Utiliser "recognisable" dans une phrase
recognisable exemples de phrases
recognisable
1. No recognisable syllables
2. He has no idea which way he should go and heads down another light blue corridor more in hope than with any recognisable sense of direction
3. She patched through using the holo interface, her ident immediately recognisable
4. was too quick for the device to convert a call to recognisable speech
5. None were recognisable, even had I known their faces
6. at least not in any way that was consciously recognisable
7. His voice was somehow deformed, barely recognisable when he said with a strangely glazed look:
8. Some tools were recognisable, but Trevor couldn’t even begin to guess the purpose of most objects
9. Athene screamed in terror as dirty fingers gripped her tongue, the dagger moved up towards her mouth, she shouted words just about recognisable as ‘OK, OK
10. He stepped over the body, which was barely recognisable as that of the spitting man, and inserted the key in the huge iron lock in the door, and turned it
11. Sanjay didn’t trust himself to speak in case his own voice was as easily recognisable
12. A ballpoint pen, a washed but still recognisable movie ticket, and a note about homework, the paper felted and most of the ink illegible, were fished out of his shirt pocket
13. disappeared but the leather seat uppers were still recognisable
14. just recognisable remains of Detective Mike
15. He watched as they reached out and tenderly touched the few pieces that were recognisable while softly wailing and crying to one another
16. Only two ever from this civilisation had been found in a recognisable state being buried completely by cave ins and so preserved
17. Within minutes the scene was a recognisable
18. Most of the house had already gone, and we could see the broken mineshaft which had been the entrance to the fatal cellar, but very little else that was recognisable
19. The scent was unmistakable; smoky and meaty it could mean only one thing… Someone was having a barbecue! The instantly recognisable tang permeated the air and she licked her lips
20. What was recovered from the main tangle of metal were the charred remains of two human beings neither being recognisable as male, nor female and neither being complete, as made by their maker
21. He is fairly easily recognisable, as you will shortly see
22. recognisable ruin of a carving could be seen
23. prices are not for the feint-hearted and the faces around are all recognisable
24. Why was a particular form of words used? What was the relevance of the unusual inflection in the voice of the speaker? Why a hesitation when the response should have been easy and instant? One great technique which good negotiators use is to ask the speaker to repeat a statement which is recognisable as being significant in the negotiation; for example a proposal or counter-proposal
25. Most of the local homeless were instantly recognisable to the straights
26. It had been a few years, but he was still recognisable
27. rapid knock on the bedroom door just before it was swung open and the beaming face of a female stranger strode into the room, though her face was instantly recognisable her smile was not
28. She peered un-threatened by the radiating compassion of the recognisable stranger through half-open eyes
29. It was a mite too small for his expanded frame, tattered and full of holes but still recognisable as the costume of the teenage archers who had cut the throats of the French nobility twenty-two years earlier
30. You meet him everywhere, shorn of the glories of his uniform, easily recognisable by the bad fit of his civilian clothes, wandering about like a ship without a rudder; and as time goes on he settles down to the inevitable, and passes his days in a fourth-floor flat in the suburbs, eats, drinks, sleeps, reads the _Kreuzzeitung_ and nothing else, plays at cards in the day-time, grows gouty, and worries his wife
31. "What did you say, Ingeborg?" he said, looking at her with that so recognisable look
32. Meanwhile the first weeks of mourning slid by in an increasing serenity, with London empty and no one to intrude on what became presently distinctly recognisable as happiness
33. recognisable faces on the international front
34. Of greater consequence is the increase in recognisable
35. recognisable but Hanor still could not place them
36. Composing himself, searching the onlookers for any recognisable features, but
37. recognisable, but only just
38. Short, dark curly hair with a strong jaw line was vaguely recognisable, but nothing Hanor
39. Only now, as you learn your trade, will you have to concentrate on moulding your work into a recognisable form
40. they would be convinced unless there was something suitably recognisable (like me, or my staircase) in the
41. Very soon his escape would be discovered, the hunt would be up, he would be caught, reviled, loaded with chains, dragged back again to prison and bread-and-water and straw; his guards and penalties would be doubled; and O, what sarcastic remarks the girl would make! What was to be done? He was not swift of foot; his figure was unfortunately recognisable
42. This is a secondary area of congestion, and instantly recognisable as such with our VAP volumes
43. No one has been able to point out what kind or what amount of difference, in any recognisable character, is sufficient to prevent two species crossing
44. Nor should we be justified in assuming that if, for instance, the bed of the Pacific Ocean were now converted into a continent we should there find sedimentary formations, in recognisable condition, older than the Cambrian strata, supposing such to have been formerly deposited; for it might well happen that strata which had subsided some miles nearer to the centre of the earth, and which had been pressed on by an enormous weight of superincumbent water, might have undergone far more metamorphic action than strata which have always remained nearer to the surface
45. Thus, community in embryonic structure reveals community of descent; but dissimilarity in embryonic development does not prove discommunity of descent, for in one of two groups the developmental stages may have been suppressed, or may have been so greatly modified through adaptation to new habits of life as to be no longer recognisable
46. It is not to be wondered at; their position was trying indeed, much more so than ours; they were all exiled, transported, for ten or twelve years; and what made their sojourn in the prison most distressing to them was their rooted, ingrained prejudice, especially their unfortunate way of regarding the convicts, which they could not get over; in their eyes the unhappy fellows were mere wild beasts, without a single recognisable human quality
47. But besides these two kinds of beings which we know by our senses, we must inevitably acknowledge still other beings (not spiritual beings like us,—that is obvious) not recognisable by our senses, but which are material, i