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: meek speek meek


[прилагательное]
кроткий; мягкий; смиренный; безответный; бессловесный


Тезаурус:

  1. Margaret Meek (1982, p.26) says that "The parents" role is to encourage the child to believe that reading is a worthwhile and pleasurable thing to do, that literacy is within his grasp, and to provide the means for his enjoyment and success'.
  2. By and large it does not, and it certainly did not in Margaret's case: she merely laughed all the more, and sang the taunting hymns of her new faith, about how tyrants would be put down from their thrones and the humble and the meek raised up.
  3. Have you ever noticed how God has a tendency to match up the strong, overbearing with the meek and shy, the perfectionist with the reckless, the lazy with the energetic, the silly with the sober?
  4. Amongst the newcomers are Llanelli 's Wayne Proctor and Swansea 's Simon Davies , both wings (a position short of challengers recently), hooker Nigel Meek from Pontypool (who has made the most of Garin Jenkins " move to Swansea), second row Paul Kawulok (another who took the Hall and Griffiths trail from Bridgend to Cardiff ) and two sons of famous fathers, Richard Shaw (Bridgend) and Scott Quinnell (Llanelli); scions of Glyn and Derek respectively.
  5. (Meek, 1982, p.47)
  6. The silent majority of Britons are unimpressed by the antics of the Brussels bureaucrats and the meek compliance of our domestic politicians.
  7. Most guitarists know people who can outplay them in some way and so most register somewhere on the meek and self-effacing scale.
  8. And I knew in some sort, I think, that the animal was my brother, in this meek and helpless form.
  9. Though Kathleen was meek and would accept.
  10. He said: "Azar has been a meek captain, rarely letting the team know his idea."
  11. She'd agree to marry him as part of a partnership - not as some sort of meek, mild bride agreeing to graciously give her hand."
  12. His own farewell to 1796 was made in his "Ode to the Departing Year", a bleak prophecy of war and ruin in which Coleridge renounces his role as public commentator, and dedicates himself to the "deep Sabbath of meek self-content" he hoped that Stowey, the Quantocks, and Tom Poole would now make possible.
  13. As Margaret Meek (1982, pp. 133-;4) says, "There is, I fear, no short cut for any of us.

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