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Перевод: evacuee
[существительное] эвакуируемый ; эвакуированный
Тезаурус:
- But these events of war didn't really disturb Little Weirwold except for Miss Emilia Thorne who had to recast the Christmas show as each evacuee left for home.
- Many people became very fond of their evacuee children and were very kind to them, but others treated children with harshness or neglect.
- Our new landlady made it clear that she was delighted to accept us in preference to yet more evacuee children.
- At the age of ten, Connery was supposed to ship out for Australia as a wartime evacuee, but the ship sank.
- Eventually Mrs Webster explained that she had had an evacuee before me, who had "breathed on the wall", and she did not want me to do likewise.
- (When subsequently, the hospital became crowded almost to bursting point with the influx of evacuee patients from London, the master reported to the Guardians Committee that, owing to limited cooking facilities and greatly increased numbers, it had become necessary to suspend the existing dietary - which had so displeased Mr.J. - and adopt a more simplified bill of fare.)
- The couple boarded the cross-Channel steamer at Dover for Ostend, while crowds returning in haste from the Continent streamed towards London, which was already a scene of departing evacuee children and sandbags mounting round government buildings.
- John McVie's wife, ex Blue-Horizon label stalwart and Chicken Shack evacuee Christine Perfect, had joined the band full time.
- During the Second World War a nudist village for evacuee naturists was set up twenty miles outside London.
- There are songs in Latin, songs in Gaelic, a song about an evacuee and one which is clearly a prayer.
- It was not difficult to arrange because I went to stay with the same farmer with whom I had spent the whole of the previous year as an evacuee.
- "All I am," says Evacuee, "A child with promises/All I have are miles full of promises of home
- The story was current when I was there that this distinguished classical scholar, so accustomed to dealing with the textual problems of Thucydides and Greek epigraphy, was somewhat disconcerted on arriving at Bletchley station to be greeted by an evacuee urchin, jeering: "I'll read yer secret writing, guv'nor!"
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