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Перевод: expire
[глагол] выдыхать; угасать; умирать; кончаться; истекать; истечь; терять силу
Тезаурус:
- That authority will expire at the end of this year's Annual General Meeting and Resolution 9 seeks a renewal of it.
- Not that one would get that impression from the announcement made by WTA after the formal statement by the WIPTC that the constitution of the Council would remain unchanged, at least until current contracts expire at the end of 1994.
- "Every estate which must expire at a period certain and prefixed, by whatever words created, is an estate for years.
- The 3,000 or so subscribers to Mountain will help to bolster High's circulation figures with the added hope that when the ex- Mountain subscriptions expire, some will renew them with High .
- The agreement with Kenwood Travel, which gave discounts to Institute members on travel booked through the company, will expire this month by mutual consent.
- Harry says that a drop of methylated spirit dotted onto their backs from a camel hair brush caused them to turn pink and expire immediately.
- The grant of probate was expressly "limited to expire upon the date upon which the codicil dated 18 April 1986 be proved."
- My Lords, this appeal arises out of a memorandum of agreement dated 19 December 1930 and said to have created a lease for a term which was not limited to expire by effluxion of time and cannot now be determined by the landlord.
- Our shooting permits, after what had been eleven months of filming, were due to expire that evening and, though shot at the very end, the sequence on Anak Krakatoa was intended to introduce the very beginning of our whole ten years of adventure films.
- However, the government removed the golden share protection in response to the Ford bid, 14 months before it was due to expire, and the Ford offer was finally recommended to shareholders by the Jaguar board.
- about to expire,
- There is also the small matter of the Government's golden share which can block a hostile bid for Jaguar and does not expire until the end of next year.
- With 33000 general practitioners working 30 years or more (ages 35 to 65) this means an annual retirement vacuum of 1100; add to this perhaps 400 a year who retire or expire earlier or who move out of general practice, and this adds up to 1500.
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