h ha hb hc hd he hf hg hh hi hl hm ho hp hq hr hs ht hu hw hy hz

Перевод: hie speek hie


[глагол]
спешить; торопиться


Тезаурус:

  1. GUIL: I'll hie you home and
  2. With what it reckons to be a higher proportion of ISDN lines per thousand of population compare with anywhere else in the UK, HIE clearly hopes to see a rapid expansion of inward investment and other forms of economic development on the back of teleworking.
  3. Indeed, in a partnership that has cost British Telecom 19m along with 5m from HIE, the existing infrastructure in the region has been significantly upgraded with the installation of advanced equipment at over 60 of its telephone exchanges.
  4. I suspect that at the back of his mind there lurked a phrase from Beowulf , about those very similar monsters Grendel and his mother: no hie faeder cunnon , "men know of no father for them".
  5. Elsewhere, Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE) estimates there are already over 200 people teleworking in the region.
  6. SE, HIE and SCOTVEC are committed to the pursuit of top quality training through a comprehensive system of quality assurance.
  7. They turned this way and that to hie or wheesh or tcht tcht or whoa ; and of course, I have no doubt the horses were so tired they would have found their way home any way.
  8. But be quick: pick up your phone or else gird up your loins, grab your staff and hie you like blazes, sprinting as though pursued by the fires of hell, to the Arts Theatre or the Festival box office, whereupon you should pawn your handbag or your jock strap - even your jewels, just as long as you succeed in laying claim to a seat.
  9. Sandy Cumming, HIE's director of natural resources, said the survey would determine whether a fishery was viable on commercial and ecological grounds.
  10. The thought of liver-spotted hands clamped on tense juve breasts - well, hie me to the vomitorium pronto!
  11. The HIE wish-list includes "hard infrastructure" projects like the Mallaig, Kinlochbervie and Lochinver roads, which service ports through which half of Britain's fish comes ashore.
  12. A letter is "the familiar and mutuall talke of one absent friend to another" (a definition taken from Erasmus, who took it from Libanius), and ought therefore to be "simple, plaine, and of the lowest and meanest stile, utterly devoyde of anye shadowe of hie and loftye speeches".
  13. The HIE chief executive, Iain Robertson, said: "Objective 1 funding would provide a platform for growth for the Highlands and Islands which would take it from the edge of Europe to the community's very heart."

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