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Перевод: Florentine
[прилагательное] флорентийский; [существительное] флорентинец ; флорентин
Тезаурус:
- There were carry-ons and carry-outs, a Florentine potage of high jinks and art, in which the outmoded sedan-chair was soon to join lepers, witches, battling Provosts, Jacobites and clubgoers alike, in the bottomless lobby-press of the vanished centuries.
- Machiavelli in his Florentine history gives this note of Cosmus Medices, the wisest and gravest man of his time in Italy.
- He wrote, too, his own epitaph: "Here, where he was baptised, lies the Florentine writer Roberto Ridolfi, born 12 September 1899 who died with as his only hope the Lord's mercy."
- White and Florentine green flooring from the Marble Collection by Amtico, from 53 per sq m.
- The plain white worksurfaces and sinks are all made from Corian, and the classic white flooring with the green Florentine inlay is by Amtico.
- The second, a sunburst-finished 1961 Gibson ES-350 with a very rare sharp-pointed "Florentine" cutaway, has the serial number 19240 on the label and at the rear of the headstock.
- ROBERTO RIDOLFI, the Italian gentleman-scholar who has died aged 92, represented the continuity of Florence as an historian of the Florentine Renaissance.
- Give it to the Captain, he's Florentine.
- Dante could turn aside from his most sublime passages of religious contemplation to hone a gratuitous insult for the benefit of Florentine families whom he happened to dislike.
- "Then it's time you changed restaurants," retorted the Florentine owner, evidently considering this an unlikely eventuality.
- In Art History the rehabilitation of artists and bodies of work which have been overlooked has been going on since Vasari made such a good job of classifying Florentine art that all other art in Italy and beyond has had to be defined, at least until this century, and at some level even now, in relation to Vasari's classifications, or at least in relation to the model of stylistic evolution which he outlined.
- Galileo produced his famous book called in brief A Dialogue etc. between a Peripatetic aptly called Simplicio, a Venetian gentleman Sagredo (actually Galileo's close friend of the old days) and a scientifically informed Florentine, Salvatio, who was really voicing the opinions of Galileo himself.
- Once upon a time, she had been able to withstand Florentine summers better than any English woman she knew but of late they had begun to tire her, to make her feel that in everything she did she was pushing a large boulder up a hill.
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