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Перевод: fly
[прилагательное] осмотрительный; умный; знающий; [существительное] муха ; маятник ; вредитель ; полет ; расстояние полета; одноконный наемный экипаж; откидное полотнище палатки; крыло; длина ; край ; колосники ; ширинка ; балансир ; [глагол] летать; лететь; полететь; пролетать; нестись; проноситься; спешить; перемахнуть; развеваться (о флаге); развевать; спасаться бегством; удирать; улепетывать; улетать; исчезать; нападать; набрасываться с бранью; облаять; напуститься; пилотировать; поднимать (аэростат); переправлять грузы по воздуху; переправлять пассажиров по воздуху
Тезаурус:
- Or because knickers shouldn't fly?
- Unless you have a great deal of spare height, do not try to fly right round the field.
- A few moments later, somewhat red-faced, Ann appeared, the fly having been removed.
- "Fly," he yelled at the Golden Girl and let the spinnaker halyard go.
- Desert Orchid is out of the picture as Norton's Coin (left) and Toby Tobias fly the last fence.
- "For instance, you fly regular missions near the border, do you not?"
- That may be the case if you want a full four-seater with a decent avionics fit, but if you primarily fly for the sheer thrill of flying and are happy with map and eyeball navigation, it is more than possible to fly for well under half of that sum.
- From September, smaller ducks fly in: tufted, pochard, goldeneye, mallard, wigeon, mergansers, goosander and smew.
- Ian had a decision coming up: whether to fly home from Miami or to get illegal work in the States and travel some more: "I really want to see Alaska."
- Former steelworker Stuart McMillan was shot dead in September 1991 just days before he was due to fly home to Britain for a family re-union.
- One aircraft is kept on permanent 24-hour standby to fly urgent medical cases to treatment off the island, and the airport can be opened for that purpose at any time at short notice.
- They could fly above the flak and outstrip most German fighters.
- Where Mr Winchester's cross-Pacific connections become less sure is when they become tangible and man-made: the optical-fibre telephone cable that snakes beneath the Pacific from California to Hawaii and then branches out to Japan and Guam; the AsiaSat satellite and its fellow "birds", sitting on the equator to bounce across Asia the telephone calls of businessmen and the television dramas of Hollywood; the new Boeing 747-;400, able to fly non-stop from Sydney to Los Angeles; and, odd as it seems, the Macintosh computer.
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