n
na
nb
nc
nd
ne
nf
ng
nh
ni
nj
nk
nl
nm
nn
no
np
nr
ns
nt
nu
nv
nw
nx
ny
Перевод: napoleon
[существительное] наполеон ; наполеондор ; название карточной игры; слоеное пирожное; высокие сапоги
Тезаурус:
- In so far as he could limit expenditure, Napoleon III did his best.
- The 40-year gap between the First and Second Empires had in no way diminished the ability of these people to perform their functions properly and with dignity, and it should not be thought that the Court of Napoleon III had a sort of second-hand quality about it.
- According to its provisions, Napoleon, if he left no direct heir, would be succeeded first by his brother Joseph, then by his brother Louis.
- That threat of invasion was, however, removed, in 1805, by the great naval victory at Trafalgar, in which Horatio Nelson destroyed the French fleet at the cost of his own life, This was followed by General Arthur Wellesley - who later became the Duke of Wellington - leading British troops into the Spanish Peninsula against Napoleon, who then began to experience considerable defeats, not the least of which was his retreat from Moscow in the winter of 1812, and the following year saw the Duke of Wellington taking the war into France culminating in the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, which brought about the final defeat of Napoleon.
- Repeatedly, he says that to brush a vicious old woman aside like a swatted fly and get on with life is to prove oneself a Napoleon - not Napoleon himself who lost whole armies and forgot about them, but a Napoleon.
- Napoleon III was an innovator, not merely a man of his time but frequently one who was ahead of it, and so he was determined that his Court would deliberately eschew the rigid exclusivity which was the hallmark of the traditional European court structure.
- Charlemagne was crowned with it, as were the later kings of Italy, including Napoleon.
- He was buried with the kings of France until Napoleon had the remains removed to the Invalides in 1800.
- What distinguished the Court of Napoleon III was its brilliance and verve, for he was determined that it should in no way resemble the moribund courts of Europe, stifling under the weight of tradition, except in so far as etiquette and good order must prevail.
- Many were taken away by the Romans, others by Napoleon, but ours was a present from the Egyptian government in the last century - a jolly nice present, too, if I may say so.
- Under Napoleon these fathers were disbanded and the church came under the governorship of the more important building to San Calimero.
- In a Napoleon he cannot discover anybody to be; a Napoleon is a projected, dreamed-up, aimed-at type, a "generalhuman".
|
|
LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов
|
|