1. pleasant
He seems very pleasant.
He was a warm gentleman with a pleasant sense of humor.
It’s quite pleasant. You won’t need a jumper.
Sometimes it is pleasant to look back on one's childhood.
Bingley had never met with more pleasant people or prettier girls in his life.
Paul is so pleasant a person that everybody likes him at once.
Upon my honour, I never met with so many pleasant girls in my life as I have this evening; and there are several of them you see uncommonly pretty.
A camel is a gentle and pleasant tame beast whereof there are plenty in Africa especially in the Deserts of Libya, Numidia and Barbary by which Africans estimate their own wealth.
All in all, the excursion was pleasant.
Mr. Bingley was good-looking and gentlemanlike; he had a pleasant countenance, and easy, unaffected manners.
The restaurant is a pleasant out-of-the-way spot in New York.
Please refrain from making posts that make this site less pleasant to visit.
Typography is the discipline of using type to set texts into a form that is pleasant to read.
Watching the Chinese new year parade seated on the balcony is so pleasant.
Sleep is more pleasant than death. At least, there's not much difference.
Angličtina slovo „kellemes„(pleasant) se zobrazí v sadách:
k4 elő- és utótagok2. pleasing
David has a keen interest in aesthetics — the qualities that make a painting, sculpture, musical composition, or poem pleasing to the eye, ear, or mind.
That should be pleasing to anyone.
The music was very pleasing to the ear.
It was pleasing to know that the presentation had gone so well.
Green leaves in a park are pleasing to the eye.
I did so with a view to pleasing him.
The music of Mozart is always pleasing to me.
The art of pleasing is the art of deception.
The show was pleasing to the audience.
It should be pleasing.
Rows of houses, each of them different and pleasing with their spacious gardens, are replaced by purely functional blocks of flats which have nothing more to commend them than over-praised 'modern conveniences'.