|
Перевод: chronicle
[существительное] хроника ; летопись ; [глагол] заносить в дневник; заносить; отмечать; вести хронику
Тезаурус:
- From the Northampton Chronicle and Echo and then Reuter's he arrived at The Gaurdian aged 28 in 1979, and is said to have covered 50 sports.
- "Our Planet Earth" - Watch on video an exciting chronicle of Man's exploration of space, a journey which has extended our horizons beyond the wildest dreams of even recent generations.
- The Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath 2 (1988), pp. 281-;358 (estimation of the bronze coinage in circulation in Britain); W. Esty, Numismatic Chronicle 1986, pp. 185-;215 (how to calculate die numbers from dies observed in a particular sample); M. Mate, Numismatic Chronicle 1969, pp. 207-;18 and P. Kinns, Numismatic Chronicle 1983, pp. 1ff (both on average output per die); F. S. Weiner, The Arch of Nero in Rome (1985) and M. Price and B. Trell, Greek Coins and their Cities (1977) (both on architectural types on coins); E. T. Hall and D. M. Metcalf (eds.),
- ( Police Chronicle , 1928)
- ( Police Chronicle , 1925)
- This "I" is the first-person narrator inside the frame of the provincial chronicle, the "character" Dostoevsky has turned himself into.
- Received the Queen's Award for Export Technology in 1990 and the Chronicle Echo Business of the Year Award in 1991.
- ( Police Chronicle , 1932)
- The system I have adopted is that of a CHRONICLE."
- (Chronicle of Lauresheim)
- The first six of these seven items originally appeared as "Sketches of London, nos. 4, 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20" in The Evening Chronicle ( see MORNING CHRONICLE) between Feb. and Aug. 1835 under a common subtitle, "The Parish", and were collected in volume form in Sketches by Boz , First Series, (Feb. 1836).
- The first came early and firmly, in February of 1870: "From a provincial chronicle.
|
|
|