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: midlands speek midlands


[существительное]
центральные графства


Тезаурус:

  1. At the same time, hundreds of workers in the Midlands plants who had heard about the Pier Head meeting on the grapevine now decided to drive up to Liverpool to influence the return to work vote.
  2. Smith should have been on the bench for London's game against the Midlands last Saturday but had to drop out with the same complaint.
  3. There were to be diversionary rebellions in Scotland and the north of England, supported perhaps by spontaneous risings in other areas like the already restive Midlands, but the main effort was to be in the south-west, centred on Bath.
  4. In June 1981 the junior transport wrote to the West Midlands "I am satisfied with the nature and standard of the repair work."
  5. At Stourbridge Town Hall in the West Midlands last night, where Botham began his tour, those who came instead of a night out at the pictures were somewhat surprised to find themselves treated to a night out at the pictures.
  6. Later, bricks were commonly imported, but even these, including the splendid "blues" of the industrial Midlands, added their individual stamp to river landscapes.
  7. Influenced by our strong local-government showing in Birmingham and the Midlands, I advised June and that was clearly the majority view.
  8. E MIDLANDS CUP.
  9. Toton took over responsibility for all Railfreight Coal traction used in the Midlands, North West, Yorkshire and North East districts, comprising some 250 locomotives of Classes 20, 56 and 58.
  10. And ironically enough, it was the iron deposits that changed Corby into a red brick town and one of the chief industrial centres of the East Midlands.
  11. Labour made least advance in the West Midlands, with its share of the vote in Sandwell, Walsall and Wolverhampton actually decreasing compared with 1988.
  12. The agricultural working class, deprived of a subsistence on the land by the enclosures of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, thronged to the cities of the Midlands and the North where the economics of laissez-faire forced them to work long hours in wretched conditions for miserable wages, and threw them out of employment altogether as soon as there was a downturn in the market.
  13. Mr Smith said "market forces" meant, for example, a 25-year-old shop worker in Liverpool earning just 40 a week or a 35-year-old travel agent's employee in the Midlands being paid just 1.11 per hour.

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru