p
pa
pb
pc
pd
pe
pf
pg
ph
pi
pk
pl
pm
pn
po
pp
pr
ps
pt
pu
pv
pw
px
py
Перевод: proffer
[существительное] предложение; [глагол] предлагать
Тезаурус:
- the sacred scales proffer no absolution:
- But the sovereigns from Queen Victoria onwards turned consultations with the archbishop into a constitutional convention; so that now the Archbishop of Canterbury had the principal say in the choice of bishops and had a right to be consulted on the choice of his own successor; or, if he had not a constitutional right, at least he had every right to proffer advice to the prime minister whether the prime minister asked for it or not.
- The solutions they proffer only come from the limited range of their own experience.
- The unwanted jongleurs even proffer tourist information: apparently if we disembark at Oxford Street we'll be in one of the finest shopping centres in the world, so why don't we "all fuck off there and buy yer wives a mink?
- Yet he saw the danger in making these communities an ideal, as he turned an anthropological eye on Christianity and perceived that such examples seem to proffer no solution to industrial urban and suburban existence - the way most people live.
- It should also be noted that breaches tend to have a "ripple effect" and that a practitioner who does not fully understand his obligations has only to proffer one piece of investment advice (which may in itself be perfectly sound) and he will almost certainly have breached several regulations in the process.
- Better still, Disneyhood proffer a smart escape route from the Robey's desolate Quids in night.
- They assumed he would provide a technical input but underestimated the degree of creative guidance he would proffer.
- It was supposed to be Mrs Friar's turn to proffer a tit-bit.
- Ever dodging the issues of principle, the Conservatives proffer only cautious protestations that they will defend the interests of women part-time workers.
- Is he merely to proffer his hand and lead her into a stately minuet?
- That was all that was necessary and to proffer whatever it was, saying with great emphasis "Here is what you asked for, sir".
- Seiji Ozawa, a Karajan pupil, has reported how, as a teacher, Karajan would identify a point at issue but never proffer a solution, conforming to another fine adage of teaching: "You may take the pupil to the window but on no account should you attempt to describe the view."
|