skyscraper

skyscraper


    Choisissez la langue
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    Synonymes et Définitions Aller aux synonymes

    Utiliser "idiom" dans une phrase

    idiom exemples de phrases

    idiom


    1. Monk-Key 1 responded, “The cross wiring of the random Emotions sets forth new considerations of word relations Which while not communicating in standard idiom still Manage to produce idioms randomly to the accommodation Of sustained communication without linear deliberation—


    2. go all the way idiom (have sex with) llegar a todo, tener relaciones sexuales


    3. In the current idiom that could be re-stated as:


    4. Biblical idiom as “Whence cometh thou”? “Give me your location?” could be asked as “Where are


    5. Another confusing idiom for him


    6. Origin: The idiom is also used as an imperative


    7. Origin: This idiom refers to a fishing pole


    8. Origin: This idiom conjures up the image of a stranded canoeist


    9. This is pretty simple once you've understood the idiom


    10. acabo de hacerlo I have just done it ( this idiom is used only with the present and imperfect of

    11. The simple idiom penetrates Pandora Driver's bulletproof custom, striking her most vulnerable spot, her heart


    12. phrase “spread His tabernacle over them” is a Jewish idiom referring to the


    13. ’ One of his great skills was to convert an abstract idea into popular idiom


    14. ‘There has …’ David fell into the idiom


    15. Compare the Uncle Remus idiom, "There's where he dropped his moneypus"


    16. this idiom is used only with the present and imperfect tenses of


    17. For, as Lightfoot says, 'The New Testament was written by Jews, among Jews, for Jews ’ (a Jud eis, atque inter Judaeos, et ad Judaeos); and if it is evident that the phrases Ages of ages, or generations to generations, were used by them in a strictly limited sense in relation to the subject of future punishment, it will be needless to pervert the plain meaning of the ordinary Greek words, used in the New Testament to denote the destruction of the wicked, or words used to denote limited duration, from deference to supposed Jewish idioms requiring them to be taken in the sense of endless misery; specially when it is proved that no such idiom exists in the Talmud (which enshrines the traditions of the nation from a period far more ancient than the age of the Pharisees), where we find the very phrases even of the Apocalypse used to describe a punishment explicitly declared to be terminable


    18. Highly exaggerated notions are entertained by some writers respecting the peculiarity of the Greek Testament idiom: No sooner is it demonstrated that the identical terms which are employed in the New Testament books signify in the pages of Plato, in a discussion on immortality, and in all other known classical writers, literal destruction or abolition of life, than you are met with the statement that New Testament Greek has its own 'spiritual and secondary meanings,’ and cannot be rightly understood if we take its words in 'classical’ senses


    19. Every existence has its idiom, every thing has an idiom and tongue,


    20. "And I," replied the visitor, changing his idiom, "know enough of English to keep up the

    21. His rendition of “Need Your Love So Bad,” with its superb short opening solo that was the only guitar break I ever aspired to memorize, was my first acquaintance with the orchestrated blues of Little Willie John, an idiom most gloriously explored by Bobby “Blue” Bland


    22. “The Japanese have an idiom for whining that is translated as ‘vomiting up weakness,’ ” Total said helpfully


    23. ” This idiom originated from the Chinese battle strategy that Honma was said to have read


    24. This idiom originated from the Chinese battle strategy the Honma was said to have read


    25. Study and investigation of this strange idiom lead to the mysterious point of intersection of regular society with society which is accursed


    26. It is also clear that the books by Voloshinov and Medvedev are explicitly Marxist in idiom, while those of Bakhtin are less so, though at the very least Bakhtin, in his own writing, both published and unpublished, makes obeisance towards Marxism, and, more strongly, appears to be influenced by it in some fundamental respects


    27. So that there are instances among them of men, who, named with Scripture names—a singularly common fashion on the island—and in childhood naturally imbibing the stately dramatic thee and thou of the Quaker idiom; still, from the audacious, daring, and boundless adventure of their subsequent lives, strangely blend with these unoutgrown peculiarities, a thousand bold dashes of character, not unworthy a Scandinavian sea-king, or a poetical Pagan Roman


    28. Chairman, that they speak in a foreign idiom


    Afficher plus d'exemples

    Synonymes pour "idiom"

    artistic style idiom parlance idiomatic expression phrasal idiom phrase set phrase accent dialect jargon lingo terminology vernacular speech