l la lb lc ld le lf lg lh li ll lm lo lp lr ls lt lu lv lw lx ly lz

Перевод: lustful speek lustful


[прилагательное]
похотливый


Тезаурус:

  1. Every action which is accepted as kindly, every individual act of devotion and sacrifice, whether made in the havoc of war or in times of peace, every act of generosity and in fact every good thing which has resulted from the endless struggle to uphold the decision to master the violent and lustful urges which are a legacy from the evolutionary process, will play its part in providing units of goodness to be enshrined in the Created God.
  2. Adonis, cold and puritanical, rejects the lustful invitations of Venus, the supreme goddess, He goes off hunting, and as a punishment for his presumptuous chastity, is killed by a boar.
  3. When I know how a lustful man may feel towards his neighbour's pretty young wife I can understand a leer, but if asked what it means there is nothing I can say.
  4. So "Hammer", a tempestuous saga of death by lustful adventure should be picked up by a Channel 4 researcher and used on an equally graphic AIDS documentary.
  5. Breasts sliced off -" he held out a glistening spoonful; Kitty blenched - "for refusing to submit to the lustful wishes of one Quintian.
  6. The myth recurs in some form in all the plays right up to The Tempest, where the boar, again the agent of the lustful goddess, charges (the threats to Miranda's chastity) but is stopped "in mid-air" by the magic of Prospero.
  7. Jaq learned the appellations of those great entities of Chaos: Slaanesh the lustful, Khorne the blood-soaked, Tzeentch the mutator, Nurgle the plague-bearer.
  8. Lustful travellers came from all over the world to watch him dance, naked except for a silk cap atop his curls.
  9. Excessive and lustful kissing, lustful embraces, suggestive postures and gestures are not to be shown.
  10. The lustful person puts out strong sexual energy and attracts the same, while the peaceful and loving heart finds himself automatically with those of a similar disposition.
  11. - "in thought I see my past madness"; these two cries are from the Arnaut Daniel speech ending Purgatorio XXVI , where the poet condemned to the circle of lust prays for the hearer's consideration and looks forward to the release from the to tortures meted out to the lustful.
  12. A fairly conventional view - but here it is transformed by an argument that makes Caliban not merely the boar, minister of the lustful Venus - in contrast to Prospero, who, like Adonis, is tediously keen on chastity - but the hero of the piece, and indeed of the collected works.

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru