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Перевод: each
[прилагательное] каждый; всякий; [местоимение] каждый; любой
Тезаурус:
- His mother noted the start and end times of each rocking session for every morning for one week.
- You were going to sell them at one and tuppence each.
- A business bargain or contract rests on the basic proposition that each party to the contract is in agreement.
- Received opinion in the art world is that he could command tens of thousands for each portrait.
- Two other experiments share second place and win 100 each.
- It is suggested that in the context of a monogamous union, adultery was elevated to the status of a sin (or indeed a crime) and grounds for divorce so as to reinforce this concept of marriage and, in the absence of birth control, to prevent the social "untidiness" caused by the production of children not the product of a couple married to each other, with all the inheritance and support complications which could follow.
- Edouard toyed with the idea of having the de Chavigny wine-labels redesigned, and each vintage ornamented by a leading artist, as Rothschild had done.
- Peter Calvocoressi has described the principle of Enigma as succinctly as it is possible to do: "The Enigma was an encyphering machine that produced a highly-variable scramble of the 26 letters of the alphabet by passing electric current through a set of moveable rotors, each of which by its internal electrical connections contributed to the overall scramble."
- Culturelink, which is published quarterly, profiles different organisations in each issue under its "Networking in Progress" section.
- A real teacher is unlikely to use an instruction like this, for 11-year-olds: "Find three ways in which you can tell from the drawings (of spider and crane fly) that they are the same as each other and three ways in which they are different."
- The Girls dared each other to go out with boys of their own age: after all they had to find out what a "French kiss" entailed.
- For instance, if a leaf spring was being made, each leaf would be tested against the pattern whilst work proceeded to ensure the correct curve.
- Firstly, there was the bare fact that two London East Enders, both of whom had left school at fifteen and were quite untutored in writing, had felt so passionately about their situation that, in different prisons and unknown to each other, they had each set themselves the daunting task of writing the equivalent of full-length books.
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