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Перевод: wealthy
[прилагательное] богатый; состоятельный; изобилующий; обильный; [существительное] богачи
Тезаурус:
- One of the high points in the life of Ellen Garwood, a wealthy Texas widow and author, was the day she sat with Reagan in the Oval Office (" we had Sanka") and told him that he ought to get rid, first, of the Sandinistas, and second of the secretary of state.
- While I was up at university, an awful lot of students from wealthy backgrounds were fiddling the dole somehow, and I reckon that the politicians and civil servants think that all they're in fact doing is cutting their own children's pocket money.
- The Azems were the Rockefellers of Hama, a wealthy family of Maecenas-like aristocrats who governed and influenced the city for well over two centuries.
- Rather it means to the wealthy provinces of Northerns or Transvaal.
- In 1661, George Staverton, a wealthy but reportedly hen-pecked businessman of Wokingham, bequeathed the princely sum of 6 per annum to provide a bull to be baited yearly.
- It helped fourth-century Christians to come to terms with the paradox that the privileged, wealthy, and powerful post-Constantinian church actually was also the church of the martyrs.
- Two men from poor northern city backgrounds, who later became very wealthy, tried to set up their elderly parents in comfort: Andrew Carnegie, American millionaire bachelor, gave his Scots mother, "my best friend and trustiest counsellor", a house and a carriage and pair as he had promised her when young, while a Manchester mill-owner failed to persuade his old mother to spend more than 1 a week, but "would pet her like the sweetheart she was."
- My cousins are rather wealthy, and so wear rich dresses, which
- Although there was never a great deal of action, at one time the firm must have done a fair trade as old Mr. Talbot was reputed to be a very wealthy man.
- No early modern king in England or Europe, however wealthy and powerful, actually had the resources to control the localities in his kingdom; all had to persuade, to rely on the co-operation of those with influence in these localities.
- Naturally, the public display of great works of art led to a demand for imitations for enjoyment by wealthy individuals.
- There he brought himself to the notice of George Clifford, the wealthy Amsterdam banker and horticulturist (see p. 50), who had engaged young Linnaeus as his personal physician and as recorder of his garden plants.
- When Mr. Major professes on the one hand to stand for something he calls a "classless society" and, on the other, whinges on behalf of the wealthy, purportedly faced with the unbearable prospect under Labour of parting with their other BMW, we can detect the unmistakable stench of humbug.
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