m ma mb mc md me mf mg mh mi mk ml mm mn mo mp mr ms mt mu mv mw mx my mz

Перевод: mania speek mania


[существительное]
мания


Тезаурус:

  1. I started Wavebreaker 's engines, used the bow thruster to drive her stem away from the quay and, with an apparent cargo of misery and mania, went to sea.
  2. The English boy showed the others all the implements and products I had collected for cleaning and disinfecting, telling them I had a mania for cleanliness, and I'd once decided to wash all his clothes and he'd had to stay indoors the whole day.
  3. Plus Hollywood's new mania for ghost movies, why The Handmaid's Tale is a great book but a lousy film, and a round-up of the latest music books.
  4. IT ISN'T just the kids that are gripped by wrestle mania.
  5. Was it a mania for translating bishops - represented at its oddest in the idea that it was sensible at the age of 73 to move the revered George Bell to one of these sees?
  6. All is not lost; the mania is not an epidemic: this weekend (January 27th) is the 235th anniversary of the composer's birth, and only Britain's Radio 3 went overboard on it.
  7. By omitting the blocks to the east and west of the site that Hall had included, Manners was effectively answering Palmerston's accusation that the Government was indulging in a "mania for pulling down".
  8. The State Paper Office, a most convenient fire-proof building, which cost the public 50,000, is, we hear, to be pulled down; and the mania for pulling down is to extend not only to it, but, in order to complete the "congruity", we should have to Gothicise the Horse Guards, and apply Gothic exteriors to all buildings in the neighbourhood.
  9. MAHOGANY MANIA FROM ESSANELLE
  10. Hopefully, someone, somewhere will find a permanent cure from this debilitating malaise, known only as Red Spot Mania .
  11. Bukharin understood better than most that Stalin's mania - as it was shown to be - for breakneck industrialisation was to bring many years of misery and suffering to all the Soviet peoples.
  12. The difference has spawned the nice turn of phrase "security by accomplishment", rather than by secrecy - which means keeping scientifically ahead of the Soviets by remaining free to move speedily, rather than by emulating their deadening security mania.
  13. Botanical guides had their heyday during the Victorian mania for fern-collection, which stripped the mountains bare of many of the rarest species - go and look at the grave of "Wil Boots" in Nant Peris churchyard for the story of this in miniature.

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru