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  • TIGHT, -and I, -oh; tight, tight, tight; tighter.

    1. Tight or tight. Tight string. Tight belt.Restraining the good horse, snorting with impatience and begging to move, on tight reins, Levin looked around at Ivan, who was sitting next to him. L. Tolstoy, Anna Karenina. All [guests] had their necks cut equally by the tight collars of their shirts. Leonov, Sot. || Firmly, tightly woven, twisted, twisted. Tight braids. Tight rope.[The little dog's] tail was curled, probably out of anger, in such a tight pretzel that it seemed there was no force that could straighten it. Grigorovich, Migrants.

    2. Tightly stuffed or heavily inflated. Tight ball.Groups of Red Army soldiers eagerly hoisted tight sacks onto their backs. Furmanov, Red Troops. || Elastic, plump, strong. Tight buds on trees. Tight ear. Tight cheeks.[The Countess] often straightened her hair, exposing her tight and round arms to her shoulders. Bunin, The Grammar of Love. Tight muscles shimmered under dark skin. B. Polevoy, The Tale of a Real Man.

    3. Difficult to do anything. impact (difficult to bend, stretch, rotate, etc.). Tight spring. Tight winding of the watch. Stiff keys.“Come in, come in, we’ll have time to say hello there,” answered the girl, turning a rather tight key in the door. Leskov, Islanders. || Slowly, with difficulty perceiving or reproducing something. (about human thinking abilities). The landowner, like all people who think independently and in solitude, was slow to understand the thoughts of others. L. Tolstoy, Anna Karenina. He, like many peasants, preferred old tales to new ones, old ones that had long been familiar to him, already mastered and assimilated by his tight, short imagination. Kuprin, Forest wilderness. || Slow and difficult. Tight growth. Slow development. Slow germination of seeds.

    4. trans.; usually what. Razg. Unyielding to sth., little inclined to sth., always testing in sth. difficulties. “All my life I’ve been hard pressed to make a decision.” Dostoevsky, Teenager. I'm terribly slow when it comes to petitions. Chekhov, Letter to N. A. Leikin, October 31. 1886. - [Agronomist] is quick on the job. From under a poke and under orders, he is a master at working. Tendryakov, Bad weather.

    5. trans. Razg. Hard, difficult. No one else could have endured what our people endured - there were such difficult times that it seemed that the Russian land would finally be empty. A. N. Tolstoy, The Indestructible Fortress.

    Tight pocket ( or wallet, purse) who- about the presence of smb. big money.

    Hard of hearing- hard of hearing, somewhat deaf, hard of hearing.

Source (printed version): Dictionary of the Russian language: In 4 volumes / RAS, Institute of Linguistics. research; Ed. A. P. Evgenieva. - 4th ed., erased. - M.: Rus. language;

Sluggish, flexible, bendy. A tight bow, stubborn to draw; a tight bowstring or string, rope, pulled tightly. Tight mattress. tightly, densely stuffed. Hold the reins tight. * Times are hard, life is hard. * A tight person, tight-fisted, stingy; prudent in spending. * He is hard of hearing, somewhat deaf. * Production in this regiment is tight, it is moving slowly, sparingly. Pull the knot tighter, tighter. He is a slow person, he is slow, he is unlikely to give money. He pulled it out very tightly. The bird sits tightly, not strictly, but lets you close. My mind is dull and my wallet is tight. I am your servant, yes. Although it’s not big, it’s tightly packed. I pulled it tight and marked it poorly. My head is empty and my bag is tight. For a friend, everything is not tight (or tight, not hard). Tugonek I gave you a nut to crack! As soon as you talk about debts, he is hard of hearing. And not tight, but elastic. Not tight, but not too tough. Tight, tight. Tightness, tightness and tightness of women. property adj. The tightness of the current income is quite crippling! To push what, they say b.ch. with attachments. to (on, under) tighten, strain, push, pull tighter. The base of the body is pressed with a pressure tool. To bully someone, Vologda. , Perm. , kaluzh. offend or oppress, oppress, find fault; to force, to coerce, to force. Tugun, in the dam, spacer in the gate, between the posts. Tugach? archan. bump on a forehead. To grieve about something, for whom, to grieve, to be upset, to be torn, to lament, to grieve, to grieve, to yearn or be sad, to be sick; regret, remember with sighs. Don’t worry about the tugs being dirty: if they break, we’ll fix it ourselves! There is no reason for a noble lady to grieve (cry). Live forever, grieve forever (you will die, you will have fun). He who serves is the one who grieves. You can’t push it, you can’t turn it back. You'll worry about it when you get married. I felt sick to death for the children. We got sick of it, our red days have come! Stress, and you’ll forget. We got sick for a year. The widow’s heart got cold, weeping. We got cold and became friends. church, a hired mourner, crying. . of Great Lent. Tuzhiki, pl., lower, tamb., thick pancakes, which are baked on the day of forgiveness, also funeral pancakes. tight, in need). . (isn’t it fat?) it’s good, it’s good to cook the meat in the tug, the food is not there, the person is not good enough to cook it carefully, guard it carefully. Tuga female tuga south , app. sadness, grief, melancholy, sadness, grief, sadness. Because of sadness, many and tight hearts have filled you with many tears. Corinth. From the great hardship shed, hanged himself (voivode), chronicle. Tightness and melancholy for son Glebov! A word about Igor's regiment Tough and needy - there are none worse! The foreign side, it is tightly wound, sowed with tears.

Polygraph resources, 1999;

(electronic version):


| Tuga, a cubic measure of boards assembled into a lock, for stone, crushed stone, sand, etc.|


Tuga? the blunt end of an egg, a dead end or a pug, a tail, a heel, in the opposite direction. body, sock, wit. Tight-faced, snouted horse, archan. tight-nosed, tight on the reins, tight on the reins, insensitive, tight.:

Dictionary:

Dahl

    . IN AND. Dahl.

    1863-1866. Synonyms

    Antonyms See what “TIGHT” is in other dictionaries:

    TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ... Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary See stingy... Dictionary of Russian synonyms and similar expressions. under. ed. N. Abramova, M.: Russian Dictionaries, 1999. tight, slow, stingy; dense, compressed; terrible, elastic, difficult, gloomy, stuffed, tense, springy,... ... Synonym dictionary

    TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ... TIGHT, oh, oh; tight, tight, tight; tighter. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened, elastic. T. onion. Tight string. Tight spring. To pull tightly (adv.) 2. Tightly stuffed. T. wallet (also translated: about someone having a lot of money, capital). Tight (adv.)… … Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

    tight - Hard of hearing and deaf. The monk didn’t hear right away: it seems he was a little hard of hearing...

    Phrasebook Russian language

    TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ...- Obsesslav. The same root (with a change o/e) as traction, heavy, bowstring, pull. Tight (*tong) literally “stretched” (like a bowstring), cf. lit. sténgti “to pull”, lat. tendere “to stretch, pull.” As evidenced by related Greek... ... Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language

    I adj. 1. Firmly, strongly pulled or strained. 2. Tightly or tightly woven, braided, twisted, etc. 3. Resistant to any influence (compression, stretching, tension). 4. Tightly stuffed, highly inflated. 5. Elastic, poured... Modern explanatory dictionary of the Russian language by Efremova

    Tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight... ... Forms of words

  • tightly tied, stretched, twisted, compressed.
    • He breaks branches at the oak tree and TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ... bends the bow.
    • Tight string.
  • colloquial. difficult to bend, straighten, compress or move.
    • Tight collar.
    • Tight spring.
    • Bud tight, shiny, cylindrical, bullet-like.
  • tightly packed.
    • Tight wallet.
  • colloquial. accomplished with difficulty; slow, difficult.
    • In the officer circle they talked about their hard work.
  • slow to think (about a person); unresponsive, dull (about feelings or sense organs).
    • In addition, by all indications one can completely unmistakably conclude that Semyon Ivanovich was extremely stupid and tight to every new, unusual thought for his mind and that, having received, for example, some news, he was always forced to first sort of digest and chew it, search for sense, get confused and confused and, finally, perhaps overcome it, but even then how -in a completely special way, unique to him...
    • “It seems to me that I drank a little too much,” Semyon Ivanovich remarked venomously, “and that’s why tight for consideration.
    • Fyodor Mikhailovich was always very tight to make new acquaintances.
    • Levin continued the conversation with the landowner, trying to prove to him that the whole difficulty stems from the fact that we do not want to know the properties and habits of our worker: but the landowner was, like all people, original and solitary thinkers, tight to understanding other people's thoughts and is especially partial to his own.
    • But Glebov was always in something tight and short-sighted.
  • (from pulling?), strong, stubborn, persistent, firmly elastic, unyielding, anti-sex. weak, soft, sluggish, flexible, bent. A tight bow, stubborn to draw; a tight bowstring or string, rope, pulled tightly. Tight mattress. tightly, densely stuffed. Hold the reins tight. *Times are hard, life is hard. *Tight person, tight-fisted, stingy; prudent in spending. *Hard of hearing, somewhat deaf. *Production in this regiment is tight, it is moving slowly, sparingly. Pull the knot tighter, tighter. He is a slow person, he is slow, he is unlikely to give money. He pulled it out very tightly. The bird sits tightly, not strictly, but lets you close. My mind is dull and my wallet is tight. your servant, yes it’s tight. Although it’s not big, it’s tightly packed. I pulled it tight and marked it poorly. My head is empty and my bag is tight. For a friend, everything is not tight (or tight, not hard). Tugonek I gave you a nut to crack! As soon as you talk about debts, he is hard of hearing. not tight, but elastic. Not tight, but not too tough. Tight, tight. Tightness, tightness and tightness g. property according to adj. The tightness of the current income is quite crippling! To push what, talk. bol. with attachments. to (on, with) tighten, strain, push, pull tighter. The base of the body is pressed with a pressure tool. To bully someone, Vologda. perm. Kaluga offend or oppress, oppress, find fault; to force, to coerce, to force. Tugun, in the dam, spacer in the gate, between the posts. Tugach? arch. bump on a forehead. To grieve about something, for whom, to grieve, to be upset, to be torn, to lament, to grieve, to grieve, to yearn or be sad, to be sick; regret, remember with sighs. Don’t worry about the tugs being dirty: if they break, we’ll fix it ourselves! There is no reason for a noble lady to grieve (cry). Live forever, grieve forever (you will die, you will have fun). He who serves is the one who grieves. To grieve half-heartedly (half-heartedly) for someone else’s grief! Live. don’t worry: you won’t cry if you die. Why bother someone who has something to live for? It’s good to live for those who don’t have anything to worry about. There is something to grieve about. as there is no one to thresh rye with. I served as long as I did, but I tried twice as hard. Serve for a year, and struggle for ten years. I don’t dare cry, they don’t tell me to grieve. The rich man doesn’t bother, but he’s bored. She didn’t grieve, she didn’t cry, but Martha went for Jacob! The young wife does not grieve for her old husband. You can’t help but love, and you can’t help but grieve. He lives without grieving, he circles around the world. He lives without grieving, and serves no one. The oppression does not soar, it will not break! The world doesn't care about men. Wood doesn't bother wood. The hat doesn't hurt my head. The quail is grieving, I will have to spend the winter somewhere! Living at home and grieving about everything. He lived and did not worry about anything; he died, they don’t bother him. Don’t worry, you’re beautiful, what a drunkard you’ve got yourself into: he’ll beat you, he won’t beat you up, but he’s his own will! The friend himself pushes easier, impersonal. You can’t push it, you can’t turn it back. You'll worry about it when you get married. I felt sick to death for the children. We got sick of it, our red days came! Stress, and you’ll forget. We got sick for a year. The widow’s heart got cold, weeping. , crying. A grieving woman, a woman who grieves a lot for the grief of others, but what about them? m. pl. lower tamb. fat pancakes, which are baked on the day of forgiveness, also funeral pancakes. pancakes are baked in the first week of Lent, on Saturday, in memory of Maslenitsa. benefit. Cook the meat in it, salt it. The food doesn’t come in, the person is not kind. Tuga tuga south zap. sadness, grief, melancholy, sadness, grief, sadness. Because of sadness, many and tight hearts have filled you with many tears. Corinth. Great Tough shed, hanged himself (voivode), chronicle. Tightness and melancholy for son Glebov! A word about Igor's regiment There is no need for them to be worse! The foreign side, it is tightly wound, sowed with tears. Tuga, a cubic measure of boards assembled into a lock, for stone, crushed stone, sand, etc. Tuga? the blunt end of an egg, a dead end or puga, a tail, a heel, in the opposite direction. body, sock, wit. Tight-faced, snouted horse, arch. tight-nosed, tight on the reins, tight on the reins, insensitive, tight. Short-nosed, arch. about a man who is obstinate and arrogant. Tugun m. east. girth sowing ship rib, frame. Tight ringing sib. tight-lipped, thrifty owner, stingy. Platinum is the most refractory metal; processing it, due to its refractoriness, is very difficult

Synonyms for tight

    • delayed
    • difficult
    • slow
    • slow
    • not fast
    • unyielding
    • solid
    • blunt
    • elastic

Hypernyms for tight

    • thinking
    • hard
    • tense
    • full
    • feeling

Similar words for tight

  • adverbs

    adjectives

    • tight-tight
    • tight-tight

Phraseologisms for the word tight

    • tight man
    • hard of hearing

- (from pulling?), strong, stubborn, persistent, firmly elastic, unyielding, ·opposite. weak, soft, sluggish, flexible, bent. A tight bow, stubborn to draw; a tight bowstring or string, rope, pulled tightly. Tight mattress. tightly, densely stuffed... ... Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

1863-1866. Synonyms

Antonyms See what “TIGHT” is in other dictionaries:

TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ... Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary Phraseological Dictionary of the Russian Language

TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ... TIGHT, oh, oh; tight, tight, tight; tighter. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened, elastic. T. onion. Tight string. Tight spring. To pull tightly (adv.) 2. Tightly stuffed. T. wallet (also translated: about someone having a lot of money, capital). Tight (adv.)… … Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

tight - Hard of hearing and deaf. The monk didn’t hear right away: it seems he was a little hard of hearing...

Phrasebook Russian language

TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ...- Obsesslav. The same root (with a change o/e) as traction, heavy, bowstring, pull. Tight (*tong) literally “stretched” (like a bowstring), cf. lit. sténgti “to pull”, lat. tendere “to stretch, pull.” As evidenced by related Greek... ... Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language

I adj. 1. Firmly, strongly pulled or strained. 2. Tightly or tightly woven, braided, twisted, etc. 3. Resistant to any influence (compression, stretching, tension). 4. Tightly stuffed, highly inflated. 5. Elastic, poured... Modern explanatory dictionary of the Russian language by Efremova

Tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight, tight... ... Forms of words

Books

  • Tight Knot, Tendryakov V.. The novel “Tight Knot” by the famous Soviet writer Vladimir Fedorovich Tendryakov (1923-1984) is the story of how the chairman of a collective farm took Sasha Komelev, the son of the deceased, into his house...
  • The pulse of life is tight. Lyrics, Ilya Stefanov. “Tragic Poems” is the title of the first section of the book, although this term can be extended to the next three sections – “Triad of Wolves”, “Songs of Robbers” and “Black and White Poems”, yes...

TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ...

(from pulling?), strong, stubborn, persistent, firmly elastic, unyielding, anti-sex. weak, soft, sluggish, flexible, bent. A tight bow, stubborn to draw; a tight bowstring or string, rope, pulled tightly. Tight mattress. tightly, densely stuffed. Hold the reins tight. *Times are hard, life is hard. *Tight person, tight-fisted, stingy; prudent in spending. *Hard of hearing, somewhat deaf. *Production in this regiment is tight, it is moving slowly, sparingly. Pull the knot tighter, tighter. He is a slow person, he is slow, he is unlikely to give money. He pulled it out very tightly. The bird sits tightly, not strictly, but lets you close. My mind is dull and my wallet is tight. I am your servant, yes. Although it’s not big, it’s tightly packed. I pulled it tight and marked it poorly. My head is empty and my bag is tight. For a friend, everything is not tight (or tight, not hard). Tugonek I gave you a nut to crack! As soon as you talk about debts, he is hard of hearing. And not tight, but elastic. Not tight, but not too tough. Tight, tight. Tightness, tightness and tightness g. property according to adj. The tightness of the current income is quite crippling! To push what, talk. bol. with attachments. to (on, with) tighten, strain, push, pull tighter. The base of the body is pressed with a pressure tool. To bully someone, Vologda. perm. Kaluga offend or oppress, oppress, find fault; to force, to coerce, to force. Tugun, in the dam, spacer in the gate, between the posts. Tugach? arch. bump on a forehead. To grieve about something, for whom, to grieve, to be upset, to be torn, to lament, to grieve, to grieve, to yearn or be sad, to be sick; regret, remember with sighs. Don’t worry about the tugs being dirty: if they break, we’ll fix it ourselves! There is no reason for a noble lady to grieve (cry). Live forever, grieve forever (you will die, you will have fun). He who serves is the one who grieves. To grieve half-heartedly (half-heartedly) for someone else’s grief! Live. don’t worry: you won’t cry if you die. Why bother someone who has something to live for? It’s good to live for those who don’t have anything to worry about. There is something to grieve about. as there is no one to thresh rye with. I served as long as I did, but I tried twice as hard. Serve for a year, and struggle for ten years. I don’t dare cry - they don’t tell me to bother. The rich man doesn’t bother, but he’s bored. She didn’t grieve, didn’t cry - Martha went for Jacob! The young wife does not grieve for her old husband. You can’t help but love, and you can’t help but grieve. He lives without grieving, he circles around the world. He lives without grieving, and serves no one. Oppression - does not soar, will break - does not bother! The world doesn't care about men. Wood doesn't bother wood. The hat doesn't hurt my head. The quail is grieving, I will have to spend the winter somewhere! Living at home means grieving about everything. He lived and did not worry about anything; he died - they don’t grieve for him. Don’t worry, you’re beautiful, what a drunkard you’ve got yourself into: he’ll beat you, he won’t beat you up, but he’s his own will! The friend himself pushes easier, impersonal. You can’t push it, you can’t turn it back. You'll worry about it when you get married. I felt sick to death for the children. We got sick of it, our red days came! Stress, and you’ll forget. We got sick for a year. The widow’s heart got cold, weeping. weeping, grieving, and grieving, who grieves a lot for the grief of others, but what about Saturday in the first week of Lent? Tuzhiki m. lower tamb. thick pancakes, which are baked on the day of forgiveness, also funeral pancakes. Lenten pancakes are baked in the first week of Lent, on Saturday, in memory of Shrove Tuesday. , benefit. Cook the meat in it, salt it. The food doesn’t come in the place, the person is not kind enough to cook it carefully, guard it carefully. Tuga tuga south zap. sadness, grief, melancholy, sadness, grief, sadness. Because of sadness, many and tight hearts have filled you with many tears. Corinth. From the great hardship shed, hanged himself (voivode), chronicle. Tightness and melancholy for son Glebov! A word about Igor's regiment Tough and needy - there are none worse! The foreign side, it is tightly wound, sowed with tears.

Tuga, a cubic measure of boards assembled into a lock, for stone, crushed stone, sand, etc.

Tuga? the blunt end of an egg, a dead end or puga, a tail, a heel, in the opposite direction. body, sock, wit. Tight-faced, snouted horse, arch. tight-nosed, tight on the reins, tight on the reins, insensitive, tight.

Short-nosed, arch. about a man who is obstinate and arrogant. Tugun m. east. girth sowing ship rib, frame. Tight ringing sib. tight-lipped, thrifty owner, stingy. Platinum is the most refractory metal; processing it, due to its refractoriness, is very difficult.

Explanatory dictionary of the Russian language. D.N. Ushakov

TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ...

tight, tight; tight, tight, tight.

    Tightly stretched, tightened. He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly. Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. ? Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring.

    Tightly stuffed. Tight wallet.

    trans. Stingy, unyielding (colloquial). Tight man.

    trans. Done with difficulty, slow (colloquial). In the officer circle they talked about their hard work. Nekrasov. Hard of hearing - see ear.

Explanatory dictionary of the Russian language. S.I.Ozhegov, N.Yu.Shvedova.

TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ...

Aya, oh; tight, tight, tight; tighter.

    Tightly stretched, tightened elastic. G. onion. Tight string. Tight spring. To pull tightly (adv.)

    Tightly stuffed. G. wallet (also translated: about someone having a lot of money, capital). Tightly (adv.) stuff a suitcase.

    Difficult, difficult (obsolete and colloquial; now usually in the form of an adverb or in the meaning of a tale). Tough times. Things are going hard for him (adv.). Money is tight for him (meaning the story). It’s hard (in the meaning of the tale) for someone. * Hard of ear (colloquial) - hard of hearing, deaf. Tight-tight (colloquial) - very tight.

New explanatory dictionary of the Russian language, T. F. Efremova.

TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ...

    Tightly tied, taut.

    decomposition Difficult to compress, stretch, or stretch.

    Tightly stuffed.

    1. trans. decomposition Done with difficulty; slow, difficult.

      Slow to think (about a person).

      Unresponsive, dull (of the senses or sense organs).

Examples of the use of the word tight in literature.

Recent years twelve avatar usually dressed in all black, and now appeared before his ward in tight black tights, over which were worn a black tunic and a short vest.

Having penetrated the azalea bushes, the boy crawled close to the wire fence of an ideal grass court, laid out according to all the rules and with tight stretched mesh.

Having found it in the closet tight full of Stellars, Herndon turned off the activator a second time, and Mardlin's body went limp again.

Having little understanding of the global economy, the inhabitants of the Amazon understood one thing: they needed tighter tighten your belt, say goodbye to divine champagne, fairy-tale dreams and the free life you love so much.

Niccolò Amati dipped his fingers into hot varnish and stretched it on his hand tight viscous film, sniffed it, applied it with a brush to the pear wood planks and quickly moved them over the dancing light of the kagan, and then rubbed the plank with the hollow of a cloth camisole - warmed by the varnish, the wood gently shimmered with living color, every fiber was visible in the light.

For the sake of the Three Sisters, whom she invited to a tea party, Ananke chose for herself the guise of an elderly German woman, a portly lady in a formal suit, with tight a tuft of hair at the back of the head.

No matter what he does, Ananke will find him sooner or later, and then he will have to very tight.

It became difficult for Jamukha to breathe, as if the Anda had thrown a bridle over him, pushed the iron bit into his mouth and that was all. tighter, tighter pulls on the reins.

The child is hidden by a very long anorak, the hood is raised, the drawstring tight pulled together so that nothing can be seen except the eyes.

The control panels sparkled, as always, the antistatic display sparkled, the magnetic tapes in the input system were tight taut, the green control light was on, the address switch indication was at zero.

He threw the undershirt into a large scented cloth, in which only she continued to live, and put it there nightgown with her hair and rolled it all up into a small one TIGHT, tight, tight; tight, tight, tight. 1. Tightly stretched, tightened. “He breaks the oak branch and bends the bow tightly.” Pushkin. Tight string. Tight bow. || Difficult to bend, straighten or move. Tight collar. Tight spring. 2. Tight... ... a package that fit under his arm.

Factors leading to the development of asphyxia are also: umbilical cord knot, tight entanglement of the umbilical cord around the neck and compression of the fetal head, post-term pregnancy, premature rupture of water, atypical course labor activity, complete or partial blockage of the respiratory tract, for example, mucus, meconium.

If I don’t find any roots, then I’ll use that simple technique that both blacks and civilized people alike resort to, with the difference that Africans tie their belly and stomach together with a vine and very tight, and Europeans, when they have to fast for a long time, tighten their belt by just one hole.

The first matinee arrived, didn’t take long to wait, stunned the midges with frost, crumbled the small grass, every poking plant with furry seeds came out into the light, began to litter the ground with fluff, the foliage on the bushes glowed, the lingonberries in the tundra burned red, the remaining blueberries fell, blueberries, late cloudberries have turned sour, the princess dropped the last small berries into the hummocks, wild rosemary leaves have curled up tighter into tubes.

Knives and an eggplant hung from a wide belt; tight stuffed bag.