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Перевод: fondly
[наречие] нежно; любовно; доверчиво; наивно; тщетно
Тезаурус:
- just a few weeks before her death he had written fondly to her on a postcard from Florence (where the Sadler's Wells Ballet went for the Maggio Musicale festival) that she "would love it so.
- Wandering around the cavernous warehouse that contains the Neighbours sets in Nunawading, Melbourne, she fondly points out various props which have all played a part in shaping the history of Ramsay Street.
- People have written fondly about The Fifties:
- "You are indeed my angel boy!" she said, kissing him fondly.
- Her mother was the original cockeyed optimist, Jo thought fondly, as her eyes strayed to the window.
- Patting does not mean slapping the horse with the open hand to make as much noise as possible, which is often done to impress the onlookers; the horse's neck should be caressed fondly and delicately."
- Watching her fondly, Perdita was reminded of Fresco.
- Amazingly, the film takes on instant depth the minute it touches "American" soil, suggesting something very like moral ambiguity as Columbus suddenly turns into the hard-arsed imperialist we now fondly imagine him to be.
- Several did respond, however, and I fondly remember visiting such people as Joan Hatton, Christine Crosland-Symms, Charles Mayo and Harold Fletcher Trew in their own homes.
- Patsy looked at her fondly.
- "He's got his father's nose" they mutter fondly.
- Mothers who dreamed fondly of a white wedding, a handsome bridegroom and grandchildren soon on the scene, may find that their daughter is planning to marry a man her father's age, who has an ex-wife and some teenage children of his own.
- I once had a humble role in one of his features: I played myself as enthusiastic musicologist, introducing a rare recordings of famous cellists performing various juicy bits (none of them had bothered to play it all) out of a stylistically promiscuous Cello Sonata by a rightly-obscure Swiss genius never existed; the cellists (who ranged from "Beatrice Harrison", complete with atrocious surface-noise and garden crow effects, to "Yo Yo Ma") were graphically impersonated by Moray Welsh; the "Sonata" excerpts themselves, fondly murdering many turn-of-the century composers and idioms, were of course all Ben's own work.
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