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Перевод: bugle speek bugle


[существительное]
дубровка ползучая; охотничий рог; рожок ; горн ; сигнальная труба; бисер ; стеклярус ;
[глагол]
трубить в рог


Тезаурус:

  1. Finally there are "augmentations of office", such as the escutcheon borne by the Kingsley family, sometime hereditary foresters of Delamere in Cheshire - argent a bugle stringed sable - and the "augmentations" allowed to bishops and other dignitaries of dimidiating their personal arms with those of their office.
  2. Then we had Lights Out and when the bugle went again, the firing started.
  3. Your bugle eyeballs, nor your cheek of cream,
  4. The marching at 140 paces per minute (noticeably swifter than the more conventional pace), the bugle calls in lieu of words of command and the famous final "double-past" are all hallmarks of the distinctive style of the Division.
  5. After a bugle call to rise at 8.30 the day seemed to be spent eating: breakfast and lunch were followed by dinner at 4 p.m. which consisted of " soup, various kinds of roasts, fowls etc., pastry, puddings cheese and celery - dessert, consisting of apples, oranges, dried fruit etc."
  6. "Can you blow the bugle?" asked Morgan.
  7. If the band were signed to the publishing company which is part of the Bugle group, I could ring them to try and force the publisher to invest even more money in the artist.
  8. part of the Bugle Group of companies which includes IRS records.
  9. At IRS and the Bugle group we are very lucky because there is an agency called Prestige Talent which books concerts for artists who aren't signed to IRS or any other record company.
  10. The bugle sounded the charge; the horsemen's pace increased, but remained all the while under control.
  11. Mats of prostrate herbs, like variegated thymes and marjorams, can be used to break up expanses of soil, or you could plant an overall ground cover of bugle, saxifrage, heather or ivy, provided room is left around the roses for annual mulches and access for pruning or cutting.
  12. Rural Britain is full of retired brigadiers and industrial captains, chaps who got where they were through diplomacy, cunning and an instinct for knocking heads together when the bugle blew.
  13. But it is far more worthwhile than being polite about an old alliance, and equipping it with new "pillars" that crumble when the next unexpected bugle sounds.

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