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Перевод: squat
[прилагательное] короткий и толстый; приземистый; коренастый; [существительное] сидение на корточках; корточки ; нора ; [глагол] сидеть на корточках; приседать; припадать к земле; свернуться в клубок; незаконно вселяться в дом; селиться самовольно на чужой или государственной земле
Тезаурус:
- He was a squat muscular man with freckled brown skin, strong arms and dry sand-coloured palms that made rasping sounds when he rubbed them together.
- The great, grey stones seemed to be heaving themselves up out of the earth like pieces of ancient bone, to squat in the alien flesh of the present.
- On two sides of the square are houses of mud-brick and concrete; on the other two the barn of a church with its squat, square bell-tower and the municipal building.
- I squat down next to the little kid and point again.
- For another year, the Genoese could continue to squat in the wreck of the city, clutching the rights to their ruined, foundering colony; promoting nothing; permitting nothing to flourish, either of theirs or the Bastard's.
- Beyond that, and hidden by a wide area of trees and bushes, was the group of squat brick houses where the pigs were kept.
- The look on the face of the Dog World supremo Mike Boulding, urged by the photographers to squat as close as possible to Des, was priceless.
- R : I was living in a legalised communal squat in Amsterdam with a lesbian, a transsexual and two bisexual women.
- Closer to home were the squat red-brick piggeries, the turkey-huts and chicken-houses, the litter of sheds and lean-tos where he was not allowed to play.
- Pat Sutton lifted 462 and a half kg - 157 and a half kg squat, 110kg bench, 195kg deadlift.
- Currently based in Los Angeles, she's active in the US urban homelessness campaign, organising the protesters so they can "squat on the White House lawn".
- Not all buildings with Romanesque detail were squat, as the magnificent St Louis demonstrated.
- Can't the Watch Committee rid the police of the hooligan element gangs of young and hefty idlers squat on the pavement or lurk in subways to annoy passers-by, to play tricks on defenceless shop assistants, or to gamble in the face of the public.
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