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21 nurture
пестоватьEnglish-Russian dictionary of scientific and technical difficulties vocabulary > nurture
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22 nurture
воспитаниевоспитаниявыведениекормпища -
23 nurture
воспитывать; воспитание -
24 nurture
v. vzpitati · взпитати vp. -
25 nurture of the mind
развитие умственных способностей.* * *развитие умственных способностей. -
26 nurture a plan
Дипломатический термин: вынашивать план -
27 nurture a snake in one's bosom
Общая лексика: пригреть змею на грудиУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > nurture a snake in one's bosom
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28 nurture changes
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29 nurture confidence
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30 nurture hope
СМИ: лелеять надежду -
31 nurture innovation
Общая лексика: развивать инновации -
32 nurture is stronger than nature
Пословица: воспитание сильнее природыУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > nurture is stronger than nature
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33 nurture of the mind
Макаров: развитие умственных способностей -
34 nurture skills
Общая лексика: развивать навыки -
35 nurture talks
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36 nurture ties
СМИ: заботиться о связях, не оставлять ( свои) связи без внимания -
37 nurture a plan
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38 nature versus nurture
соц., псих. = nature-nurture debate -
39 nature vs nurture
соц., псих. = nature-nurture debate -
40 nature-nurture debate
соц., псих. дискуссия о соотношении природы и воспитания (конкуренция двух различных подходов к объяснению мышления и поведения человека: насколько они определяются врожденными характеристиками и насколько их определяет внешняя среда и образование; этот дискурс имеет очень древнюю природу и в настоящее время находит выражение в научных спорах по поводу роли генетической наследственности)Syn:See:
См. также в других словарях:
Nurture — Nur ture, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Nurtured}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Nurturing}.] 1. To feed; to nourish. [1913 Webster] 2. To educate; to bring or train up. [1913 Webster] He was nurtured where he had been born. Sir H. Wotton. [1913 Webster] Syn: To… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Nurture — Nur ture, n. [OE. norture, noriture, OF. norriture, norreture, F. nourriture, fr. L. nutritura a nursing, suckling. See {Nourish}.] 1. The act of nourishing or nursing; tender care; education; training. [1913 Webster] A man neither by nature nor… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
nurture — I verb advance, aid, assist, back, bolster, bring to maturity, bring up, care for, cherish, coach, cultivate, develop, direct, educate, encourage, enrich, feed, fortify, forward, foster, further, give aid, harbor, help, improve, instruct,… … Law dictionary
nurture — [n] development, nourishment breeding, care, diet, discipline, edibles, education, feed, food, instruction, nutriment, provender, provisions, rearing, subsistence, sustenance, training, upbringing, viands, victuals; concepts 457,712 Ant.… … New thesaurus
nurture — vb foster, *nurse, cherish, cultivate Analogous words: raise, rear (see LIFT): train, educate, school, discipline (see TEACH): *support, uphold, back Contrasted words: *neglect, overlook, disregard, ignore … New Dictionary of Synonyms
nurture — ► VERB 1) rear and encourage the development of (a child). 2) cherish (a hope, belief, or ambition). ► NOUN 1) the action or process of nurturing. 2) upbringing, education, and environment as a factor determining personality. Often contrasted… … English terms dictionary
nurture — [nʉr′chər] n. [ME < OFr norreture < LL nutritura, pp. of L nutrire, to nourish: see NURSE] 1. anything that nourishes; food; nutriment 2. the act or process of raising or promoting the development of; training, educating, fostering, etc.:… … English World dictionary
nurture — {<charset c=U><HR> } 01. A study done by British researchers in 1995 determined that a sense of humor was dependant upon [nurture], not nature. 02. You should [nurture] those qualities of your character which are most likely to help… … Grammatical examples in English
nurture — [[t]nɜ͟ː(r)tʃə(r)[/t]] nurtures, nurturing, nurtured 1) VERB If you nurture something such as a young child or a young plant, you care for it while it is growing and developing. [FORMAL] [V n] Parents want to know the best way to nurture and… … English dictionary
nurture — {{11}}nurture (n.) c.1300, breeding, upbringing, from O.Fr. norture, nourreture food, nourishment; education, training, from L.L. nutritia (see NURSERY (Cf. nursery)). {{12}}nurture (v.) to feed or nourish, early 15c., from NURTURE (Cf. nurture)… … Etymology dictionary
nurture — nurturable, adj. nurtureless, adj. nurturer, n. /nerr cheuhr/, v., nurtured, nurturing, n. v.t. 1. to feed and protect: to nurture one s offspring. 2. to support and encourage, as during the period of training or development; foster: to nurture… … Universalium