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Перевод: fawn
[прилагательное] желтовато-коричневый; [существительное] молодой олень; олененок ; [глагол] вилять хвостом; ласкаться; телиться; подлизываться; прислуживаться; подхалимничать; лебезить
Тезаурус:
- The chairman, wearing a fawn sports jacket, said he apologised if he had "caused any offence", but said he was annoyed because Mr Loveluck-Edwards had been reading a novel in court.
- Langley spared neither blood nor fortune - he would beggar a nobleman for taking a fawn or a hare wandering on the road.
- Matt black with tiny fawn flecks, they are just under a centimetre long.
- It was only when Fawn Hall testified, flicking back her hair in a fetching manner, that Inouye joined in the spirit of the proceedings, holding a piece of paper over his eyes to see her better in the glare of the television lights.
- Dot waited quietly till Gloria emerged from the jostling crowd holding up a fawn coat, triumphant like the A.R.P.
- The wonder of this, the danger and seduction of it, were well caught by William Safire in a piece in the New York Times , written while Fawn Hall was testifying.
- She wore white ankle socks; my mother preferred me to wear fawn knee-length ones, but our skirts and berets were the same except mine had a leather band inside you couldn't see.
- When Dot went to bed that night, Gloria laid the fawn coat over the top of the blanket.
- So it was interesting to hear this week from Mrs Bolton of Wildlife In Need in the north of our country that she has recently saved the life of a six-month old roe doe fawn.
- Similarly Fawn Hall, asked by North to alter memoranda to conceal his work for the contras, remembered feeling uneasy: "but I believe in Colonel North, and I know that there must have been a good reason why he was asking me to do this, and I - I did as I was told."
- Thickets of fawn papery stems, tender green as they unfurl in the spring, have a specialized ecology all of their own.
- For you must know that I had a twin brother, as beautiful as the day, and gentle as a fawn, and wholesome as new bread and butter, whose company pleased me so much, as mine also pleased him, that we swore an oath never to marry but to live forever peacefully in the castle, and hunt and play together the livelong day.
- At Chigwell in September 1632 a fine of 30s. was imposed for keeping an unexpeditated dog, 5 for killing a fawn, 20 for placing nets to take the game, and 50 marks for making a coney burrow, which was ordered to be stopped.
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