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Перевод: clad
[глагол] одевать; покрывать; облекать; #past и p.p. от clothe
Тезаурус:
- Standing at the far end of the room, before the southern doors, is a man clad head to toe in plate mail armour, wielding a rune-inscribed bastard sword.
- Small children, watching the falling snowflakes from inside the hut, began to cry and reach for their parents as the snowslope parted and two strange, spindly creatures clad only in red thermals and inner boots emerged like primordial reptilian embryos.
- Others present massive facades to the sea, their walls clad with smoothly worked slabs fitted irregularly but snugly together with the skill reminiscent of Inca workmanship.
- Underneath it she was clad in a close-fitting N. Peal black sweater which showed off her figure to full advantage.
- They were sharp-faced and casually clad.
- But for one or two better clad of the group, the place might truthfully be designated a shopful of rags.
- He realized that he was getting cold, clad as he was exclusively in a rather small towel, but decided to stick it out and pick up all of Davidson's message.
- All you or your workmen have to do is supply a concrete base and clad the outside walls in brick or stone and give it the finishing touches.
- In accordance with the procedures governing Roger Hall's comedy, they do so at regularly-spaced intervals, each entering with a gasp and clad in a ridiculous profusion of scarves, hats and rainwear, so that his droll point about the awfulness of the country's climate can be adequately appreciated.
- The mock-Stealer gestured at her snout clad in syn-skin.
- A dozen men and women clad in furs were polishing axes and broadswords monotonously, mindlessly.
- The design for a separate building housing toilers - block built but externally clad with matchboarding - successfully achieved complete harmony with the H.H. B.R. construction.
- The British Army soldiers had been, for a considerable period of time, mainly clad in a red tunic for battle, reputably so that any sign of blood was not easily discerned, but Baden-Powell realised that, with the advance of fire arms, the red tunic provided a more prominent target than the rather drab mixture of green and brown as normally worn by the Boers.
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