|
Перевод: dingy
[прилагательное] тусклый; выцветший; грязный; грязноватый; закоптелый; темный; плохо одетый; обтрепанный; сомнительный
Тезаурус:
- A dingy doorway.
- But one was left wondering at the decision to commit time, money and talent to this dingy piece of hokum.
- A scarlet neon sign, Susan's Sauna , subject of many nudge-nudge jokes at work, but to Vic merely a useful landmark, glows above a dingy shop-front.
- The girl felt a call coming like a flaming arrow across the dingy coffee bar.
- Play resumed just after four o'clock, the pitch having been sweating under the covers in the meantime, and the light decidedly dingy.
- In 1977, Kelly and the Malaysian rubber industry, with the support of the university's Earthquake Engineering Research Center, began testing rubber base isolators inside a sprawling warehouse in a dingy industrial district north of San Francisco.
- I stumble up the aisle to the immense ponderous tones of a god extolling the virtues of a restaurant in Moscow Road, Bayswater, and pass through some dingy curtains into the foyer.
- Life here, which was dingy enough with war conditions overlying the natural drabness of environment and narrowness of mind, was suddenly galvanised into alarm by the thought that half the population might not be decently married at all.
- Modigliani felt the pain of these visits more than any of them, and was horrified to see his old friend in dingy and sinister surroundings, humiliated and frightened.
- Albert's dingy sink had been scoured to its original yellow colour, and the window above it gleamed and winked with unaccustomed cleanliness.
- The muscular derring-do of our film heroes inspired us to imitative feats of climbing, usually trees; and their prowess in stalking and sniffing out was echoed in our exploration of sombre, dingy and often damp places.
- It was a house, a kind of shop with a rather dingy entrance.
- Leapor's house, for example, would probably have had a clay floor, and if its lighting was primarily from rushes, it would have been dingy.
|
|
|