h ha hb hc hd he hf hg hh hi hl hm ho hp hq hr hs ht hu hw hy hz

Перевод: haggard speek haggard


[прилагательное]
изможденный; измученный; осунувшийся; неприрученный


Тезаурус:

  1. Occasional letters and photographs would come from Terry Anderson, an AP journalist captured in 1985; the face grew more haggard, the eyes more accusing and staring.
  2. At this point in the tale most readers would expect a tragi heroic ending, and indeed in the hands of Rider Haggard or Masefield this would almost certainly have been the case.
  3. Sarah's face was haggard.
  4. Looking drawn and haggard, she dived back into the crowd as she was recognised by photographers.
  5. At thirty-two, he was young enough not to look completely haggard, even after thirty-six hours with only the odd hour's sleep, but his dark hair was plastered to his head and the brown eyes were sunk back in his head and reddened with smoke and exhaustion.
  6. Haggard recounted the power of Cook's name in the only travel book he wrote.
  7. White-haired, yellow faced, thin and haggard, as were so many of those lying in the beds that lined both sides of the long hut.
  8. I had expressed concern that after the long journey, probably spent standing in the corridor, I might look rather haggard, so the wearing of a yashmak was suggested, especially as Leslie would be used to seeing this item of female camouflage in the souks and cafs of North Africa from Alexandria to Algiers.
  9. But she'd already started to dissipate the beauty of her voice with various kinds of addiction - narcotics, alcohol and companions who weren't altogether kind to her - and the last ten years of her life (she died in 1959) find the light, drifting delivery of the pre-war years shrivelling into the croak of a haggard ghost.
  10. For this purpose such books as She of Rider Haggard, and Lost Horizon of Hilton, and Tolkien's Fellowship of the Ring , and Eddison's The Worm Ouroboros , help to give the imagination a new dimension.
  11. She imagined him haggard and afraid, even though she was too far away to see his face clearly.
  12. Beneath it, Harriet Shakespeare's face was huge and haggard and she was leaning hard against the woman beside her.
  13. During those times I read a great deal - mostly books chosen for me by my father and which I thought more suitable for boys than for girls - Jack London, Rider Haggard, Talbot Baines Reed, Arthur Ransome.

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