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Перевод: chagrin speek chagrin


[существительное]
досада ; огорчение; разочарование;
[глагол]
огорчать; досаждать


Тезаурус:

  1. Compare him with Hawthorne, Henry James, E.A. Robinson and Edith Wharton: all these writers have their Waste Land, which is the aesthetic and emotional waste land of the Puritan character and their chief force lies in the intensity with which they communicate emotions of deprivation and chagrin.
  2. Nevertheless, they were able to continue the art classes (to Leonard's chagrin, a Saturday morning event) alongside needlework and other crafts, which were exhibited locally from time to time.
  3. QUEL chagrin.
  4. State banks, much to their chagrin, have been ordered to provide cheap insurance for pilgrims to Mecca: some 800 Indonesians died in the haj last year.
  5. Her whole face drooped and she blushed with chagrin.
  6. "Why, you must both come with us," said Frulein Mller to Karelius' gratification, the more so as he glimpsed the chagrin in Lapointe's dark face.
  7. To his senior executives' chagrin, Mr McGovern always flies economy class and is proud of it.
  8. It surfaces, bringing feelings of humiliation and chagrin and causing conflict in the family.
  9. Labour showed some chagrin that the Tories had stolen a march on them by ending conscription, but even Aneurin Bevan, the shadow Foreign Secretary and a unilateralist at heart, accepted the need for the British nuclear deterrent, making his famous remark that to abandon it would "send a British Foreign Secretary, whoever he may be, naked to the conference table".
  10. Little's insistence that Darlington remain full-time ("more for advantages of preparation than fitness") won the support of the club's new chairman, Richard Corden, director of an industrial scaffolding company - and also, to his chagrin, a worthy candidate for the title of the unluckiest man in football.
  11. Sturgis re-entered Clark's Fork in Howard's rear on 11th September, much to the general's chagrin.
  12. The great Civil War battle of Marston Moor, in the vales of Yorkshire, in July 1644, with Parliamentary troops under the command of Cromwell, Fairfax and Leven, with Lord Manchester in overall command, resulted in a great victory for Parliament, but it was not followed up by Lord Manchester, much to the chagrin of Cromwell, and the Royalists managed a considerable victory in September of that year, at Lostwithiel, thirty miles west of Plymouth.
  13. Will the doubtful gains for the child's personality development of an undiscriminating total ban outweigh the fairly certain chagrin, embarrassment and isolation that will be experienced when he or she cannot join in some of the most popular entertainments and games of middle childhood?

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