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Перевод: scenery speek scenery


[существительное]
декорации ; пейзаж


Тезаурус:

  1. The smell of the peat, gurgle of water racing over boulders and chuckle of flocks of fieldfares searching for mountain ash berries are as characteristic as the scenery itself.
  2. The rural district of Ryedale in the heart of North Yorkshire covers six hundred square miles of dramatic scenery, with picturesque villages, purple moorland, grassy Dales and fertile valleys, and quaint market towns.
  3. Then on through beautiful Swiss scenery to Lake Lugano for lunch, before travelling back to Lake Como, and driving along Europe's most spectacular lakeside road.
  4. Dozens of people with rucksacks glare back at them from the platform as they wait for their substandard "Sprinter" to turn up; wet, cold and miserable perhaps, but at least secure in the knowledge that they will eventually travel through the same scenery without parting with their life savings.
  5. Almost on the border of the Tirol and the Vorarlberg, St Anton is set amongst the most breathtaking scenery.
  6. The Isle of Man Tourist Board is offering microlight gliding days round the island; Lake Vrnwy Hotel in Mid-Wales is promoting helicopter safaris over magnificent scenery; and clients can abseil down the walls of the Lake District's Armathwaite Hall.
  7. Malcolm Pleydell spent most of October and November there, and described the scenery.
  8. Beautiful scenery, fresh air and good food, a chance to live the simple life, staying in accommodation with more character than a motel and more comfort than a tent.
  9. But if you have the luck to come of country stock then you should never sever your roots, no matter how great the temptation to "improve" yourself, or to inhabit more glorious scenery, or to be nearer a railway station.
  10. The scenery is breathtaking and the feeling of isolation and ruggedness is easily found.
  11. In 1698 Celia Fiennes records in her "Journeys" that she visited Windermere, but the object of the visit was not only to view the scenery but to taste the Windermere char, a fish already so famous that, for instance, James Graham of Levens Hall used to order his steward to send down potted char to London, where he presented some to Queen Anne.
  12. But we were drawn by the Romantic taste in scenery, what Bertrand Russell called "wild torrents, fearful precipices, pathless forests, thunderstorms and generally what is useless, destructive and violent".
  13. "Breathtaking" is an overworked brochure cliche, but you'll find it very apt when you've experienced the kind of scenery we're talking about.

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