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Перевод: devil
[существительное] дьявол ; черт ; бес ; сатана ; настоящий дьявол; сумчатый дьявол; сумчатый волк; коварный человек; страшный человек; энергичный человек; напористый человек; дьявольская штука; трудное дело; человек ; парень ; журналист, выполняющий работу для другого; литератор, выполняющий работу для другого; мальчик на побегушках; ученик в типографии; жареное мясное или рыбное блюдо с пряностями и специями; волк-машина ; [глагол] исполнять черновую работу для журналиста; исполнять черновую работу для литератора; надоедать; дразнить; готовить острое мясное блюдо; готовить острое рыбное блюдо; работать
Тезаурус:
- "We get offers from other finance houses but the prices are similar, so we think it's better to stick to the devil you know," said John Preen.
- Indeed the pact with the devil emerges as a favoured theme not only in Goethe's Faust , but also in Melmoth the Wanderer , the strange work of a Church of Ireland clergyman, the Rev. Charles Maturin (1780-;1824).
- It was Steve McQueen who was picked to play the French criminal determined to escape from Devil's Island where he has been sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of a pimp, of which he claims he is innocent.
- Two of the best plays to read from this period are Tourneur's The Revenger's Tragedy , and Webster's The White Devil .
- We may well wonder whether the ambiguity in the word servus does not hide a fundamental ambiguity running right through the period; and if we had asked the abbot of Saint-Germain, he might have answered that the servitude of serf and slave alike was a small matter compared with man's servitude, since the Fall, to the devil; and that all men were slaves.
- The anthropologist Margaret Murray used to say that the god of one religion becomes the devil of the next, and these legends may be a way of indicating that the sites to which they were attached had been sacred in pre-Christian times.
- Concluding the entry on Knock, the Curate next confided to his diary the tale of Father Vianney, a priest persecuted by the devil, who kept banging on the walls and throwing furniture around.
- Henry Compton was a good school, and I was a reasonable pupil - no cherub, but no devil either.
- At this point, the devil accosts her with further arguments:
- "The devil he is," she said quietly.
- Poole told me that some people were also shocked because John, in his role as the Devil, "disguised himself as a girl in point shoes, a tutu and a blonde wig, with his devil's horns showing through".
- The resulting fear and frustration would seem to be more in line with the mockery of the devil.
- He particularly hated the billy, with its ragged white beard and devil's eyes.
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