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Перевод: confluence speek confluence


[существительное]
слияние; впадение; пересечение; место слияния; стечение народа; толпа


Тезаурус:

  1. An ultimate agit pop group, sat painfully pat at the confluence of three socialist realist orthodoxies: that there is a necessary and simple fit between pop culture and radical politics: that youth culture is a working-class phenomenon; that black music alone is the only unembarrassing and legitimate basis for protest.
  2. Among them was Donald Mackenzie, a 312-pound colossus, who returned the following year to build Fort Nez Perce on the confluence of the Snake and Clearwater Rivers.
  3. A descent of the western slope over rough ground leads to a confluence of streams that now goes forward as Hell Gill Beck, still forming the county boundary and being accompanied by a track as it heads south-west.
  4. It is a fast-flowing river and falls around 400 to its confluence with the Thames, formerly powering a number of mills en route.
  5. The confluence of the difficulties over a further Cassell renewal of funding; the prospect of the focus of her work shifting to Huntingdonshire, and the arrival of Lee in 1931 was perceived by Miss Green as an indication of preparations for her displacement in Northamptonshire and eventual redundancy; for which there appears to be no documentary basis.
  6. The outlet into the Meloch was obvious once we had slashed down a bit of undergrowth, and so was the confluence with the Dee, but where, under the sizeable area euphemistically called the drive, was the tunnel?
  7. Here is the archetypal mid-Wales upland village, set at a confluence of river valleys among tree-lined pastures and overlooked by forested hills.
  8. "Confluence" offers new directions for Indian dance.
  9. In this same year, 1878, by an extraordinary confluence, their spiritual paths crossed, though they were travelling from opposite directions.
  10. (An interesting confluence also took place between the development of classical music, which by now had moved away from tonality by vastly enlarging its range, and the coloured musicians' microtonality.)
  11. Sedgebrook is a pleasant village in the flat, once marshy area a few miles west of Grantham, near the confluence of two rivulets.
  12. Brian Larkman has discovered what he calls the "Corridor of Sanctity" in York, leading from the confluence of the Rivers Ouse and Foss, through the site of a Templar chapel, the massive Clifford's Tower, and five other medieval churches, including the Minster.
  13. This stood close to the confluence of the Cone and Aylesmore Brooks.

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