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Перевод: courtier speek courtier


[существительное]
придворный ; льстец ; царедворец


Тезаурус:

  1. Not surprisingly Gironella has returned over and again to aspects of Las Meninas and in particular to the portrait of the artist himself, the insider, the fawning courtier, the creator of icons.
  2. Then, of course, there were the Bruces, Lord Bruce who should be preparing himself for death instead of being involved in politics as if he were some young courtier intent on rising as fast and as far as he could.
  3. He was neither a plotter nor a courtier.
  4. His passport carries the word "courtier" in the space set aside for occupation - a joke he came to regret when arriving at Darwin airport to be faced by a massive, bronzed Australian immigration official who looked down and told him "that's not the way you spell courier, mate."
  5. I am glad - as you must be - that she has her adoring courtier, to take care of her in her old age, and to give her gallantry and flattery and sweets.
  6. He took small parts in ballets by Ashton (a courtier at the ball in the premiere of Cinderella , one of the revellers in the cave scene of Apparitions ) and de Valois ( Checkmate, Don Quixote and Job ), walked on as a pall-bearer in Helpmann's Hamlet , and appeared in the classics, where his most prominent parts were a mazurka dancer in Swan Lake and a marquess in the hunting scene of The Sleeping Beauty .
  7. This poem is a dialogue between Sylvanus, a courtier, and Phillis, a country maid.
  8. and act the courtier:
  9. A courtier told TODAY: "The Princess of Wales is expected to carry out her royal engagements but is no longer expected to attend family occasions, which do not in involve the attendance of Prince William and Prince Harry."
  10. He had been an excellent courtier of the very best tradition.
  11. This lack of the courtier's innate instinct for self-preservation - a characteristic he shared with his father - did not endear him to the aristocracy, and probably lost him the appointments he needed.
  12. Woolton was an exponent of laisser faire , Leathers a rather unsuccessful interventionist, Alexander ineffectual all round, and Cherwell what he had always been, a highly intelligent courtier to his chief, though he did succeed in driving through his pet project of hiving off atomic energy from the Ministry of Supply into what became the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority.
  13. The reluctant courtier gave his master a look which would have extinguished any man with a less armour-plated ego.

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