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: sternness speek sternness


[существительное]
суровость ; твердость


Тезаурус:

  1. The family, as Josephine Butler put it, was in accordance with the law of God, and the claim that every person should live in accord with their instincts was a departure from "the sternness of the moral law".
  2. Try to talk about things that aren't on the list, to find out a little more about Moore and how shaky he is, how super-sensitive, how damned defensive, and you'll be faced with as much sternness and disapproval as he can muster.
  3. Mrs Kirkley ate one of Millie's buns and praised it highly; and after Annabel had eaten one, and then asked if she might have another, her mother exclaimed in mock sternness, "Oh!
  4. The Great War started and took the scho er This Road school had all men teachers extep except standard one, which was an introduction from infants to grown-up and a matronly lady always called Miss , er broke us into this new sort of discipline and sternness really.
  5. This is your period," Mada Joyce's concern began to turn to sternness.
  6. And I was not in the position to show the sternness which would have nipped it all in the bud.
  7. She was a forceful personality who did not suffer fools gladly, but her sternness was accompanied by grace and Victorian courtesy.
  8. I looked at her in mock sternness.
  9. Both in his sternness and in his generosity, Davie is strongly reminiscent of a much earlier writer, whose name is invoked towards the end of Under Briggflatts.
  10. Even Ratagan seemed to have forgotten how to smile, and the sternness of the Myrcans deepened.
  11. She was demure and dark-haired with deep blue eyes, and her full lips were constantly set firmly, giving the impression of sternness, although she was far from stern when dealing with her charges.
  12. Her happiness because of this scene was so strong she closed her eyes so that it would not beam out in great mellow streams and betray her to the sternness of the others.
  13. Chamberlain was explicit about his motives in a letter to Beatrice Webb: "It will remove the great danger, viz, that public sentiment should go wholly over to the unemployed and render impossible that state sternness to which you or I equally attach importance.

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