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Перевод: Irishman
[существительное] ирландец
Тезаурус:
- William Bowles, (1705-;1780) an Irishman who became superintendent of mines in Spain, was dismayed by the lack of unusual plants in the area and wrote to Peter Collinson from Bilbao in 1733 asking for packets of seeds and bulbous plants and continued: "There is a Miller's Dictionary in Town, so I would take some pains to give the Spaniards a taste you know what best to send".
- Jack and the vet (who turned out to be an Irishman too) drinking whiskey which they thought was brandy because I'd put it into a brandy bottle
- A few strokes of his pen brought out all the Irishness of an Irishman; proud lean faces were a speciality.
- However, the NUJ man managed to squeeze a month's money out of the management and Jane crossed Blackfriars Bridge back into the real world in a thunderstorm but with a light heart, passing the inevitable drunk Irishman proclaiming to the heavens: "Jasus, Mary and Joseph - a bludy hurricane!"
- Scottish rider Niall Mackenzie retired after five laps when his Yamaha developed engine trouble, and mechanical problems also forced out Londoner Peter Graves, who qualified for his first grand prix, and Irishman Eddie Laycock.
- I had heard an Irishman say "Begorrah" and now I could die happy.
- To Leibniz he was "The Irishman who attacks the reality of bodies and belongs to the class of men who want to be known for their paradoxes".
- The Irishman's shot thudded into Schmeichel's chest.
- AN Irishman, an American and a Scotsman - not the line-up for a bad music-hall joke, but the principal characters of a trio of novels concerned with the slow decay of personality.
- FRANKIE DID NOT WANT to think of his mam and the Irishman.
- The big Irishman had been teasing him all along, just to make him look ridiculous in front of all those other men.
- Even as he drifted into sleep, his eyes pricked with unshed tears and his mind was filled with images of the Irishman snorting like a foraging pig around his mam's naked body.
- Here as one of the latest winners of the Ivan Sutton Recording Prize was a former pupil of Harle, the Irishman, Gerard McChrystal, a performer of such striking personality that, given the right backing, he might become the James Galway of the saxophone, though not every musician would want to.
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