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Перевод: take
[существительное] захват ; взятие; выручка ; барыши ; сбор ; улов ; урок наборщика; дубль ; кинокадр ; [глагол] брать; захватить; овладеть; ловить; брать в плен; получать; регулярно получать; использовать; пользоваться; потреблять; принимать; принимать внутрь; глотать; есть; доставать; добывать; считать; полагать; реагировать; соглашаться; воспринимать; действовать; оказывать действие; воздействовать; увлекать; уносить; иметь успех; нравиться; быть очарованным; приохотиться; подвергаться; поддаваться; снимать; фотографировать; выход`ить на фотографии; требовать; отнимать; схватываться; твердеть; нанимать; выписывать; садиться; занимать; преодолевать; брать препятствие; выиграть; вычит`ать; измерять; заболеть; заразиться; провожать; сопровождать; брать с собой; изображать; рисовать; разводить; развести; свезти; повезти; развозить; доставлять; довозить; завезти; завести; отвести; снести; отнести; относиться; понимать; выбирать
Тезаурус:
- Unable to take up residence in the Baabda palace occupied by Gen Aoun, this was where he had been conducting his consultations for the formation of a government of national unity.
- In their third year, students take a special topic on which they prepare a substantial piece of work.
- Take a barbecue set, for example: in early summer, displays in shops, advertisements in newspapers and magazines, and posters in shop windows encourage us to make use of our spare time, enjoy the outdoor life, invite friends round and to do this, of course, we need a barbecue set!
- They were like astronauts landing on the moon and finding footprints in the dust, or like the mountain climbers in Jules Verne who, having at last reached the summit of what they take to be a virgin Himalayan peak, find a sign saying: M. Durand, Dentist, 14 rue Caumartin, Paris .
- These include Great Barrier Reef trips in amphibians, Grand Canyon trips with Las Vegas's Scenic Airlines, the Bolivian 727 crews who routinely take off and land at airports over 13,000 feet amsl, and others.
- There are 16 steam engines waiting to take you for a ride from Northiam, the setting for Anneka Rice's famous "Challenge", to historic Tenterden, the station seen in ITV's "The Darling Buds of May" - you can even travel in Ma Larkin's steam train!
- Sainsbury, for example, defend the sky-high price of their organic vegetables by saying that they take less percentage profit on them, and that the wholesalers seem to be the ones jacking up the price.
- There had been no buying or selling at Seamer for very many years, but in 1987 hundreds of gypsies arrived with the intention of reviving the horse trading which used to take place.
- Given that Dunrossness is experiencing a boom, it is entirely reasonable to make the most of the boom by selling individual plots of land, if that is the only way one can take advantage of it.
- Many of the old takeover favourites were also hard hit as speculators moved to take their profits.
- Wages for housework bypasses all those other struggles - well, I mean, with wages for housework, women wouldn't have to go out and take a second job.
- Coleridge, his thoughts still at Racedown, immediately saw the opportunity for bringing all his friends together at Stowey, and on 29 June wrote to Joseph Cottle to suggest - unsuccessfully - that he should take the next coach to Bridgwater: "T. Poole would fetch you in a one horse Chair."
- "Will you take it, father?"
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