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Перевод: spurn
[существительное] пинок ногой; презрительный отказ; презрительное отклонение; презрительное отношение; [глагол] отпихивать; отталкивать; оттолкнуть; отпихивать ногой; презрительно относиться; отвергать с презрением
Тезаурус:
- These are the same youngsters who spurn the school dining hall on weekdays.
- Early on 22 September he captured a Scarborough collier and another vessel and, later that morning, with typical effrontery, signalled for a pilot off Spurn Head, at the mouth of the Humber, and then captured the two boats sent out in response.
- One notorious example is the 5.5 km of the east side of the Spurn peninsula on Humberside.
- This is very much a product of his legal background which, in a career spanning 40 years as a lawyer, has seen him spurn a more lucrative profession to concentrate on the injusticesthat accompany bureaucracies like the Civil Service.
- Now Breeze produced some crackers, which they pulled with much laughter - and when a pink "Glengarry" fell to the old man's share, he did not spurn it after all, but actually put it on!
- The Main Street is part of the main A1033 road from Hull, which runs to Withernsea and Easington and to the Spurn peninsula.
- I am on the radical wing of the "leave-them-alone" camp and spurn the US Army research which proved that 80 percent of carefully burst blisters reattach to the skin over time.
- They spurn any subjective dressing up of the naked data.
- Although market researcher Market Assessment suggests charge card usage could increase by 43 per cent by 1995, charge card companies, particularly American Express, have suffered from poor publicity in recent months as retailers spurn their cards and their associated high margins.
- It emphasises the huge element of mystery and uncertainty in voters' behaviour, which makes them spurn the most fluent campaigns and ignore the gaffes and trifles which dominate television news bulletins and front pages.
- Spurn Kinnock, says Owen
- Was I to spurn him?
- Sunk Island itself pushes its great productive belly out into the Humber, protected from the North Sea by the encircling arm of the Spurn peninsula.
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