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Перевод: cordial
[прилагательное] сердечный; задушевный; радушный; искренний; теплый; [существительное] стимулирующее сердечное средство; крепкий стимулирующий напиток; наливка
Тезаурус:
- Meanwhile, relations in the scrum were not always cordial.
- These pictures, rarely cordial, have become more and more baleful: it is as if he is holding himself back from physical assault on a reader supposed to be a trendy and a lefty, which is, indeed, what many of his readers have always been.
- Higgins always opened each Boxing Day morning and I was dispatched to buy their own brand of "Carminative Cordial".
- The meetings of the Combined Policy Committee, which was tasked to draft a replacement for the 1943 Quebec Agreement in the form of a modus vivendi , were constructive and cordial: the Americans had much to gain from making them so.
- This Victorian advertisement claims that Carminative Cordial tin which Dad had so much faith) "saved the lives of many, especially during the time when cholera raged in Salisbury" (1849).
- Coleman lived on cordial terms with his assistant, William Sewell, for over 40 years.
- Personal relations amongst officials on both bodies remained cordial, and as much as possible was done to keep collaboration alive without breaching the letter of Congress's legislation.
- "But if I should ask you for - say, a cordial, to relieve my troubles"
- To cordial goodbyes they left, leaving Erika and Frulein Silber alone in the huge gym.
- The atmosphere was cordial and relaxed - the Emperor even entertained the children with conjuring tricks - and when the time came to leave he assured the Queen that "If we stayed longer we should end up by forgetting France altogether."
- The atmosphere was, however, cordial, if not convivial, and the talk was of what grandchildren were up to or what Dr So-and-so said about this or that particular problem.
- One of the minor tragedies of the war, thought Karelius, lay in the fact that his own enforced deceit meant that he and a totally decent man like Moreau, however cordial their relations, could never become true friends.
- He hadn't expected either that the Mess would be in a chteau, that the furniture would be impressively of its period - no worn armchairs or bits of junk in a state of collapse from subalterns' games, as so often to be found in the messes of his experience, or indeed that his welcome would be so unaffectedly cordial.
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