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Перевод: dweller
[существительное] житель ; обитатель
Тезаурус:
- Economic factors and unemployment for the educated and uneducated, the urban and the rural dweller, the young and the old(ish), are lessening this type of escape alienation.
- Inevitably this means that not only are individual consciousnesses unique but that the consciousnesses of one epoch may differ as greatly from those of another as do the construed worlds of a polar Eskimo and a city dweller in New York.
- Back in Pinjarra the old, semi-conscious aboriginal groans, and then lapses back into sleep; another fringe dweller out for the count.
- Furthermore, the causes of fuelwood scarcity must seem remote and diffuse to the average urban dweller.
- This assistance inevitably spilled over as an increase in general prosperity for the ordinary Milanese city dweller.
- To a town dweller the silence is eerie - so this is how the wilderness felt to the early explorers and settlers.
- My bet is that it was started by one cave dweller stalking another through the gravel of Peking or Java, his stone club at the ready.
- She loved the night sky, brilliant with stars, which to her town dweller's eyes, seemed much nearer to earth here in East Anglia.
- Hence there follows a full description of the origin and staple features of the constituent parts of the traditional farmstead because it is important that the untutored town dweller who is contemplating the purchase and conversion of an old farm building should recognise the different building types, understand the operational influences which shaped the form of each structure, and frame his or her ideas for the conversion so that any permanent evidence of agricultural history which the building provides is not erased.
- It is also the meeting of the cultured city dweller, who led Odysseus from undergrowth to city palace, with the savage Cyclops who wished to eat the hero in a cave.
- There are many topographical names which have lasted down to the present in a perfectly straightforward fashion (the articles or toponymical qualifiers being dropped), such as Field, Bridge, Ford, Green, Lake, Lane, Orchard, Townsend, Gate and so on, but others are less obvious in their modern guises - Atwell and Attwood, Byfield and Byway are clear enough as examples in which the definite article has become assimilated, but others like Boveton = above town, and Binetheton - below town, are not so obvious at first sight, neither are Biart - dweller near the enclosure, Stanners = dweller at the stone house, or Leese = dweller by the pasture.
- My respected landladies, who are the double-distilled quintessence of considerateness and island hospitality, would think all good would leave their abodes if a dweller beneath their roof left fasting, so, in spite of all my entreaties to the contrary, a cup of tea was prepared to forestall my start; and as I walked by the river-side and reached a road that skirts a number of very massive peat-stacks, and displays on the landward side an interminable host of peat-pits, the geniality of the sunshine was felt, and I would gladly have slackened my pace were it not that by so doing my good friends at Gress (some eight miles from Stornoway, where I was due at eight o'clock, if I remember rightly), might have waited breakfast for me.
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