v va vb ve vf vh vi vl vm vn vo vp vr vs vt vu

Перевод: veer speek veer


[существительное]
перемена направления; поворот ;
[глагол]
менять направление; менять курс; изменять (взгляды); травить


Тезаурус:

  1. However, Beinn Alligin provides no such logistical problems and it's a fabulous start to the walk up the Abhainn Coire Mhic Nobuil through a forest, again passing close to some splendid waterfalls, before you veer off to the left and head towards the dauntingly steep corrie that is the most direct route to the summit.
  2. Coming to the Elbow, where the runners veer right-handed off the main course towards the line with little more than a furlong to go, Pitman gave his mount a smack down the right-hand side.
  3. Their origin was explained by the German physicist Gustav Magnus in 1852, who thus solved the vexing problem of why spinning projectiles veer off course.
  4. But this caused Aboyeur to veer away from the rails and collide with Craganour, carrying him out towards the centre of the course and interfering with the finishing runs of Nimbus - who had been far enough back at Tattenham Corner for his jockey to have seen the suffragette incident - and Great Sport, both coming up the stands side.
  5. She saw the young man hesitate, then veer away.
  6. It was symptomatic rather than part of the train of thought that led to his decision: Britain, as a great power, could not leave her security in the hands of the Americans, who, however friendly, could veer so unpredictably from generous international collaboration to self-centred isolationism.
  7. Two novels, for example, which in other respects are very different, Claudio Piersanti's Charles (1986) and the first of Aldo Busi's three novels published to date, Seminar on Youth (1988), have this in common: they both veer between an urban setting whose contemporaneity is underlined by its fashionableness and topicality (Busi) or which is vaguely futuristic (Piersanti) and a rural, provincial past which, though overtaken by the modern world, still remains extraordinarily alive.
  8. If they'd spent a particularly warm close time together, Jay even wondered if she and Lucy could be unique friends and veer away from this sexual desire which shimmered like an uncrossable burning field for Lucy.
  9. These jibes at "the old gang", a phrase Maxse used frequently, are of course reminiscent of Oswald Mosley, and on occasion Maxse did veer towards a rather Fascistic "Caesarism", calling for "a Leader" to save the nation.
  10. Critics argue that if the probe should explode on lift-off or veer off course and re-enter Earth's atmosphere, the batteries could be pulverised, dispersing 260,000 curies of radioactive waste - more than half as much as has been released in all nuclear tests.
  11. He plots a path to veer and to avoid, to watch cars flashing by smiling at blank, unknown faces in mutual avoidance.
  12. The Services continued to run at the opposition and after Fenn was hauled down just short they took a half-time lead when quick hands gave Crossland sufficient room to veer inside at pace and score beneath the posts.
  13. If the pinches of flake were thrown over any other bream's head then that fish would veer to one side, but only the bream immediately alongside him would react, and then only to get out of the way.

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