b ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bk bl bm bn bo bp br bs bt bu bw bx by

Перевод: belong speek belong


[глагол]
принадлежать; быть одним из группы; быть связанным; быть 'своим'; быть родом из; происходить; относиться; находиться; помещаться


Тезаурус:

  1. The squad have just 52 caps between them and 31 of those belong to the new captain, Andy Halliday of St Albans.
  2. Culturally, the most militant gangs who beat up immigrants in the name of the nation belong to the international youth culture and reflect its modes and fashions, jeans, punk-rock, junk food and all.
  3. Observations of European wild cats, which belong to the same species as the domestic cat, reveal that, far from being kitten-killers, the males sometimes actively participate in rearing the young.
  4. For instance, if a testator had left per vindicationem a legacy of something which did not belong to him, that legacy was ineffective.
  5. It is seen in The Facts to belong to the times in which the writer lived when he wrote the novel, when opposition to the Vietnam War, and to a President Johnson perceived as monstrous, took to the street-wisdom of a farcical obscenity.
  6. They ought to go back where they belong."
  7. He chose a small squad from among those men available who did not belong to any lineage closely involved in the affair.
  8. And, by the Married Women's Property Act 1964, any money derived by a wife from an allowance made by her husband for housekeeping purposes, or any property acquired out of it, is deemed, in the absence of any agreement between them to the contrary, to belong in equal shares to the husband and wife.
  9. These "god-like" qualities cannot really belong to more than one being.
  10. The roots of this belong not in the New Testament but in Latin legalism.
  11. The permanent swimmers belong to four main groups: the squids (which are cephalopods - molluscs - related to the octopuses); the bony fish, most of which belong to the group known as the teleosts; the sharks - which are quite different from the teleosts, though they are also commonly referred to as fish; and the cetaceans, which are the whales, dolphins and porpoises and are, of course, mammals.
  12. The new leaders - Kinnock, Smith, Brown, Cook, Hattersley, even Tony Blair (despite being Fettes and Oxford) - belong to a different background.
  13. "Being various; absence of monotony or uniformity; class of things differing in some common qualities from the rest of a larger class to which they belong"

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