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Перевод: peer
[существительное] ровня ; пэр ; лорд ; член палаты лордов; [глагол] делать пэром; равняться; вглядываться; всматриваться; присматриваться; показываться; проглядывать; выглядывать
Тезаурус:
- Viscount Astor, a hardworking and professional hereditary Peer.
- A PEER with a distinguished war record who became a Conservative minister, Warden of Winchester College and businessman, yesterday described to a High Court jury his horror when he realised a pamphlet described him as a war criminal.
- There he lifted a corner of the curtain to peer out at the bright patches of daylight filtering through the trees.
- With Paul Weller and Peter Gabriel on their case, can this hard-playing mob cope with the excess of peer approval?
- They will be concerned with the status of the source; statements may be accepted quite uncritically from a peer whom the receptors admire and emulate.
- By 1990, the figure was one peer for every 48,000 people.
- Likewise it is sometimes difficult for adolescent boys who work hard at building an image of toughness within their peer group to drop that image for the sake of the drama.
- How often have you wanted to peer into your disc drive to see what's inside, for example?
- Peer tells of horror at being branded as a war criminal
- We approach a tight bend: the driver talks to the conductor; the morning sun shines blindingly - I peer over into pure space.
- It is unlikely that many visitors will peer too closely into the workings of Spain after a decade of socialist rule.
- Don't worry about some Strangelove of a character turning your innocent little toy into a satellite vaporiser, theory has it that military research is second rate because you cannot do good research behind screens of secrecy and away from the cut and thrust of peer review.
- They come to the recognition that being black places themselves and other black kids in a similarly disadvantaged position: "It would seem, on the basis of the pupils" own perception of this tendency, that this withdrawal into racially exclusive peer groups results from the pupils' realization of a common identity and shared destiny' (1978, p.64).
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