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Перевод: adroitly

искусно


Тезаурус:

  1. His meaning clear, Montgomery adroitly changed the subject.
  2. Lady Clanranald returned to Nunton, where she kept Captain Ferguson busy, adroitly evading all questions as to where she had been.
  3. He welcomed changes in the life of the University and of the Department in adroitly phrased verse and limericks.
  4. In so adroitly "carrying" Gandhi, Irwin greatly reduced his value as an ally.
  5. Mr Murray, who was by now in great form, talked his way adroitly around this one and almost - but not quite - persuaded our gathering that it was a special privilege to hear well-spoken French.
  6. In response to the charge in a leaflet by Tom Mann and the Red International of Labour Unions that the NUGW had refused to support the miners on Black Friday, Thorne adroitly deflected criticism by declaring that this was malicious propaganda designed to "disrupt everyone of the workmen's organisations" (SE 20 August 21).
  7. It was advice Erika took seriously, distancing herself from Fritz as much as possible and adroitly using Rosa as a shield so that Fritz was forever baulked in his obscure desires.
  8. Kirov became serious, adroitly changing the course of the conversation.
  9. This was partly due to the way in which Egypt, Syria and Israel adroitly drew their superpower sponsors into the struggle.
  10. Hynes catches adroitly the flavour of poetry and politics in a period when even poetry found it impossible to be politically neutral, and he writes perceptively of the underlying links between such disparate writers as, for example, Isherwood and Greene.
  11. She turns at once to the Women's page, where there is a Posy Simmonds strip cartoon adroitly satirizing middle-aged, middle-class liberals, an article on the iniquities of the Unborn Children (Protection) Bill, and a report on the struggle for women's liberation in Portugal.
  12. Sticking to a principle is more than adroitly shifting from one position to another.
  13. In the election campaign of 1964 Harold Wilson, the new leader of the Labour party, adroitly integrated two themes: the surge towards equality (and, more specifically, the end of the eleven-plus) represented by comprehensive schools, and the national need to embark upon a "white hot technological revolution".

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