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Перевод: eastward
[прилагательное] восточный; направленный на восток; обращенный на восток; движущийся на восток; [наречие] к востоку; на восток; в восточном направлении; [существительное] восточное направление
Тезаурус:
- The symptoms are generally worse the further you fly and they are more marked after eastward flights than those to the west.
- street in London, eastward continuation of Cheapside from Old Jewry.
- Where cost permits, some units are now being shifted eastward.
- And both the American westward and the Russian eastward expansion had, of course, the same destination: the Orient.
- Eastward the road lies,
- Aubeterre is eastward,
- In the closing years of that century the eastward spread was beginning: there was already some development east of the Tower of London, including the later-notorious Ratcliff Highway and the docks area at Wapping, Shadwell and Limehouse.
- Now it was shifting eastward to include China in the equation.
- By the eighth century the eastward drift of shingle along the coast had given natural protection to the spread of the salt marsh, and during the 12th and 13th centuries Pevensey Levels gradually changed from saltmarsh to reed and sedge meadows and ultimately pasture.
- The discovery of Italian bronze coins of the third century BC in the area of modern Yugoslavia may perhaps indicate the presence there of individual pilgrims, tourists, soldiers or traders from Italy, in much the same way that the presence of hundreds of thousands of Islamic silver coins in Viking hoards of the eighth to tenth centuries is a reflection of the eastward penetration of Viking traders, who exchanged objects such as furs, slaves and amber for silver coinage.
- And if so why should it be supposed they had adventured into the forest rather than eastward towards the corn lands and the nearer towns, and the coast?
- As the great Maclean lymphad rounded Ardnamurchan Point to ship oars and sail eastward towards Arivegaig, the men rested in their places, sharpening their weapons, muttering uneasily to each other.
- Looking eastward, the tall column to the memory of Captain Cook, a local lad, stands like a lighthouse on the purplish blue heights of Easby Moor.
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