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Перевод: ponder speek ponder


[существительное]
пестик ;
[глагол]
обдумывать; взвешивать; размышлять


Тезаурус:

  1. One can only ponder at the ethics of an industry which for thirty years slaughtered dolphins in their millions for the sake of saving 2 cents per can, and then requires an "epic" debate to change its source of supply.
  2. When women ponder on an individual, emotion or social phenomenon, it is called Gossip.
  3. If you've ever wondered whether your mate might stray, here are some questions to ponder.
  4. It is worth spending a little time to ponder the significance of this.
  5. Leonard extends this sense here in this book - to those who will read and ponder.
  6. He urged that a review procedure should be devised to assist ministers to ponder "its distribution between the various services".
  7. But, while the legislators ponder on "the rights and freedoms of the individual" (is that the right to throw your Alsatian out onto the motorway because he's grown too big to handle?) we are all left to contemplate statistics like 1000 stray dogs put down daily by the RSPCA, or 58,000 road accidents (many involving death and serious injury) caused by stray dogs.
  8. The Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police might care to ponder why it is that juries increasingly dismiss the sworn evidence of his officers in favour of those accusing them of gross impropriety.
  9. He could fill a car-boot after any show with bumph given to him by exhibitors, none of whom ever seemed to ponder the consequences of encouraging copycat technology.
  10. It was a thought to ponder while reading about the short-nosed shrew and the harmlessness of the false chanterelle.
  11. The falling of Burbank, taking us down the moral ladder, and the "saggy bending of the knees" of Bleistein, taking us down the evolutionary ladder, lead to the declining "smoky candle end of time" which prepares Burbank and the reader to ponder over "Time's ruins", the etymology of "ruins" being important.
  12. In the end, I judged the best option to be to talk in the privacy of his room, thus giving him the opportunity to ponder his new situation in solitude once I took my leave.
  13. Then Augustine begins to ponder that the memory is a vast and boundless sphere, full of desires and hopes of happiness, as well as being full of fears and sorrows: "Great is the power of memory, a fearful thing, O my God, a deep and boundless manifoldness: and this thing is the mind, and this am I myself."

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