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Перевод: callow
[прилагательное] неоперившийся; неопытный; [существительное] низина ; затопляемый луг; болотистый луг
Тезаурус:
- He was one of those relatively few actors - Ian McKellen and Simon Callow are others - who somehow boost the confidence of regular theatregoers by taking the opportunity of a free evening to watch fellow actors at work.
- Screen Two will feature Stephen Fry and Simon Callow in a new Simon Gray comedy, Old Flames.
- What Clive wanted was callow youth.
- Which was right be had no resemblance to what is commercially thought of a typecasting in any way - it's just that the mixture was right with Simon Callow.
- "Three of us were elected to Exhibitions at the same time, and I recall the maturity of his literary powers as contrasted with the callow essays we had to take up to Owen M. Edwards each week."
- The meanings of Redhead, Cruickshank, Barefoot, are obvious as are those of Thynne and Broad, but those of Callow = bald, and Pendrell = long ears, are not so well known.
- In practice this often meant that immature minds would take over Leavis's own evaluations without relating them to their own experience of literature, resulting in the diffusion of callow or inept judgements that has been condemned from the right by C. S. Lewis and from the left by Catherine Belsey.
- They collapsed into each other's arms and at that moment a group of callow youths stomped past, bigger than the girls and ferocious looking.
- It was Simon Callow's first film as director.
- The visitors could be seen to be bewitched at the learning about the cathedral coming out of such callow lips.
- To have shared the experience of Simon Callow's bottom with another was a betrayal.
- In 1980 U2 were four callow youths from Dublin, and in 1989 people come looking for miracle cures in Bono's front garden.
- Offering us "the entire history of World Theatre", a kind of pop-up guide to the theatrical imagination, he artfully avoids dry chronology, beginning instead with the modern, virtuoso excesses of Simon Callow, reaching Shakespeare through Jane Austen's observations of Edmund Kean, and the Greeks via puppetry.
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