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Перевод: pierce speek pierce


[глагол]
пронзать; протыкать; проткнуть; прокалывать; проколоть; пробуравливать; просверливать; пробивать отверстие; проникать; прорываться; постигать; проходить; пронизывать


Тезаурус:

  1. It takes the form not just of arched entrances, as at Brussels Midi (1869), Zurich North-East (1873), and Budapest East (1881), but also of arched lunette windows which define the building they pierce, as in the Paris stations Gare de l'Est (1852), Gare Montparnasse (1852), and Gare du Nord (1864), and at London King's Cross (1852).
  2. I had invited any of the hospital staff who had cared to come, and my "Dawes Road" friend Miss Dorrie Pierce told me that church folk had organized a little wedding tea, and my husband-to-be had ordered and paid for a wedding cake.
  3. She exposed the soles of her feet at the mouth of the oven she drank gall and rubbed her eyes therewith in her ardent desire for suffering she made herself a silver circlet in which she fixed three rows of sharp points in honour of the thirty-three years that the Son of God lived upon earth she wore it underneath her veil to make it the more painful as these points being unequally long did not all pierce at the same time so that with the least agitation these iron thorns tore her flesh in ninety-nine places
  4. To their amazement, his arrow was the first to pierce the inner gold circle, winning him the silver arrow.
  5. Anything which symbolizes the early lack of care can strengthen or pierce the defences.
  6. "You know how to pierce," I said, wincing.
  7. Intellect is a barrier in our way, no doubt, but we have to pierce this barrier with the help of intellect.
  8. By five I am sober and handle the meeting with a superb professionalism borrowed from Mildred Pierce and Mommie Dearest.
  9. It will pierce rotten wood easily.
  10. We see it in brilliant colours which flow through the whole spectrum, and extend to dayglo; but it starts life in a natural tone, initially floppy until the grippers or stenters pierce the outer edges to stretch it flat as it is heat treated, and dyed.
  11. It is rather like a BANSHEE, with wails like those of a woman and which pierce the countryside for miles around.
  12. On 14 December 1542, James V died in his splendid royal bedchamber at Falkland, the beauty he himself had created no longer enough to pierce the malaise of his profound melancholy.
  13. But this was not the whole story; for there were people all too anxious to pierce that cocoon.

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