-
101 caos total
m.total chaos, pandemonium, mayhem. -
102 mutilación criminal
f.mayhem. -
103 تشويه
تَشْوِيه(الشّكْلِ أو الجِسْمِ أو الوَجْهِ إلخ)deformation, disfigurement, defacement, distortion, mutilation; mayhem; deformity, misshapenness, malformation -
104 تعطيل
تَعْطِيلbreakdown, breaking down; disablement, incapacitation, mayhem, crippling; suspension, temporary ban or stoppage; abeyance, temporary inactivity; disruption, interruption; paralyzation, neutralization, frustration, putting out of action; deactivation, inactivation; defusing -
105 تمثيل بالقتيل أو بالجثة
تَمْثِيلٌ بِالقَتِيلِ أو بِالجُثّة: تَشْويهmayhem, mutilation, maiming, mangling -
106 беспредел
-
107 хаос
1. mayhem2. pandemonium3. chaos4. clutterСинонимический ряд:непорядок (сущ.) бедлам; безалаберщина; безалаберщину; беспорядок; бестолковщина; бестолковщину; ералаш; кавардак; каша; кашу; непорядок; неразбериха; неразбериху; неурядица; неурядицу; путаница; путаницу; сумбур; сумятица; сумятицуАнтонимический ряд: -
108 East Timor
Colony of Portugal from the 16th century to December 1975, with an area of 40,000 square kilometers (18,989 square miles). East Timor is located on the eastern portion of the island of Timor in the Indonesian archipelago. From 1975 to August 1999, when it was forcibly annexed and occupied by Indonesia, until May 2002, when it achieved full independence, East Timor was, in effect, a ward of the United Nations.In the 16th century, the Portuguese established trading posts on the island, but for centuries few Portuguese settled there, and the "colony" remained isolated and neglected. After the Dutch won control of Indonesia, there was a territorial dispute with Portugal as to who "owned" what on the island of Timor. In 1859, this question was decided as the Dutch and Portuguese governments formally divided the island into a Dutch portion (west) and the Portuguese colony (east) and established the frontier. From the late 19th century to World War I, Portugal consolidated its control of East Timor by means of military campaigns against the Timorese tribes. In addition to colonial officials, a few Portuguese missionaries and merchants occupied East Timor, but few Portuguese ever settled there.East Timor's geographic location close to the north coast of Australia and its sharing of one island in the Dutch colony catapulted it into world affairs early in World War II. To forestall a Japanese invasion of Timor, a joint Dutch-Australian expedition landed on 17 December 1941; the Portuguese authorities neither resisted nor cooperated. In February 1942, when Japanese troops landed in Timor, the small allied force fled to the hills and later was evacuated to Australia. Japan occupied all of Timor and the remainder of the Dutch East Indies until Japan's surrender in September 1945. Portugal soon reassumed control.After the Revolution of 25 April 1974, East Timorese nationalist parties hoped for rapid decolonization and independence with Lisbon's cooperation. But on 28 November 1975, before a preoccupied Portugal could work out a formal transfer of power, the Revolutionary Front of Independent East Timor (FRETILIN), then in control of the former colony's capital, declared independence, and, on 7 December 1975, Indonesian armed forces swiftly invaded, occupied, and annexed East Timor. In the following years, a tragic loss of life occurred. Portugal refused to recognize Indonesia's sovereignty over East Timor and claimed legal sovereignty before the United Nations.As Indonesia persistently and brutally suppressed Timorese nationalist resistance, world media attention focused on this still remote island. Several sensational international and Indonesian events altered the status of occupied East Timor, following the continuation of FRETILIN guerrilla resistance. In November 1991, world media disseminated information on the Indonesian forces' slaughter of East Timorese protesters at a cemetery demonstration in the capital of Dili. In 1996, two East Timorese, Bishop Belo and José Ramos Horta, each a symbol of East Timorese resistance and the desire for independence, shared the Nobel Peace Prize. Then, in 1998, in Indonesia, the Suharto regime collapsed and was replaced by a more democratic government, which in January 1999 pledged a free referendum in East Timor. On 30 August 1999, the referendum was held, and nearly 80 percent of the East Timorese voters voted for independence from Indonesia.However, Indonesian armed forces and militias reacted brutally, using intimidation, murder, mayhem, and razing of buildings to try to reverse the people's will. Following some weeks of confusion, a United Nations (UN) armed forces, led by Australia, took control of East Timor and declared it a UN protectorate, to last until East Timor was secure from Indonesian aggression and prepared for full independence. East Timor had changed from a Portuguese colony to an Indonesian protectorate/colony to a fledgling nation-in-the-making.The status of East Timor as a ward of the UN was made official on 25 October 1999, as the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor began to prepare the country for independence. Appalling conditions prevailed: 70 percent of the country's buildings had been destroyed and nearly half of the population of 800,000 had been driven out of East Timor into uneasy refuge in West Timor, under Indonesian control. A territory without an economy, East Timor lacked police, civil servants, schools, and government records.With UN assistance, general elections were held in the spring of 2002; the majority of parliamentary seats were won by FRETILIN, and José "Xanana" Gusmão was elected the first president. On 20 May 2002, East Timor became independent. World luminaries adorned the independence celebrations: UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, former U.S. president Bill Clinton, and other celebrities attended. But East Timor's travails continued with civil strife and uncertainty. -
109 დასახიჩრება
vcripple, lame, mayhem, mutilate -
110 Chaos
n1. anarchy [fig.: disorder]2. bedlam3. chaos4. disorder5. mayhem6. snafu7. turmoil -
111 Chaos verursachen
-
112 schwere Körperverletzung
fmayhem -
113 Selbstverstümmelung
f1. mayhem2. self mutilation -
114 Verstümmelung
f1. dismemberment2. mayhem3. mutilation -
115 kaumingomingo
Maori for mayhem -
116 tirangorango
Maori for mayhem, mix-up -
117 csonkítás
mutilation, mayhem, concision -
118 összever vkit
to beat up, to commit a mayhem on sy -
119 צער
צַעַרm. (preced.) pain, grief, trouble. B. Kam.VIII, 1, v. נֵזֶק. Ib. 84a; 26b (ref. to Ex. 21:25) ליתן צ׳ במקום נזק this intimates that you must decree indemnity for pain even where injury has been inflicted (in addition to damages for mayhem). Snh.19b, a. e. צ׳ גידול בנים, v. גִּידּוּל. Taan.11a בזמן … שרוי בצ׳ when the community is in trouble (and holds a fast). Ib. הואיל וישראל שרויין בצ׳ … עמהם בצ׳ as Israel is in trouble (suffering the privations of warfare), I (Moses), too, will suffer privations with them, v. צָעַר. Ib. 10b בדבר של צ׳ עושה … ע׳ הוא לו in a matter of affliction, one may act (as if he were a distinguished person) …, for his motive is not self-elevation but affliction (sympathy with public sufferings). Gen. R. s. 52, end צַעֲרוֹ של אישוכ׳ the privation (abstinence from sexual contact) is felt more intensely by the man than by the woman. B. Mets.31a משום דאיכא צ׳ בעלי חיים because there is suffering of animals connected with the case (which must be relieved). Ib. 32b; Sabb.128b צ׳ בעלי חיים דאורייתא the duty of relieving the suffering of beasts is a Biblical law; a. v. fr. -
120 צַעַר
צַעַרm. (preced.) pain, grief, trouble. B. Kam.VIII, 1, v. נֵזֶק. Ib. 84a; 26b (ref. to Ex. 21:25) ליתן צ׳ במקום נזק this intimates that you must decree indemnity for pain even where injury has been inflicted (in addition to damages for mayhem). Snh.19b, a. e. צ׳ גידול בנים, v. גִּידּוּל. Taan.11a בזמן … שרוי בצ׳ when the community is in trouble (and holds a fast). Ib. הואיל וישראל שרויין בצ׳ … עמהם בצ׳ as Israel is in trouble (suffering the privations of warfare), I (Moses), too, will suffer privations with them, v. צָעַר. Ib. 10b בדבר של צ׳ עושה … ע׳ הוא לו in a matter of affliction, one may act (as if he were a distinguished person) …, for his motive is not self-elevation but affliction (sympathy with public sufferings). Gen. R. s. 52, end צַעֲרוֹ של אישוכ׳ the privation (abstinence from sexual contact) is felt more intensely by the man than by the woman. B. Mets.31a משום דאיכא צ׳ בעלי חיים because there is suffering of animals connected with the case (which must be relieved). Ib. 32b; Sabb.128b צ׳ בעלי חיים דאורייתא the duty of relieving the suffering of beasts is a Biblical law; a. v. fr.
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