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121 верхня палата
( законодавчого органу) higher chamber, higher house, first chamber, upper chamber -
122 Herrenhaus
n1. manor house2. HIST. upper house* * *das Herrenhausmanor house* * *Hẹr|ren|hausnt1) manor house* * *Her·ren·hausnt manor house* * *1. manor house2. HIST upper house* * *n.manor-house n.stately home n. -
123 yuxarı
1. s. topyuxarı mərtəbə – upper floor, top flooryuxarı qatlar – upper layersyuxarı təşkilatlar – higher body, higher authoritiesyuxarı Palata (parlamentdə) – Upper Chamber2. z. up, upwardsyuxarı baxmaq – look upyuxarı qalxmaq (pillələrlə) – go upstairsyuxarıda – above; overheadyuxarıdan – from aboveyuxarıya – upwardsyuxarıda qeyd edilən – above mentioned -
124 State Council
гос. упр. Государственный совет ( верхняя палата парламента Словении)See: -
125 parlament
-tu, -ty; loc sg - cie; m* * *mi1. polit. parliament; obrady parlamentu parliamentary session, parliamentary debates; parlament dwuizbowy bicameral parliament; izba niższa parlamentu lower chamber of the parliament; izba wyższa parlamentu upper chamber of the parliament; wybory do parlamentu parliamentary election; zasiadać w parlamencie be a member of parliament; rozwiązać parlament dissolve parliament.2. ( budynek) parliament building, parliament.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > parlament
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126 чертог
1) (дворец, богатые палаты) mansion, palace2) upper chamber, chamber3) библ. temple -
127 Corporativism
Corporativism or corporatism, a social and economic doctrine or ideology, has been influential on several occasions in the 20th century. Based on Catholic social doctrines, corporativism began to enjoy a certain vogue among conservative parties in the First Republic. The Estado Novo adopted the doctrine as one of its main ideologies and strategies after 1930, although it took decades for the corporative system to be instituted in any comprehensive way. Antônio de Oliveira Salazar and his ruling group advocated the corporative system in the 1933 Constitution and the National LaborStatute of September 1933, but it was not until after a 1956 law that the system was put into operation.The Estado Novo's intention was to have greater control over the economy than the weak First Republic had managed by means of eliminating social conflict as well as the inevitable struggle between labor and management. New state doctrine declared that the regime under a corporative system would be "neither bourgeois nor proletarian." The idea was that corporativism in Portugal would be largely self-regulating and would promote social peace and prosperity. In fact, the corporative system became simply another part of the large state bureaucracy in the 1950s, l960s, and 1970s. Under this system, management was organized in guilds ( grêmios) and labor in official unions ( sindicatos). The state also organized special employer-employee institutes for rural workers ( Casas do Povo or "Houses of the People") and for fishermen ( Casas dos Pescadores or "Houses of Fishermen").An elaborate bureaucratic structure administered this cumbersome system. A Chamber of Corporations, representing all professions and occupations, was the upper chamber of the national legislature in Lisbon. One major aim or strategy of the system was to prevent labor strikes or lockouts, but after 1942's widespread strikes and later labor unrest it was clear that opposition labor groups, some organized by the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP), had engineered their own labor union system parallel to the corporative system. After the Revolution of 25 April 1974, the first provisional government abolished the Estado Novo's corporative system. -
128 Sinusknoten
■ In der Wand der oberen Hohlvene liegendes primäres Automatiezentrum des Herzens, das die Kontraktion der Vorkammern bewirkt und die Schlagfrequenz des Herzens bestimmt.■ One of the major elements in the cardiac conduction system, consisting of a cluster of cells that are situated in the upper part of the wall of the right upper chamber of the heart and generate electrical impulses.Syn. sinoatrial node
См. также в других словарях:
upper chamber — noun see upper house * * * ˌupper ˈchamber 7 [upper chamber] noun = ↑upper house … Useful english dictionary
upper chamber. — See upper house. * * * … Universalium
upper chamber — noun One of the two parts of a parliament in some countries. Syn: upper house … Wiktionary
upper chamber — noun another term for upper house … English new terms dictionary
upper chamber — /ˈʌpə tʃeɪmbə / (say upuh chaymbuh) noun → upper house …
upper chamber. — See upper house … Useful english dictionary
upper chamber — one of the two houses of parliament … English contemporary dictionary
upper house — noun or upper chamber : the house of more restricted membership in a legislative body having two chambers * * * ˌupper ˈhouse [upper house] (also ˌupper ˈchamber … Useful english dictionary
upper house — Synonyms and related words: Austria, Barbados, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Fiji, France, House of Lords, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Laos, Liberia, Malagasy Republic, Malaysia … Moby Thesaurus
chamber */*/ — UK [ˈtʃeɪmbə(r)] / US [ˈtʃeɪmbər] noun Word forms chamber : singular chamber plural chambers 1) [countable] a large room in a public building, especially one used for meetings the council chamber of Chiswick Town Hall a debating chamber a) an old … English dictionary
chamber — A room or apartment in a A private repository of money; a treasury. A compartment; a hollow or cavity. @ judges chambers The private room or office of a judge; any place in which a judge hears motions, signs papers, or does other business… … Black's law dictionary