barbarism
31barbarism — n. 1 a the absence of culture and civilized standards; ignorance and rudeness. b an example of this. 2 a word or expression not considered correct; a solecism. 3 anything considered to be in bad taste. Etymology: F barbarisme f. L barbarismus f.… …
32Socialism Or Barbarism — infobox Book name = Socialism or Barbarism From the American Century to the Crossroads author = István Mészáros publisher = Monthly Review Press classification = Non Fiction release date = 2001 media type = Print pages = 126 isbn = ISBN 1 58367… …
33semi-barbarism — semi barˈbarism noun • • • Main Entry: ↑semi …
34barbarity — barbarism, barbarity Barbarism has the widest scope of reference, being applied to matters of taste as well as human behaviour, and it has a special meaning in relation to language (see barbarisms). Barbarity (and occasionally barbarousness,… …
35ВАРВАРСТВО — (barbarism) стадия развития, которая в ранних теориях общественного развития (см. Эволюционная теория) символизировала скотоводческое общество. Впервые термин в этом значении использовал Монтескье, выделив три основные стадии общественного… …
36barbarity — barbarism UK [ˈbɑː(r)bəˌrɪz(ə)m] / US [ˈbɑrbəˌrɪzəm] or barbarity UK [bɑː(r)ˈbærətɪ] / US [bɑrˈberətɪ] noun [uncountable] extremely violent and cruel behaviour …
37barbarity — barbarism ► NOUN 1) extreme cruelty. 2) an uncivilized or primitive state. 3) a word or expression which is badly formed according to traditional rules, e.g. the word television, which is formed from two different languages. DERIVATIVES barbarity …
38Facundo — Facundo: Civilization and Barbarism   …
39Michel Henry — (10 January 1922–3 July 2002) was a French philosopher and novelist. He wrote five novels and numerous philosophical works. He also lectured at universities in France, Belgium, the United States of America, and Japan. Contents 1 Life and work 1.1 …
40J. G. A. Pocock — John Greville Agard Pocock (born 7 March 1924), as a writer known as J. G. A. Pocock, is a historian noted for his trenchant studies of republicanism in the early modern period (especially in Europe, Britain, and America), for his treatment of… …