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Перевод: rampart
[существительное] крепостной вал; вал ; бастион ; оплот ; защита ; [глагол] защищать валом; укреплять валом
Тезаурус:
- A section 55 ft long was cut across the rampart, and the tessellated pavement of the villa corridor was excavated, together with a small but complete building attached to it.
- Over a hundred sherds of pottery were recovered from the rampart.
- The area bordered by Brown Street, St. Ann's Street, Rampart Road and Milford Hill/Milford Street, each side measuring about 250 yards had eight General Stores, two Confectioners, two Greengrocers, one Newsagent and one Dairy serving a population of some fifteen hundred people.
- Funny thing was they had no gardens and were built right up against the old City Rampart.
- It gives an evocative glimpse of a winter landscape: "In those days we travelled on push-bikes and the rampart right along to Ballinary was high and soft.
- An impressive demonstration of this was given at Great Casterton in the first section across the town rampart in 1950 (Corder, 1951), excavated with meticulous care as part of a training school; every sherd was collected and recorded, totalling in all about 100 from the bank.
- The Milford Hill section between Culver Street and Rampart Road was mainly private housing with the exception of White's Baker's Shop on the Guilder Lane corner and St. Martin's Men's Club on the south corner with Rampart Road.
- The tops of the trees in the palm grove rustled beneath us as we walked up the road, round the earthen rampart to the hotel.
- At the top of St. Ann's Street at the Rampart Road corner was Mrs. Lanning's shop.
- For example, the defences were firmly dated to the reign of Hadrian, although Antonine pottery was found in the rampart, but dismissed with the remarkable statement "the overwhelming preAntonine character of the mass of associated pottery suggests the earlier, rather than the later of Dr Oswald's limiting date for the exceptional sherd", i.e. AD 130 - 50.
- The rampart shook under our weight and the ice all over the bog cracked and broke on both sides.
- There are still traces of hut circles attributed to an Iron Age occupation and, at the time of the Roman invasion, the local patriots, the Brigantes, established a hill fort to resist the foreign legions; an ancient rampart wall, built around the perimeter of the summit and almost half a mile in circumference, has survived the centuries although it is now crumbled and has many gaps.
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