Utiliser "suitcase" dans une phrase
suitcase exemples de phrases
suitcase
1. They are in a blue suitcase by the big chair near the window
2. suitcase behind him that was covered in taped down lengths of
3. ticket this year,' I said as I chained our suitcase to the lower berth
4. ‘What on earth have you got in here? Rocks?’ Dave asked five minutes later, lifting the suitcase out of the boot
5. … along with that suitcase of clothes
6. What surprised was me how quickly the water and electricity had come on when I was packing my suitcase so I had a chance to have a quick shower, and I supposed the water noise helped dull the noise of shots being fired
7. "The case you mean, well its Tom Foolery's latest gimmick samples I expect," Fizzicist drew closer, "If I could use your barn we might see what is in it eh!" Clothier tied the well rope to the bottle neck and lowered it back down the well, then hoisted the suitcase onto his broad shoulders and lumbered into the barn
8. because her suitcase had been dirtied
9. Carmen started to shiver and Alex set his suitcase on the porch
10. There, he tossed his suitcase in the back and dug in his pockets for the keys
11. Part of my job, you’ll recall, was to convince those Russian scientists with suitcase bomb knowledge to stay at
12. Inside the bedroom, Bill and Emmy were packing a suitcase
13. That was the reason for them packing a suitcase
14. Living out of a suitcase can feel chaotic
15. Marcos tried to snap the locks on the suitcase shut, but it had too many clothes inside
16. Marcos saw his wife eye the dresses he’d just tossed from the suitcase, but knew she wouldn’t argue with him, she never did
17. She turned to a smaller suitcase instead and began packing the children’s clothes
18. He collided with a woman, toppling her over Pat’s fat backside as the big man bent to retrieve his suitcase
19. He asked me to return his suitcase to Arborville
20. I inched forward and slipped my suitcase out from under the foot of my bed
21. It had landed there when he tripped on my suitcase
22. He traded five packs of cigarettes for a battered but sturdy leather suitcase at the shoemaker’s shop where he had purchased his Leica camera
23. The cars were all third-class with wooden bench seats and no compartments, and the B-4 bag and suitcase, which contained the Luger and $500 of his cache in its hidden compartment, made an awkward burden as he walked the length of the train searching for her
24. Elizabeth gave him a thick loose-leaf notebook containing many typed pages of what appeared to be inventory lists, with stock numbers, quantities on hand, and so on, which he placed in his suitcase
25. The purchase of the tickets had taken almost all of the American dollars he was carrying on his person, and meant that he might not be able to pay for a decent meal until he could dig into the extra cash in his suitcase
26. She told him not to worry and asked him to lift her suitcase from the overhead rack
27. Elizabeth began chattering about what might be on the restaurant’s menu, while she opened her suitcase and extracted the envelopes of cash, which she stuffed into her purse
28. Colling pulled out the notebook that he had carried in his suitcase from Germany, and began to make a show of comparing it with the list he had been given
29. He sat in one of the easy chairs, reading an old issue of Time that he had packed in his suitcase in Germany, as the maid finished her work
30. They hid their United States passports and Colling’s Army identity card and travel orders in the secret compartment in Colling’s suitcase
31. With Colling carrying his suitcase and the canvas bag, and Elizabeth her own, they used the stairs to descend to the basement
32. “I’ve gotten better at it lately,” said Colling wryly, as he began packing his suitcase
33. He asked that she take some of their American currency from her suitcase so that he could go into the town the following day to exchange it for Polish banknotes
34. The cab driver had appeared with Colling’s battered suitcase in hand, and Quarles ordered it taken to Colling’s room
35. Colling was about to follow his suitcase into the elevator, when Quarles pulled at his arm, motioning with his head towards the hotel dining room
36. Instead, he used money he had taken from the secret compartment in his suitcase before leaving his room at the Metropole to pay the staff sergeant for postage stamps and a package of stationery that he selected from a wire display rack on the counter
37. The civilian clothes and the folded B-4 bag were packed into the suitcase
38. The wallet, shoes, underwear, socks and a slouch cap and a hat that had been part of the shipment he packed into the battered suitcase he had carried in Poland
39. He stowed the suitcase and box in one of the cabinets under a counter in the dispensary
40. The familiar old suitcase that had served him well in Poland now held Cousin Jerry’s clothes, long since altered to fit Colling by a woman DP who was a seamstress
41. A canvas zipper bag was required to accommodate some of Cousin Jerry’s clothing that would not fit in the suitcase, and Colling stuffed the second bag inside the B-4 he would use to store his uniform once he reached Munich
42. “Not at all,” said Colling, reaching to the overhead rack and pulling down his suitcase and the canvas bag and placing them on the seat
43. Colling’s escort insisted on carrying his suitcase, leaving Colling with only the small canvas bag in his hand as they stepped down onto the platform
44. The officer ordered one of his men to take Colling’s suitcase from his escort on the train, who re-boarded, apparently to return to Piotrkow
45. He partially unpacked, hanging his suits and jackets in the armoire, but leaving everything else in his suitcase and the canvas bag
46. Jalesow waited impatiently while Colling opened his suitcase and rummaged until he found his coat and put it on
47. He went to his suitcase and took out the penicillin he had brought with him from Germany
48. He was about to pull back in order to search for a prophylactic from his suitcase when he felt her hands on him, and she whispered, “I took one out already, Jim,” as she made sure it was properly in place
49. He counted the last of his dollars from the compartment in his suitcase, and checked the Luger and extra ammunition
50. Cousin Jerry’s passport was in the concealed compartment in his suitcase, and Colling had no intention of disclosing its location