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Перевод: know
[глагол] знать; иметь представление; иметь определенные знания; уметь; испытать; пережить; быть знакомым; узнавать; отличать
Тезаурус:
- I'm, I'm certainly as I was going to come on to explain and the way you will see ourselves working, is not people who sit in the Town Hall and just turn out reports, I mean the kind of work we do and the way we work means that were actually very much involved in the community groups, but I mean if it was, if it was thought to be an issue that we needed to have greater community involvement, i.e. to resurrecting that forum then that's something that, you know, we may need to address, but I never saw it as operating like that anyway, I mean I saw it as it's almost like in a cabinet of members mainly. .
- At first it will be helpful to know which is being described, but later, having worked through the chosen list, you could try to pick out which is being described when one category is chosen (you do not know which) in random order.
- And you know we don't get on."
- One or two of his colleagues may know something of his patch if they have covered for him when he was unavailable, or if they have previously worked it before being transferred elsewhere.
- It is almost true to say that we know how the genetic program determines the shape of a ribosome.
- You know what can be done in a novel.
- "I know I can win the championship this year," he says.
- You really must put it over that it is your job to know every wretched pipe anywhere on this river system that it's your job to know what is going on, who is doing what."
- We know that we can open them, and when we use them we go into a world full of exciting possibilities."
- There again, I don't know whether to confront her about it, write her a letter or what.
- That was one of the things we did not know.
- "Captain Maestrangelo," he said, filling his pipe rapidly and efficiently, "needs to know something about the family, everything about the family, in fact, and quickly."
- they may not feel open to accepting that person into the family, very aware of having to make a conscious effort to put aside prejudices and stereotypes in order to get to know, like and accept him or her.
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