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Перевод: gentleman
[существительное] джентльмен ; дворянин ; господин ; барин ; мужская уборная
Тезаурус:
- The Professional Gentleman embodied an ideal of unemotional, rational, asexual maleness which was insulated against any tendencies towards emotional degeneration.
- He was far too much of a gentleman to degrade any woman.
- patronized by Mr Chester as "very fine in his way", BR 23; considered a "terrible fellow" by Dora, DC 48; referred to as "the illustrious ornament of the Elizabethan Era" by Mr Micawber, DC 52; Mrs Wititterly inspired by a visit to his birthplace, NN 27; dreamed of by Mrs Nickleby (" a black gentleman at full-length, in plaster-of-Paris, with a lay-down collar tied with two tassels, leaning against a post and thinking"), NN 27; his borrowings of plots defended by Nicholas Nickleby, NN 48; criticized by a Viscount ("There's a lot of feet in Shakespeare's verse, but there ain't legs worth mentioning in Shakespeare's plays"), MC 28; if played entirely by wooden legs "wouldn't draw a sixpence", OCS 19; referred to as "Swan of Avon", "Bard of Avon", MED 9; SB 53.
- NK: May I also ask the Right Honourable Gentleman which way the wind is blowing?
- Bobbie asked the Station Master to give it to the old gentleman the next morning.
- We have in the workshop a gentleman called Tim Hodgkinson.
- Distinguished Gentleman first ended with Murphy moralising.
- Henry Lonsdale, The Worthies of Cumberland , vol. i, 1867; O. Wood, West Cumberland Coal 1600-;1982/3 , 1988; Gentleman's Magazine , vol. i, 1829, pp. 178-;9; R. G. Thorne (ed.),
- Because she had to provide for the Barons and for her other gentleman who was still with her she was obliged to go out daily to market and this quite ordinary transaction restored some of her spirits.
- A certain gentleman might have been punished if somebody had passed by and seen them."
- His lordship had been entertaining two guests, a young lady and gentleman, in the summerhouse, and had watched my father's approach across the lawn bearing a much welcome tray of refreshments.
- John Clarke of Swinden, for one, must have been a gentleman, with his income of 10 a year, yet his moveables were valued at no more than 30s., with which he only just scraped into the top 20 per cent.
- To a gentleman fond of sporting, or a family desirous of a truly elegant abode within a moderate distance of town an opportunity such as the present rarely occurs,
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