shirabe.org
Ajustes
Español
Common
Acento tonal
Atamadaka (頭高型)
Nakadaka (中高型)
Significado Español · JMdict
  1. 1
    mala voluntad;malicia;rencor;malevolencia;maldad
  2. 2
    mala intención;de mala fe
  3. 3
    malicia
  4. 4
    intento criminal para engañar
Significado English · JMdict
  1. 1
    ill will;spite;evil intention;malice
    Don't read evil intentions into the ordinary actions of people around you.
  2. 2
    bad meaning
  3. 3
    law mala fides;bad faith;criminal intent to deceive
    Véase también: 善意 (ぜんい)
  4. 4
    law malice
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De Wikipedia
Español Wikipedia

La mala fe es la convicción que tiene una persona de haber adquirido el dominio, posesión, mera tenencia o ventaja sobre una cosa o un derecho de manera ilícita, fraudulenta, clandestina o violenta. La mala fe es transmisible, de manera que no sólo estará de mala fe quien efectivamente haya ejercido la violencia, fraude o clandestinidad, sino también a quien le fue traspasado el derecho de alguien que la haya ejercido o la adquirió de esa forma. La mala fe se opone a la buena fe, que es la convicción de adquirir un derecho por medios legítimos, exentos de fraude y de todo otro vicio.

es.wikipedia.org · CC-BY-SA

English Wikipedia

Bad faith (Latin: mala fides) is double mindedness or double heartedness in duplicity, fraud, or deception. It may involve intentional deceit of others, or self-deception. The expression "bad faith" is associated with "double heartedness", which is also translated as "double mindedness". A bad faith belief may be formed through self-deception, being double minded, or "of two minds", which is associated with faith, belief, attitude, and loyalty. In the 1913 Webster’s Dictionary, bad faith was equated with being double hearted, "of two hearts", or "a sustained form of deception which consists in entertaining or pretending to entertain one set of feelings, and acting as if influenced by another". The concept is similar to perfidy, or being "without faith", in which deception is achieved when one side in a conflict promises to act in good faith (e.g. by raising a flag of surrender) with the intention of breaking that promise once the enemy has exposed himself. After Jean-Paul Sartre's analysis of the concepts of self-deception and bad faith, bad faith has been examined in specialized fields as it pertains to self-deception as two semi-independently acting minds within one mind, with one deceiving the other. Some examples of bad faith include: a company representative who negotiates with union workers while having no intent of compromising; a prosecutor who argues a legal position that he knows to be false; an insurer who uses language and reasoning which are deliberately misleading in order to deny a claim. Bad faith may be viewed in some cases to not involve deception, as in some kinds of hypochondria with actual physical manifestations. There is a question about the truth or falsity of statements made in bad faith self-deception; for example, if a hypochondriac makes a complaint about their psychosomatic condition, is it true or false? Bad faith has been used as a term of art in diverse areas involving feminism, racial supremacism, political negotiation, insurance claims processing, intentionality, ethics, existentialism, and the law.

en.wikipedia.org · CC-BY-SA

Códice gramatical

Qué significan las etiquetas de color

Hiragana

ひらがな

El kana redondeado y fluido. El hiragana escribe palabras japonesas nativas, terminaciones gramaticales y todo lo que va sin kanji (o junto a él): es el primer silabario que se aprende. Cada carácter representa una sílaba.

Ejemplo

ねこ — gato