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Перевод: perplex
[глагол] ставить в тупик; приводить в недоумение; озадачивать; усложнять; запутывать; сбивать с толку; смущать; ошеломлять
Тезаурус:
- His sadism is satisfied, at least at first, within the permitted limits of naval discipline, but it is accompanied by unpredictable moods and actions which disturb and perplex the crew to the point of mutiny, terrified as they are by the hostile surveillance of the officers and the malicious spying which William Bentley the midshipman carries on by his uncle's order.
- It is a fact that the issues and situations of conflict which most unsettle, pressurise and perplex us have their roots deep within our inner selves.
- The issue of naturalization seemed to perplex some Libyans; this was clear in their discussions at the Kufra Assembly and at the National Assembly which followed it.
- Solly's climb was to perplex and stretch the best climbers for decades.
- Lord Lenyon CJ, said that it "would perplex the commercial transactions of mankind" if negotiable securities were encumbered by conditions, into which those to whom they were negotiated had to inquire.
- It was a problem (to be discussed below in chapter 5) which was to perplex not only the wealthy but every level of the middle classes for the remainder of the century.
- In La Jalousie (1957), the disjointed chronology, the use of the present tense, the repetition of scenes, the recurrence of certain details - features which initially perplex readers - become explicable if an identifiable narrator is postulated.
- Would be interpreted a thing perplex'd
- 1 room-by-room guide to Chatsworth (bit cheeky, this, as it is simply to perplex guides and attendants who are not used to seeing people coming round their house with noses stuck in guide to a completely different mansion, though you'd be surprised how often it fits well anywhere)
- Her looks perplex people, and much of her press involves long discussions about them.
- In the apt selection of active incidents, the clear response of a hero to the challenge of danger and the support of interesting detail, Forester's books followed the conventions of adventure-story which had governed "boys' stories" for two centuries and the undercurrent of irony in the presentation of Hornblower as reluctant hero was hardly insistent enough to perplex immature readers.
- This tragedy, which acquired a certain celebrity because of the sculptor's art, illustrates a problem that must necessarily perplex religious people: in a religion teaching moral purpose, reward and punishment, what can be the meaning of early death in a pious family?
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