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Перевод: grandeur
[существительное] великолепие; пышность ; грандиозность ; знатность ; величие; высокое положение; нравственное величие
Тезаурус:
- Jane was fond of history and old houses, but was not guilty of folie de grandeur .
- But what held the audience's rapt attention from beginning to end was above all the genius of Verdi himself and the superlative grandeur of his music.
- But when Mexican stations moved from the era of foreign capital to the period of nationalist fervour, they took on a new self-conscious national grandeur, complete with the acres of frescos which Aldous Huxley noted on his visit to Mexico.
- But the scenic grandeur of the mountains was a tonic in itself, and the luxury of those splendid C.P.R. hotels made a memorable holiday.
- Scotland's mountains surpass themselves under snow, magnifying their grandeur and intensifying their beauty until the beholder runs out of language and is left making small bestial gasping noises.
- Reviving the classical grandeur of the railway carriage of Edwardian days, with all its silver-plated, lacetableclothed dining-car finery and mahogany-panelled parlour-car ambience, on the long-established route from London to Paris and Venice, the Orient Express was the brainchild of James Sherwood, head of the Sea Containers Group.
- But to Harriet the grandeur and studied comfort were somehow artificial, the atmosphere more reminiscent of a luxury hotel than a home.
- M. Polanyi wrote that beauty can reveal truth about nature; thus Einstein's theory of relativity was extolled by a fellow scientist for the grandeur, boldness, and directness of the thought which made everything more beautiful and grand.
- I discovered the Messiah when I was sixteen years old and I was overwhelmed by the sheer beauty and grandeur of Handel's enduring masterpiece.
- It became a sorry sight: a ghost of grandeur.
- It had all the rugged grandeur of the sea-girt castle of a medieval Danish warrior-king.
- The civic grandeur of Liverpool, which in the middle of the nineteenth century was ever expanding on the most monumental scale, must have influenced Mr Bushnell's taste, for he had strong views on what he wanted.
- For all their grandeur, the chancellors in Germany, France and England in this period were still essentially officials of the household: even in England the royal chancery did not become a quasi-independent department of state until the turn of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
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