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Перевод: wretched
[прилагательное] несчастный; никудышный; жалкий; никуда не годный; надломленный; неприятный; ужасный; гнусный; плохой; хуевый [неценз.]
Тезаурус:
- Anton, he lay over the rim of the pan: panting, thoroughly wretched, ruined.
- In the large marquee which served as Company Office and Company Stores combined, a line of wretched riflemen in dripping ground sheets sat bare footed waiting to display a fine collection of blisters.
- Those wretched people held by Saddam at the start of the Kuwait invasion were prisoners.
- One was to Germany to film a documentary on the wretched William Joyce, nicknamed Lord Haw-Haw, whose wartime broadcasts from Berlin had led to his trial and execution for treason after the war.
- To make matters even more wretched than they already were, Celia cried both day and night and because of Liza's deepening depression Harriet found it was she who was forced to bear the brunt of this, so much so that after a while she simply swept up baby and cot and took them into her own bedroom.
- She drives the wretched boy Kit, who has a platonic devotion to her, to attempt suicide by persistently upsetting him with ambitions for a stage career, for which he has no vocation.
- I rambled aimlessly for about an hour, in and out of dirty narrow streets, their only saving grace being their brevity, in and out of a variety of shops, bought some oranges from the market stalls, the most interesting feature of the wretched place, then went in to see an "explicit sex" film and was presented with a badly mutilated and heavily censored version of some third-rate continental film which I left within the first fifteen minutes.
- She had never felt so wretched and she vowed that if Maggie recovered she would make it up to her somehow.
- The match in which Simpkin lost 7-6, 6-2 to Audra Keller was a wretched affair, something to be endured rather than enjoyed.
- He realised that for the first time in weeks he had not thought of school, Murray, Fairbrother or the wretched affair of the letter.
- I cannot stand it any longer, if someone does not come to me I will give up and be miserable for ever and perhaps go home of my own accord, write or wire to Uncle C. and say you are coming at once pleas darling, and come on Saturday or I will give up altogether and always wretched.
- "I had," said Rosalind, hurrying in, "but I stopped at the post-office to get a stamp for my letter and it was closed and the wretched stamp-machine was empty.
- I was jolly well tempted to tell him it's those wretched Frenchmen.
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