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Перевод: breed
[существительное] порода ; потомство; племя; поколение; [глагол] размножаться; высиживать; разводить; развести; расплодить; расплодиться; выводить; вывести; растить; вскармливать; воспитывать; обучать; вызывать; порождать
Тезаурус:
- Moreover, colour selection within a breed is a very recent trend and even in the late nineteenth century there was often a wide tolerance of colours in the breeds.
- The hymn-like "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now" was a testament to the fact that success didn't automatically breed contentment but it helps.
- Mrs Gawthrop's first Rottweiler was Adda of Mallion, who held her own at All Breed Shows in the UK; she was placed, which was difficult for a minority breed at the time, in variety classes.
- The Breed Club takes an active role in all things, including inspection of litters to help with the resale of puppies from litters which are bred within the Club's jurisdiction.
- She thought that breed was extinct, but he, fat, bearded, boss-eyed, aged thirty-six but looking fifty - an effigy of dissipation - was unfortunately very much alive.
- r and K selection tend to produce widely contrasting strategies for individual success in reproduction, which are in turn given expression in the types of social organization in which individuals live and breed.
- It was not at all certain, then, how he would fare against the younger breed of highly professionalized butlers looking for posts.
- By 1973, after the last major milking herd had been dispersed, only 70 purebred (or relatively purebred) Gloucesters were registered, but the breed society was re-established and, with the help of the Rare Breeds Survival Trust, the breed's numbers are slowly building up again.
- Despite once dominating the industry - and even controlling the basic patents that forced foreign competitors to licence their technology - America's robot makers are a vanishing breed.
- Their problems are manifold: besides the obvious troubles of handling and riding such horses, they may also be more difficult to breed or be prone to suffer from minor or even major illnesses.
- Many of the new breed were people for whom, in Andrew Roth's words "capitalism doesn't have an unacceptable face".
- They think we should breed lambs off them and we don't do that because they are too young to stand the environment," Mr Hartley said.
- Possibly more champions are made up in one year in Australia than the total achieved in the UK since the breed's first introduction.
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