Wielki słownik angielsko-polski red. nacz D. Jemielniak, M. Miłkowski

(Adjective) złoty, pozłacany;

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

ZŁOCISTY

Wordnet angielsko-polski


1. (elaborately or excessively ornamented
"flamboyant handwriting"
"the senator's florid speech")
kwiecisty
synonim: florid
synonim: flamboyant

2. (having the deep slightly brownish color of gold
"long aureate (or golden) hair"
"a gold carpet")
złocisty, złoty, pozłocisty, złociutki, złotolity, złotolicy: : synonim: gilded
synonim: gilt
synonim: gold
synonim: golden

Przykłady użycia

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

Poet laureate Carol Ann Duffy is appearing today in The Steyning Bookshop in West Sussex, queen of romantic fiction Katie Fforde will be at Brendon Books in Taunton tomorrow, and former children's laureate Michael Morpurgo has lined up a visit to Edinburgh's Mainstreet Trading Company later this week. A week-long celebration of independent booksellers kicks off today with hundreds of events planned for the next seven days, as the beleaguered sector looks to raise its profile.
The Nobel laureate turned opposition figurehead joined the sit-in in Alexandria over the case of a man allegedly killed by plainclothes policemen.
Michael Morpurgo is a writer and poet. He was the Children's Laureate from 2003 to 2005. His latest book is An Elephant in the Garden (HarperCollins, Â?12.99)
Grandees of high culture have been wheeled out by all of them, notably Derry's Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney, but mass involvement played a larger part in the detail of the bids.
Unlike his well-known Iranian colleagues Shirin Ebadi, a peace Nobel laureate and Shadi Sadr, a winner of Human Rights Defenders Tulip awards 2009 who were forced to leave Iran, Mostafaei was still working inside Iran although he was arrested for a while last year.
The education secretary, Michael Gove, today announced plans to combat the decline in exam standards by proposing an English baccalaureate qualification to recognise the achievements of GCSE students who complete a broad course of studies.
GCSE league tables obscured the exams pupils were taking and hid the flight from languages and tougher subjects such as science, his aides said. The education secretary was not seeking to tell pupils what exams to take, but the baccalaureate would be a way of rewarding those who took a wider range of subjects.
"If you don't understand science and you don't understand other cultures, you are deliberately cutting yourself off from the best that is going on in our world."Gove said he was "very attracted" by the baccalaureate systems operated by many European and Asian countries that deliver a broader educational curriculum than in England.
The percentage of pupils gaining a baccalaureate would be included in school league tables, allowing parents to assess which schools were likely to give their children a broad academic education.
Others will include a Roald Dahl Reading Relay, events at Waterstone's bookshops, and the Roald Dahl Funny Book Prize, set up by former children's laureate Michael Rosen. A new musical version of Matilda from the Royal Shakespeare Company arrives in November, an opera based on Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in October, and Jeremy Dyson's adaptation of Tales of the Unexpected at the Lyric Hammersmith in Januaryâ?? although that may be one for adults only.A Roald Dahl Reading Relay â?? challenging children to read three books by the author between September and December â?? has just been launched, Waterstone's bookshops around the country will be holding events to commemorate Dahl throughout September, and later this week the shortlist for the Roald Dahl Funny Book Prize â?? set up by former children's laureate Michael Rosen in honour of Dahl â?? will be announced.