Usar "lettered" en una oración
lettered oraciones de ejemplo
lettered
1. They sent me a picture of their fresh-coat-of-brown painted house, with their white lettered last name “PATCHEN” painted on an old piece of wood and nailed in front just above their wrapped-around deck
2. “Is there a chance you may, you know” Akua said, not wanting to use that four lettered word, live
3. My sponsor nearly killed me for letting Bud Williams, LHS’ All State QB in 1960 who broke his wrist at UF and then lettered as a linebacker, put an apron on me and make me tend bar at Leon H
4. “It’s beautiful! Thank you!” Talia said as she opened it to the title page, which was lettered with flowing script
5. The last box, lettered with the number 1, ended at her pubic region
6. The compliment paid to the sea services by naval historian and Admiral Samuel Eliot Morison after World War Two could be applied to the Coast Guard from its Revenue Service days to the present: “Let us remember the gunboats, minecraft, destroyer escorts, PTs, beaching and other lettered craft
7. red, white and blue name badge with a red ribbon lettered
8. The sign was made out of packing material and had been crudely lettered with a soft marker
9. Jebongo hand lettered across the front
10. Both women came back down fifty minutes later, finding Sarah Ur in the process of giving an English teaching lesson to Hien in the living room with the help of lettered dominos
11. Crudely lettered cardboard signs hanging from the ceiling read: welcome baby
12. a cover with "EXPERIMENTAL" lettered on it
13. TOOMB" lettered on the side
14. TOOMB" lettered on it screeches to a halt and dies a grinding death at the gate
15. Then, perhaps, a mason's van with newly lettered tombstones recording how some one loved some one who is buried at Putney
16. "Be not uneasy, friend Sancho," said the barber, "for we will entreat your master, and advise him, even urging it upon him as a case of conscience, to become an emperor and not an archbishop, because it will be easier for him as he is more valiant than lettered
17. ” In his senior year in high school, by sheer force of will, he lettered in—of all things—basketball
18. passed on, pouring indignation and scorn upon Ramirez; but, that Sunday, she nearly died of wretchedness and shame, lying on the carved and lettered stone of Teresa's grave, subscribed for by the engine-drivers and the fitters of the railway workshops, in sign of their respect for the hero of Italian Unity
19. Before he could think about what he was doing, Mercer had laid aside the erotica and hurried back out of the shop and was following the man east, toward the lettered streets, as if there were something he could not wait any longer to find out
20. By no means all Hobbits were lettered, but those who were wrote constantly to all their friends (and a selection of their relations)
21. his reputation as a lettered man):
22. It was a neatly lettered page full of the text of the Argonautica
23. This had given her, when very young, and even a little later, a sort of pensive attitude towards her husband, a scamp of a certain depth, a ruffian lettered to the extent of the grammar, coarse and fine at one and the same time, but, so far as sentimentalism was concerned, given to the perusal of Pigault-Lebrun, and "in what concerns the sex," as he said in his jargon—a downright, unmitigated lout
24. all the languages of Europe, and, what is more rare, all the languages of all interests, and speaking them; an admirable representative of the "middle class," but outstripping it, and in every way greater than it; possessing excellent sense, while appreciating the blood from which he had sprung, counting most of all on his intrinsic worth, and, on the question of his race, very particular, declaring himself Orleans and not Bourbon; thoroughly the first Prince of the Blood Royal while he was still only a Serene Highness, but a frank bourgeois from the day he became king; diffuse in public, concise in private; reputed, but not proved to be a miser; at bottom, one of those economists who are readily prodigal at their own fancy or duty; lettered, but not very sensitive to letters; a gentleman, but not a chevalier; simple, calm, and strong; adored by his family and his household; a fascinating talker, an undeceived statesman, inwardly cold, dominated by immediate interest, always governing at the shortest range, incapable of rancor and of gratitude, making use without mercy of superiority on mediocrity, clever in getting parliamentary majorities to put in the wrong those mysterious unanimities which mutter dully under thrones; unreserved, sometimes imprudent in his lack of reserve, but with marvellous address in that imprudence; fertile in expedients, in countenances, in masks; making France fear Europe and Europe France! Incontestably fond of his country, but preferring his family; assuming more domination than authority and more authority than dignity, a disposition which has this unfortunate property, that as it turns everything to success, it admits of ruse and does not absolutely repudiate baseness, but which has this valuable side, that it preserves politics from violent shocks, the state from fractures, and society from catastrophes; minute, correct, vigilant, attentive, sagacious, indefatigable; contradicting himself at times and giving himself the lie; bold against Austria at Ancona, obstinate against England in Spain, bombarding Antwerp, and paying off Pritchard; singing the Marseillaise with conviction, inaccessible to despondency, to lassitude, to the taste for the beautiful and the ideal, to daring generosity, to Utopia, to chimeras, to wrath, to vanity, to fear; possessing all the forms of personal intrepidity; a general at Valmy; a soldier at Jemappes; attacked eight times by regicides and always smiling
25. For there were words written on this egg in white calcium outline, as if the nervous system of the chicken, moved by strange night talks that only it could hear, had lettered the shell in painful half-neat inscriptions
26. When his protests weakened a little they carried the packing case over to the laboratory, tacked red, white, and blue bunting over it, lettered the big sign with iodine on a card, and they started the decorating from there
27. At last the Captain made a postman of it; tying a lettered, leathern tally round its neck, with the ship's time and place; and then letting it escape