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这事就这么办
най-стари
old hand N
to be an old hand (at sth)
I. old <-er, -est> [əʊld, Am oʊld] ADJ
1. old (not young, new):
2. old (denoting an age):
3. old (former):
4. old (long known):
old friend
Phrases:
II. old [əʊld, Am oʊld] N (elderly people)
the old pl
old boy N
1. old boy Brit inf (old man):
2. old boy Aus, Brit (former pupil):
old-established [ˌəʊldɪˈstæblɪʃt] ADJ
old-style ADJ
old-maidish [ˌəʊldˈmeɪdɪʃ] ADJ pej
old lady N inf (one's wife, mother)
old man N inf (husband, father)
old-fashioned [ˌəʊldˈfæʃnd] ADJ pej
1. old-fashioned (out):
old-fashioned clothes, views
2. old-fashioned (traditional):
old flame N inf
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Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)
Generally, the notion of keeping a diary is now considered a bit old-maidish.
www.ft.com
Their chairman said it was an old-established firm with a very substantial wholesale trade in food commodities, notably sugar and a chain of over 100 retail grocery shops.
en.wikipedia.org
For the first time, an old-established convention was broken: she was allowed to keep everything.
www.dailymail.co.uk
The two old-established schools are only a 10-minute walk apart and students from both attend some classes at the other school.
www.stuff.co.nz
Belief that sunlight cures skin ailments is an old-established one.
www.thehindu.com

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