s sa sb sc sd se sf sg sh si sj sk sl sm sn so sp sq sr ss st su sv sw sy

Перевод: shoemaker speek shoemaker


[существительное]
башмачник ; сапожник


Тезаурус:

  1. Woodhouse retained a sense of himself as a shoemaker long after he had gone into the book trade: the title of his most important work "The Life and Lucubrations of Crispinus Scriblerus" (c. 1795) is an allusion to one of the patron saints of cobblers.
  2. His parents, Abraham and Beattie, were ordinary, respectable, middle-class Jews who owned an electrical-goods store in the town; his grandfather, who left Russia in the 1920s, had been a peddler and a shoemaker.
  3. He had been apprenticed to a shoemaker in his teens, but had been interrupted by the War.
  4. He won the Sword Dancer Stakes in July, with 50-year-old Bill Shoemaker replacing his regular jockey Laffit Pincay.
  5. In 1928 Erika met and married Salomon Markus, a shoemaker twice her age, who also played bridge.
  6. A Luton shoemaker's grandfather would come every Friday night for a bath and a meal of pease pudding and chitterlings in front of the fire.
  7. The former writer and fund manager, now deputy chairman of the renamed Maddox Group, has just backed his younger brother, Paul, and a partner in buying the Hush Puppy factory in Kilmarnock from Burlington International, the shoemaker which called in the receiver last month.
  8. This little shoemaker I'm carving is a leprechaun he pronounced it "leprehorn" and the priest will say there's no such thing.
  9. In the late 19th century businesses were varied - tailor and insurance agent, saddler and parish clerk, carrier, shoemaker, wheelwright, pig jobber, taxidermist, doctor, grocer, miller, blacksmith, bricklayer, butcher, cattle dealer, five farms, market garden and three public houses.
  10. He may make an excellent shoemaker, but can never make a good poet.
  11. He says that the companies with which he deals are often like "the shoemaker's kid who wears shoes with holes".
  12. There was once a poor shoemaker who had three fine strong sons and two pretty daughters and a third, who could do nothing well, who shivered plates and tangled her spinning, who curdled milk, could not get butter to come, nor set a fire so that smoke did not pour into the room, a useless, hopeless, dreaming daughter, to whom her mother would often say that she should try to fend for herself in the wild wood, and then she would know the value of listening to advice, and of doing things properly.
  13. The rural sociological literature of the 1960s of the diffusionist school has demonstrated to the point of overkill the problem of the laggard and the small farmer (Rogers Shoemaker 1971).

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru