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Перевод: invective
[прилагательное] ругательный; оскорбительный; [существительное] обличительная речь; ругательства ; выпад ; инвектива ; брань
Тезаурус:
- He was also beginning to relapse into invective and his voice was rising.
- After a few more days in Salamanca, during which you and I could do no work in common, your friends left in a great uproar of drunken invective, shouting political slogans - which fortunately were in German - against the Franco regime.
- Take one opposition spokesman, simmer for an hour in a heavy sauce of sarcasm, season with scornful adjectives, throw in liberal amounts of contempt, add several pinches of disdain, and spice with invective.
- He was brilliant at invective, and making general statements about the need to communicate a politically responsible set of values, but neither he nor any of his friends were screenwriters, nor were they motivated to work with writers on ideas that were their own.
- Miller - were he to exist - would surely feel an equal burden if, on top of his own torment, he was further bludgeoned by the contempt and invective of his creator.
- He lingered on, drinking more heavily, occasionally interrupting proceedings with a bit of the old invective, but nobody took any notice.
- The Labour Party, in order to distance itself from its estranged and inconsistent creator, shrouded his name and reputation with invective.
- The government and opposition traded invective and plunged the country's three week-old "peaceful revolution" into uncertainty.
- From the cover cartoon of John Major, labelled "Yesterday's man - the vanishing Prime Minister" it is filled with ill-chosen invective.
- Wounded, the punks were stunned into silence as my vitriolic invective ricocheted around the stalls.
- The dominant theme of a whistle-stop second half was of Swansea driving towards Harlequins' line, a shrill blast for a penalty, followed immediately by an even shriller one and Griffiths pacing out a generous 10 metres to silence the Welsh invective.
- They are great gossips, the men as much as the women, whispering behind raised hands, then bursting into sudden excesses of rage with wildly waving hands, flashing eyes, curled lips spitting torrents of invective.
- John Osborne turned his invective on the Palace in 1957 in an article in Encounter :
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