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right+party

  • 1 right

    [raɪt]
    1. adjective
    1) on or related to the side of the body which in most people has the more skilful hand, or to the side of a person or thing which is toward the east when that person or thing is facing north (opposite to left):

    When I'm writing, I hold my pen in my right hand.

    يَمين
    2) correct:

    Is that the right answer to the question?

    صَحيح
    3) morally correct; good:

    It's not right to let thieves keep what they have stolen.

    سَليم، أخْلاقي
    4) suitable; appropriate:

    When would be the right time to ask him?

    مُناسِب، مُلائِم
    2. noun
    1) something a person is, or ought to be, allowed to have, do etc:

    You have no right to say that.

    حَق
    2) that which is correct or good:

    Who's in the right in this argument?

    صائِب، مُصيب، على حَق
    3) the right side, part or direction:

    Take the second road on the right.

    جِهَة اليَمين
    4) in politics, the people, group, party or parties holding the more traditional beliefs etc.
    اليَمين السِّياسي
    3. adverb
    1) exactly:

    He was standing right here.

    تماما، بالضَّبْط
    2) immediately:

    I'll come right down.

    حالا، فَوْرا
    3) close:

    He was standing right beside me.

    قَريب
    4) completely; all the way:

    The bullet went right through his arm.

    تماما، كُلِياً
    5) to the right:

    Turn right.

    إلى اليَمين
    6) correctly:

    Have I done that right?

    I don't think this sum is going to turn out right.

    بصورةٍ صَحيحَه أو سَليمَه
    4. verb
    1) to bring back to the correct, usually upright, position:

    The boat tipped over, but righted itself again.

    يُصَحِّح، يُعَدِّل
    2) to put an end to and make up for something wrong that has been done:

    He's like a medieval knight, going about the country looking for wrongs to right.

    يُصَحِّح، يوقِف الظُّلْم
    5. interjection
    I understand; I'll do what you say etc:

    "I want you to type some letters for me." "Right, I"ll do them now.'

    أفْهَم، نَعَم، حَسَنٌ

    Arabic-English dictionary > right

  • 2 right wing

    1.
    the members of a political party who hold more traditional opinions:

    He's on the right wing of the Labour Party.

    الجَناح الأيْمَن
    2. adjective
    (ˌright-ˈwing) (having opinions which are) of this sort.
    يَميني الأفْكار

    Arabic-English dictionary > right wing

  • 3 Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático

    (PSD)
       One of the two major political parties in democratic Portugal. It was established originally as the Popular Democratic Party / Partido Popular Democrático (PPD) in May 1974, following the Revolution of 25 April 1974 that overthrew the Estado Novo. The PPD had its roots in the "liberal wing" of the União Nacional, the single, legal party or movement allowed under the Estado Novo during the last phase of that regime, under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano. A number of future PPD leaders, such as Francisco Sá Carneiro and Francisco Balsemão, hoped to reform the Estado Novo from within, but soon became discouraged. After the 1974 Revolution, the PPD participated in two general elections (April 1975 and April 1976), which were crucial for the establishment and consolidation of democracy, and the party won sufficient votes to become the second largest political party after the Socialist Party (PS) in the number of seats held in the legislature, the Assembly of the Republic. The PPD voting results in those two elections were 26.4 percent and 24.4 percent, respectively.
       After the 1976 elections, the party changed its name from Partido Popular Democrático to Partido Social Democrático (PSD). As political opinion swung from the left to the center and center-right, and with the leadership of Francisco Sá Carneiro, the PSD gained greater popularity and strength, and from 1979 on, the party played an important role in government. After Sá Carneiro died in the air crash of December 1980, he was replaced as party chief and then prime minister by Francisco Balsemão, and then by Aníbal Cavaco Silva. As successors, these two leaders guided the PSD to a number of electoral victories, especially beginning in 1985. After 1987, the PSD held a majority of seats in parliament, a situation that lasted until 1995, when the Socialist Party (PS) won the election.
       The PSD's principal political program has featured the de-Marxi-fication of the 1976 Constitution and the economic system, a free-market economy with privatization of many state enterprises, and close ties with the European Economic Community (EEC) and subsequently the European Union (EU). After the PSD lost several general elections in 1995 and 1999, and following the withdrawal from office of former prime minister Cavaco Silva, a leadership succession crisis occurred in the party. The party leadership shifted from Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa to Manuel Durão Barroso, and, in 2004, Pedro Santana Lopes.
       During 2000 and 2001, as Portugal's economic situation worsened, the PS's popularity waned. In the December 2001 municipal elections, the PSD decisively defeated the PS and, as a result, Prime Minister António Guterres resigned. Parliamentary elections in March 2002 resulted in a Social Democratic victory, although its margin of victory over the PS was small (40 percent to 38 percent). Upon becoming premier in the spring of 2002, then, PSD leader Durão Barroso, in order to hold a slim majority of seats in the Assembly of the Republic, was obliged to govern in a coalition with the Popular Party (PP), formerly known as the Christian Democratic Party (CDS). Although the PSD had ousted the PS from office, the party confronted formidable economic and social problems. When Durão Barroso resigned to become president of the EU Commission, Pedro Santana Lopes became the PSD's leader, as prime minister in July 2004. Under Santana Lopes's leadership, the PSD lost the parliamentary elections of 2005 to the PS. Since then, the PSD has sought to regain its dominant position with the Portuguese electorate. It made some progress in doing so when its former leader, Cavaco Silva, was elected president of the Republic of 2006.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático

  • 4 Christian Democratic Party

       Established originally as the Centro Democático e Social (CDS) in May 1974, following the fall of the Estado Novo, the CDS was supported by conservatives inspired by Christian humanism and Catholic social doctrines. In the first democratic elections after the Revolution of 25 April 1974, which were held on 25 April 1975, the CDS won only a disappointing 7.6 percent of the vote for the Constituent Assembly. In the following general elections for the Assembly of the Republic, in April 1976, however, the party more than doubled its votes to 16 percent and surpassed the number of votes for the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP). In 1979-80, the Christian Democrats joined the Social Democratic Party (PSD) in a coalition called the Aliança Democrática (Democratic Alliance), a grouping that defeated the Socialist Party (PS) in the succeeding elections. The Christian Democrats remained in the background as the principal party rivals for power were the PS and the PSD.
       In the 1990s, the CDS altered its name to the Partido Popular (PP) and featured new leaders such as party chief Paulo Portas. While the democratic Portuguese system had become virtually a two-party dominant system by the 1980s and 1990s, the PP would have opportunities, depending upon circumstances, to share power in another coalition with one of the two larger, major parties, the PS or PSD. Indeed, parliamentary election results in March 2002 gave the party just such an opportunity, as the PP won 14 percent of the vote, thus surpassing for the first time since the 1975 elections the PCP, which was reduced to 12 percent of the vote. The PP thus gained new influence as the PSD, which won the largest number of seats in this election, was obliged to share governance with the PP in order to have a working majority in the legislature.
       Various right-wing lobbies and interest groups influenced the PP. In early 2000, the PP proposed a law to the Assembly of the Republic whereby former colonists, now mainly resident in Portugal, who had lost property in Portugal's former colonies of Angola and Mozambique, would be compensated by Portugal for material losses during decolonization. The PP leadership argued that the manner in which the governments after the Revolution of 25 April 1974 administered the disputed, controversial decolonization process in these territories made the government responsible for compensating Portuguese citizens for such losses. The PS-dominated government of then prime minister, Antônio Guterres, argued, however, that independent governments of those former colonies were responsible for any compensation due. Thus, Guterres declined to accept the proposed legislation. This proposal by the PP and others like it followed upon other proposed laws such as Law 20, 19 June 1997, put before the Assembly of the Republic, which was passed under the aegis of the PS. This law pledged to compensate opposition militants (the survivors) who had opposed the Estado Novo and had spent years in exile, as well as in clandestine activities. Such compensations would come in the form of pensions and social security benefits. Given the strength of conservative constituencies and former settlers' lobbies, it is likely that the Christian Democrats will introduce more such proposed laws in future parliamentary sessions.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Christian Democratic Party

  • 5 партия правых

    Русско-английский политический словарь > партия правых

  • 6 Front National

    , FN
       Extreme right-wing and xenophobic political party, founded by Jean Marie Le Pen in 1972. The party is strongly Eurosceptic, anti-immigration, and traditionalist; party members, including Le Pen, have been prosecuted for racist remarks, negationism, and the downplaying of war-crimes.
       The Front National has been a significant force in French politics since the 1980's, particularly where they have been aided by proportional representation. They won 10 seats at the European Parliament in 1984, and then 35 seats in the French general election of 1986, after François Mitterrand introduced a degree of proportional representation into the voting system. PR was quickly dropped again after this, and the FN has never since had more than a single Député. However, in European elections, where PR has remained, the FN has continued to pick up seats, most recently with 7 in the 2004 election.
       In 1995, the Front National won municipal elections in three towns in the south of France, Orange, Vitrolles and Marignane, in "triangular" second rounds for which neither the socialists (PS) nor the main conservative party would withdraw their candidates.
       Perhaps the FN's most visible success was that of its leader, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in the 2002 Presidential election, when he obtained second place in the first round, thus securing a place in the runoff. It is interesting to note that in this second round, which was a massive victory for Jacques Chirac, le Pen took less than 1% more of the vote than in the first round.
       The high profile of the FN in French politics surprises many foreign observers, but it is not really a surprise in a country with a fragmented party political structure. France's biggest mainstream political parties have a tradition of instrumentalising whatever means possible in order to damage their opponents, and for a long time French left-wing parties have sought to portray the Front National as the natural ally of other conservative parties. Yet by blurring the distinction between this far right party other mainstream conservative parties, they paradoxically helped to legitimise the FN. Mitterrand's introduction of PR into the voting system for general elections in 1984, which propelled the FN into the limelight, was actually intended to stop the mainstream conservative parties from winning. The policy backfired, since the conservatives won anyway, and the FN obtained its own "group" in the French parliament.
       Currently (2008) the FN is in decline. The party has lost voters to other right-wing parties, and has had to sell off its flagship headquarters building in Neuilly-sur-Seine, in order to pay its debts. See Political Parties in France

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Front National

  • 7 Parteibuch

    n party card
    * * *
    Par|tei|buch
    nt
    party membership book

    das richtige/falsche Partéíbuch habento belong to the right/wrong party

    das Partéíbuch ab- or zurückgeben — to leave the party

    * * *
    Par·tei·buch
    nt POL party membership book
    das falsche/richtige \Parteibuch haben (fam) to belong to the wrong/right party
    * * *
    das party membership book
    * * *
    Parteibuch n party card
    * * *
    das party membership book
    * * *
    n.
    membership book n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Parteibuch

  • 8 вечеринка

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > вечеринка

  • 9 весёлая вечеринка

    1) General subject: clambake
    2) Jargon: knees-up

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > весёлая вечеринка

  • 10 веселая вечеринка

    1) General subject: clambake
    2) Jargon: knees-up

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > веселая вечеринка

  • 11 партия правых

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > партия правых

  • 12 centroprawica

    f.
    center-right party l. coalition, moderate right party l. coalition.

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > centroprawica

  • 13 Forza Italia

    * * *
    Forza Italia
    pol. = Italian centre-right political party
    \
    →  forza

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > Forza Italia

  • 14 Parteibuch

    Par·tei·buch nt
    party membership book;
    das falsche/richtige \Parteibuch haben ( fam) to belong to the wrong/right party

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch für Studenten > Parteibuch

  • 15 крайне правая партия

    1) General subject: protofascism
    2) Politics: far-right party

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > крайне правая партия

  • 16 П-539

    ПО ПРИНАДЛЕЖНОСТИ отправить, передать что и т. п. offic PrepP Invar adv
    (to dispatch, transmit etc sth.) to where it belongs
    to the proper (right) party (quarter, place etc).
    В отделе перевозки Сергееву сказали, что передадут доставленный им пакет по принадлежности. In the shipping department they told Sergeev that they'd pass on to the proper quarter the package he had delivered.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > П-539

  • 17 по принадлежности

    ПО ПРИНАДЛЕЖНОСТИ отправить, передать что и т.п. offic
    [PrepP; Invar; adv]
    =====
    (to dispatch, transmit etc sth.) to where it belongs:
    - to the proper (right) party (quarter, place etc).
         ♦ В отделе перевозки Сергееву сказали, что передадут доставленный им пакет по принадлежности. In the shipping department they told Sergeev that they'd pass on to the proper quarter the package he had delivered.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > по принадлежности

  • 18 крайне правая партия

    Русско-английский политический словарь > крайне правая партия

  • 19 Giscard d'Estaing, Valéry

       (adj. Giscardien)
       Born 1926
       President of France from 1974 to 1981. Valéry Giscard d'Estaing succeed Georges Pompidou as French president, thereby putting an end to 16 years of Gaullist presidency. Though a conservative, Giscard was from the UDF, the centre right party in the conservative coalition of the time.
       On becoming president, Giscard promised change after a decade and a half of Gaullist rule: more Atlanticist and pro-European than previous presidents, he nevertheless failed to embody the change that many people wanted, and was not reelected for a second term. He tried to give the French presidency more popular appeal than it previously enjoyed, and make it seem closer to ordinary Frenchmen, but his changes were more symbolic than real, and included walking down the Champs Elysées in a sweater rather than a suit, and inviting himself to dinner with ordinary French families from time to time.
       After his defeat at the 1981 Presidential election, Giscard returned to politics as an ordinary Député (MP), and also became strongly involved in local politics in his region, the Auvergne, becoming President of the Regional Council from 1986 to 2004.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Giscard d'Estaing, Valéry

  • 20 frankovac

    m hist member of the True Right Party; hist derog militant Croatian nationalist

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > frankovac

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