a aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az

Перевод: allure speek allure


[существительное]
очарование; привлекательность ; обаяние;
[глагол]
прельщать; соблазнять; завлекать; очаровывать; заманивать; привлекать; пленять


Тезаурус:

  1. When I grew up, opera had all the allure of a th dansant on Bournemouth pier.
  2. The Saatchis are yesterday's men; Next has shed George Davis and its allure and this has been an end of year without bonuses for the City as it seeks to operate within the constraints of a tight credit policy and high interest rates.
  3. Peter Mantle thinks so, and MEG is heartened by the fact that the handful of farmers in the area who are sitting on the fence and hoping to make a fast punt out of an imminent El Dorado are outnumbered by a mass of people for whom gold holds no allure.
  4. this apparently buys an exhibition gallery utterly inadequate to host even a moderately-sized show; a restaurant not large enough to serve both staff and members and be an income-generating venue for the public; a bookshop that needs twice as much space if it is to be the premier one in England; library and drawings storage that will mean costly out-housing as soon as the new facility is opened; and finally - my own personal quibble - a drawings collection that will have lost its allure as a magnet for donor support.
  5. Few complain about "Just looking thanks" in a town where stock is displayed in authentic settings; where you can walk the patch in a day; where dealers make time to talk and where Bath's famous light lends allure to even the diciest piece.
  6. Its re-emergence as spectacle relates more visibly to its cult status and the nostalgic allure of fifties Paris; a marginalised and dissolute existence in the company of exotic friends and of romantic places with beautiful names.
  7. There is the growing allure of apocalyptic solutions.
  8. They do not possess the seductive allure of other parts of the female anatomy.
  9. Not only are foreign programmes often better made, but they also have the allure, real or imagined, of being sophisticated or trendy.
  10. This group's only sin is their wry self-consciousness which falls smugly short of arrant narcissism; the fey, running commentary implicit in their song-titles ("Rent", "Shopping", "Suburbia", "Opportunities Let's Make Lots of Money") signifies detachment, and finally alienation From the allure, the lush materiality of pop.
  11. And the more he succumbed to the allure of his own Fhrer cult and came to believe in his own myth, the more his judgement became impaired by faith in his own infallibility, losing his grip on what could and could not be achieved solely through the strength of his "will".
  12. TWENTIES: the chic allure of Brussels in the Twenties is echoed is the tastefully restored Albert I (Lower Town, 20 Place Rogier, telephone 02-;2172125, cost: 3,000 fr).
  13. When the press finally has to confront masculinist music head on, it gives up any attempt to reclaim it, and tries instead to deny its allure by poking fun at it.

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