Используйте «hit off» в предложении
hit off примеры предложений
hit off
1. When they saw Tig smirking, Wambach said, "Wipe that shit off
2. The poor guy hit off his stumps at about three feet
3. She took one more hit off the blunt and
4. You could have laughed that shit off, put your stake in your prize woman and
5. shit off the food as the other carcasses swung over
6. You wouldn't be smart enough to pull that shit off!"
7. Many have tried to hit off with them tonight, even the celebrity football players, but they are having none of it
8. I took another hit off one of the other brandy bottles I'd accidentally forgotten to share
9. he took another hit off of the tobacco
10. Rider took a final hit off of his cigarette, and flicked the stub off into the paved parking lot
11. to hit offside but were in fact the only retreating position that Zhan Donglai could move if he evaded from Ye Manqing's attacks
12. timekeeping that they hit off within a couple of days of
13. ” Dylan takes a hit off the
14. During the 90s the ecstasy drug really hit off with the partygoers of Amsterdam
15. Marco entered the large sitting room cautiously and it was then that he noticed that he had forgotten to close the window near the side table where it seemed like the blowing drapes had hit off a glass vase
16. The wind blew the drapes and they hit off a vase
17. " He turns to the android quietly and tries to focus on how to wipe off the glue shit off his shoes
18. "I," said Binet, "once saw a piece called the 'Gamin de Paris,' in which there was the character of an old general that is really hit off to a T
19. LANGDON JAMES takes a hit off his joint and squints through the smoke at the cable news show, where four well-dressed lawyers are talking over one another, arguing about the merits of Dio Cornwall’s testimony and the overall strength of the prosecution’s case against “Surfer Jesus
20. But he can’t just sit here like bait on a hook, so he takes a hit off his inhaler and finds the stairs, the foiled walls, the front hall
21. He was an amusing cross between a tricky little Paris gamin and a real child, and he hit off the characteristics of the various writers with as keen a touch of actuality as he could put into his stories of how many centimes he had won that morning at 'craps' from his friend Pierre