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Перевод: orient
[прилагательное] восточный [арх.]; восходящий; поднимающийся; блестящий; яркий; высшего качества (о жемчуге); [существительное] восток ; высший сорт жемчуга; блеск жемчуга; [глагол] ориентировать; определять местонахождение; поворачивать на восток; строить здание фасадом на восток
Тезаурус:
- "I adore the Orient, particularly the Malay States.
- In 1980, luxury trains like the Royal Scotsman and the Venice Simplon Orient Express did not exist.
- His work was to supervise the extensive traffic of Chinese between Canada and the Orient on the CPR's great "Empress" liners which plied the Pacific between Vancouver and Shanghai every month.
- Phytoplankton have adapted to low-light conditions, and even orient themselves in the water column to bask more efficiently and store energy with which they fix carbon during darker periods.
- By the faint, clouded moonlight from the small window in the adjoining washroom he was able to orient himself; he struggled upright, leaning awkwardly against the wall, hampered by his bound hands and lacerated feet, and began to walk.
- Tranmere Rovers.... 3 Leyton Orient...... 0 TRANMERE ROVERS, who in recent years have survived a threat of extinction as well as only just preserving League membership, reinforced their position as Third Division leaders by overcoming Leyton Orient, thereby stretching the margin to four points.
- Several such cities once claimed the title of "Jewel" or "Pearl" of the Orient.
- Then he was dropped five games later and it became obvious to all that the goalkeeping hero of the finest days the club had ever known could not be long in going - and on 16 October 1973 he moved over to Orient for a 30,000 fee.
- In April 1921 they were invited to play in Paris against the Olympic Club there, a Belgian side and then Clapton Orient, who would be in the French capital at the same time.
- The Manila-based Orient Airlines Association is an informal but effective cartel that fixes fares and shares out business.
- Mr Saegusa calls the finished piece "an ode to Mozart from the Orient," explaining that the new music is his own, rather than a supplement to Mozart's.
- A less glamorous version of its origin sees the first Manx cat as nothing more than a Manx sailor's pet - a curiosity brought home after travels to the Orient.
- It was said there were some 40,000 Chinese in Chinatown, and I gravitated there to indulge my long-time love of the Orient.
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