2014-10-14

Politikai

Štai jie.



Sentencijos ir aforizmai
  1. Politikai ir vystyklai turi būti keičiami dažnai ir dėl tos pašios priežasties. – A. Kristi.
  2. Politikai visur vienodi. Jie pažada pastatyti tiltą ten, kur net nėra upės. – N. Chruščiovas.
  3. Tik patyręs nesėkmę menininkas suvokia savo tikrąjį santykį su kūriniu, tik patyręs pralaimėjimą karvedys pamato savąsias klaidas, tik nemalonėn patekęs politikas iš tikrųjų geba aprėpti politinę situaciją. – S. Cveigas.

Kas jie?

politikas

politik|as, politikė dkt.
1. politikos veikėjas.

2. šnek. asmuo, kuris domisi politika.


polìtikas, smob. (1)
1. asmuo, dirbantis politikos srityje: Blaivūs politikai ir šaltakraujai praktinio veikimo žmonės rš. Piktas politikas SD271.
2. asmuo, kuris domisi politika.
3. DŽ prk. gudrus, apsukrus žmogus.

Negi pilietikas...

Ir ne partizanas.

 
non-partisan (adj.)
also nonpartisan, 1872, American English, from non- + partisan.
FIRST POLITICIAN: Who's backing this non-partisan candidate?
SECOND POLITICIAN: The non-partisan party. ["Life," Sept. 29, 1927]
politician (n.)
1580s, "person skilled in politics," from politics + -ian. It quickly took on overtones, not typically good ones. Johnson defines it as "A man of artifice; one of deep contrivance."

politics (n.)
1520s, "science of government," from politic (adj.), modeled on Aristotle's ta politika "affairs of state," the name of his book on governing and governments, which was in English mid-15c. as "Polettiques." Also see -ics.
Politicks is the science of good sense, applied to public affairs, and, as those are forever changing, what is wisdom to-day would be folly and perhaps, ruin to-morrow. Politicks is not a science so properly as a business. It cannot have fixed principles, from which a wise man would never swerve, unless the inconstancy of men's view of interest and the capriciousness of the tempers could be fixed. [Fisher Ames (1758-1808)]
Meaning "a person's political allegiances or opinions" is from 1769.

...applied to public affairs...

politic (adj.)

early 15c., "pertaining to public affairs," from Middle French politique "political" (14c.) and directly from Latin politicus "of citizens or the state, civil, civic," from Greek politikos "of citizens, pertaining to the state and its administration; pertaining to public life," from polites "citizen," from polis "city" (see polis).

 


polis (n.)
"ancient Greek city-state," 1894, from Greek polis "city, one's city; the state, citizens," from PIE *pele- "citadel, enclosed space, often on high ground" (cognates: Sanskrit pur, puram "city, citadel," Lithuanian pilis "fortress").
Būtumėt pilietikais - niekas prie jūsų nesikabinėtų.
 
dabar...
 
Iš kurio poliaus peni jus?
 
Most of the significant tax havens existing today have developed around two principal geo-political poles. One pole has evolved with close links to the City of London. This includes British Crown dependencies such as the Channel Islands, Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man, British Overseas Territories among which the most significant tax havens are the Cayman Islands, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Turks and Caicos and Gibraltar, and recently-independent British Imperial colonies such as Hong Kong, Singapore, the Bahamas, Bahrain and Dubai. Less significant in terms of impact, but more numerous, are newly independent British Pacific territories.

The other pole developed in Europe and consists of the Benelux countries - Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg - Ireland, and of course, Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

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