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Перевод: cotter
[существительное] батрак ; бедняк-арендатор ; клин ; чека ; шпонка ; шплинт
Тезаурус:
- He had spent a couple of minutes chatting to a slightly wary Tom Cotter, the Station Master, before starting the two mile walk home to Ham.
- Cotter Force
- I left the road halfway between the Cotterdale Road end and Hardraw and walked with Bill the dog and Eddie the landlord from the Sun in Dent along to the signpost that pointed the way to Cotter Force.
- But besides the falls I've just mentioned there are many more falls and forces like Cotter Force, Catrigg Force and Scaleber Force which, perhaps because they are a little less accessible, are visited by far fewer people, although they are also arguably less impressive because they don't fall as far or there aren't as many of them.
- Three miles out of Hawes on the Sedbergh road, a signposted footpath leads through pleasant fields to Cotter Force, a lovely waterfall descending in steps and embowered in trees, a scene perfectly posed for the camera.
- The Marine Caterer for October 1911 records that foreign labour having been introduced into Cunard, Mr Cotter, among others was put out of the Mauritania and that in 1909 he asked the assistance of the Liverpool Trades Council to organise seagoing stewards.
- I used Hardraw as a starting and finishing point of a walk that goes first to Cotter Force, then passes along Cotterdale up on to Shunner Fell, crosses the Butter Tubs to Lovely Seat and returns by the upper falls above Hardraw Falls to the village itself.
- COTTER FORCE
- Tom Cotter, the little fat station master who had gawked unashamedly at the beautiful girl on his platform, could still have had the same shirt on.
- The performers are: Susannah Jupp, Cliff Brayshow, Lee Broom, Don Cotter, Morgan Deare, Cassandra Holliday, Patrick Jamieson, David Peyton-Bruhl, Paul Tomany and Andrea Turner.
- But it seems that neither had any connection with a much more notable and wholly bona fide development, the National Union of Ships' Stewards, Cooks, Butchers and Bakers which appeared in Liverpool in 1909 under the charismatic leadership of Joe Cotter, known as Explosive Joe, who, it has been claimed, had been fired by the Cunard Line for agitating against the influx of continental cooks and stewards on to British ships.
- Cotter, Lewis and Shinwell
- Lostwithiel too dealt with its scolds by means of the ducking stool near the mill by Cotter Lake, close to the present railway station.
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