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Перевод: poultice
[существительное] припарка ; [глагол] ставить припарки; класть припарки
Тезаурус:
- The Anglo Saxons' solution to chapping and peeling was a poultice of beet, lettuce, coriander, herbs and crumbs mixed with water.
- As she could not stop, he had arisen, telling her that she might cry herself sick, but that he was going to Mrs Inigo, a woman who wasn't quite such a cold poultice.
- "So that we can flatten that Swire Sugden and post him back through his letter-box," Otley said, crushing his bread roll into a poultice.
- The solid uncooperative bundle was surprisingly heavy; it was like trying to manoeuvre a firm and rather smelly poultice.
- It was as if they had served to draw some morbid agent from her blood, as if they had been a great black and damson poultice to draw off her petulant humours and leave her as placid as a Madonna.
- As for the supposedly curative hair of the dog, this stems from the ancient belief that the only cure for an infected dog bite was a poultice of milk, bread and fur from the offending animal.
- Anyway, Mother became very ill with pleurisy and my father had to poultice her.
- Launched on a miniscule budget and a surge of dubious optimism, held together in the first eighteen months by a poultice of desperation and blind faith (not to mention liberal applications of cow gum and sellotape), still independent after a decade of brinkmanship publishing this is a tremendous achievement.
- It seemed at first glance that Louise was wearing a turban; she had saved her day's ration of flour and had made a poultice of it for a boil which had erupted on her temple; her other boils seemed to be growing slightly better.
- Poultice?
- She is there in the tone of voice: "My corner shop sells wrapped, sliced white loaves that, at a pinch, could poultice a wound."
- "the smoke of the innumerable tall chimneys lies over all like a poultice houses and shops go on for ever, and at the back of them, blotting out all the rest of the world, rise great precipitous mills like frowning cliffs, at whose base are the small houses where the folks live like coneys at a mountain foot.
- Louise Dunstaple, who had once been so fair, now looked like some consumptive Irish girl you might find walking the London streets; in spite of the angry red spots on her pale brow she no longer wore the poultice of flour the temptation had been too much for her and she had eaten it.
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