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Перевод: cram
[существительное] толкотня ; давка ; нахватанные знания; зубрежка ; обман ; мистификация ; [глагол] переполнять; набивать; впихивать; втискивать; откармливать; пичкать; наедаться; натаскивать к экзамену; втолковывать; вбивать в голову; наспех зазубривать; лгать
Тезаурус:
- I feel very strongly that a man like Cram, who has served his country very well in the past and won a host of medals, deserves more loyalty.
- Because of the stress that such feelings may cause, their physical health is at risk just as much as it is in the case of the busy executive trying to cram 200 hours-worth of activity into those 168.
- "Steve Cram and people like him should be there.
- In addition to Linford there were most of the British track stars from Stuttgart the year before - Steve Cram, Tom McKean, Roger Black, Tim Hutchings, Colin Jackson, Kirsty Wade, Yvonne Murray.
- Steve Cram had to face Sebastian Coe in the 1500 metres, the man who had beaten him in Los Angeles, and Daley Thompson was to meet his three main rivals in the decathlon - Hingsen, Wentz and Kratschmer - in front of their home crowd.
- And have a tiny back yard because otherwise they couldn't cram so many boxes onto the site.
- This time Michael Spivak, described as the "original creator/producer", contrived to cram in four elements.
- THERE was a resounding message sent to Steve Cram, the man England have left out of the Commonwealth Games team, from the Scottish Indoor Championships yesterday.
- Verbal presentations often fail because the speaker tries to cram too much into too short a time, or goes on for far too long.
- 1947 saw her launched from the Kelvin yard and she is now the last sea going paddle steamer in the world, faithfully paddling the old route down the Clyde and out to the islands of the west when there are enough tourists to cram her nostalgic upper decks and saloons.
- "It's bad news about Cram," he said.
- The spacious boot coped admirably with everything they could cram into it in one week - picnic hampers, the weekly shopping, even the latest buys from Sue's visits to the garden centre.
- Staying cool and lovely in the midst of this bubbling cauldron was the interpreter Anna Legnani, seemingly word-perfect in a host of languages - including, after Steve Cram's conference, Geordie.
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