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Перевод: languor
[существительное] слабость (после болезни) ; вялость ; апатичность ; усталость ; отсутствие движения; отсутствие жизни; истома ; томление; томность ; застой
Тезаурус:
- It makes sense that the ineffable languor of Prince is infinitely more fruitious than a thousand sinewy Age of Chance slogans.
- He also offered dire predictions to couples (Graham couldn't even consider the possibility they might not be married) that going at it like knives would lead to "languor, lassitude, muscular relaxation, general debility and heaviness, depression of spirits, loss of appetite, indigestion, faintness and sinking at the pit of the stomach, increased susceptibilities of the skin and the lungs to all atmospheric changes, feebleness of circulation, chilliness, headache, melancholy, hypochondria, hysterics, feebleness of circulation, feebleness of all the senses, impaired vision, loss of sight, weakness of the lungs, nervous cough, pulmonary consumption, disorders of the liver and kidneys, urinary difficulties, disorders of the genital organs, spinal diseases, weakness of the brain, loss of memory, epilepsy, insanity, apoplexy, abortions, premature births, extreme feebleness, morbid predispositions, and an early death of offspring."
- But it is no longer cheap - and palm-fringed beaches, tropical languor and all that goes with them are in decidedly short supply.
- A bower of briar roses guarded the final stile that led into Nod and, in later life, Paul never smelt that sharp breath-taking sweetness of the wild rose without remembering the languor and warm happiness of those golden afternoons with Molly Piggott.
- He was more himself now, shaking off the languor which the bone-chilling cold had brought.
- And in the age-old tradition of sirens, whatever their sex, Zambia used the opportunity of post-coital languor, not to mention the accessory of intoxication, to gently squeeze Tammuz for information.
- The most extraordinary moments traverse conventional divisions, occurring both in Edenic gardens (pp. 112, 146 - 7) and the drug-induced languor in darkened recesses of cafs: "to linger there
- The century also delivered a few gorgeous formal feminine odes: the Countess of Winchilsea's address "To Spleen" and Henrietta O'Neill's "Ode to the Poppy", with its almost Keatsian languor.
- Summer shows all the languor of a hot, breezeless day as the dancer lazily brushes her hand over her brow.
- And there seems no doubt that this intense life of the mind often reached a point either of aching or of languor.
- Tenderness and languor did not fit into the "Young Soul Rebels" scheme.
- But of fat fairies bearing hot sweet tea there was never a sign and the fingers of the station clock jerked away the minutes with maddening languor, the tedium of their watch being broken only by the intermittent arrivals and departure of train.
- But lying there beside her, listening to the susurration of the tide and looking up at the sky through a haze of grasses he was filled, not with post-coital sadness, but with an agreeable languor as if the long-committed Sunday afternoon still stretched ahead of them.
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