l
la
lb
lc
ld
le
lf
lg
lh
li
ll
lm
lo
lp
lr
ls
lt
lu
lv
lw
lx
ly
lz
Перевод: leather
[прилагательное] кожаный; [существительное] кожа (выделанная) ; кожаное изделие; ремень ; краги ; футбольный мяч; мяч в крикете; [глагол] крыть кожей; пороть ремнем; работать с напряжением; колотить
Тезаурус:
- Morgan sat in the leather chair facing Buckmaster's desk for some time after his chief had left, his bulk squeezed between the arms.
- Turning up its coat collar in a hard-boiled way, the voice is briefed on its mission - "leather couches, portraits of the Queen this must be MI6" - passes a dingy border checkpoint getting its forged passport stamped, studies a spy plane view of Cheltenham, cracks a cipher or two, and spots a glamorous female spy from the window of the Orient Express to Istanbul.
- Mind you, Malcolm did take the piss out of him as well, calling him Troy Tempest in a leather jacket.
- The economic prosperity of the county once relied on leather, footwear and other traditional activities.
- "L" for Leather.
- Whatever, Carmody is an unassailable optimist who has never been seen in anything other than sprayed-on black jeans, winkle-pickered Chelsea boots, leather jacket and cap.
- Jos was wearing yellow leather gauntlets which looked totally out of place in such a decrepit vehicle.
- Reluctantly the old woman prodded the unyielding toecaps of the other shoe, feeling Martha's long bones crammed painfully together beneath the worn leather.
- "What d'you two young buggers want?" he grinned, as he fastened the buckle of his wide leather belt "We're taking Molly and her mate for a picnic Selwyn," Yanto replied Selwyn's nut brown, weathered face split into another grin.
- He was wearing the leather shoes that had been only for best until they grew too small for his feet and now had to be worn for school.
- The water was ruining his leather jacket.
- He put this in the breast pocket of his leather jacket, next to his heart.
- For golfers, wearing the dress of the day, - tailored tweed jackets and trousers, leather boots, and carrying well-made bags of up to 30 heavy-weight clubs (according to former 1920's caddy Charles Robins) - the prospects of coping with certain of Henley's holes must have been daunting without a caddie.
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