)
No tree, no shrub, no blade of grass that was not owned. (J. Galsworthy)
••an arrangement of sentences (or of the homogeneous parts of one sentence) which secures a gradual increase in significance importance, or emotional tension in the utterance (I.R.G.)••расположение слов и выражений в порядке возрастающего их значения (I.V.A.)Ant.: anticlimaxSyn.: climax, gradationEnglish-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > climax
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51 features\ of\ belles-lettres\ style
- use of words in contextual and very often in more than one dictionary meaning, or at least greatly influenced by the lexical environment.- a vocabulary which will reflect to a greater or lesser degree of author's personal evaluation of things or phenomena;- a peculiar individual selection of vocabulary and syntax, a kind of lexical and syntactical idiosyncrasy;- the introduction of the typical features of colloquial language to a full degree (in plays) or a lesser one (in emotive prose) or a slight degree, if any (in poems)- individual, distinctive properties, aesthetic-cognitive effect.Source: I.R.G.English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > features\ of\ belles-lettres\ style
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52 features\ of\ newspaper\ style
- alleges and claims, restrictions of time and space- special political and economic terms, non-term political vocabulary, newspaper cliches, abbreviations, neologisms;- syntactic constructions, indicating a lack of assurance of the reporter as to the correctness of the facts reported or his desire to avoid responsibility;- complex sentences with a developed system of clauses;- syntactical complexes: verbal constructions (infinitive, participial, gerundial) and verbal noun constructions;- specific word order - five-w-and-h-pattern rule: (who-what-why-how-where-when);- attributive noun groups (e.g. leap into space age);- headlines are the most concise;- considerable amount of appraisal (the size and arrangement, the use of emotionally coloured words and elements of emotive syntax).Source: I.R.G.See: особенности газетного стиля, newspaper styleEnglish-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > features\ of\ newspaper\ style
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53 features\ of\ official\ style
- special system of cliches, terms and set expressions; conventionality of expression;- each of subdivisions of this style has its own peculiar terms, phrases and expressions;- the encoded character of language; symbols: special terminological nomenclature, abbreviations, conventional symbols and contractions;- use of words in their logical dictionary meaning. There is no room for words with contextual meaning or for any kind of simultaneous realisation of two meanings;- word with emotive meaning are also not to be found, except those which are used in business letters as conventional phrases of greeting or close (as Dear Sir);- absence of any emotiveness: (commercial correspondence) emotional words and phrases;- compositional patterns, compositional design; infinitive object clauses;- a general syntactical mode of combining several pronouncement into one sentence, the whole document in one sentence [according to] its formal syntactical structure.Source: I.R.G.English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > features\ of\ official\ style
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54 general\ slang
such special colloquial words which- used by most speakers in very and highly informal, substandard communication- are highly emotive and expressive and as such- lose their originality rather fast and- are replaced by newer formations, unstable, fluctuating, tending to expanded synonymity within certain lexico-semantic groupsNow take fried, crocked, squiffed, loaded plastered, blotto, tiddled, soaked, boiled, stinko, viled, polluted"(K.Kesey)
"Do you talk?" asked Bundle. "or are you just strong and silent?" "Talk?" said Anthony. "I burble. I murmur. I gurgle - like a running brook, you know. Sometimes I even ask questions." (A.Christie)
Source: V.A.K.English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > general\ slang
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55 gradation
a semantically complicated parallel construction, in which each next word combination (clause, sentence) is logically more important or emotionally stronger and more explicit (V.A.K.)Three types:- logical climax- emotive climax
- quantitative climaxWe were all in all to one another, it was the morning of life, it was bliss, it was frenzy, it was everything else of that sort in the highest degree. (Ch.Dickens)
I am firm, thou art obstinate, he is pig-headed. (B.Charlestone)
No tree, no shrub, no blade of grass that was not owned. (J. Galsworthy)
••an arrangement of sentences (or of the homogeneous parts of one sentence) which secures a gradual increase in significance importance, or emotional tension in the utterance (I.R.G.)••расположение слов и выражений в порядке возрастающего их значения (I.V.A.)Ant.: anticlimaxEnglish-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > gradation
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56 jargonisms
such special colloquial words which- are used by limited groups of people, united either professionally (professional jargonisms or professionalisms) or socially (jargonisms proper)- cover a narrow semantic field, function and sphere of application- tending to expanded synonymity within certain lexico-semantic groupsSource: V.A.K.English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > jargonisms
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57 parallel\ construction
reiteration of the structure of several sentences (clauses), and not of their lexical "flesh"almost always includes some type of lexical repetition, and such a convergence produces a very strong effect, foregrounding at one go logical, rhythmic, emotive and expressive aspects of the utterance. (V.A.K.)I notice that father's is a large hand, but never a heavy one when it touches me, and that father's is a rough voice but never an angry one when it speaks to me. (T.Dreiser)
From room to room they went, hand in hand, lifting here, opening there, making sure -- a ghostly couple. (V.Woolf)
When a man wants to kill a tiger he calls it sport; when a tiger wants to kill a man it is ferocity. (I.V.A.)
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see
So long lives this and this gives life to thee. (W.Shakespeare - XVIII)
English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > parallel\ construction
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58 polysyndeton
многосоюзие, полисиндетонrepeated use of conjunctions- is to strengthen the idea of equal logical/emotive importance of connected sentencesBy the time he had got all the bottles and dishes and knives and forks and glasses and plates and spoons and things piled up on big trays, he was getting very hot, and red in the face, and annoyed. (A.Tolkien)
Bella soaped his face and rubbed his face, and soaped his hands and rubbed his hands, and splashed him, and rinsed him, and towelled him, until he was as red as beetroot. (Ch.Dickens)
Source: V.A.K.••the SD of connecting sentences, or phrases, or syntagms, or words by using connectives (mostly conjunctions and prepositions) before each component part- makes an utterance more rhythmical; so much so that prose may even seem like verse- has a disintegrating function (generally combines homogeneous elements of thought into one whole resembling enumeration);- causes each member of a string of facts to stand out conspicuously unlike enumeration, which integrates both homogeneous and heterogeneous elements into one wholeThe heaviest rain, and snow, and hail, and sleet, could boast of the advantage over him in only one respect. (Ch.Dickens)
Source: I.R.G.Ant.: asyndetonEnglish-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > polysyndeton
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59 slang
such special colloquial words which- used by most speakers in very and highly informal, substandard communication- are highly emotive and expressive and as such- lose their originality rather fast and- are replaced by newer formations, unstable, fluctuating, tending to expanded synonymity within certain lexico-semantic groupsNow take fried, crocked, squiffed, loaded plastered, blotto, tiddled, soaked, boiled, stinko, viled, polluted"(K.Kesey)
"Do you talk?" asked Bundle. "or are you just strong and silent?" "Talk?" said Anthony. "I burble. I murmur. I gurgle - like a running brook, you know. Sometimes I even ask questions." (A.Christie)
Source: V.A.K.English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > slang
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60 special\ slang
such special colloquial words which- are used by limited groups of people, united either professionally (professional jargonisms or professionalisms) or socially (jargonisms proper)- cover a narrow semantic field, function and sphere of application- tending to expanded synonymity within certain lexico-semantic groupsSource: V.A.K.English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > special\ slang
См. также в других словарях:
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Emotive — E*mo tive, a. Attended by, or having the character of, emotion. H. Brooke. {E*mo tive*ly}, adv. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
emotive — index demonstrative (expressive of emotion), sensitive (easily affected) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
emotive — 1735, causing movement, from L. emot , pp. stem of emovere (see EMOTION (Cf. emotion)) + IVE (Cf. ive). Meaning capable of emotion is from 1881; that of evoking emotions is from 1923, originally in literary criticism … Etymology dictionary
emotive — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ arousing intense feeling. DERIVATIVES emotively adverb emotivity noun … English terms dictionary
emotive — [ē mōt′iv, imōt′iv] adj. 1. characterized by, expressing, or producing emotion 2. relating to the emotions emotively adv … English World dictionary
emotive — emotional, emotive Emotional and emotive both mean ‘connected with or appealing to the emotions’, but emotional is the word more often used in the neutral sense ‘relating to emotions’ whereas emotive has a stronger sense of ‘causing emotion’: •… … Modern English usage
EMOTIVe — A Perfect Circle – eMOTIVe Veröffentlichung 2004 Label Virgin Records Format(e) CD Genre(s) Progressive Rock Anzahl der Titel 12 Laufzeit 48 min … Deutsch Wikipedia
Emotive — A Perfect Circle – eMOTIVe Veröffentlichung 2004 Label Virgin Records Format(e) CD Genre(s) Progressive Rock Anzahl der Titel 12 Laufzeit 48 min … Deutsch Wikipedia