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Перевод: foxy
[прилагательное] лисий; хитрый; рыжий; красно-бурый; покрытый пятнами сырости; прокисший; имеющий резкий запах; сексапильный
Тезаурус:
- "It's called Foxy Lady."
- A competitive Members' race went to Robin Gill riding his father's Foxy Games.
- Another Foxy scheming method to miss conscription is to join the Quakers, avoiding being drafted because of religious immunity not because of bloating on porridge.
- The ploy did not stop a lot of people muttering about the flaws in his catwalk show (rather unfairly), although the Destroy line certainly got better once again by opting for the tight "Partridge Family" look and foxy jersey dresses with denim trims.
- She was a married woman - and here she was, offering her body to Zitney Trench like some foxy bitch with the craziest passion on the brain and superheated sex between the legs.
- Carl Channell, the chief fundraiser - a slight, foxy man from West Virginia - - admitted it was "sort of crazy" to call North Mr Green, or "our special person" or nicknames of other sorts, but his employees "loved to do that, because that was exciting
- Wasn't it fine just to cruise the freeway, in the afternoon sunshine, a foxy lady in the seat beside you
- And so Tamara Dobson became Cleopatra Jones, CIA narco queen supreme, as Millie Jackson and Joe Simon warbled soulfully amid punch-ups, and Pam Grier went into the castration industry as Foxy Brown, with Willie Hutch again offering street-sound support.
- Foxy move
- Mr. Gill overdid the waiting tactics in Foxy Games's previous outing at Cottenham, but made no mistake here, going on five out and comfortably holding the late run of the favourite, York Royal.
- At 25 he'd found his way into the hearts - and often the beds - of every foxy fraulein in the fatherland.
- After four years in the Royal Artillery, Dignam was invalided out of the army and went straight to the Arts Theatre, where he was a delightfully tongue-in-cheek Shavian Angel and a foxy Claudius, proving Stanislavsky's adage, as Agrippa in the Anthony Quayle/Edith Evans Antony and Cleopatra, that there are "no small parts".
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