Usa "english" in una frase
english frasi di esempio
english
1. For example, if the testator never knew English but has the will drafted in that language, then it can be contested on the basis that the testator had no idea what he/she was signing
2. With that he raised his own glass and toasted the young English couple
3. signed copy was in Italian, but his was translated into English
4. The secret of writing good English lies in a good match between nouns and adjectives
5. And we should not study an English word singly
6. An English word must be learned together with other words at the same time
7. Stephen’s heavily into the healthy option … we haven’t had a full English for years now
8. He switches from Arabic to English
9. I thought I heard some foreign, you know? Like east European or something, but then I heard a voice that sounded English so I can't really tell you
10. They don't give a dime if I know perfect English and Italian, as well as very good German and Spanish
11. As the heat in my soul rose to a combustible level I forgot the rudiments of the English language, reverting to a lingua franca that combined the best of the gutter from East and West
12. I tried to speak in my best and most recently learned English accent
13. He speaks English and one of his disciples translates his words into Greek
14. “I only hope I am not the one who caused this,” he said, and then he tried to make me feel better by revealing to the class that “Yvonne is an unselfish person indeed: she was willing to translate ''Self-knowledge and Metaphysics'' from Greek into English free of charge, she did her best and finished it within a month!”
15. Just as I started to get the image into some sort of focus, at the critical moment when I started to remember details about the garden, their clothes and the house, right then the truck would bounce or shake over rough English roads, and these carefully assembled pieces of the picture puzzle would break and scatter
16. I called myself every name under this weak English sun, and slapped my face hard to restore full alertness
17. Of all the nights that I had spent sleeping under the English sky, this was, I think, the most relaxing
18. I remembered a passage from an early English novel, one that I studied at university
19. Once the euphoria of the meeting subsided a little, we four settled into the habitual comparisons that dominate male conversation, sharing our stories of capture, and gabbling away ten to the dozen in a mixture of Arabic and English about our shared experiences in the hostage hotels
20. What would I have done in this or that situation? How would I react if I found myself facing similar choices? Would I have been as bold as Menachem and entered into a passionate affair with an English woman, a civil servant, just as he had done? Would I have dared to chase a French politician through the streets of Paris to ask that one final question, a question that resulted in Aban spending three days in a French gaol?
21. is Professor of English and Creative
22. in the cold greyness of a rainy English dawn
23. I gave her a wide smile and touched my forehead hoping she would recognise this as an apology and said sorry, in the hope she might speak a little English
24. With one arm raised and her head held high, she announced in unexpected, but excellent English, 'This one is good
25. but only the English
26. I found myself remembering my holidays from boarding school and how Uncle Pantelis would rattle on, telling tales, pointing things out and singing some moody love song or other, mixing Greek and English in the same sentence
27. Look at me! I used to teach English there and now I drive this damned van
28. 1 refer to Ardha-Matsendrasana, called in English the SPINAL TWIST, not a very poetic name for what you will see is a Yogic poem of graceful movement
29. It too is English
30. He was open and animated, a natural Master of Ceremonies who asked lots of questions about Britain and the Irish, the Welsh, the Scots and couldn't quite understand why everyone with the same language was not English
31. 'That was taken by English Staff Sergeant in the war
32. There were even some in English
33. ’ He replied – in English this time - the Welsh lilt to his voice charming to hear
34. Always nice to hear the English accent way up here in the mountains
35. As I approached their table one of the ladies gave me a wide smile and asked loudly, 'Just wondering, how do they say “Thank you” in Greek? My husband said before I left that I aught to bring a phrase book, but you'd think they'd all speak English here, wouldn't you?'
36. But first, we must find English donkeys,' he sucked the brandy from his moustache, his otter eyes fluttered closed and his voice fell to a whisper
37. He explained that, although new to them all, it was clearly a hybrid from the equatorial regions, a masterful admixture of the new world and the old ways of the English garden
38. ‘There’s some maths and I have to get started on the English essay as well
39. What is also reassuring is that everyone, but everyone, speaks English
40. Access to the grounds of the villa is via a pair of wrought iron gates which look very impressive but to be honest the place is slightly run down in the way that Mediterranean properties tend to be – I don’t know if it is the heat or just a cultural difference but they don’t take the pride in their properties that the English do
41. “I’m really sorry, I have no idea what you’re asking,” she said in English, then repeated the same statement in Kassidorian
42. She noticed the word ‘wooo’ drawn out meant the same in this language as it did in English
43. With apologies in English and Kassidorian she crawled back to her seat on the boat
44. As they walked to the parking garage, the thirty percent of the ads that were in English told Ava that this had become in some ways the Las Vegas of Europe
45. Half the people spoke Minoan, a third spoke Greek, half could speak English, a third could speak French or German, quite a few could speak Russian and quite a few could speak Turkish
46. old ways of the English garden
47. Someone else appeared at the door, someone who also knew English because he used that to say, “I must be late for the meeting, the discussions have already started
48. She must have had the tea things all ready, because she is back within a matter of minutes and we go through the very English social game of pouring the tea and passing the biscuits
49. He looked at her like maybe English wasn’t his native tongue
50. If it comes off, there may be other commissions … there are lots of organisations like the Foundation which were established through the blood, sweat and sheer determination of individuals, it’s a rather English thing, I think, though I may be wrong there