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Перевод: seat
[существительное] место; место для сидения; сиденье; зад ; седалище; задняя сторона; местонахождение; избирательный округ; билет ; место в парламенте; должность ; пост ; усадьба ; посадка ; гнездо клапана; седло клапана; опора ; основание; опорная поверхность; подкладка ; подставка ; подстилающая порода; [глагол] сажать; усаживать; рассаживать; назначать на должность; предоставлять место; сидеть; размещаться; устроиться; вмещать; снабжать стульями; чинить сиденье; устанавливать; проводить
Тезаурус:
- If the Tories were to form the next government then Chris Patten would be found a seat, if necessary.
- Therefore, if the wearing of seat belts reduces accidents, it is also likely to reduce the number of kidneys available for transplant.
- As for teeth, he certainly has them, in the shape of a seat on the NHS's Management Executive.
- Well-manicured hands took her jacket respectfully, offered her a seat, brought her coffee in a china cup with a saucer.
- A rabbit on its "seat", the resting place often used during daylight and the alternative to remaining below ground.
- For a privileged few, perhaps, with access to an appropriate hall and the good fortune to find the right seat for the particular kind of music on offer.
- "There's nothing constitutionally improper about a minister not having a seat in either House of Parliament," says Lord Blake, the historian.
- Many feel reluctant to take a back seat and allow their children to enjoy the special attractiveness of the teens and twenties.
- Take a seat aboard a flying desk and spiral backwards through the corridors of time on an exciting journey of discovery; the story of Oxford University is uncovered to reveal its remarkable impact on Western civilisation.
- During a study of the various styles, it became apparent to me that if the back legs are set into the seat rails at an angle, this angle, together with the curvature of the rear legs and backward slope of the chair back can regulate the flair: if the legs are mounted at right angles to the rear seat rail, there would be no flair.
- Rosie Barnes's pretty face, not unlike the young Margaret Thatcher, is etched with disappointment and pain as she hears she has failed to keep her seat for the Liberal Democrats in Greenwich.
- After his defeat Mr Taylor said he had given 100 per cent commitment to the seat.
- In October 1974, he entered Parliament as MP for Southampton Test, a seat he unexpectedly won by just over 800 votes.
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