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Перевод: dub
[существительное] неумелый человек; увалень ; [глагол] тыкать; ударять; обрубать; обтесывать; строгать; отделывать; ровнять; пригонять; смазывать жиром; посвящать в рыцари; давать титул; даровать титул; давать прозвище; окрестить; дублировать; дублировать фильм; производить дубляж
Тезаурус:
- FRESH FROM the wreckage of semi-legendary crusties Radical Dance Faction, DF 118 peddle a similar line in guitar-laced dub.
- Dub reggae had themes dealing with the overthrow of Babylon and which were openly hostile to the white world.
- But Heath raised him to a kind of economic overlordship which led Bill Kendall of the Civil and Public Services Association to dub him "deputy prime minister", a tag which stuck.
- The return to rock means a re-awakening of dub, remoteness, loss of self in a recession of space, a search for unlit rather than overlit regions.
- For this reason, you will not find an audio dub button on an 8mm machine which has hi-fi FM sound.
- It's hard to believe that the man who used to play the bass in a sullen and studenty pop group called The Housemartins is the creator of this year's most significant number one single, but the success of "Dub Be Good To Me" is a sing that things have truly changed for the better.
- Just as it is possible to enjoy taking part in a favourite sport without either joining a dub or belonging to a team, so it is possible to be a spiritual person even if you never enter a church, synagogue, mosque or any other place of religious worship.
- The Irish have good reason to remember the steely determination of the 53-year-old Mr MacSharry, the man headline writers dub "Mac the Knife".
- Bored with straight DJing (as Chuck and Looney Tunes), they started recording, intending to build their own original dub plates.
- The five-part Mass Fera Pessima - as its mutilated manuscript superscription should probably be read, though certain scholars have tried to dub it A Pessinuntia (on account of its saturation in the dark Phrygian mode) or even A Pestilentia (speculatively linking it with an outbreak of plague in Stirling, where Carver might, or then again might not, have been living, in the 1940s) - seems freely based on a plainsong of the Sarum rite derived from Chapter 37 of the Book of Genesis: "Jacob rent his garments.
- I just couldn't take a journey in a confined space with a man who pronounced Sgurr na Ciste Duibhe as Sisty Dub and didn't think it was as good as the Lake District.
- "Dub Be Good" is to him a vindication of his belief in an eccentric mix of punk, politics, reggae, ragga, hip hop, pop and the most hardfaced sampling style since Mark "the 45" King first laid hands on an Akai S900.
- "I dub thee Sir Roger Chatwin of Spignel Meu," the King declared.
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