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Перевод: emerge speek emerge


[глагол]
появляться; выход`ить; всплывать; выясняться; возникать; вставать


Тезаурус:

  1. They lay their eggs in fresh or brackish water where the immature larval mosquitoes develop to pupae, from which emerge the winged adult mosquitoes (see Box A).
  2. If war in Europe seems likely, trucks carrying four missiles each will emerge from their bunkers and disperse around southern Britain to protect them from attack.
  3. However, as streets were reconstructed one by one by a determined local authority, so did the success of calming begin to emerge and opposition to soften.
  4. However, the period immediately after the Conquest saw short-lived hereditary surnames beginning to emerge.
  5. No such clear-cut patterns emerge when looking at the substance of their preferences: whom they had chosen to comment on, and whether they regarded them favourably or unfavourably.
  6. From the cell body of a neurone there emerge two kinds of processes: relatively short dendrites which carry messages towards the cell body, and a single axon, which may be a metre in length, although in the brain it is usually much shorter, which carries signals away from the cell body.
  7. Too often the study of competitors will be subsumed in market research or industry analyses, and only an incomplete and very partial view of competitors' strategies will emerge.
  8. One of the first to emerge was DFDP from Atlanta Signal processing (Fig. 1), at one time marketed by Texas Instruments.
  9. Yet from this trivial and exhaustive research, a portrait of Goldwyn does start to emerge - indulgent, yet credible and sometimes touching - until, at length, it triumphs over the irrelevant details, the plot summaries, and the occasional errors of fact.
  10. Here, it is worth drawing attention to some points other than cost which emerge from the analysis of people's attitudes to different types of credit (Appendix I, Tables 12a, 12b, 12c and comments on them).
  11. However good our schools, there will emerge from them some people, quite capable of looking after themselves and of having a simple job, whose reading age will never be more than 8 or 9.
  12. Lawson comes over as smug and arrogant, yet his is the best book yet to emerge from inside the Thatcher years.
  13. A few minutes" whittling caused a fairy cobbler to emerge from the tree in which his spirit had evidently been imprisoned.

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