g
ga
gb
gc
gd
ge
gf
gg
gh
gi
gj
gk
gl
gm
gn
go
gp
gr
gs
gt
gu
gw
gy
gz
Перевод: garments
[существительное] одежда
Тезаурус:
- There are many different variations of lifted weaving which can be used for decorating garments.
- But the garments modern Christians think of as Western ecclesiastical vestments developed from the "Sunday best" of late Roman aristocrats, which the clergy (always the guardians of the old tradition) continued to wear after their barbarian congregations had put on trousers or Lederhosen.
- He began to wrap the garments again.
- With Garments trickling like a shallow Spring,
- And these - garments - are the sort to impress?"
- They all have shortcomings which I will not go into on this occasion, but which make them inappropriate models on which to slip the garments of orthodox doctrines of Atonement and the Trinity.
- He has definitively discovered what happens to socks and underwear once the wearers have been persuaded to shed them, how co-habiting men and women care for their most intimate garments, and how couples come to joint terms with the washing machine - or fail to.
- He knew how easy it was for someone to conceal himself amongst the clutter of hanging garments, unseen and unsuspected, while even grown-ups went about their business in ignorance of his presence.
- The therapist will show you the techniques of helping the patient to cope with particular garments.
- For trousers, socks and shoes, the garments are placed on a stool slightly to the side of the patient.
- The first part of the programme consists of three short pieces: Cohan's clever solo for Bhuller in which he discards his garments, in front of Crickmay blow-up photographs, to Britten's Six Metamorphoses after Ovid; Bhuller's own Interlock, which is quite simply about an interlocked couple to the accompaniment of a sitar; and a dance by Jonathan Lunn, to Philip Glass music, called Doppelganger which is, as you might guess, about a chap confronted by a woman in identical costume whose stuttery movements gradually blend into his own.
- A derivation of White Sunday, it refers to the white garments worn by the recently baptised Christians of the early Church.
- Jessie was small and hunched, like a white-haired mouse, hardly visible beneath the garments she carried.
|