c ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci ck cl cm cn co cp cr cs ct cu cw cy cz

Перевод: chafe speek chafe


[существительное]
ссадина ; раздражение;
[глагол]
тереть; растирать; согревать растиранием; втирать; натирать; тереться; раздражаться; бередить; горячиться; нервничать


Тезаурус:

  1. Every item of clothing you wear, especially your shoes, should have been tried and tested on long runs to ensure there is no danger of an unsuspected seam causing you to chafe.
  2. Lofoten apart, though, Keyes's private armies were to chafe at the bit of ministry reins throughout the summer of 1941, while remaining dependent on these masters for the very shoe-string of their existence as Commandos.
  3. Tell people day and night that they are beasts if they allow baby's thighs to chafe, of that they will lose their friends unless they banish cat-box odour from their homes, and they will soon believe it, if not consciously, then in the little compartment of the brain that controls buying habits.
  4. Chafe (1977:244) criticises the typical psycholinguistic tree structures which assign agents and roles to the words used in the recall as being "able to capture only certain decisions that were made during certain particular verbalisations.
  5. Old-fashioned or external sanitary towels, as anyone who has had the misfortune to make use of them will know, are dreadfully uncomfortable: they will not stay in place, they leak, and they chafe.
  6. Chafe's (1977) approach offers potentially more for the study of recall.
  7. No sooner had the CIG started work than it began to chafe at its restrictions and sought authority to start operating espionage networks abroad.
  8. After some time, when people began to chafe against the impotence, isolationism and litism of the post-punk avant-garde, this notion, indeed the very idea of the "alternative," was gradually dismantled.
  9. The fact that Chafe (1977) has suggested that information concerning agent and recipient is not necessarily stored by the individual in a specific arm is perhaps fortuitous in our comparison of English with BSL.
  10. Chafe (1977) maintains that the categorisation arises as a result of the experience itself, the needs of the discourse, and especially the centrality of the word to be used as indicative of the category.
  11. Chafe (1977) too has examined the problem of explaining people's understanding and subsequent recall of stories or events.
  12. Chafe's view is that the event is held in some abstract form which allows the recreation of sub-chunks and propositions on the basis of the needs of the story situation at that time.
  13. This brings Chafe's view of the processing closer to that of Bartlett, where recall is based on the production of particularly salient features of the original and the reconstruction of other features around these.

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