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: star-spangled
[прилагательное] усыпанный звездами; ура-патриотический; настроенный шовинистически
Тезаурус:
- It was just before midnight and she was out on the terrace, staring out only half seeingly at the star-spangled horizon, when she heard the sound of a car drawing up at the front of the house.
- STAR-SPANGLED MANNER: Texan millionaire Bryan leans over to give Fergie an affectionate peck on the shoulder as the couple stretch out in the sun
- A tall, well-built girl in a star-spangled bathing suit knelt by Miss Liberty, and picked up the coronet.
- When the press were allowed to interview the star-spangled jailbird, Mitchum said, "Yes, boys, I was smoking a marijuana cigarette when they came in."
- Denim's Siobhan and Lawrence with star-spangled blammer Gerry out of The Glitter Band
- A star-spangled gallery watched his dramatic win.
- It's been seven long years since they ran the riot act, but there remains a threatening air of petulance and possibility about their onstage demeanour that throws a star-spangled spanner into the works.
- The smart logo for the mini-League stage is a star-spangled football.
- In Kilronan churchyard lies the blind harper who, it is said, wrote the music for the tune that became "The Star-Spangled Banner" - Turlough O'Carolan, led across Ireland on a white horse by his servant, and sleeping with his harp in the bed so as not to let the instrument's wood warp in damp rooms.
- Poor are those still, star-spangled nights of high pressure when a frost threatens, but even the bream will feed to some extent.
- What he really needed on his side was some good old-fashioned redneck backing; a few influential voices bellowing the Battle Hymn of the Republic and waving the Star-Spangled Banner in tightly clenched fists.
- The Doctor was standing on his head and juggling the balls by knocking them with the soles of his feet whilst gargling "The Star-Spangled Banner".
- America was hailed as the "great English Republic" and orators hoped that England would become a country in which "all denominations will be as free from State patronage or persecution as they are in the great land over which waves "the star-spangled banner"".
|