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Перевод: foreshadow
[глагол] предвещать; предзнаменовать
Тезаурус:
- In Mycenaean times, Thorikos on the east Attic coast was importing the black volcanic glass called obsidian from the island of Melos, a reminder that there was and is a good little harbour nearby at Laurion; Attic submycenaean and geometric pottery has been found as far away as western Asia Minor; and the archaic Athenian colonies at Sigeum and the Chersonese, and the sixth-century cleruchies on Salamis and Euboia, foreshadow the fifth-century empire.
- This socio-demographic complexity seems to foreshadow that of man.
- There is a passage in Mr Palomar which plays on the dialectic between speech (or communicative language) and silence and which might be taken to foreshadow the structure of the book as a whole.
- The situation and its elements foreshadow the later confrontation of Sweeney and Doris on their "cannibal isle".
- Such virtual reality systems are already in existence today and foreshadow far more powerful developments likely within a few years.
- Whereas the revolutionary upheaval of 1917 had seemed to them to foreshadow an entirely novel social order in which power would remain firmly in the hands of the masses themselves, the Bolsheviks proceeded to restore hierarchical and coercive control in every field.
- Two incidents from William Joyce's time at the College of St Ignatius Loyola were to foreshadow his public personality in adult life.
- TO WHAT extent does the change in the ministers in the economic departments foreshadow a change in policy direction?
- Nor did the London dock strike necessarily foreshadow the style of trade unionism which many formally unskilled workers of the time might have wished to adopt.
- Although these activities only relate to a fraction of the total number of UK library authorities, it may be hoped that they foreshadow a revival of interest in an essential and much neglected component of the book provision process.
- In all this work, Marx, and to a lesser extent, Engels, foreshadow later anthropology and even run into the same technical difficulties concerning what term to use for pre-capitalist property systems, thereby showing how close they are to modern scholars.
- The English mystics, like their European contemporaries, did foreshadow these changes, but not in a way that people who are familiar with more well-known fourteenth century English literature might expect.
- The internal wrangles, sometimes over single issues, which are coming to characterise British party politics in the 1980s, may well foreshadow a similar process.
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