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Перевод: serpent speek serpent


[существительное]
змея ; змей ; змий ; коварный человек; злой человек; дьявол


Тезаурус:

  1. A huge sea-monster, variously described as a serpent or squid, said to have been seen off the coast of Norway and on the North American coast.
  2. Eliot had known Lawrence's work for some time, but in 1931-;2 he had grown particularly interested in that writer, whose "travels to more primitive lands" and use of Mexican divinities in The Plumed Serpent were physical embodiment of Eliot's anthropological reading and a likely reason for that title, After Strange Gods .
  3. More common is Milton's use of the word, describing the serpent in Paradise Lost as "the fittest imp of fraud", for imps are thought to sprout from Satan and to frequently adopt various animal forms in order to serve their evil master.
  4. Hindus know the cosmic energy as the kundalini or serpent force, and this is said to be coiled around the base of the spine in every human being.
  5. The Serpent when assailed
  6. Instead, I ran screaming like a banshee into the garden engulfed in coils of stiffened pipe and looking like some mythical figure being consumed by a serpent.
  7. Depicted as a feathered serpent, he was the chief god of life, as well as controller of the winds.
  8. Dreamtime legends tell that the Julunggul, in his guise as a gigantic serpent, dug out many rivers and waterholes as he writhed through the desert sand.
  9. Mithra's other form, found in the Eastern as well as the Western world, is as a lion-headed monster around whose body a serpent is coiled.
  10. They see the "cunning" of the serpent in the Garden of Eden as the wiles of the first intellectual (probably a theologian).
  11. The serpent at its root, the fruit of gold
  12. They have lent forms and skills even to the great serpent who beguiled Eve, who swallowed Jonah and who wrestled in the wilderness with the young man from Nazareth.
  13. The rifts of the The Fairy Melusina are heavily overloaded with ore; during the Pre-Raphaelite Period it was admired by certain critics, including Swinburne, who called it, "a quiet, muscular serpent of a tale, with more vigour and venom than is at all usual in the efforts of the female pen, but without narrative thrust; rather, as was Coleridge's Serpent who figured the Imagination, with its tail stuffed in its own mouth."

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