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Перевод: days
[существительное] эпоха
Тезаурус:
- Sadly, they won't carry him on one of his exciting runs to the tryline in the next eight days of Australia's Welsh tour because he sprained an ankle at training.
- If after two days, it's still the same - go to see a practitioner.
- Cleveleys has always been an important destination on the Blackpool and Fleetwood line, with an intermediate service operating there from earliest Company days.
- It was here in Chambers Street that Benjamin and Elizabeth Titford were living - probably, we may guess, as guests of brother Thomas at no. 11 - when they took their little son for baptism at St Mary Whitechapel in the March of 1809, a few days short of his first birthday.
- "Edinburgh is packed with refugees these days."
- Stacks of weathering timber stood between them in the days when four thousand men worked in the shipyard at the height of the Napoleonic Wars.
- In those days there existed another Methodist Society, known as the Primitive Methodists, and they had established themselves in Chiswick using a room in Devonshire Road, and working amongst the labouring classes of the community.
- The days of death rolled on inexorably towards the ending of the year.
- In fairness none of them appeared at the Berlin show that began only two days after Paris, a show signalling a new frontier for the German manufacturers, who may just, in 10 years' time, give the French as much to think about as the Japanese do.
- Admission to a psychiatric unit was not thought necessary because she was able to make realistic plans concerning how she would cope during the next few days, and support was available from her children.
- It was not only that my grandmother had given birth to and brought up eight children, and with the help of a Mrs Pipkin (whose wages were ten shillings a week and an egg) run a large house for many years; there was the shop, and shops in those days were by no means labour-saving.
- In a few days you will hear that Stalingrad is completely in German hands."
- Whereas it hath been represented to us, upon the oaths of several of our trusty and well-beloved booksellers, that certain journeyman taylors, shoemakers, barbers, Spitaldfields-weavers sic, and other handicraftsmen, and that certain apprentices, shopmen, c. have assembled in certain clubs, called Spouting-clubs, and, having there intoxicated themselves with porter and poetry, have presumed to make rhymes, and discharge them on the Public, under the title of "Squires and Honourables, c. c. to the great annoyance of said Public, and of us, the said Reviewers; WE do hereby ordain and decree that everyone so offending in future, shall, for every such first offence, be chained to the compter, for a space, not exceeding twelve, nor less than six days; and for every such second offence, be not only chained to the compter for the said space of time (more or less) but be obliged to wear bob-wigs, and flapped hats without girdle or buckle, for the space of six months.
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