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Перевод: personify
[глагол] олицетворять; персонифицировать; воплощать
Тезаурус:
- Family and proprietary considerations still loomed so large that the Kaiser could in 1891 give orders for a mobilization to be carried out if his mother was insulted in Paris, yet it was also an age in which monarchs had more and more to personify national and even democratic causes.
- Aged 49, married, and living in Croydon and Eastbourne - "a lovely place" - she seems to personify the Radio 2 listener.
- I think the cut-out must have no plant form then, it should be earthy or an old withered tree trunk or some such - because the dancers personify Spring so much that the stage should represent the earth.
- The media tell it whenever they present international relations as a dramatic encounter between world leaders who personify their countries.
- He has many opportunities to personify the government or, strictly speaking, to be presented as its spokesman.
- Federman's first novel Double Or Nothing 1971) is a narrative about preparing to narrate, where the different persons named in the text personify different compositional procedures.
- The fantasy in "Margaret on the Guillotine" is more like wishful thinking, than the resolve to do violence, or even personify violence theatrically.
- Instead, Gonzlez came more and more to personify the new wave of 1980s socialism with the social largely left out.
- But so too may be identification with the other, as Charles Marowitz implies when he describes Genet's The Blacks as a play which champions blacks "not because they are socially downtrodden but because they personify two of Genet's favourite types: The Rebellious Outcast and The Splendid Primitive
- The entrepreneurial hero and the worker drone together personify the mythic version of how the American economic system works.
- They prefer to personify the life-force as male and female, known variously as the God and Goddess, Lord and Lady, the Horned God and the Silver Lady among others.
- In this myth, entrepreneurial heroes personify freedom and creativity.
- The inexplicable weight of cumulative malevolence in the human race made it natural to personify the power of evil as Satan, "the adversary", in Greek diabolos or "slanderer", a cosmic "god of this world" (2 Cor. 4: 4).
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