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to find oneself unable to do

См. также в других словарях:

  • find (or lose) one's tongue — be able (or unable) to express oneself after a shock. → tongue …   English new terms dictionary

  • find one's tongue — ► find (or lose) one s tongue be able (or unable) to express oneself after a shock. Main Entry: ↑tongue …   English terms dictionary

  • find one's tongue — find (or lose) one s tongue be able (or unable) to express oneself after a shock …   Useful english dictionary

  • lose oneself — {v. phr.} 1. To go wrong; miss your way; become unable to find the right direction. * /Fred lost himself in the confusion of downtown Boston streets./ 2. To conceal yourself; hide. * /The pick pocket lost himself in the crowd and escaped the… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • lose oneself — {v. phr.} 1. To go wrong; miss your way; become unable to find the right direction. * /Fred lost himself in the confusion of downtown Boston streets./ 2. To conceal yourself; hide. * /The pick pocket lost himself in the crowd and escaped the… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • lose\ oneself — v. phr. 1. To go wrong; miss your way; become unable to find the right direction. Fred lost himself in the confusion of downtown Boston streets. 2. To conceal yourself; hide. The pick pocket lost himself in the crowd and escaped the police. 3. To …   Словарь американских идиом

  • Existentialism — The …   Wikipedia

  • Fourth Way — For P.D. Ouspensky s book titled The Fourth Way see Fourth Way (book). For the jazz group, see The Fourth Way (band). In his early lectures G.I. Gurdjieff described his approach to self development as a Fourth Way. [P.D. Ouspensky (1949), In… …   Wikipedia

  • Christine Hakim — Born Herlina Christine Natalia Hakim 25 December 1957 (1957 12 25) (age 53) …   Wikipedia

  • Terry Eagleton — holding one of his books after a talk in Manchester Mechanics Institute in 2008 Terence Francis Eagleton FBA (born 22 February 1943, Salford) is a British literary theorist regarded as one of Britain s most influential living literary critics.[1] …   Wikipedia

  • stick — I. noun Etymology: Middle English stik, from Old English sticca; akin to Old Norse stik stick, Old English stician to stick Date: before 12th century 1. a woody piece or part of a tree or shrub: as a. a usually dry or dead severed shoot, twig, or …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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