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Перевод: applaud speek applaud


[глагол]
аплодировать; рукоплескать; одобрять


Тезаурус:

  1. I applaud and support the efforts by Bill Bates, food safety consultant at Control UK, in his attempts to get an arbitration board set up, but have reservations about the priority likely to be given to this by food minister, David Maclean.
  2. I too applaud the aims of the Alvey Committee .
  3. She has witnessed the party applaud.
  4. Having said that, if you weigh only 60 kg (132 lb) and yet still manage to sit your 90 kg (198 lb) opponent down with a solid thump to his mid-section, then the refereeing panel may well applaud your fervour with a full point.
  5. Mr Salmon then, quite illogically, goes on to applaud the presence of overseas players in League One.
  6. People are keen to applaud the successes of physically handicapped people who gain successful academic qualifications, and acquire practical skills.
  7. To revert to the trivial example of the letter posting: one would be willing to applaud the lack of certainty accepted by the person who resists the temptation to follow someone down the street and check whether a letter has been posted.
  8. "All Europeans who deal with the Masai inevitably, after a short period, appreciate that the Masai have certain characteristics which we, the British, deeply applaud", wrote the District Commissioner in charge of Narok in 1955.
  9. One can only applaud the selfless dedication of our law-enforcers.
  10. The people who conceived this film and the people who applaud it take certain masochistic fascination in casting themselves as the martyrs, poor innocents slaughtered by barbarians."
  11. I applaud Leigh Dayton's report on the growing need for more comprehensive approaches to the loss of biodiversity ("On the sowing of the species", 14 January).
  12. Its activities led to the British Film Weeks of 1924, which involved screening a programme of British pictures, accompanied by the sort of ballyhoo which left the public, according to critic Paul Rotha, "hypnotized into readiness to applaud the worst picture in the world because it was British."
  13. As I said in an earlier chapter, the principle of speaking is not to go on for more than a few minutes without getting your audience to do something - applaud or laugh or raise their hands.

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