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

Перевод: herd speek herd


[прилагательное]
стадный;
[существительное]
стадо; табун ; гурт ; толпа ; пастух ;
[глагол]
ходить стадом; толпиться; быть вместе; подружиться; примкнуть; собирать вместе; пасти


Тезаурус:

  1. Horses need to belong to a herd for many related but completely separate reasons.
  2. Southern African countries, particularly Zimbabwe, whose elephant herd numbers are rising, allowing them to make valuable foreign exchange from culling the animals, have already announced that they will not accept a Cites ban.
  3. He instructed Miles instead to break his surrender terms, and herd the 432 prisoners 800 miles to Fort Lincoln, near Bismarck, North Dakota.
  4. Mr Herd said police forces were using a new command structure with one senior officer, referred to as "gold" overseeing strategy for any big operation.
  5. "Other members of the herd are swimming around in the blood-red sea as this killing continues.
  6. The dolphins may also make loud sounds and a series of echo-clicks which help to herd the fish and may even stun them.
  7. This was not unusual as the Carters were farmers and it was Thomas's duty to herd the cows.
  8. Incidentally, in the eighteenth century Lord Darlington had a herd of Galloway-type cattle "finely globed with red and white", while in 1821 William Cobbett described the herd of Lord Caernarvon at Highclere, Hampshire, as white hornless "Galways" with black or red spots varying in size from that of a plate to that of a crown piece, and some without spots.
  9. The strong showing of the two environmental parties - the Greens and Ecology Generation - who clearly benefited from a haemorrhage of votes from the socialists, must have convinced the President that the old party pulled together by him in 1971 and still led by its familiar herd of "pink elephants" was doomed.
  10. The last time she'd met a herd of cows she'd turned and ridden away.
  11. Owned by Jo Rutherford, Trigo rounded up the milking herd and brought it back to the milking parlour in Devon.
  12. Alison Norman in her challenging discussion paper suggests very basic origins for ageism: "We have, after all, an animal inheritance and it is animal instinct to challenge and destroy the leader of the herd when his strength begins to fail and to abandon to their fate animals which are too weak to keep up with the rest."
  13. Some calls have a more general effect, for instance a loud neigh or whinny may alarm the whole herd in the main however, so far as communications between individuals are concerned, visual signals are more important than sounds.

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