s sa sb sc sd se sf sg sh si sj sk sl sm sn so sp sq sr ss st su sv sw sy

Перевод: straggling speek straggling


[прилагательное]
разбросанный; беспорядочный


Тезаурус:

  1. On Friday it only niggled , as if the chief had departed from a conquered place, and merely left a small garrison behind, or as if he had evacuated the Corsica, and a few straggling pains only remained.
  2. Straggling columns of federal infantrymen and their local militia allies advanced unopposed on the suburbs of Visegrad as shells rained down on Muslim positions.
  3. Hfn is a straggling village - aren't they all? - - with a row of brightly-coloured ships in the harbour and a fine memorial out on a headland.
  4. His buffaloes, some ten in number, were straggling up towards the road and he said he would leave as soon as they had grazed up to where he was sitting.
  5. It stood way up Brandon Hill in a rambling garden that in summer was full of overblown roses, but now under the dying rays of a winter sun, was a ruin of dead leaves and straggling yellow grass.
  6. Straggling behind her was a small child, about four or five, O couldn't see what sex the child was.
  7. Where once they flew in such flocks that they threw shadows over the earth, they now survive in a few straggling colonies.
  8. She lived in the Palestinian camp at Rashidiyeh, a wretched four square miles of breeze-block huts and cabins relieved only by the occasional tree, a straggling plant hanging from a poorly made brick wall and an open sewer that snaked uneasily down the centre of the mud roads.
  9. The passengers came straggling back shedding overcoats and saying it was cold outside, and again the dining car filled up.
  10. While Howard attempted to organise his straggling, two-mile-long column into a cohesive attacking force, he came under fire from twenty-four snipers organised by Toohoolhoolzote.
  11. Far from piling into Nolan in a preventative heap, they formed an instant ring around us and, as the band came to a straggling sharp-flat unscheduled halt, Lewis's drunken aristocratic voice could be heard drawling, "Five to four the field."
  12. Nether Stowey - usually known in Coleridge's day, and since, simply as Stowey - had called itself a town for as long as anyone could remember, but by the late eighteenth century it was in reality no more than a large, straggling village whose inhabitants numbered fewer than six hundred.
  13. The Mother waited for the straggling child to catch up with her, and then she bent down, shouted something to it right up close against its face, and then hit it hard across the face with the back of her right hand.

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