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Перевод: flashy
[прилагательное] показной; бросающийся в глаза; кричащий; дешевый; ослепительный; кратковременный; порывистый
Тезаурус:
- Lily held out a dimpled hand with a flashy ring on the second plump finger.
- He looked round; at the large woman with the flashy rings, the bald man, the other bidders.
- So she must be flashy for Purdy, devastatingly accurate for Roy.
- By contrast, genetically-engineered "human" insulin is flashy stuff, a rapid application of advanced molecular genetics to modify a therapeutic product.
- The policeman smiled showing large flashy teeth.
- On January 14 in Atlantic City he faces Michael Olajide, the flashy Liverpool-born Canadian nicknamed The Silk who dabbles in male modelling and was outpointed by Frank Tate for the IBF title three years ago.
- The shops are either flashy or dingy.
- Final Analysis (15) is a glossy psychological thriller by one of America's most talented but apparently mindless directors, Phil Joanou, whose debut was the flashy gangster movie, State of Grace.
- Predictably, the Koons exhibit dominated attention at a festival that included work from scores of internationally renowned, but less flashy artists, and even proved so provocative that one fanatic ended up slashing each painting with a knife, some four months after the show opened.
- Instead of Farrell or Foster, Hammersmith settled for a flashy Post-Modern office and retail development which, while providing the sort of covered spaces the borough wanted, led nowhere architecturally.
- On December 7th, it was Reagan's particularly flashy plaid jacket that distracted him.
- A flashy piece of pop gothic from Joel Schumacher, Flatliners details the attempts of a group of brattish medical students (Keifer Sutherland, Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon etc) to stop their hearts ("flatline" in medical slang), get revived a few minutes later, and in the process explore "death".
- Both houses combine elegant early metalwares (twelfth/thirteenth century), bronze vessels with silver inlay - which are expensive - with nineteenth- century imitations, more flashy but in the mid-hundreds.
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