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Перевод: melt
[существительное] расплавленный металл; плавка ; садка ; [глагол] таять; растаять; топиться; топить (воск); стаять; плавиться; плавить; расплавляться; растапливаться; растапливать; растопить; расплавиться; расплавлять; растворяться; растворять; смягчаться; смягчать; перетапливать; перетапливаться; умиляться; трогать; слабеть; уменьшаться; исчезать; незаметно переходить; тратить; разменивать; перетопиться
Тезаурус:
- He was black enough to melt into the shadows too risky with all the fetching of beer and port.
- Reg's confidence with Pam's love began to melt even my frigid soul.
- The crowd begins to melt away and a bubbling froth is tossed along the river, dancing and swirling and disappearing from sight round the bend.
- They developed the technique used by Schmidt to melt the urania - firing high-powered carbon dioxide lasers onto a suspended disc of uranium dioxide fuel.
- Offstage Yukio Ninagawa and his 100-strong company seemto melt into the background.
- Melt the butter in a large saucepan, add the onion and cook slowly, covered, for 5min.
- But the "decay heat" from the reaction was still enough to cause the uranium fuel to begin to melt.
- Melt the butter in a saucepan or a microwave dish, add the garlic and mushrooms and cook for 2-;3min, until just soft.
- Close to the sea Brei3amerkurjkull, a broad flat snout of Vatnajkull, dies into this lake, the melt water exiting along a wide, fast channel into the sea.
- Behind her, as if on cue, the ice heart started to melt.
- Willie Learmouth the session clerk came by today for the Intimations and he's an awful nice man, one of Nature's Gentlemen, went to Allan Glen's when that meant something, his wife's got a plastic hip but you never hear him complain, anyway he sat down to a wee cup of tea and naturally he could not resist my all butter shortbread "Nettie," says he, "your petticoat tails would melt in a man's mouth."
- Paula might look as if butter wouldn't melt in her mouth but when her mind was made up to something it took a stronger woman than Grace to talk her out of it.
- As with many of the city's churches, San Nazaro was gutted by fire in the early Middle Ages, when light could only be provided by open flames and work on roofs meant using braziers to melt lead.
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