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Перевод: devil speek devil


[существительное]
дьявол ; черт ; бес ; сатана ; настоящий дьявол; сумчатый дьявол; сумчатый волк; коварный человек; страшный человек; энергичный человек; напористый человек; дьявольская штука; трудное дело; человек ; парень ; журналист, выполняющий работу для другого; литератор, выполняющий работу для другого; мальчик на побегушках; ученик в типографии; жареное мясное или рыбное блюдо с пряностями и специями; волк-машина ;
[глагол]
исполнять черновую работу для журналиста; исполнять черновую работу для литератора; надоедать; дразнить; готовить острое мясное блюдо; готовить острое рыбное блюдо; работать


Тезаурус:

  1. "We get offers from other finance houses but the prices are similar, so we think it's better to stick to the devil you know," said John Preen.
  2. Indeed the pact with the devil emerges as a favoured theme not only in Goethe's Faust , but also in Melmoth the Wanderer , the strange work of a Church of Ireland clergyman, the Rev. Charles Maturin (1780-;1824).
  3. It was Steve McQueen who was picked to play the French criminal determined to escape from Devil's Island where he has been sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of a pimp, of which he claims he is innocent.
  4. Two of the best plays to read from this period are Tourneur's The Revenger's Tragedy , and Webster's The White Devil .
  5. We may well wonder whether the ambiguity in the word servus does not hide a fundamental ambiguity running right through the period; and if we had asked the abbot of Saint-Germain, he might have answered that the servitude of serf and slave alike was a small matter compared with man's servitude, since the Fall, to the devil; and that all men were slaves.
  6. The anthropologist Margaret Murray used to say that the god of one religion becomes the devil of the next, and these legends may be a way of indicating that the sites to which they were attached had been sacred in pre-Christian times.
  7. Concluding the entry on Knock, the Curate next confided to his diary the tale of Father Vianney, a priest persecuted by the devil, who kept banging on the walls and throwing furniture around.
  8. Henry Compton was a good school, and I was a reasonable pupil - no cherub, but no devil either.
  9. At this point, the devil accosts her with further arguments:
  10. "The devil he is," she said quietly.
  11. Poole told me that some people were also shocked because John, in his role as the Devil, "disguised himself as a girl in point shoes, a tutu and a blonde wig, with his devil's horns showing through".
  12. The resulting fear and frustration would seem to be more in line with the mockery of the devil.
  13. He particularly hated the billy, with its ragged white beard and devil's eyes.

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