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

(Adjective) na wysokich obcasach, nadziany;

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

OBCAS: NA OBCASACH (O PANTOFLACH)

Przykłady użycia

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

There is food on the shelves now, and the trillion-dollar banknotes are gone. Since 2009 citizens have been free to use the South African rand or the US dollar, and all do. A human rights commission has been sworn in. A media commission has licensed newspapers independent of government control and one, Newsday, began publishing this month. There are more cars on the road, some traffic lights work and the big four-wheeled drives no longer mainly have white faces behind the wheel. Vast diamond fields discovered at Marange have the potential to bring prosperity, and work on a new constitution is under way.
After years of welcoming well-heeled tourists from around the world with open arms, one of Tuscany's smartest, most discreet beach resorts is in revolt against outsiders, wealthy or not.
The age of austerity dawned in fashion months before George Osborne got his hands on the keys to No 11. In March, the Paris catwalks were full of grown-up clothes in sensible, wearable colours. Even before the bloodbath budget, fashion had a new buzzword to replace fabulousness â?? "believability". Easy-to-do ponytails and walkable-heeled shoes are hot topics in fashion right now. The issue of whether the women who can afford these clothes can also wear them without looking absurd is deemed relevant again.
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.
At the event I attended earlier this summer at the Tabernacle, a former evangelical church in west London that is now a community arts centre, Boycott's decision to programme without a specific agenda in mind was much in evidence: Fatima Bhutto, Andrew O'Hagan, Yotam Ottolenghi, Frances Stonor Saunders and Maureen Lipman â?? a memoirist, a novelist, a chef, a historian and a comic actor â?? shared the bill, with a musical interlude of "politically incorrect" songs from the writer Terence Blacker. Given its location â?? Holland Park and Notting Hill are barely a stone's throw away â?? it's perhaps unsurprising that the audience was a slightly older and better-heeled group than the punters most likely to attend a Literary Death Match or make their way to the Bethnal Green Working Men's Club. Indeed, when 5x15 ventured beyond these shores in June, it landed in Paris, as part of bookshop Shakespeare & Co's summer festival. "This gig," as Lipman remarked during the 15 minutes that she spent telling jokes and performing one of a series of comic monologues that she's currently writing, "is like a cross between the Comedy Store and the Women's Institute." If the assembled company, packed in like sardines, tucking into plates of antipasti and sipping dry white wine, took that as a slur on their credentials as sophisticated cultural consumers, they weren't letting on.
It is a misleading title in other ways too. The urban jumper does much more than simply jump. He scouts buildings. He studies security arrangements. He reads the weather (strolling the darkened pavements Witchalls discharges in his wake a trail of small folded bits of paper, his wind tell-tales). He also breaks in: we gained access to our chosen rooftop disguised as Village People-esque builders; later, faced with a potentially catastrophic locked door, Witchalls somehow levered himself through a window 10ft off the ground and roughly the size of a letterbox. And so here we are at last, brooding above the night-time skyscape, only one of us with any thought whatsoever of taking the stairs back down. Up here Witchalls reminds me briefly of another London legend: Spring Heeled Jack, a mythical Victorian prankster-cum-outlaw said to have been seen leaping from roof to roof after dark.
If you're a cyclist and none of these fringes appeal to you, then don't worry. It shows that cycling is big enough to support these branches, however off-beat, and we can only wonder what other two-wheeled strangeness is out there. Spotted any? Feel free to comment below.
For the second time in a decade, Lymington's 14,000 mostly well-heeled residents and its councillors have struck back against the mighty chains. A few years ago, the sailing town made its name when it resisted Argos. The owner of a local boutique led a successful anti-Argos campaign, arguing that the store "would lower the tone and drive out that calibre of people because they would stop shopping here or moving here to live". Lymington got a Marks & Spencer Simply Food shop instead, and breathed a collective sigh of relief.
There were other pieces, too: an especially beautiful punch suede peach-coloured frock, a voluminous cobweb maxi dress, a lairy lurex bikini. The desultory teenage model brigade sported identikit Crystal Tipps candy floss hairdos, perspex block heeled wedges and shades; and carried heavily fringed shoulder bags. Barry White provided the soundtrack on the finale. It was witty and daft and extremely glamorous.
New train routes notwithstanding, the triangular area between the Rhine and Mosel valleys, with well-heeled Koblenz sitting at its apex, is most readily accessible from Frankfurt-Hahn airport, a 50-minute hop from Stansted. But Frankfurt am Main and Bonn are not too far away for those understandably determined to avoid Ryanair. Driving is the easiest way to get around, though wholly unavoidable. There are good local train and bus services linking the valley towns in addition to the swift KD riverboat cruisers.

You scum-sucking bastard, if you ain't heeled, go and arm yourself.
Ty śmierdzący draniu, jeśli nie jesteś uzbrojony, to idź i uzbrój się.