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Перевод слова


Перевод: imbecile speek imbecile


[прилагательное]
слабоумный; имбецильный; неразумный; глупый;
[существительное]
слабоумный ; глупец ; дурак ; придурок ; болван


Тезаурус:

  1. In over four years of "The Great War for Civilization", something that could never be assessed had been crushed by the imbecile violence of the Great Powers.
  2. You weak-kneed, imbecile, spineless -"
  3. In fact this is an even worse mountain and it's on Skye, you imbecile!
  4. She is usually just trying to be friendly and helpful and supportive when the love crazed imbecile is trying to explain that his wife doesn't understand him (yawn).
  5. As hard as I tried, I could not make use of the staff, so I carried it, hobbling like a stage imbecile.
  6. He was using his "goon's" voice, the one he put on when he wanted to make himself sound like a harmless imbecile.
  7. I wait to see how long you can control your imbecile temptation to violate my copyrights on this letter and once again untruthfully take words and phrases from it to show your "powers" to match those boasted by your kind in the NF and the BNP, whose performances are different from yours only in that instead of using your limbs to physically assault us like they would, you have acted by wearing the "civilised" guise of being the "editor" of the "left" NewSS , and have written to assail my integrity, my capacity to think, my freedom to defend and speak for my constitutionally organised members at the Stratford school.
  8. She glared at Evelyn as if she were an imbecile, then handed the chalk to Joy Prentice.
  9. Imbecile initiation."
  10. We may be very liberated and all that but - "Oh - I must ask my husband"" She put on a high-pitched imbecile voice like a detergent or wash-up liquid ad.
  11. In fact this banal verse, which forms a part of the novel At Swim-Two-Birds , is a satire on the cult of imbecile proletarian writers that began in the thirties and later reached its apotheosis under Joan Littlewood.
  12. An unoccupied person, finding a drum, may be seized with a desire to beat it; but unless he is an imbecile he will be unable to continue beating it, and thereby satisfying a need (rather than a "desire"), without finding a reason for so doing.
  13. Such terms as "idiot" and "imbecile" have even attained a certain respectability, to be joined no doubt in time, by such terms as "moron" and "cretin".

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