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Перевод: feast speek feast


[существительное]
пир ; праздник ; празднество; банкет ; наслаждение; удовольствие; ежегодный сельский церковный праздник; ежегодный сельский приходский праздник;
[глагол]
пировать; праздновать; угощать; принимать; чествовать; угощаться; наслаждаться; попировать


Тезаурус:

  1. He provides the feast for rejoicing, as well as the fine clothes for the banquet guests to sit before him.
  2. But when the feast is finished and the lamps expire,
  3. The King was arranging a feast tomorrow for Nicholas, and Nicholas wasn't here yet.
  4. Most years this gave rise to no special problem, but eventually there was an occasion when the king's enjoyment of the Easter Feast was spoilt by the absence of his queen, who was still fasting because for her it was Palm Sunday.
  5. One touching moment during a Love Feast in Edenderry was once when a visitor to the service, who had never attended a Love Feast before but who had felt he wished to share in it, stood and held up half the biscuit he had been given.
  6. When Karen and I used to feast on each other's bodies, Dennis was the unseen guest at the table.
  7. The following day was the eve of the Feast of St Nicholas.
  8. Late that night there was a feast of rice and meat.
  9. That the owners are not described may imply that they have withdrawn from the close relations with tenants, servants, and labourers that is called for from lords of the manor; they have grown remote in more or less the way described by Bloomfield in his discussion of the harvest feast.
  10. Richard Feast
  11. The Christian Church organized annual burning-cats-alive ceremonies on the day of the Feast of St John.
  12. Here were audio spaces that, in certain instances, bled around comers out of sight of their sources; sculptural/architectural spaces around and through which the viewer must travel; virtual spaces of onscreen worlds; visual spaces of Greenbergian flatness, for example in Susan Hiller's well-known Belshazzar's Feast (1983-;4), where images of flame move towards the purity of pixels (though she also devotes attention to the generation of images and gestalts from the eye itself); geographical spaces, notably in the move of Judith Goddard's environmental sculpture, Electron (1987), from Dartmoor indoors.
  13. In her last speech Phillis describes a harvest feast:

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