|
Перевод: gregarious
[прилагательное] стадный; живущий стаями; живущий стадами; живущий обществами; общительный
Тезаурус:
- Hayward was gregarious, a great attender of dinners and parties, but he could also be a caustic and gossipy creature given to telling salacious stories.
- Excess XS is based on a series of interlinking sketches, with "Ecstasy" personified as the gregarious MC E Byron.
- Paul had reasons for the private emptying of his; he was still treating himself with a solution of the doctor's recommended potassium permanganate crystals, and had to make his exit quickly when Willie was out of the room, as that gregarious gentleman would have come with him on the same errand; then hurry outside with the tell-tale purple contents, empty them, rinse the pot at the pump, and come back.
- It is generally understood that the disease is spread by fleas and mosquitoes and since rabbits are gregarious by nature their close contact with each other automatically ensures the rapid spread of the disease.
- The gregarious owls were juveniles less than a year old just coming into breeding condition, but unable to find a place to nest in the plantation.
- The tadpoles of some spadefoot toads are gregarious and form large moving shoals.
- For the more gregarious souls there's always Borrowdale and the queues
- Modern witchcraft has as many "denominations" as does Christianity and, just as a respectable high Anglo-Catholic might shrivel with embarrassment at the gregarious worship of black Pentecostals, and vice versa, there are similar reactions between various branches of witchcraft.
- Hallowell (1950, 1956) went on to argue that the emergence of culture was due to a novel psychological structure rooted in the social behaviour of the gregarious primate that gave rise to Man.
- As she may not be a particularly gregarious person she will experience great loneliness after her husband's death, and her need will be for the company of her family and a few special friends to see her through this difficult period.
- He pointed out that the structural basis of human behaviour must be rooted in the gregarious nature of primates and the potentialities thereby offered for the socialization of individual experience.
- Here I must think Wordsworth is deeper than Milton, though I think it has depended more upon the general and gregarious advance of intellect, than individual greatness of Mind From the Paradise Lost and the other Works of Milton, I hope it is not too presuming, even between ourselves to say, that his Philosophy, human and divine, may be tolerably understood by one not much advanced in years
- The first difference is that crows are usually solitary or in pairs, while rooks are gregarious.
|
|
|