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Перевод: about
[наречие] поблизости; приблизительно; недалеко; повсюду; неподалеку; относительно; почти; рядом; везде; около; вокруг; кругом; в обратном направлении; [предлог] около; у; близ; вокруг; кругом; относительно; о; об; насчет; по; [глагол] менять курс; поворачивать на другой галс
Тезаурус:
- Nature was seen as a process of strife between divine cosmic powers and demoniacal chaotic powers in which humans were not just spectators but were obliged to play an active part in helping to bring about the required phenomena by acting in full unison with nature.
- Journey time about 100 minutes Phone 071-;387 7070 or contact your local station for details.
- "What does Freud say about sadism and masochism?"
- These were meat eaters who admitted to not caring about their intake of salt, sugar, caffeine or calories.
- In the glow the lazy blue smoke of a cigarette folds in slow waves to vanish in the sepia shadows of the room Everything about us says come here, you , and our fingertips are first to arc between us and hover on cheeks, lips, chin.
- Meanwhile, the majority of their colleagues prefer not to talk either about their own attitudes to race or about racism in their schools.
- Concerns were expressed about S's time-keeping, non-school attendance and friendships.
- He has this image in his head of the kind of person he'd like to be, it's a cartoon character something about 2000 AD.
- Cocom is more relaxed about Eastern Europe than it is about Russia.
- There was a simple ordinariness about those brief appearances, during which Marcus enquired about Patrick's health; but how long could ordinariness continue and what would happen next?
- This leavening of men and women who had worked abroad for a number of years provided a yeast which helped to bring about change within the island.
- Yes - this is the risk that all energetic ladies should know about.
- And, although you do get Patsy Kensit to show that not all Boers are boors, there can be little doubt that casting like this will in the long run do more to bring about the end of white rule in South Africa than Robert Royston's worthy but long-winded drama of apartheid horrors.
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