Verwenden Sie „outback“ in einem Satz
outback Beispielsätze
outback
1. Within the outback, the Pilbara is a large, dry, thinly populated region in the north of Western Australia
2. Tell me about the outback
3. At 19:30 the men gathered around caked with sweat and the red outback dirt
4. “Strong winds whip up a lot of loose sand and carry it in clouds that roll across the outback like a tsunami up to 7,000 metres in height! Airborne sand blasts everything in its way
5. He was overwhelmed with the stark beauty of the outback
6. there were kangaroos in the outback – the one virtually
7. “That could be the next outback clothing trend to take off,” Mason replied
8. As the two vehicles passed in the outback, the trucker decided, I’m over this shit
9. There is a restaurant called Outback Steak House
10. Brownie wasn’t hanging around; he had an outback tour to finish with his German tourists
11. He and his mates had passed him travelling in the outback, on their road trip to Bells Beach in 1973
12. It had a canopy cover for camping and was all decked out to survive three or four weeks on the beach or the outback
13. It was a group playing in the outback of Australia
14. He most probably had not heard about her abduction and she was not going to let him know either even is was able to locate him in the vast Australian outback
15. There was a graveyard outback where those who had displeased the clan were buried along with a few government men who had thought to run in the Elkins or the Beebes
16. They were safe and secure here in the outback even if it was very hot and barren
17. So off to the outback we travelled
18. Rory liked the outback, although this wasn't really that outback
19. ancestors in Africa suddenly lived in the outback of Australia - would
20. It was near the end of September and the day was warm, with a northwester blowing hot air straight out of the outback
21. Tell him that she replied! He said, “Young man, I have it on good authority that even the best in the business never made it through this test last year in the outback camp
22. “on the hoof” along roadsides in rural and outback areas, the strip of grassed land bordering most highways and backroads across Australia is often referred to as “the long paddock”
23. ‘Unless he got confused, I mean, he was a strange man from the outback
24. She wasn’t going out there to claim some old tin shack in the outback, or for the funeral, either, come to that
25. “He always said they were just a couple of outback farmers, and that’s certainly what he was
26. How could I publish them knowing what I did: that (at best) they were two pidgin poems of questionable authorship found (reportedly) on the back of a restaurant menu in Brisbane? Of course, they could very well have been the poems of an aborigine by the name of Eldred Van-Ooy, but just as equally they could have been written by some day-tripping hippy returned from a sojourn in the outback, or by some spinster inspired by the latest library slide-show travelogue on Ayres Rock
27. (Those “facts”, by the way, were roughly as follows: Eldred Van-Ooy, the author of the poems, was an aborigine born in 1891 in the outback near Brisbane and then raised from birth by white, middle-class parents, Mildred and Cinque Van-Ooy, who educated him to the point where he went on to become an instructor in hydraulic engineering at a technical college as well as the inventor of a unique waste pumping system
28. Bodies were being found in the remote outback and there
29. Weapons Squad when he was in the outback but he was
30. bones are being found near Winton, in outback Queensland, that
31. Outback farm: The correct name is "property"
32. said for outback driving — see Outback, above
33. Outback farm: The correct name is property
34. There weren't many bitumen-sealed roads in the outback
35. many petrol stations in the outback (same as now) and
36. Working on a sheep station in outback Queensland
37. And these conditions were nothing compared to the isolated areas of the Alaskan outback, and definitely nothing like the city! Not at all
38. The man, who was probably from the Australian outback, lost his mind in London and the poor woman lost her man
39. kites and glides to the bright outback, to slide and chat-slow with the crowded conglomerations in the downstairs rooms and on the paved patios
40. How to Experience Life in an Outback Station
41. Outback, as Australian’s refer to it, is a huge area in the remote part of the country which is away from the hustle and bustle of the cities and sparsely populated
42. Knowing that people are looking for something different, many outback stations have now made arrangements for tourists to come and enjoy the different lifestyle by indulging in the real life activities at these work stations
43. The rooms are all air conditioned allowing you to relax after a day out in the heat of the outback
44. This station is different from other outback ones in its casual lifestyle
45. The American and British governments tested their bombs on remote Pacific islands and deep in the outback of Australia (which shows what they thought of Pacific islanders and Australian Aborigines)
46. " He hesitated, and then said, "Sorry I talked so much, boring you with the outback and all that
47. Joe was wearing an old green linen sun hat that had once belonged to the American Army, a cotton singlet, a pair of dirty khaki shorts, and boots' without socks; his appearance contrasted strangely with the neatness of the airman, but the pilot was accustomed to the outback
48. It was a gambler's action, but his whole life had probably been made up of gambles; it could hardly be otherwise in the outback
49. "Are all the outback towns like that?"
50. Had he made his money on an outback cattle station, too? Had he been just such another as Joe Harman?