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Перевод: Bedouin speek Bedouin


[существительное]
бедуин


Тезаурус:

  1. Why, a silver tea tray engraved with a picture of the royal yacht Britannia and a book about Bedouin jewellery for his wives.
  2. Six Arabs - their headdress and robes suggest they are Bedouin - rest beside an ancient well of translucent blue water.
  3. It was inevitable that I was fully occupied by my fear rather than watching an Egyptian film, Abla and Anter , a classic Bedouin love story.
  4. It is not enough to explain this, as some outsiders and many insiders did, by invoking some theory of social inertia, to the effect that Libyans still had a Bedouin mentality.
  5. It takes the form of a stone tent, to which his widow intended to attach camel-bells; a small crucifix, incongruously superimposed upon it, fails to redeem it from its bizarre and Bedouin appearance.
  6. Different again is the dancing of the bedouin soldiers, at once chaste and erotic - "chaste because it takes place among men, mostly holding one another by the elbow or the forefinger erotic because it takes place between men, and because it's performed before the ladies.
  7. Prior to the Second World War this species was hunted, as part of a traditional subsistence economy, by Bedouin tribes but with the development of the oil industry and the introduction of modern vehicles and weapons, hunting parties organised on a large scale rapidly reduced oryx populations to such an extent that they were virtually eliminated.
  8. It has very little that anyone covets, so the Hashemite Kingdom has no choice but to woo the traveller; to see that he has ice for his drinks, a soft bed, a flushing loo and a dash of Bedouin mystique to add zest to his package-deal.
  9. The sergeant's parting shot was, "I suppose you'll be in the desert in a few weeks" time disguised as a Bedouin."
  10. There were peoples in the empire - the Masai, pre-eminently, were one, and the Bedouin Arabs were shortly to be another - who seemed instinctively to possess the right combination of self-respect and pragmatic acceptance of the facts of British power.
  11. Peters' article on Bedouin families contains information about who lived in particular camps, leading him to suggest that "the core" of a camp was not a male head of tent-hold, but his mother (Peters, 1965).
  12. It made me think of a Bedouin taking out his prayer carpet and unrolling it in the vastness of the desert.
  13. He is a man of vision, whose Bedouin roots give him respect for tradition and the belief that the pursuit of peace must come through diplomacy.

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