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Перевод: shopkeeper
[существительное] владелец небольшого магазина; лавочник
Тезаурус:
- A SHOPKEEPER was fighting for his life in hospital last night after a gas blast hurled him from his bed into the street.
- Another risk run by the shopkeeper who deals with a married woman is that he may find that, though she has property, her husband is insolvent.
- One such was the 27-year-old Keith Littlejohn, who had spent time in Borstal after robbing an elderly shopkeeper.
- I wanted the approval of everyone from the bus conductor to the Pakistani shopkeeper, because he owned a shop and spoke English.
- Mr Ali hurled himself at Conroy as he fired, hitting the shopkeeper and Navid, who had been watching TV.
- A shopkeeper in Nuremberg who said to a customer what "in these days was common to almost everybody in Nuremberg", that Hitler was set on continuing the war, tried to deceive the people into thinking that he still had a miracle weapon, and was "nothing more than a criminal", was denounced by the customer, taken away by the police, and shot for "subversion of the military power".
- shopkeeper
- Charles was essentially a shopkeeper and pig butcher; he turned his waste animal fats into tallow candles - a foul-smelling process at best - to sell to those who chose not to make their own, and also kept up a bit of a sideline in cheese - a product for which the area was, of course, justifiably famous.
- Not all the content is quite so melodramatic, and the same filmmaker's Our Little Errand Boy (1905) is a fabulous slapstick comedy about a plucky prankster who terrorizes his neighbourhood and, when pursued by the vicar, the shopkeeper, the matron and various others, locks them all behind the wire mesh of a chicken run.
- First, there always has been and always will be room for a small shopkeeper with a bright idea.
- And the shopkeeper who supplies goods to a married woman without inquiry is not entitled to assume that she has her husband's authority.
- "Oh my God!" she screeched, and spun the wheel, running the car up onto the pavement, twisting the wheel to try and avoid a shopkeeper, and plunging head-on into the wide, plate-glass window of an antique shop.
- He married Betsy Adcock, the daughter of a Whittington shopkeeper, and their young William became an apprentice shoemaker in 1796.
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