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Перевод: nobility speek nobility


[существительное]
благородство; великодушие; величие; дворянство; знать ; родовая знать


Тезаурус:

  1. Yet many of the young passengers adopted an air of cool nobility, even of passionate complicity in their own fate; these were praised.
  2. In the 1770s, however, there were great numbers of ordinary people who overnight had become "prisoners" of whom few, if any, of the gentry and nobility, let alone Members of Parliament were aware.
  3. There was a drastic shift in the ratio of Polish to German nobility in and around Danzig.
  4. The attempts to rationalize the administration, to centralize power, collided directly with local liberties and the particularist and traditional privileges of the old supporters of the regime (for example, the Tatar nobility).
  5. Unlike most of the other Prussian monarchs, who were genially indifferent to Poland and things Polish, Frederick William II had a deep contempt for the Polish nobility.
  6. What he had already done at Bec and Caen, he would do at Canterbury: he rebuilt the cathedral church and monastic buildings; he fought pertinaciously and successfully to defend the ancient properties of the cathedral church against the rapacious invading nobility, who scoured the land for what they could pick up; he drew up a new code of monastic practice, and he introduced new men who would know how to implement it.
  7. So quickly that the commonalty experienced difficulty in keeping up with them and the nobility wondered where disaster would strike next in the realm.
  8. In Kaszubia, Mazowia and Silesia the peasants referred to themselves as Kaszuby , Mazury and Slzaki rather than as Poles: Polak was a term reserved for the Polish nobility.
  9. Here is a similar mixture of impetuosity and nobility which makes Richter so special.
  10. Those tears were tears of ecstasy at contemplating the nobility, courage and great heartedness of Socrates, rather than tears of sadness for the death of so upright a man.
  11. Rising as it did, when the nobility and knightly classes in England were of Norman stock, it follows that the language of armory was French, and so it has remained (in remarkably garbed form with English interpolations) to the present day.
  12. Yet even the nobility were loath to pay for such intangibles when they could obtain a similar ritual at less outlay and with greater speed from within the trade.
  13. Such images, it may be surmised, were not well received by the nobility, who continued to commission portraits of conventionally austere appearance.

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