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Перевод: nut
[прилагательное] гаечный; помешанный; свихнувшийся; [существительное] орех ; орешник ; голова ; башка ; котелок ; откуп [сленг] ; псих ; сумасброд ; чудак ; дурак ; дурачок ; фат ; щеголь ; гайка ; муфта ; мелкий уголь; [глагол] собирать орехи; шевелить мозгами
Тезаурус:
- Six gritty months of fumbling with biros and over-read text books in A level tedium were wiped nut.
- The principle of proportionality - do not use a sledgehammer to crack a nut - is straightforward logic.
- Equally good is the string spacing, which does not feel cramped at all (39mm across a 47mm nut, 81mm at bridge) - obviously another feature given special consideration.
- At first I had the strings about an inch off the fingerboard, but I slowly started filing down the nut until I ended up with a lower action.
- GIBSON Les Paul Standard, 1989, black, Seymour Duncan Invader pickups, Graphtech trem nut, chrome pickup surrounds, straplocks, Gibson case, all in excellent condition, 500.
- Mechanical, sliding nut devices never seem to have become that popular in Britain.
- That was all easily fixed in five minutes, but the nut slots were still far too high.
- No doubt it was easier to reform it with Dzerzhihsky nut of Moscow, although he retained his post as head.
- This is so even if a company fails to export to Europe a single nut, bolt, software package or policy of insurance.
- "What d'you two young buggers want?" he grinned, as he fastened the buckle of his wide leather belt "We're taking Molly and her mate for a picnic Selwyn," Yanto replied Selwyn's nut brown, weathered face split into another grin.
- Mind you, both the bottom E and the top E strings rub against the woodwork between machines and nut, which is careless.
- Portions were given in scraps of paper and eaten with the fingers, the locals expertly peeling a boiled potato like a squirrel with a nut.
- It have been pouring down with rain on a wet Saturday afternoon, but the sight of Best, haircut shimmying in unison with his hips as he splayed three hard nut halfbacks, was Manchester's version of Hollywood on legs.
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