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lack of candor

См. также в других словарях:

  • lack candor — index feign, palter Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • candor — I (impartiality) noun detachment, disinterestedness, disinterestness, dispassionateness, equitableness, equity, even handedness, evenness, fair treatment, fairness, justness, liberality, neutrality, nonpartisanship, objectivity, probity, unbias,… …   Law dictionary

  • RKO General — was the main holding company through 1991 for the noncore businesses of the General Tire and Rubber Company and, after General Tire s reorganization in the 1980s, GenCorp. The business was based around the consolidation of its parent company s… …   Wikipedia

  • Lie to Me — For other uses, see Lie to Me (disambiguation). Lie to Me Genre Drama Crime Police procedural Comedy drama Created by Samuel Baum …   Wikipedia

  • Earl Warren — For the swing saxophonist and occasional singer, see Earle Warren. Earl Warren 14th Chief Justice of the United States In office October 2, 1953 …   Wikipedia

  • suggest — 1 Suggest, imply, hint, intimate, insinuate can all mean to convey an idea or the thought of something by indirect means. Suggest emphasizes a putting into the mind as the result of an association of ideas, an awakening of a desire, or an… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Antidepressant — Fluoxetine (Prozac), an SSRI The chemical structure of …   Wikipedia

  • sly — adjective (slier or slyer; sliest or slyest) Etymology: Middle English sleighe, sli, from Old Norse slœgr; akin to Old English slēan to strike more at slay Date: 13th century 1. chiefly dialect a. wise in practical affairs b. displaying …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • sly — sly, cunning, crafty, tricky, foxy, insidious, wily, guileful, artful are comparable when they mean having or showing a disposition to attain one s ends by devious or indirect means. Sly implies a lack of candor which shows itself in… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • suggest — transitive verb Etymology: Latin suggestus, past participle of suggerere to pile up, furnish, suggest, from sub + gerere to carry Date: 1526 1. a. obsolete to seek to influence ; seduce b. to call forth ; evoke c …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • expedient — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French or Latin; Anglo French, from Latin expedient , expendiens, present participle of expedire to extricate, prepare, be useful, from ex + ped , pes foot more at foot Date: 14th century 1.… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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