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Перевод: scaffold
[существительное] лес ; леса ; строительные леса; подмости [стр.] ; эшафот ; плаха ; виселица ; подмостки ; [глагол] обстраивать лесами
Тезаурус:
- It is unwise to erect one on a grassed area unless you use scaffold boards to spread the load
- Standing at the corner of Great Tower Street and Seething Lane, in the very shadow of the Tower of London, All Hallows must have been as impressive a building then as it is today: one of the oldest parish churches in the City, it has always had close links with the Tower itself, and was used as a place of burial for many an unfortunate wretch executed on the nearby scaffold.
- He died on the scaffold in Aylesbury market square on 28 March 1845, after confessing to the murder while in prison.
- I met Hermione and David and John Hutchinson, who was the guitarist, at a show which was with the Scaffold and The Who.
- He reached the town and entered the Lawnmarket; there was a crowd gathered watching some wretch being dragged by horses across the open space to a waiting scaffold.
- Who remembers the public-service training films they used to show on TV, round about news time, with words and music by - The Scaffold? - introducing us to the prospect of the 2p and the 5p and so on?
- One of the most interesting recent developments had been the discovery that the very first muscle cells to differentiate also erect a kind of scaffold of pathways along which the later "motor" nerves migrate in order to locate their muscle targets (Nature , Vol 301 p 66).
- One of the sideshows had a two-inch thick scaffold board into the top of which five-inch nails had been driven to a depth of about half an inch.
- Christianity was the justification of conquest and exploitation: Atahualpa had died a convert; from the scaffold his nephew Tupac Amaru had denounced the religion of his ancestors as a fraud.
- On the scaffold an unrepentant Jarman boasted of some sixty or seventy murders.
- Dorchester may have been an extreme case, but throughout England, there were hard-working, anxious, godly folk whose rage with their king eventually led him to the scaffold at Whitehall.
- I had, in fact, driven over a two-foot high pile of scaffold boards, which had been concealed in the darkness.
- James I was declared by his contemporaries to have died of it, and his victim Sir Walter Ralegh, awaiting execution in the Tower, prayed that he would not be seized by a fit of ague on the scaffold, lest his enemies should proclaim that he had met his death shivering with fear.
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