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Перевод: eloquence speek eloquence


[существительное]
красноречие; красноречивость ; ораторское искусство; риторика


Тезаурус:

  1. Most of them could express themselves with a lilting eloquence which left the English spellbound.
  2. There was an eloquence about his hand movements and I realized also that he could be a dancer if he wanted to be.
  3. The creator of the Metropolitan police force (Peelers), he changed sides over Catholic emancipation and the repeal of the corn laws, and carried his (Tory) party on both reforms by his eloquence and stature.
  4. He addressed Coleridge, with more enthusiasm than skill, in a poem which begins "Hail to thee Coleridge, youth of various powers!", and which expresses in its stilted, conventional way, something of the electrifying effect produced by Coleridge's passionate eloquence on any sympathetic listener.
  5. From a hot-head who has done time for killing a man, he develops into a union organiser who discovers the eloquence his new role demands.
  6. In these weeks he was also carrying his tireless eloquence to local Unitarian chapels.
  7. The two men were instantly captivated by one another, Coleridge overwhelming Southey with his extraordinary powers of eloquence and intellect, Southey immediately winning Coleridge's admiration by his decisiveness and strength of character.
  8. Mr Prescott's rough-edged style conveys a sense of honest indignation, where soothing strokes of eloquence might seem insincere.
  9. What they lacked was Mr Pozsgay's eloquence, access to the media and the ability to relate these lofty ideas to the man and woman in the street.
  10. The obsessions with eloquence and general knowledge would appear to be ones that emerged with our generation, probably in the wake of Mr Marshall, when lesser men trying to emulate his greatness mistook the superficial for the essence.
  11. While the best thing about the lovers is the way they convey adolescent awkwardness towards each other, their sexual excitement is less marked and both underplay the eloquence of their ecstatic speeches.
  12. John Stuart Mill's claim that eloquence is heard and poetry overheard can, in a sense, be applied to such poems.
  13. Asked by Congressman Jenkins whether he could persuade his superiors, simply because of his eloquence, to run against the wishes of the Cabinet, North replied "I have no doubt about that."

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