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Перевод: smite
[существительное] сильный удар; попытка ; [глагол] ударять; наносить удар; разбивать; разрушать; сразить; убивать; поражать; охватывать; наказывать; карать
Тезаурус:
- "It has been lowered over my head many times, and then, as I have reached up to smite it, it has passed before me and consumed many people.
- She saw it struggling against a mighty wind, but unable to smite anything tangible within its.
- And some wene they close and conteyne the worlde in theyr hondes and therefore they put not theyr hondes to take mete" paranoid patients "fall in to full euyll suspiccions without recouer and therfore they hate and blame theyr frendes, and sometyme smite and slee theim".
- "The Lord shall smite thee with an extreme burning, and with the sword, and with blasting, and with mildew; and they shall pursue thee until thou perish," Gabriel said firmly.
- It was our delight to dash those proud faces to the ground, to smite them with the sword and savage them with the axe, as if blood and agony could follow from every blow.
- And finally, brethren, let us ask the Almighty to look down upon us and our endeavours with His special favour, beseeching Him that He may send a blessing upon our daily tasks, and that in His infinite wisdom He may smite our enemies, and destroy those who would destroy us.
- "The Lord will smite thee with the botch of Egypt, and with the emerods, and with the scab, and with the itch, whereof thou canst not be healed."
- And behold there were sheep being driven, and they went not forward but stood still; and the shepherd lifted his hand to smite them with his staff, and his hand remained up.
- She waited for realisation, for pain to smite her.
- His Lordship is hailed from the shore by a knight, who we are told is King Arthur, have you the sacrifice my Lord, who answers no, then take my sword and smite the water in front of the grot and see what my wizard has done, take also this dove and when asked, give it to the keeper.
- Brim's translation "You will be smitten with the Egyptian dermatitis, characterized by swellings, dry crusts, and ulcers, from which you will never be healed, and the Lord shall smite you in the knees, and in the legs, with a sore botch that cannot be healed from the sole of thy foot to the top of thy head" not only gives a description that would do very well for syphilis but also pre-empts the habit of the fifteenth-century Europeans of ascribing the disease to the enemy.
- In north Warwickshire, Stoneleigh Abbey had to move Cryfield hamlet, and Combe Abbey destroyed two hamlets called Smite; further examples are documented by Robin Donkin.
- Christ, he really can smite the ball almost the length of the pitch, marvelled Perdita.
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