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Перевод: regale
[существительное] пир ; угощение; изысканное блюдо; деликатес ; [глагол] угощать; потчевать; попотчевать; пировать; услаждать; ласкать
Тезаурус:
- There is no shortage of guide books in the modern world, nor of travel books which regale readers with accounts of what travellers have seen.
- Sometimes, when drunk, he would regale me with stories of his footballing prowess, but such stories went past me like galley smoke because I could not bring myself to enquire, nor indeed to care, about the differences between a Tight End and a flea-flicker.
- Later, over a dram, Cam would regale me with tales of female conquests. "did I ever tell you about wee Sheila?" he'd say, licking his lips.
- YOUR correspondent Mrs Kalinowsky (April 5) is perhaps thinking of Gillie Potter, who used to regale us with accounts of the goings-on at Hogsnorton.
- When not trying to match his 15-hour days, they regale each other with endless stories about his idiosyncrasies and absent-mindedness.
- So the large one decided to regale them with further information.
- But while publishers and booksellers eagerly regale journalists with recession horror stories, it is clear that the roots of the industry's problems go well beyond the crisis in the wider economy.
- Lilium regale, the best lily for pots, steals the show in June, although the newly planted white geraniums are already flowering.
- She enjoys propagating, the rose garden contains pinks and martagon and regale lilies from seed.
- In an effort to improve on this state of affairs, some museums have tried to regale the visitor with assorted snippets of information in ordinary English.
- No garden should be without L. regale (regal or Royal Lily) for its scented white flowers.
- They had no aspirations to be patrons of the arts and to regale themselves like proletarian Ludwig IIs with grand opera or private performances of the classics.
- The solicitor was strongly professionally oriented: he would regale one with legal anecdotes, the humour of which depended on a prior deferential attitude to barristers and judges; he was strict in his interpretation of professional ethics.
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