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Перевод: reminiscent
[прилагательное] вспоминающий; склонный к воспоминаниям; напоминающий; вызывающий воспоминания
Тезаурус:
- It was a reaction reminiscent of that following Huddersfield's stormy League encounter with Notts County ten years before, when Chapman transferred the suspended Islip.
- The projection from a semi-circle is reminiscent of certain forms of seashells.
- But in the discreet, epicene efficiency with which he clears away Casio's bowl of vomit or dusts down Othello after his fit, he is the finicky gentleman's gentleman, his body language strongly reminiscent of Dirk Bogarde in The Servant.
- The positive rectangle can approach the superellipse, reminiscent of the Desmid , an algae of about 0.5 mm (0.02 inch) diameter.
- Three other members of the family are reminiscent of medieval shields.
- On these are to be inscribed words reminiscent of the Ten Commandments, beginning with a new commandment not to make "molten gods" (34.1-;28).
- In the ensuing interstellar search - thuddingly reminiscent of Second Foundation - the characters run true to Asimovian form, sitting in boardrooms or (indistinguishably) spaceship cabins to discuss the big situation out there.
- "I have yet to see a trailer that is anything reminiscent of the film it promotes," he said.
- The language used to describe this is reminiscent of Harrison, as well as clearly relating to the technique of Charlie Mears, Tiresias, and the dromenon- like patterning with which Eliot had been experimenting in the quatrain poems.
- Hobbes's references to previous lack of philosophical progress and the disputatious wrangling of the prevailing scholastic philosophy, and his distaste for ideas based solely on the foundation of authority, are all reminiscent of Bacon.
- This necessitated having a low roof and a side gangway in the upper saloon, reminiscent of the old low-bridge buses.
- Again he said, in an argument strangely reminiscent of Erastus, Richard Hooker and Matthew Arnold, that "the State is more sacred than any Church for the State stands for the whole people in their manifold collective life; and any Church is but a fragment of that life, though one of the most important fragments".
- It is easy to see that this was a practical means of enclosing a large volume which then could be used for the storage of grain, and the profile is reminiscent of the gambrel-roofed hay barns in the USA.
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