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Перевод: wracked
разрушенный
Тезаурус:
- The bank was wracked by internal divisions between the bank's traditional managers and the outsiders headed by Sir Kit.
- For most of the Eighties, Punjab has been wracked by vicious conflict between the security forces and half a dozen incoherent but well-armed groups ostensibly fighting for a free Sikh state of Khalistan, the Land of the Pure.
- Anne-Sophie, on the other hand, lives a life wracked by doubt because she can never decide whether a garment is dirty or not.
- Throughout the seventeenth century, therefore, the English church was wracked by a series of bitter and divisive doctrinal and liturgical conflicts.
- PRINCESS Diana will spend this Christmas wracked with heartache, separated from everyone she loves best in the world.
- Wracked with longing, Luke drove through the grey lunar landscape, only broken by occasional white towns or ebony clumps of trees.
- SOUL was once - a very long time ago - the sound of a psyche breaking up, shattered by desire or loss - a wracked catharsis, an ailing, dejected, broken sound, essentially tragic.
- Agony wracked his body.
- I was wracked with arthritis.
- Perhaps it is a sort of demoralisation, not surprising considering the misfortunes which have wracked the East Asian communities now in Britain - first their years of suffering associated with their expulsion from Africa, then their experiences at the hands of racist British authorities who tried to keep them out of Britain, and finally the day-to-day racism which they have faced in Britain as refugees.
- The NCCSL works closely with other religious and secular organisations in its efforts to make a contribution towards encouraging and assisting individuals and communities whose lives have been devastated by the ongoing violence and ethnic conflict that have wracked Sri Lanka for more than a decade.
- The problem extended both to Old Dissent - what had become in the nineteenth century Independents or Congregationalists and Baptists - and to the Methodists who were wracked by schisms until 1849.
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