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Перевод: purse
[прилагательное] тучный; [существительное] кошелек ; сумочка ; дамская сумочка; мошна ; деньги ; богатство; казна ; денежный фонд; собранные средства; приз ; премия ; мешок ; сумка ; портмоне; мотня ; [глагол] морщить; морщиться; класть в кошелек
Тезаурус:
- The impact tightens the purse net as the draw cord pulls tight and the rabbit is trapped.
- Now, with support from local industry and Liverpool-based holiday specialists Leisure Angling, the festival has been resurrected carrying a IR5,000 purse.
- Mr Ridley said: "I give notice of our intention to pursue vigorously any claims which show prospects of reducing the cost to the public purse of these payments."
- He plans to market CIRVs in packs of six for 50,000, and says that while potential users such as the SAS and RAF aircrew have shown great interest in the concept, Whitehall purse keepers have yet to be convinced.
- The type and quality of the inner lining was dependent on the purse of the purchaser.
- The National Railway Museum will set the family purse back by a similar sum.
- Hardly a warning note would be sounded about the "erosion" of anything, except perhaps the ratepayer's purse.
- "In the present spirit of the age," Surtees replied with a sidelong glance at Catherine, "more generous provision from the public purse might even lead to a proliferation of bastardy.
- Eau de Patou by Jean Patou, from 15; Wrappings by Clinique, from 25; Cristalle by Chanel, from 15 (purse spray): Lauren by Ralph Lauren, from 30; Eau de Givenchy by Givenchy, from 16.75.
- She took her tray to the pay desk, opened her bag and felt for her purse.
- He was of a more literary bent, and wrote a biography of King Louis, as well as a book on ethics and business titled Put Money In My Purse ).
- Whichever way his tastes lie, and whatever the capacity of his purse and his bookshelves, it is certain that no other single work offers to the collector such variety of choice, experience and discovery as four and a half centuries of the book of which Lord Chief Justice Sir Matthew Hale (1609-;76) wrote to one of his sons who had just recovered from smallpox:
- when I purse my lips
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