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Перевод: despondent
[прилагательное] унылый; подавленный
Тезаурус:
- At first Tony looked less happy than before, and said he had become somewhat despondent about his lack of progress in finding employment.
- She was becoming increasingly despondent about the way things were going.
- "Ma," he said in a tentative tone of voice, his face going slowly pink with the strain of trying to communicate with his despondent parent.
- In temperament, Coleman appears to have been somewhat mercurial, and he could be despondent, as he was understandably at the time of his wife's illness.
- The results are shown in Table 5.3 and indicate that substantial numbers were experiencing each symptom, with some posing a problem for the majority of carers (losing or hiding things, dangerous or risky behaviour, falling, repeating questions or actions, being restless, angry or irritable, despondent or depressed, or uninterested in what was going on).
- His despondent letter to Thelwall was written immediately following an absence of "a day or two", during which, it seems likely, he walked westward into the Exmoor fringes above Porlock, the home territory of his maternal ancestors, and in a lonely farmhouse near Culbone Church sought the isolation he needed to complete Osorio .
- Diana took the criticism to heart, avidly read what was being said about her and became depressed and despondent.
- The second was his residence in France during the French Revolution: this direct encounter with the main movement of the age led Wordsworth into constant political agony and debate, and it is significant that one of the main characters in The Excursion , his other long poem, is the Solitary, a despondent figure disillusioned by the failure of the Revolution.
- The locked door - if it was really true - made him feel more despondent than ever.
- Don't become despondent just because it seems that your employer is keen to drive a hard bargain.
- From a distance of two weeks, the initial reaction to defeat also seems unnecessarily despondent.
- "Despondent souls," it was said, "and there are not a few of these, seem to have been struck only by one part of the Fhrer's speech: where he spoke of the preparations for the winter campaign in 1942-;43.
- He may well have lost customers; and even those he retained would no doubt have been despondent if not positively angry at what they were having to pay.
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