c ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci ck cl cm cn co cp cr cs ct cu cw cy cz

Перевод: cordial speek cordial


[прилагательное]
сердечный; задушевный; радушный; искренний; теплый;
[существительное]
стимулирующее сердечное средство; крепкий стимулирующий напиток; наливка


Тезаурус:

  1. Meanwhile, relations in the scrum were not always cordial.
  2. 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.
  3. Higgins always opened each Boxing Day morning and I was dispatched to buy their own brand of "Carminative Cordial".
  4. 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.
  5. 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).
  6. Coleman lived on cordial terms with his assistant, William Sewell, for over 40 years.
  7. 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.
  8. "But if I should ask you for - say, a cordial, to relieve my troubles"
  9. To cordial goodbyes they left, leaving Erika and Frulein Silber alone in the huge gym.
  10. 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."
  11. 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.
  12. 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.
  13. 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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