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Перевод: exceedingly
[наречие] чрезвычайно; крайне; очень
Тезаурус:
- It ran Britain exceedingly well under duress.
- Venus is exceedingly hot, partly because it is nearer to the Sun than is the Earth, but largely because its atmosphere is so rich in "greenhouse" gases.
- The final, most outstanding feature of tropical forest - not so obvious to the casual visitor, but exceedingly important - is the sheer speed at which detritus (leaf litter and dead animals) is broken down by insects, fungi, and bacteria.
- "The mills of God grind exceedingly small" - even if "the god of their cult" was disliked.
- Mr Baker said it would be "exceedingly difficult" for Mr Gorbachev to revitalise the Soviet economy but it was premature to predict failure.
- It is not a fantasy to say that Nancy has now come close to being a myth, and with a fiction writer that is exceedingly dangerous, for sometimes I ask myself, did Nancy ever exist?
- Emerson noticed this propensity of flags to make ordinary people "poets and mystics", to set off a tingle in the blood; and flags were festooned round Iran-contra like bunting, exceedingly hard Brought to trial, the players could not believe that their love for their country had caused them to commit crimes; and the light penalties handed down to all these men, with only Poindexter receiving a jail sentence, suggested that the judges, to some degree, accepted patriotism in mitigation.
- There was something inside me after all, and whatever it was - to my untutored mind it seemed that it must be exceedingly unpleasant, even hideous - it was not well .
- When I got back to the car, the fern was sitting in the boot in its pot looking exceedingly perky, if a fern can look perky.
- I was exceedingly lucky, I had something to fill my mind, a commitment for the whole of the spring and summer, a signed contract and a small advance to work off.
- When she did breathe "cancer", in her muffled contralto, the implications were of something exceedingly unfortunate with a strong hint of divine retribution, more often than not accompanied by a sharp, righteous, "be sure your sins will find you out."
- The core of the book focuses on the period between 1660 and 1857, when legal divorce was exceedingly rare and confined to the privileged.
- At no time did England lack a government which could give direction to religious affairs, whether that of Henry VIII, Mary and Elizabeth, or the minority government of Edward VI, presided over by the exceedingly tough Somerset and Northumberland.
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