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Перевод: disperse
[глагол] рассеивать; рассеять; развеивать; разогнать; разгонять; рассредоточивать; рассредоточиваться; рассеиваться; расходиться; разбредаться; разбрасывать; рассыпать; рассыпаться; распространять; исчезать; диспергировать
Тезаурус:
- If there was no natural cover, camouflage nets were slung over the trucks, while the men tended to disperse themselves some distance away, preferably in the lee of a rock.
- Mrs Thatcher's decision to back the library despite economic setbacks surely outweighs the decision to disperse the Conservative Party's own research library.
- Peak numbers are fairly consistently present in January and early February; numbers in December are often quite low, and the birds disperse rapidly in late February and March.
- Police sealed off central East Berlin and tried to disperse the crowds.
- The extremities of the cloud are rotating so fast that the cloud would disperse if it were not held together by some force of gravity.
- What is more, these helices in their turn aggregate, rather than disperse as bacterial cells in fluid culture usually do, and give a living, growing structure.
- Shake 5 to 10 drops of neat essential oil onto the surface of the water after after you have drawn the bath; agitate the water to disperse the oil.
- Cycle races followed, and after them no one wanted ti disperse.
- Lord Cameron came to the conclusion that there had not been a baton charge in Duke Street but that many policemen had drawn their batons individually and when ordered to disperse the march, had then used them indiscriminately.
- Females tend to disperse themselves among the males but in cases where a male has an especially good territory a female may opt to breed with him even if he already has a mate, rather than go for one without.
- The Sheriff of Cornwall chanced to be in the town and he and the Mayor persuaded them to disperse and go home.
- Once it had dispersed, Bunting was allowed to hold a meeting in the Diamond and for a short time afterwards there was tension as rival groups of teenagers faced each other, but police and DCAC stewards persuaded them to disperse before any trouble broke out.
- After this a section of the crowd marched to the Guildhall, from where they were driven back up Shipquay Street towards the Diamond, where two baton charges were needed to disperse them.
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