m
ma
mb
mc
md
me
mf
mg
mh
mi
mk
ml
mm
mn
mo
mp
mr
ms
mt
mu
mv
mw
mx
my
mz
Перевод: masquerade
[существительное] маскарад ; [глагол] притворяться; выдавать себя за кого-л.; надевать маскарадный костюм; участвовать в маскараде
Тезаурус:
- Maximilian Novak speaks of the eighteenth century as the "Age of Disguise", and Terry Castle treats the masquerade as a central metaphor of eighteenth century culture Leapor adamantly refuses to conceal herself.
- The kids loved the chants and the masks and puppets-usually Masquerade's strength, although here even these lacked the usual imagination-but really it could all have been so much better in almost every respect.
- But all for Masquerade .
- Those who specialize in treating food intolerance regard hyperventilation as a somewhat less common problem, but one which can masquerade as food sensitivity.
- MASQUERADE Theatre is a Christmas institution in Wales: a company that works in both English and Welsh, it specialises in an area of theatre that appeals directly to young people.
- His father had gone along with the masquerade.
- Further, rather than seeking such a sensibility in an "inner condition", we might more usefully identify it outwardly and in relation to other strategies of survival and subversion, especially the masquerade of femininity, and the mimicry of the colonial subject.
- Certainly censorship should not be allowed to masquerade as virtuous compromise, but nor should commitment to free speech go unexamined.
- I had bought her for a song, then spent a fortune restoring her and, when my term of service expired and I could afford to become the gypsy-sailor I had always wanted to be, I left the Marines and made Masquerade my new home.
- "They often masquerade as local government officials," says Byron Criddle, senior lecturer in politics at Aberdeen University.
- The association of the hare with the Moon was one of the most widespread ideas, long before Kit Williams' Masquerade became a bestseller.
- The masquerade of camp becomes less a self-concealment than a kind of attack, and untruth a virtue: many a young man, says Wilde, "starts with the natural gift of exaggeration which, if encouraged could flourish.
- "No," I said, and hated myself for telling the untruth, but I was thinking of my own boat standing propped on the sand of Straker's Cay, and I thought of all the work I had lavished on Masquerade , and of all the love and care and time I had poured into her, and I tried to imagine her rotting under the tropical sun with her paint peeling, her deck planks opening and her timbers riddled with termites.
|
|
LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов
|
|