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Перевод: elapse speek elapse


[глагол]
проходить (о времени); лететь (о времени); пролетать (о времени)


Тезаурус:

  1. Nevertheless, centuries were to elapse before this invention became widespread.
  2. If you allow more than one or two days to elapse you may either lose your nerve, or find that you have missed your opportunity, or you might give the prospective employer the impression that you are not really interested.
  3. In an era when many months might elapse between the collection of plants and seeds from abroad and their arrival in Britain, care over their packing and transport was essential.
  4. The existing constitution stipulated that in the event of the president's death, the vice-president must act in place of the president for the ninety days which would elapse before an election could be held.
  5. In areas of multipath, several minutes may elapse between successive occurrences of successful reception and decoding of the groups carrying the CT data.
  6. They did not realise that three years would elapse before Black's injuries would be sufficiently stabilised to enable them to be measured by his doctors or that there are factors in the functioning of the United Kingdom judicial system which would thwart him from securing justice in the courts.
  7. A domicile of origin is notoriously adhesive, but it is only if it is replaced with a foreign domicile of choice, and three further years elapse, that the individual will escape the UK inheritance tax net.
  8. He watched his dejected figure walk past him into the cottage and, after allowing a few minutes to elapse, followed him in and discovered him sitting at the table in the living room, his bag of apples and sandwich lying untouched.
  9. Almost a century would elapse before the prejudice thus created was extinguished, and donors began freely to leave their bodies for medical research.
  10. As the rule book insists, 12 weeks will elapse before the electoral college is convened.
  11. Researchers working with this substance set about trying to remove a fertilized ovum from a woman during the few days that elapse between actual conception and the implantation of the cell into the uterus - where it must be to develop into an infant - and then replacing it.
  12. Doubts arose over the length of time which might elapse before the child ceased to be regarded as "newly born", and the Infanticide Act 1938 extended the definition to the killing of a child within twelve months of its birth by a mother whose mind is disturbed either by reason of her not having fully recovered from the effect of giving birth to the child or by reason of the effect of lactation consequent upon the birth of the child.
  13. There was no "correct" length of time which should elapse before she was ready to try, so it did not matter how long it took.

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