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Перевод: deformed
[прилагательное] уродливый
Тезаурус:
- It damages the joints of fingers, wrists, toes and other areas which can become swollen, stiff, and, in severe cases, even deformed.
- It examined the records of 8517 deformed children born at 34 hospitals between 1966 and 1979.
- The study found that 127 of the deformed infants were fathered by Vietnam Veterans while 123 of the healthy children were also fathered by veterans.
- It is essential that bulbs spend a period of time in cool, dark conditions before flowering (this is known as plunging) to ensure that a good root system is produced, otherwise stunted growth and deformed flowers can result.
- I could easily write paragraphs in tender praise of that young girl's pouting lower lip, but the end result would be to make her appear ludicrously deformed.
- In the end the consequences of Chernobyl may be more than a horrifying collection of statistics about unleashed radiation, deformed lives, premature deaths.
- He was a thalidomide baby who was born with deformed legs - the right one was later amputated when Geoff was 12.
- Examine filthy battered weekend trousers and deformed suede shoes.
- He became convinced that his nose was deformed and saw another analyst regularly for a few months, but he recovered - at least until the next lot of symptoms after he rejected her advice and interpretations and simply told himself to stop thinking about his nose so much.
- In the light of Leapor's harrowing narratives of heterosexual attachment gone awry, as in "The Temple of Love," and family feeling deformed by familial conflict, as in The Unhappy Father and The Cruel Parent , it is possible to read into this last wish a peculiar kind of vindication.
- For a long time it has been known that heavy drinking during pregnancy can badly affect a baby's development so that when it is born, its face and head are deformed and it is mentally backward.
- The Irish courts have held that a child which was born deformed in consequence of an injury to its mother, caused by the fault of a railway company on whose line she was travelling, could not recover damages; but the decision turned on the view that the company, not having means of knowledge of its presence, owed no duty towards it.
- Malcolm Muggeridge about Mrs Marilyn Carr, a candidate in a Croydon by-election who was standing on a "pro-life programme"; against abortion and the medical termination of babies born deformed or with Down's Syndrome.
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