c ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci ck cl cm cn co cp cr cs ct cu cw cy cz

Перевод: cuckold speek cuckold


[существительное]
рогоносец ; муж-рогоносец ; обманутый муж;
[глагол]
наставлять рога


Тезаурус:

  1. I wouldn't want to be the one responsible for proclaiming him a cuckold for the world to laugh at."
  2. Jim spoke as if he were telephoning from a golf club instead of a cuckold's bed.
  3. Iago soon brings him back to the "foul" image: "I will chop her into messes - cuckold me!"
  4. Traditionally at least, horns convey to us the notion of the cuckold - the unfortunate, unmanly husband whose wife's unsated sexual passion finds its outlets elsewhere.
  5. Because I made a cuckold of him?
  6. I cannot divorce her nor can I proclaim myself a cuckold, to be a common joke amongst my tenants and fellows.
  7. Sharpe translated the crowd's attention as the derision due to a cuckold and, in that misapprehension, his temper snapped.
  8. the cuckold hatstand
  9. In 93, by contrast, the sense of isolation and suspicion of infidelity (92 ends with the line "Thou mayst be false and yet I know it not") takes on that most bitter form, knowing self-deception: "So shall I live supposing thou art true, /Like a deceivd husband" - that is, a cuckold.
  10. "Sharpe's clearly a fool if he lets an idiot like Johnny Rossendale cuckold him."
  11. "Cornwall is the Cornucopia, the compleate and repleate Horne of Abundence, for high churlish Hills and affable courteous people: they are loving to requite a kindness, placable to remit a wrong, and hardy to retort injuries; the country hath its share of huge stones, mighty rocks, noble, free Gentlemen, bountiful housekeepers, strong and stout men handsome, beautiful women and (for all that I know) there is not one Cornish Cuckold to be found in the whole county.
  12. It is unlikely that many Europeans would have had access to Aristotle's writings, but the cuckoo's habits were certainly well enough known during the Middle Ages for them to be mentioned by Chaucer (in The Parlement of Foules , 1382), and for the term "cuckold" - describing a man deceived by his wife - to have passed into the English language.
  13. Another expression of this psychic force is found in the cynicism and bitterness he displayed from time to time when he grumbles about the dark, the flies and the cold; but other references are very much stronger, e.g. "The Cuckold's Song" etc).

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