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Перевод: spy
[существительное] шпион ; тайный агент; диверсант ; лазутчик ; [глагол] следить; шпионить; разглядеть; увидеть; заметить
Тезаурус:
- All they could hear was one of the spy planes.
- The US Defence Mapping Agency supplies, in digital form, details of the terrain gleaned from sources such as spy satellites.
- LAWS should be passed controlling the rapidly increasing use of video "spy" cameras in public places, the National Council for Civil Liberties said today.
- None of this makes any sense because one of Blake's fellow prisoners in D block of Wormwood Scrubs was the Russian spy Gordon Lonsdale (whose real name was Konon Molody), a key figure in the Portland spy ring who, ironically, had also been exposed by the defector Goleniewski.
- All those who scoff at Ian Fleming's spy fantasies should think again.
- Mata Hari, Malay wife of a Scotsman called MacLeod, was sentenced to death in Paris as a spy.
- There is a huge appetite for the popular crime and spy fiction that never existed in heavily censored Soviet times.
- On the other hand, the French boasted they could make a neutron bomb, the US was still anguished over the spy story of Cheltenham as Prime got 35 years' rumours of Brezhnev's death proved true.
- The end of the spy story reached Coleridge from the innkeeper of the Globe, who had been ordered to Brymore by Sir Philip Hales (" Sir Dogberry" as Coleridge called him) to give evidence in person.
- This is picture-by-picture finance, depending on such chancy things as the tastes of producers and directors, or a type of story in vogue at the moment (a spy boom brings filmmakers to Europe; a Western boom could drive them home).
- George Barker had taken his place in 1940 but had escaped to the United States before Pearl Harbor, for he had been followed everywhere by the "thought police", the sinister kempeitai , who suspected him of being a communist spy.
- It also throws up endless suspicions about anyone who was friendly with the spy and about those in charge who recommended his promotion.
- This was given unfortunate confirmation a month later by the arrest, as a Soviet spy, of the British-naturalized Austrian scientist, Klaus Fuchs, who had worked at Los Alamos.
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