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Перевод: repel speek repel


[существительное]
часы с репетиром;
[глагол]
отгонять; отбрасывать; отталкивать; отражать; отвергать; отклонять; вызывать отвращение; вызывать неприязнь; победить


Тезаурус:

  1. Always up with the pace, she responded instantly when Cash Asmussen asked her to repel the challenges of the favourite, Chimes Of Freedom, and Line Of Thunder.
  2. Stumpy Martello towers, built to repel Napoleon, stand sentinel on the shoreline.
  3. Since electrically charged objects attract or repel one another (unlike charges attract, like charges repel), there are forces of attraction and repulsion between atoms, which may cause them to combine in specific ways to form chemical compounds.
  4. I cannot bear this obscene, grubbing curiosity about the affairs of others, it has never failed to repel me.
  5. YORK IS preparing to repel a band of gypsies who have been travelling to the city for centuries.
  6. Its ability to repel water along with its excellent insulating properties were immediately noted by leading engineers and scientists of the day such as Faraday, Siemens and Wheatstone.
  7. Rival Serbian and Muslim gangs stood poised to repel any attempt to breach the fluid battle lines.
  8. He posted the detective constable he had with him back down the path to join his colleague, armed with instructions to repel all attempts by anyone, however senior or armed with whatever authority, to go anywhere near the body unless he, Sergeant Black, personally accompanied them.
  9. He had instructed his staff to stay calm and repel intruders with "physical force".
  10. In seeking to grasp this dynamic, and portray it, he had become enthused with the duende , the spirit unleashed by the flamenco - music and dance - which he believed to be the dynamic of true art and artistic expression: "Repel the angel, kick out the muse,", he was wont to exclaim; arguing that artists must work "from the gut," with the conviction and intensity that the expression exudes; allowing the life-force it releases to flow - torrentially, vividly, dramatically; as in the flamenco itself.
  11. Farmers can make good use of some land while other areas nearby are less attractive , or even repel them.
  12. Dunwoody made all the running on Wont Be Gone Long, keeping something up his sleeve to repel the challenge of Bonnie Artist, who ranged upsides rounding the home turn.
  13. With the publication of the Foreign Relations of the United States volumes on the Korean War and the release of the British documents it was evident that Britain had played a major role in the important decisions taken in the early stages of the war, and in particular the decision to change the aim of the operation from being merely to repel the aggressor north of the 38th parallel to that of achieving a unified Korea.

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