|
Перевод: dread
[прилагательное] страшный; ужасный; [существительное] страх ; боязнь ; опасения ; опаска ; то, что порождает страх; тот, кто внушает страх; пугало; [глагол] бояться; страшиться; опасаться
Тезаурус:
- The letter is interesting, though, for the light it casts on his rooted dread of mental imbalance, and on his horrified feeling that the unsatisfactory relations which had existed between himself and his father since eariy adolescence might somehow mar him for the rest of his life: You and I are both qualified for it neurosis because we were both afraid of our fathers as children.
- He stood there watching the blood-red satin drop into Manila Bay, then took a visitor's hand and guided it over his forehead, each bump sending a vague dread thought through the fingers.
- I was nourished on stories like these; William Wallace, slaying half a dozen English soldiers with his fishing rod; Bruce, before Bannockburn, felling an English knight with one stroke from his slender battle-axe; and when I was a boy I contracted a mortal dread of dying in bed.
- His colleague Fleming's humiliation on horseback had made him dread the same thing for himself.
- But I do not think it is this threat alone which explains the sick feeling of dread - rather like the feeling of a man who knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight - which clouds the prospect of a Labour victory.
- What will happen when you publish on Sundays as well, I dread to think.
- He saw the new drugs as a threat to his well-being, and lived in dread of the day when they might be prescribed for him.
- She no longer looked forward to each day, so much had she come to dread her sister's peremptory orders, the changes of routine, the explanatory telephone calls.
- With dread but in the end inevitability, I moved my left arm.
- LORD Spencer's death might have served to remind this country of the dread winter of 1978/1979 when rubbish was uncollected in the streets, the fire brigades were on strike, hospitals were picketed by auxiliary workers who demanded to approve all surgical operations, housewives fought each other over a cauliflower leaf and the dead lay unburied in every churchyard.
- The thought, perhaps, is borrowed from Tolkien, whose immortals cannot see why men dread death.
- I think of it with loathing and dread; have visions of designing the no-need-to-clear-mask and then return to reality.
- And then, he wrote, there is the question of why that dread should also be a source of excitement.
|
|
|