ECTACO słownik angielsko-polski Słowniki elektroniczne Ectaco do nabycia u wydawcy

WYCIĄGAĆ SIĘ

Przykłady użycia

Przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.

The lubricant makes it easier to pass capsules nicknamed "palomas," Spanish for dove. The first of the packages â?? about 5ft long â?? held rehydration tablets and a high-energy glucose gel to help the miners begin to recover their digestive systems. It took an hour for the packages to reach the trapped men.
Engineers have already worked to reinforce the borehole using a long hose to coat its walls with a metallic gel to decrease the risk of rockfalls. The lubricant also makes it easier to deliver the capsules, the first of which held rehydration tablets and a high-energy glucose gel to help the miners' digestive systems. It took an hour for the packages to reach the trapped men.
In the car, Miliband (1/3 at Paddy Power) has a pop at some of his fellow leadership candidates for "trashing the record" and implicitly includes his brother Ed â?? though, despite stories about escalating fraternal tensions, he won't be drawn much further. He's more bellicose than any other candidate in defending past controversies such as market-based public service reform, and shrugs off a question about his tendency to use arcane jargon via the New Labour trick of affecting to interview himself: "Is it important to always simplify and reduce and explain more clearly? Yes. Am I going to say that intellectual thought isn't very, very important? No." He also talks, with restrained emotion, about the rare occasions when he can spend time with his two young children: "I'm probably seeing less of them now than when I was foreign secretary. Everything in my mind is directed to next Thursday, when I go on holiday."
A sweaty morning at Thorpe Park, and the smell of sunblock and ketchup hangs heavy in the air. In the shade of Saw, a freefall rollercoaster based on the torture-porn franchise, and beside a grey but warming lake, a crowd is gathering by the Embarrassing Bodies truck. For one day only, Dr Christian Jessen and Dr Dawn Harper will be consulting in the back of their well-lit van, a televised surgery open to anybody passing between rides. Provided, of course, that they're within the 70% of the population suffering from an embarrassing illness â?? varicose veins, excess hair, stretchmarks, alopecia, IBS, obesity. Something that oozes, preferably. Something swollen.
In the car, Miliband (1/3 at Paddy Power) has a pop at some of his fellow leadership candidates for "trashing the record" and implicitly includes his brother Ed â?? though, despite stories about escalating fraternal tensions, he won't be drawn much further. He's more bellicose than any other candidate in defending past controversies such as market-based public service reform, and shrugs off a question about his tendency to use arcane jargon via the New Labour trick of affecting to interview himself: "Is it important to always simplify and reduce and explain more clearly? Yes. Am I going to say that intellectual thought isn't very, very important? No." He also talks, with restrained emotion, about the rare occasions when he can spend time with his two young children: "I'm probably seeing less of them now than when I was foreign secretary. Everything in my mind is directed to next Thursday, when I go on holiday."
"We would not advise them to stop taking their medication in the meantime even if they are experiencing adverse side effects, as it is very important that people with diabetes keep their blood glucose under control to prevent short- and long-term complications."
The Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, has fired Yuri Luzhkov, ending the 18-year rule of the Moscow mayor who gave the crumbling metropolis a glamorous facelift but was maligned for outdated values and bellicose posturing.
Languishing in the polls and engaged in an almighty battle to push through his flagship pension reform â?? taking the retirement age from 60 to 62 â?? the man once cast by some as the Gallic Margaret Thatcher is facing his most testing showdown with the notoriously bellicose unions.
Pyongyang often issues bellicose warnings when military manoeuvres are due in the area.