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Перевод: spectator
[существительное] зритель ; очевидец ; наблюдатель
Тезаурус:
- Sad really, but I'd rather the impotent ramblings appeared in the Spectator and left the Guardian to those of us who enjoy reading it.
- He designed the Palazzo del T, Mantua, in 1525, and decorated it with frescos; in the Sala de' Giganti the room is painted from floor to ceiling, so that the spectator feels overwhelmed by the rocks and thunderbolts hurled down by the rebellious Titans.
- "GIVING AWAY THE ROD" The Spectator , 21 January 1978
- The next moment she was a shocked spectator, seeing them both as something in a theatre, perhaps ballet dancers pretending to be puppets.
- Wasps' foray comes as the sport prepares to move into the next decade as a leading spectator attraction.
- You can read in The Spectator of two hundred and sixty years ago that the streets of London were not safe at night because of the Mohawks, gangs who terrorised London and beat up the Watch, who tarred and feathered innocent citizens.
- Mr Simon Heffer argued in last week's Spectator that welfarism is once more coming to characterise the British, having been repulsed during the Thatcher years: "The plaintive, dependent-relative voice of the something-for-nothing society, heard on almost every street in this campaign, was a little harder to find five years ago."
- At the Los Angeles Open, Fred Couples says he was told by a spectator: "Have a good day and don't choke."
- THE SPECIAL Kurt Waldheim Award for War Reporting goes to Paul Johnson for his Spectator column (February 18).
- The huge yacht sailed up the Derwent accompanied by hundreds of spectator craft to take the winner's gun early yesterday evening.
- Spectator sport in this respect seems to be a part of a wider system of entertainment" which embraced the music-hall and the cinema, the record industry "and the dance-hall.
- The Spectator article secured him an invitation to Hampton Court and, having offered his specification for the repair work, he was duly hired.
- For the latter he quoted a sentence by Lucian, the second-century Greek rhetorician: "A work of art requires an intelligent spectator who must go beyond the pleasure of the eyes to express a judgement and to argue the reasons for what he sees."
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