Verwenden Sie „museum“ in einem Satz
museum Beispielsätze
museum
1. Then there had been what Joris had termed ‘bits and pieces’ – in truth, valuable artefacts collected from all over the world that he had garnered during his travels; after discussions with Berndt who had taken a quick look at the vast store of, without exception, items of considerable artistic merit if not value, Kara had agreed that the bulk might be offered to the new Guild to form the basis of a museum of some sort
2. For a moment Kara hesitated, wondering if there was an aspect of Joris she’d never suspected … a black brutal side she’d never seen … then she realised that the various weapons had been used by people attacking Joris or his colleagues … they had been won in battle … oh, you silly man! It’s a gallery of your successes! I wonder if the Secret Guild would like these … they have a small museum
3. ‘Joris has a collection of paintings, sculptures … oh, all sorts of things … it’s enough for a small museum
4. The village is an oddity, a living museum
5. A living museum yes, but one that is dying
6. The museum was interesting enough though, and I enjoyed looking round it
7. No wonder Aristethes had described it as a living museum that was dying; he could not have been more literate
8. to do this is by renting out a museum after hours
9. Museum or art gallery: If you know that you both enjoy art or history this is a great first date idea
10. Stencilled on the nearest, 'Iraq National Museum of Baghdad'
11. Before I'd arrived, he had given Irene his list of these evil thieves translated into Classical Greek with instructions for her to inscribe it onto an amphora, to cast it in her kiln and to take it with Agni to the Archaeological Museum in Athens
12. Since he never married it had been sitting in a museum for centuries
13. The Vishala Village Restaurant and Utensils Museum is located at the outskirts
14. Along with a craft museum and village
15. The whole center island was restored as a museum and tourist trap
16. It’s got a little art museum on the side and an impressive collection of ancient manuscripts from Morlain and
17. He stopped at a different cafe each day and strolled the paths, visited the museum or relaxed at lakeside, casting happily for the denizens of the lake
18. “Harry, if you are at loose ends this afternoon would you like to walk with us to the Museum?” She nodded in the direction of the Hunter's Gate and the American Natural History Museum
19. The exhibitions and displays of the museum afforded Harry an opportunity to match some of the information from his school texts to tangibles, and he once again entertained the Spelman ladies with the depth of his knowledge about the things they were viewing, of which he had only read before now
20. The car’s parked by St Mary Redcliffe Church, not the closest car park to the museum but by far the easiest for me to drive to
21. I don’t like driving through the centre of Bristol and the walk from there to the museum will only take us about fifteen minutes
22. I explain about the museum
23. was as still as a likeness in a wax museum, but Roman was sure that if even one
24. They strolled the grounds and walked through the preview exhibits of the Manchester Museum, scheduled to open to the public in early Spring
25. cannot miss the Museum set up here, where
26. In a museum in the Imperial City, there had been artifacts of similar appearance
27. Rex told her he never got bored in the old historic museum
28. These are: New Bedford Whaling Museum, Arthur Moniz Gallery,
29. It seemed as big as a pony, its canines the size of the sabre-toothed tiger’s she’d once seen at a museum on a school trip
30. and handed to a museum
31. (The reader need only refer to the tasteless exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in order to catch my ―whiff!‖)
32. What is unconceivable is that the ticket to enter the caves and the museum is one and the same and that tourists cannot visit the museum when the caves are not accessible
33. Marguerite begged them to let us visit the museum, at least, for we had come from very far and we might not be able to come back for another visit
34. She insisted, besides, that she understood the determination and the need to protect the caves, but maintained that that did not justify the decision not to allow us to visit the museum which was an artistic entity totally independent and does not require the same protective measures
35. She had no other alternative than to fill out a rather constructive complaint to the Board of Directors of the museum
36. While Marguerite tried to negotiate in English our possible admission to the museum, I remained silent so as to avoid creating doubts in the fact that we really came from California
37. Once the determination was made to deny us admission to the museum, I calmly spoke to them in Spanish and let them know how disappointed I was of the manner in which they administered that cultural center of such historic significance and that I was going to write an article to let the world know what I considered an “inconceivable administrative ineptitude”
38. Approximately one month after that incident, Marguerite received in her residence in Los Angeles the following communication from the Board of Directors of the museum:
39. In answer to your complaint of August 18th of 2004 in your visit to the renovated Museum of Altamira, we regret that the information given to you was not to your complete satisfaction
40. I am pleased to communicate to the reader that, according to the information provided therein, the prices indicated for the visit to the museum do not include the visit to the caves
41. For that reason, I suspect that the administration has wisely decided to separate the visit to the caves from that of the museum
42. Our complaint was not about the measures taken to protect the drawings of those historic caves, which do require certain restrictive norms, but rather the inconsequence of those measures with regard to the museum
43. As big as a pony, with canines the size of the sabre-toothed tiger’s she’d seen at a museum
44. When he was out of sight, I pulled into the same lot and found a parking space that was closer to the museum
45. But at the far end of the silken ropes that would have been appropriate in a museum or a bank, there was a space he could easily get through
46. “Where’s the nearest museum?”
47. “That would be very pleasant, I’m sure, but I have an appointment at the museum,” Brendan said
48. The museum was everything it pretended to be, and less
49. There was little in the exhibit, that in comparison, he had not seen similar on Earth, whether it be real in a museum, or in an encyclopedia, online, or in a book
50. Talk about hell, but it did preserve a museum, a slice of life as it was lived at that time, especially among the upper classes of a pagan society