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Перевод: coterie speek coterie


[существительное]
кружок ; замкнутый круг; избранный круг


Тезаурус:

  1. From that small coterie of fine talented actors half dozen or more went out to make names for themselves using the experience gained during those early days in Vancouver's CBC.
  2. The shabby ghosts of the Forster coterie waft out once more to pool their romantic gossip; Forster himself shuffles forward to complain that Joe's doings with one brawny menial have so put him off the lower classes that he has been obliged to travel first rather than third-class on a railway journey, and once again the air is full of that peculiarly spiritless twitter about guardsmen, homosexual tea parties and cure for pubic lice.
  3. Normally it comes from what she likes to call her coterie of friends and advisers.
  4. He described the coterie around John as "a kind of Chelsea-Bloomsbury Group" and said that they were in and out of each other's flats all the time.
  5. THE debate about how BBC Television covers the arts enters a new phase tonight when BBC2 launches a new show deliberately intended as a rival to The Late Show and its laid-back coterie of cultural commentators.
  6. Dr Bennett, a fellow of New College, Oxford, had accused Dr Runcie of leading a coterie of liberals who were weakening the Church's main beliefs.
  7. the red-faced "Parlour Orator" who complacently pontificates on public affairs to the admiration of his little coterie: "there is not a parlour i.e. in an inn or tavern, or club-room, or benefit society, or humble party of any kind without its red-faced man".
  8. Then there was the very earnest, dedicated "alternative" coterie, with a "no smoking" sign on their front door.
  9. Both men are part of a coterie of so-called "rugby mercenaries" whose pay-offs are said to start at the 120,000 mark and the best-rewarded of whom - the "rugby millionaires" - are reckoned to be paid 250,000 per season.
  10. This tended to give a certain bias to the work likely to be found in schools, especially as the coterie of advisers who knew each other's work well, often teaching on each other's courses and jointly helping to tutor the national D.E.S.
  11. His model of what computer learning should be like is taken from the "Samba schools" in Rio de Janeiro, where experts and stars gather a coterie of followers and students to prepare for the carnival.
  12. Montagu was a serious and talented, although not publicly charismatic Liberal politician, who chose to seek his pleasure and friends in a close-knit coterie whose speciality was "in" jokes, to which some contribution was made by the more sophisticated aspect of pre-1914 (and indeed pre-1939) English upper-class anti-semitism.
  13. Even to speak of those by-now famous evenings as a coterie is to imply that they were both more formal and more enclosed than was the case.

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