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1 loyalty
noun loialitate -
2 allegiance
[ə'li:‹əns](loyalty to a person, group, idea etc: I have no allegiance to any political party.) loialitate -
3 be torn between (one thing and another)
(to have a very difficult choice to make between (two things): He was torn between obedience to his parents and loyalty to his friends.) a nu şti ce să aleagă între (...)English-Romanian dictionary > be torn between (one thing and another)
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4 be torn between (one thing and another)
(to have a very difficult choice to make between (two things): He was torn between obedience to his parents and loyalty to his friends.) a nu şti ce să aleagă între (...)English-Romanian dictionary > be torn between (one thing and another)
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5 endear
[in'diə](to make dear or more dear (to): His loyalty endeared him to me.) a face să îndrăgească- endearment -
6 exceptional
adjective ((negative unexceptional) unusual; remarkable: exceptional loyalty; His ability is exceptional.) excepţional -
7 faith
[feiƟ]1) (trust or belief: She had faith in her ability.) încredere2) (religious belief: Years of hardship had not caused him to lose his faith.) credinţă3) (loyalty to one's promise: to keep/break faith with someone.) cuvânt•- faithful- faithfully
- Yours faithfully
- faithfulness
- faithless
- faithlessness
- in all good faith
- in good faith -
8 fidelity
[fi'deləti](faithfulness or loyalty: his fidelity to his wife; fidelity to a promise.) fidelitate -
9 inspire
1) (to encourage by filling with eg confidence, enthusiasm etc: The players were inspired by the loyalty of their supporters and played better football than ever before.) a stimula2) (to be the origin or source of a poetic or artistic idea: An incident in his childhood inspired the poem.) a inspira• -
10 loyal
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11 recompense
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12 screen
[skri:n] 1. noun1) (a flat, movable, often folding, covered framework for preventing a person etc from being seen, for decoration, or for protection from heat, cold etc: Screens were put round the patient's bed; a tapestry fire-screen.) paravan2) (anything that so protects etc a person etc: He hid behind the screen of bushes; a smokescreen.) ecran3) (the surface on which films or television pictures appear: cinema/television/radar screen.) ecran2. verb1) (to hide, protect or shelter: The tall grass screened him from view.) a ascunde, a masca2) (to make or show a cinema film.) a proiecta; a prezenta pe ecran3) (to test for loyalty, reliability etc.) a testa4) (to test for a disease: Women should be regularly screened for cancer.) a consulta•- the screen -
13 subvert
[səb'və:t](to overthrow or ruin completely (eg a person's morals, loyalty, arguments, a government).) a răsturna; a ruina- subversive -
14 swear
[sweə]past tense - swore; verb1) (to state, declare, or promise solemnly with an oath, or very definitely and positively: The witness must swear to tell the truth; He swore an oath of loyalty; Swear never to reveal the secret; I could have sworn (= I'm sure) she was here a minute ago.) a jura2) (to use the name of God and other sacred words, or obscene words, for emphasis or abuse; to curse: Don't swear in front of the children!) a înjura•- sworn- swear-word
- swear by
- swear in
- swear to -
15 team spirit
(willingness of each member of a team or group to work together with loyalty and enthusiasm.) spirit de echipă
См. также в других словарях:
loyalty — loy‧al‧ty [ˈlɔɪəlti] noun [uncountable] MARKETING the fact of being loyal to a particular product: loyalty to • He has noticed a falloff in loyalty to particular brands of car. ˈbrand ˌloyalty MARKETING the degree to which people regularly buy a… … Financial and business terms
Loyalty — Loyalty … Википедия
Loyalty — Loy al*ty, n. [Cf. F. loyaut[ e]. See {Loyal}, and cf. {Legality}.] The state or quality of being loyal; fidelity to a superior, or to duty, love, etc. [1913 Webster] He had such loyalty to the king as the law required. Clarendon. [1913 Webster]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
loyalty — c.1400, from O.Fr. loialté, leauté loyalty, fidelity; legitimacy; honesty; good quality (Mod.Fr. loyauté), from loial (see LOYAL (Cf. loyal)). Earlier leaute (mid 13c.), from the older French form. Loyalty oath first attested 1852 … Etymology dictionary
Loyalty — (spr. Leuältl), Inselgruppe des Westlichen Polynesiens, zwischen Neu Caledonien u. den Neuen Hebriden; sie wurde 1803 entdeckt, 1827 von D Urville untersucht; die drei größten Inseln der Gruppe sind: Britannia, Chabrol u. Holgan … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
loyalty — I noun adherence, adherency, allegiance, attachment, bond, compliance, constancy, dedication, dependability, devotedness, devotion, duty, faithfulness, fealty, fidelitas, fidelity, fides, good faith, group feeling, incorruptibility, obedience,… … Law dictionary
loyalty — *fidelity, allegiance, fealty, devotion, piety Analogous words: trueness or truth, faithfulness, constancy, staunchness, steadfastness (see corresponding adjectives at FAITHFUL): *attachment, affection, love Antonyms: disloyalty Contrasted words … New Dictionary of Synonyms
loyalty — [n] faithfulness, dependability adherence, allegiance, ardor, attachment, bond, conscientiousness, constancy, devotedness, devotion, duty, earnestness, faith, fealty, fidelity, homage, honesty, honor, incorruptibility, integrity, inviolability,… … New thesaurus
loyalty — ► NOUN (pl. loyalties) 1) the state of being loyal. 2) a strong feeling of support or allegiance … English terms dictionary
loyalty — [loi′əltē] n. pl. loyalties [ME loyaulte < OFr loialte] quality, state, or instance of being loyal; faithfulness or faithful adherence to a person, government, cause, duty, etc. SYN. ALLEGIANCE … English World dictionary
Loyalty — For other uses, see Loyalty (disambiguation). Loyalty is faithfulness or a devotion to a person, country, group, or cause (Philosophers disagree as to what things one can be loyal to. Some, as explained in more detail below, argue that one can be … Wikipedia