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- Oil is the main 'export' of Saudi Arabia.
- The 'export' of fish is forbidden in this country.
- You will be 'exported' from the club if you continue this behaviour.
- Japan 'exports' electronic goods throughout the world.
- 'Oil is the main 'export' of Saudi Arabia.
- 'The 'export' of fish is forbidden in this country.
- 'You will be 'exported' from the club if you continue this behaviour.
- 'Japan 'exports' electronic goods throughout the world.
- a solid 1px 'border' around a table
- The room has a wooden 'floor'.
- Many sunken ships rest on the ocean 'floor'.
- The 'floor' of a cave served the refugees as a home.
- {{archaeology The pit 'floor' showed where a ring of post holes had been.
- Wooden planks of the old bridge's 'floor' were nearly rotten.
- For years we lived on the third 'floor'.
- Will the senator from Arizona yield the 'floor'?
- The mayor often gives a lobbyist the 'floor'.
- The 'floor' of 4.5 is 4.
- 'floor' a house with pine boards
- As soon as our driver saw an insurgent in a car holding a detonation device, he 'floored' the pedal and was 2,000 feet away when that car bomb exploded. We escaped certain death in the nick of time!
- 'floor' an opponent
- 'Floored' or crushed by him. — Coleridge
- We were 'floored' by his confession.
- 'floor' a college examination
- I've 'floored' my little-go work — ed Hughes
- the 'absorption' of bodies in a whirlpool
- the 'absorption' of a smaller tribe into a larger
- the 'absorption' of light, heat, electricity, etc.
- 'absorption' in some employment
- Les Dawson was a famous 'Northern' comedian.
- Organize the data into third normal form.
- Felicia baked the bread the normal way.
- John is feeling normal again.
- My grandmother attended Mankato State Normal School.
- We don't like your sort around here - this bar is for normal people.
- The interior normal vector of a ideal perfect sphere will always point toward the center, and the exterior normal vector directly away, and both will always be co-linear with the ray whose' tip ends at the point of intersection, which is the intersection of all three sets of points.
- 'History' repeats itself if we don’t learn from its mistakes.
- Holes in your pant pockets turn your coins into 'history'.
- He teaches 'history' at the university.
- 'History' will not look kindly on these tyrants.
- He dreams of an invention that will make 'history'.
- A personal medical 'history' is required for the insurance policy.
- He has a 'history' of cancer in his family.
- I visted a great site yesterday but forgot the URL; oh! ... luckily I didn't clear my 'history'.
- A 'harbor', even if it is a little 'harbor', is a good thing, since adventurers come into it as well as go out, and the life in it grows strong, because it takes something from the world, and has something to give in return - q:Sarah Orne Sarah Orne Jewett
- The neighborhood is a well-known 'harbor' for petty thieves.
- The docks, which once 'harbored' tall ships, now 'harbor' only petty thieves.
- The fleet 'harbored' in the south.
- She 'harbors' a conviction that her husband has a secret, criminal past.
- You are such a worrier! I'm sure everything will turn out all right.
- That goal was so close, it went in off the 'woodwork'.
- France and Spain are 'bordering' nations.
- Some would argue that a moped is little more than a 'motorized' bicycle, but others would disagree.
- Because the medic had been supplied with a jeep, he and his aide were classed as a 'motorized' detachment.
- After his back injury, Phillip 'motorized' his canoe to reduce the amount of paddling he needed to do.
- I thought the 'fieldwork' in the course I was taking was going to be hard, but it was just interviewing people.
- That well Bob set up last weekend was some good 'fieldwork'.
- Billy's out building some 'fieldwork' so that our enemies don't walk right over us.
- This dictionary will be nowhere near complete in the 'foreseeable' future.
- A cowboy's greatest friend is his 'horse'.
- These bone features, distinctive in the zebra, are actually present in all 'horses'.
- We should place two units of 'horse' and one of foot on this side of the field.
- All the King's Horse and all the King's Men, couldn't put Humpty together again.
- She's scored very highly with the parallel bars, let's see how she does with the 'horse'.
- Now just remind me how the 'horse' moves again?
- Every linebacker they have is a real 'horse'.
- Alright, mate, got any 'horse'?
- If you're going to horse around, we'll never get this done.
- Your exam results are 'worse' than before.
- She was very ill last week but this week she’s 'worse'.
- He drives 'worse' than anyone I know.
- He's 'worse'-mannered than she is.
- Her leg is infected. Still 'worse', she's developing a fever.
- His mood took a turn for the 'worse'.
- I had been working on the problem for weeks, and then I had a 'brainstorm' and saw that the solution was easy.
- We were both feeling 'amorous' so the inevitable happened.
- She kept making these 'amorous' suggestions.
- She read me an 'amorous' poem.
- He had been 'amorous' of her since schooldays.
- Wipe your shoes on the doormat before you start plodding around in the house.
- He's such a doormat, he lets everyone walk all over him.
- To apply for the position, complete the application 'form'.
- "Jim has 'form'."
- When he saw the wreck, he 'formed' the crash in his imagination.
- By adding -ness, you can 'form' a noun of an adjective.
- It was a matter of great 'import'.
- Yes, my life has been 'blameworthy'; I confess it. But you know nothing of its temptations.
- This building used to be a 'store' for old tires.
- We have a large 'store' of beer, in case we're snowed in.
- I need to get some milk from the grocery 'store'.
- The main 'store' of 1000 36-bit words seemed large at the time.
- I'll 'store' these books in the attic.
- This operation 'stores' the result on the stack.
- I don't think that kind of cheese will 'store' well in the refrigerator.
- Sleep in 'comfort' with our new mattress.
- the 'comforts' of home
- We still have the spare tire? That's a 'comfort' at least.
- The outcome of the peace negotiations in Moscow in 1940 was a heavy blow to the young nation, but in the same time a great 'comfort': at least the independency was preserved.
- Rob 'comforted' Aaron because he was lost and very sad.
- Smoke detectors are mandatory in public buildings.
- They came up with a 'workable' solution, until they could think of something better.
- 'Mordant' these goods for dyeing.
- A large meteorite impact would cause 'worldwide' extinction of life.
- The character of James Bond is known 'worldwide'.
- English is spoken 'worldwide'.
- The 'cornerstone' on the Flatiron Building is set on the Fifth Avenue facade.
- Exceptional service is the 'cornerstone' of the hospitality industry.
- That is the 'cornerstone' of any meaningful debate about budgets and projects, regulations and policies.
- She always said that preschoolers always danced 'adorably', so it was no wonder that she opened a dance school for them.
- In their articles, journalists sometimes 'distort' the truth.
- The class squirmed and fidgeted in the 'uncomfortable' new chairs.
- Sharing a house with them made me 'uncomfortable'.
- Morally, it is a difficult issue to deal with.
- to behave morally
- an 'ultrashort' pulse
- an 'ultrashort' bond
- Lies are as important as truth, for without lies, the truth is 'worthless'.
- The committee's decision is 'worthless'. It is not going to be acted upon.
- Don't be a 'worthless' slouch! Go get yourself a job.
- The android turned to gaze at its 'animator'.
- In recent years, 'animators' using computer rendering have largely superseded artists working by hand.
- His expensive 'tailored' shirts didn't look that much better than off-the-rack, but they lasted much longer.
- Grass goes 'dormant' during the winter, waiting for spring before it grows again.
- The bank account was 'dormant'; there had been no transactions in months.
- w:Grammatical coordinating conjunction
- My house now is 'worth' double what I paid for it.
- Cleanliness is the virtue 'most worth' having but one.
- I think you’ll find my proposal 'worth' your attention.
- This job is hardly 'worth' the effort.
- I’ll have a dollar's 'worth' of candy, please.
- They have proven their 'worths' as individual fighting men and their 'worth' as a unit.
- Our new director is a man whose 'worth' is well acknowledged.
- Woe 'worth' the man that crosses me.
- There's a 'rumor' going round that he's going to get married.
- They say he used to be a thief, but that's just 'rumor'.
- John is 'rumored' to be next in line for a promotion.
- This product contains 'reformed' meat.
- The pop group 'reformed' for one final tour.
- Kenneth E. Iverson was the 'creator' of APL.
- I am neither hungry 'nor' thirsty 'nor' tired
- I made a 'recording' of the show.
- Don’t move that beam! It’s a 'support' for the whole platform.
- Don’t move that beam! It’s a 'support' beam.
- The government provides 'support' to the arts in several ways.
- Sure they sell the product, but do they provide 'support'?
- Don’t move that beam! It 'supports' the whole platform.
- Je ne 'supporte' pas le mot injustice. (w:François François Pérusse) - I can't bear the word injustice.
- "In 1997, 4th and 5th grade Waterville Elementary students told me they saw Short-horned lizards (commonly known as 'Horny' toads) all around their area." http://depts.washington.edu/natmap/projects/waterville/begin.html
- That girl makes me feel 'horny'.
- That chick is so 'horny'!
- Rebecca had always thought shorts were far 'superior' to pants, as they didn't constantly make her legs itch.
- An 'airworthy' helicopter...
- Doc Savage doubted that he would carry out the threat, and thought the plane was still 'airworthy'.
- There was 'horrendous' carnage at the scene of the plane crash.
- My journey to work this morning was 'horrendous'!
- His haughtie Helmet. 'horrid' all with gold,//Both glorious brightnesse and great terror bredd. - w:Edmund Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queen, I-vii-31
- 'Horrid' with fern, and intricate with thorn. - w:John John Dryden
- Ye grots and caverns shagg's with 'horrid' thorn! - w:Alexander Alexander Pope, Eloisa to Abelard, I-20
- Give colour to my pale cheek with thy blood,//that we the 'horrider' may seem to those//Which chance to find us. - Shakespeare, Cymbeline, IV-ii
- I myself will be//The priest, and boldly do those 'horrid' rites//You shake to think on. - w:John Fletcher John Fletcher, Sea Voyage, V-iv
- Not in the legions Of 'horrid' hell. - Shakespeare, Macbeth, IV-iii
- What say you then to fair Sir Percivale,//And of the 'horrid' foulness that he wrought? - w:Alfred Alfred Tennyson, Merlin and Vivien
- '1668' My Lord Chief Justice Keeling hath laid the constable by the heels to answer it next Sessions: which is a 'horrid' shame. - w:Samuel Samuel Pepys, Diary, October 23
- About the middle of November we began to work on our Ship's bottom, which we found very much eaten with the Worm: For this is a 'horrid' place for Worms. - w:William William Dampier, Voyages, I-362
- Already I your tears survey,//Already hear the 'horrid' things they say. - w:Alexander Alexander Pope, The Rape of the Lock, IV-108
- Sì, signore - Yes, sir
- No, signori - No, gentlemen
- All the contest judges agreed that Brigitt was absolutely 'gorgeous'.
- The sunsets in Hawaii are 'gorgeous'.
- Sponges are 'porous' so they can filter water while trapping food.
- Concrete is 'porous', so water will slowly filter through it.
- 'foreign' students
- Eating with chopsticks was a 'foreign' concept to him
- 'foreign' body
- My bank charges me $2.50 every time I use a 'foreign' ATM.
- He is pretty 'stubborn' about his political beliefs, so why bother arguing?
- Blood can make a very 'stubborn' stain on fabrics if not washed properly.
- train 'conductor'
- 'Memory' is a facility common to all animals.
- I have no 'memory' of that event.
- This data passes from the CPU to the 'memory'.
- I was so 'mortified' I could have died right there, instead I fainted, but I swore I'd never let that happen to me again.
- Some people seek sainthood by 'mortifying' the body. I wonder if such ascetics are masochists?
- The loss of blood flow caused the toe to 'mortify' and they had to amputate the foot to save the life.
- He is a remarkable 'swordsman'.
- Archers attempted to take down an unknown 'swordsman'.
- Hie wæron benumene ægðer ge ðæs ceapes ge ðæs cornes: they were deprived both of cattle and of corn. (AS Chronicle)
- The draperies did little to keep out the light; rather, they were mainly there as 'adornment' for the windows.
- Fred 'forestalled' disaster by his prompt action.
- In French, an aspired h 'forestalls' elision.
- The Government here is 'corrupt', so we'll emigrate to escape them.
- The text of the manuscript is 'corrupt'.
- It turned out that the program was 'corrupt' - that's why it wouldn't open.
- Who with such 'corrupt' and pestilent bread would feed them.
- Don't you dare 'corrupt' my son with those disgusting pictures!
- 'languor' of convalescence
- a certain 'languor' in the air hinted at an early summer -- wikipedia:James James Purdy
- from 'languor' she passed to the lightest vivacity -- wikipedia:Elinor Elinor Wylie
- a 'dilatory' strategy
- 'Fluorite' is the main natural resources of Thailand.
- Leave him alone, he's 'working'.
- a 'working' ventilator
- a 'working' copy of the script
- 'working' mothers
- the 'working' week
- a 'working' knowledge of computers
- A rhetorical question, for example, is one used merely to make a point, with no response expected.
- a coroner may also be known as a medical examiner, or ME, if he or she holds a medical degree and performs autopsies.
- This definition applies only to some countries (e.g., Canada), and not others (e.g., the USA).
- The assistant manager was a 'self-important' fellow who strutted about the office barking instructions.
- Il est important de se brosser les dents.
- Une partie importante des votes
- Most people agreed, but a sizable 'minority' were upset by the decision.
- The company claims it has hired several 'minorities' since the complaint was lodged.
- That man's 'demeanor' marked him down as a criminal.
- A good 'demeanor' is crucial for success.
- These ‘three principles of connexion’ comprise the 'framework' of principles in Hume's account of the association of ideas.
- 'Quotation'
- Of apples and oranges, I choose the 'fore' fruit.
- When weighing the importance of wealth and happiness, do not assume the 'fore' can buy the latter.
- The 'fore' cabin is near the bow.
- The 'fore' was painted white.
- He did me a 'favor' when he took the time to drive me home.
- She enjoyed the queen's 'favor'.
- At the holiday dinner, the hosts had set a 'favor' by each place setting.
- Would you favor us with a poetry reading?
- 'Favoring' your sore leg will only injure the other one.
- You 'favor' your grandmother more than your mother.
- '1871' "Yes, young people are usually blind to everything but their own wishes, and seldom imagine how much those wishes cost others," said Mrs. Garth She did not mean to go beyond this salutary general doctrine, and threw her indignation into a needless unwinding of her 'worsted', knitting her brow at it with a grand air. — George Eliot, [http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/ot2www-pubeng?specfile=/texts/english/modeng/publicsearch/modengpub.o2w&act=surround&offset=292303629&tag=Eliot,+George:+Middlemarch:+a+study+of+provincial+life+(1900),+1871&query=worsted+ý&id=EliMidd Middlemarch.]
- '1902' He had tied a bit of white 'worsted' round his neck -- Why? Where did he get it? Was it a badge -- an ornament -- a charm -- a propitiatory act? Was there any idea at all connected with it? Joseph Conrad, [http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/ot2www-pubeng?specfile=/texts/english/modeng/publicsearch/modengpub.o2w&act=surround&offset=171509961&tag=Conrad,+Joseph,+1857-1924:+Heart+of+Darkness,+1902&query=worsted+ý&id=ConDark The Heart of Darkness.]
- A 'worsted' wig or jasey is an alternative to wigs made from horse - or human hair
- '1869' Jo carried her love of liberty and hate of conventionalities to such an unlimited extent that she naturally found herself 'worsted' in an argument. — Louisa May Alcott, [http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/ot2www-pubeng?specfile=/texts/english/modeng/publicsearch/modengpub.o2w&act=surround&offset=60874635&tag=Alcott,+Louisa+May,+1832-1888:+Little+Women,+1869&query=worsted+ý&id=AlcLitt Little Women.]
- The author painted a good 'portrait' of urban life in New York in his latest book.
- The band’s 'sophomore' album built upon the success of their debut release, catapulting them to megastardom.
- She was very mature for a 'sophomore' and had several friends who were juniors or even seniors.
- The filly had looked promising as a 'sophomore', but concerns over her health had prompted the owner to pull her from the season’s early races.
- "The eyes of the cirripeds are more or less 'aborted' in their mature state." -w:Richard Richard Owen.
- It's a 'forked' road. Turn left at the fork.
- A baidarka has a 'forked' bow.
- The road 'forked'.
- He 'reinforced' the handle with a metal rod and a bit of tape.
- The right homework will 'reinforce' and complement the lesson.
- Advertising for fast food can 'reinforce' unhealthy dietary tendencies.
- We have to get people out of their cars and encourage them to use alternative forms of 'transportation'.
- Mulligan's sentence was commuted from death to 'transportation'.
- Nice 'transportation', dude, but your brake lights are busted.
- Magnolias belong to the 'order' Magnoliales.
- Will the 'unicorn' be willing to serve thee, or abide by thy crib? Canst thou bind the 'unicorn' with his band in the furrow? Or will he harrow the valleys after thee? — Job 39:9-10 KJV.
- Gloria is 'enormously' pleased with our progress.
- He was 'enormously' popular.
- This medicine is taken 'orally'. Swallowing a pill sure beats getting a shot every day.
- I took the make up test 'orally' because my arm is still in a cast.
- Mabel dreaded the upcoming ball and the preliminary 'corseting' it would entail.
- "I will not remain 'corseted' by your notions of what is and is not proper!" she exclaimed.
- His expertise at 'swordplay' made his acting in the part of Hamlet very believable.
- I have a 'theory' about who broke into the school last night, but I have no proof to back it up.
- So we’ll be there in three hours? — Yes, that’s the 'theory'.
- There is now a well-developed 'theory' of electrical charge.
- The 'theory' of relativity was proposed by Einstein.
- Knot 'theory' classifies the mappings of a circle into 3-space.
- A 'theory' is consistent if it has a model.
- I left the room after John came home drunk but before the 'fireworks' went off.
- Having the 'foresight' to prepare an evacuation plan may have saved their lives.
- Surviving fame to gain, By tombs, by books, by 'memorable' deeds. -w:Sir John Sir John Davies.
- The victim was able to 'enforce' his evidence against the alleged perpetrator.
- The police are there to 'enforce' the law.
- offshoreboring — offshore drilling
- He's very 'neighborly'; he always collects my mail when I'm away on vacation.
- A 'torrential' downpour.
- A stray wrench can really gum up the 'works'.
- The steel 'works' almost fills the valley.
- I'll have a Behemoth Burger with 'the works'.
- His 'works' displayed his righteousness.
- Those paper towels were amazingly 'absorbent'. That was quite a spill.
- The 'original' manuscript contained spelling errors which were fixed in later versions
- This recording is by the 'original' broadway cast.
- Tonight we will hear an 'original' work by one of our best composers.
- The paper contains a number of 'original' ideas about color perception.
- Parker was one of the 'original' bebop players.
- This kind of barbecue is 'original' to North Carolina.
- This manuscript is the 'original'
- You’re an 'original'
- The player with the highest 'score' is the winner.
- The 'score' is 8-1 although it's not even half-time!
- Pronunciation: "8-1" is pronounced "eight to one" or "eight one."
- Some words have 'scores' of meanings.
- England had a 'score' of 107 for 5 at lunch.
- Pelé 'scores' again!
- It is unusual for a team to 'score' a hundred goals in one game.
- The baker 'scored' the cake so the servers would know where to slice it.
- I 'scored' some drugs last night.
- Did you 'score' tickets for the concert?
- While choronology refers to the study of time, 'chorology' refers to the study of regions/places. - "Place, A Short Introduction", by Tim Cresswell
- Doing volunteer work to help others is truly 'worthwhile'.
- a 'sorted' list of numbers
- I have to get my life 'sorted'.
- 'Sorted' for e’s and whizz (song and album by UK band Pulp)
- For his explanation he will 'allegorise' the problem.
- This guy's a decent 'sort'.
- I had a 'sort' of my cupboard
- I opened the wine with a 'corkscrew'.
- John Hancock is famous for being the first 'signatory' to the American Declaration of Indepence, and for writing his name large.
- I am not very 'forgiving'.
- All you could see of the 'alligator' were its two eyes above the water, and suddenly it snatched up and caught the poor bird with its strong jaws full of sharp teeth.
- Washing dishes is a 'chore', but we can't just stop eating.
- a 'fortunate' event
- a 'fortunate' concurrence of circumstances
- a 'fortunate' investment
- The 'storyboard' process helps promote brainstorming, highlights missing tasks, and allows the team to incorporate changes prior to traveling too far down a particular path. — By Cheryl A. Malloy & William Cooley, NASA & SAIC [http://appel.nasa.gov/ask/issues/13/practices/index.html here]
- 'Storyboarding' allows students to work together as they generate ideas and eliminates the territorial defensiveness that often occurs when new ideas are suggested. — "Using Storyboarding to Determine components of Dellness for University Students" J Am Coll Health. 1996 Jan;44(4):180-3 [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8583044&dopt=Abstract Abstract]
- There were tons of 'malodorous' garbage bags outside her house.
- He is an avid 'collector' of nineteenth-century postage stamps.
- That old piano is just a big dust 'collector'.
- She works for the government as a tax 'collector'.
- His 'meteoric' rise to power was followed by a slow, lackluster career at the top.
- political 'horsepower'
- The story he told was a bit of a 'distortion'.
- This recording sounds awful due to the 'distortion'.
- That program runs on an X-Window-System 'platform'.
- He went out in the rain and came back 'thoroughly' drenched.
- 'Fortitude' is bravery on the side of justice.
- The African 'diaspora' caused a melding of cultures, both African cultures and Western ones, in many places.
- Jews in the 'diaspora' often have a different perspective of anti-Semitism from Israeli Jews.
- Canada may put a 'moratorium' on cloning for research.
- He dressed quite 'formally' - too 'formally' for the occasion.
- He 'formally' filed a complaint, which involved much paperwork.
- He proved it 'formally' but gave his students no intuitive feel for the matter.
- Anna had always felt 'inferior' to her brother due to poor school grades.
- It was written on the exterior
- She is our new minister of the exterior
- Your 'comforting' words help ease my mind.
- It's 'comforting' to know that I've always got my Mum when things go wrong.
- I've been 'corresponding' with my German pen pal for three years.
- The store provided a veritable 'cornucopia' of modern gadgets.
- India is the leading 'exporter' of guar gum making up nearly 85 per cent of the global production.
- in borghese - civilian clothes/plain clothes
- We got news that he died of a 'hemorrhage'.
- He's hemorrhaging!
- The company 'hemorrhaged' money until eventually it went bankrupt.
- Most canoe aficionados would argue that 'motorizing' a canoe removes the pleasurable aspects of traveling in one.
- Once jack decided to 'motorize' his paper delivery route, he found he could reach an order of magnitude more subscribers.
- The refit plan recommended that the first battalion be 'motorized' to upgrade their offensive capabilities.
- The 'advisory' committee could only offer advice, but since that was almost always accepted they had real power.
- The consultant's 'advisory' recommendations were selectively adopted.
- The Coast Guard issued a small craft 'advisory', warning little boats to watch out for bad weather.
- An example of a 'performative' utterance could be, "I name this boat Alfred".
- From 10 September 1621 till 12 June 1632, Sir William Alexander, styled Earl of Stirling and Viscount of Canada, was 'proprietor' of the Scottish colony Nova Scotia
- Eat your 'porridge' while it's hot!
- Just do your 'porridge' and keep your head down.
- that remark was 'uncalled-for'.
- We'll let Nick give the presentation next week: he's a good 'communicator'.
- It makes sure that the field name argument is not empty, and that the field specified there is an actual existing field in the class which declares the method 'decorated' with this attribute.
- We now make available these works which were 'heretofore' unpublished.
- That is my 'favorite' flavor of ice cream, I'd eat it daily if I could.
- The teacher's 'favorite' always went first.
- He's the 'favorite', he'll probably be elected.
- How far should one accept the rules of the society in which one lives? To put it another way: at what point does 'conformity' become corruption? Only by answering such questions does the conscience truly define itself. - q:Kenneth Kenneth Tynan
- Buying 'preformatted' floppy disks saved me a lot of time.
- I shall love you 'forever'.
- We had to wait 'forever' to get inside.
- It took her 'forever' to get dressed and ready for the party.
- The drive to his mothers' house took 'forever'.
- You'll have a home here 'forever', my son!
- You are 'forever' nagging me.
- It takes 'forever' to get business a permit and a landline.
- Sure, I'd be happy to meet with you on the 12th of 'forever'.
- 'On one's doorstep'.
- They want to build the prison right on our 'doorstep', it will only be half a mile away and being that close scares me
- 2003, Diana Wynne Jones, The Merlin Conspiracy", P 241 ISBN 0-06-052318-2
- "I cut myself a 'doorstep' of bread with masses of butter and went along to see Romanov while I was eating it."
- He stood 'before' me.
- The case laid 'before' the panel aroused nothing but ridicule.
- The period 'before' us looks grim because of the economical crisis.
- In alphabetical order, "cat" comes 'before' "dog", "canine" 'before' feline".
- An entrepreneur puts market share and profit 'before' quality, an amateur intrinsic qualities 'before' economical considerations.
- I've never done this 'before'.
- I have 'forgotten' most of the things I learned in school.
- I 'forgot' to buy flowers for my wife at our 14th wedding anniversary.
- Let's just 'forget' about it.
- Forget you!
- He is a 'deplorable' boy, frequently being beaten by his parents.
- His 'unsavory' reputation as a mobster came back to haunt him when he ran for mayor of New York.
- Enron's profits were all 'illusory'.
- He did a 'thoroughgoing' job of cleaning up the broken glass.
- an 'informal' get-together
- an 'informal' agreement
- 'informal' clothes
- Abraham alias Ibrahim is the 'progenitor' of both the Jewish and Arab peoples.
- ARPANET was the 'progenitor' of the Internet.
- She looked 'favorably' on people who gave freely their assistance.
- Due to an undersized inventory at the Boston outlet, customers had to travel to Providence to find the item.
- The inventory included several items that one wouldn't normally think to find at a cheese shop.
- This month's inventory took nearly three days.
- The main job of the night shift was to 'inventory' the store, and restock when necessary.
- The executioner was proud that he kept his axe 'razor-sharp', so no prisoner would feel any pain when his head was cut off.
- Manny had a coronary last week, followed by a triple bypass.
- The fire was confined to the 'forward' portion of the store.
- I thought his suggestion that we move in together was rather 'forward'.
- '1999:' "Would you think it 'forward' of me to kiss you?" asked Tristran. — Neil Gaiman, Stardust, pg. 44 (2001 Perennial paperback edition).
- The stock price is currently 12 times 'forward' earnings.
- The bus driver told everyone standing up to move 'forward'.
- After spending an hour stuck in the mud, we could once again move 'forward'.
- From this day 'forward', there will be no more brussels sprouts at the cafeteria.
- I'll be glad to forward your mail to you while you're gone.
- The discovery of the laws of electricity laid the 'groundwork' for a century of innovation.
- is the formula for finding the roots of the quadratic equation y = ax + bx + c.
- HO is the formula for water (Dihydrogen monoxide)
- The formula of the rocket fuel has not been revealed.
- He conveyed his teachings 'metaphorically'.
- 'Metaphorically', he was crushed.
- With a name like "The Wine and Spirits 'Emporium'", no wonder the prices are so high.
- 'ambulatory' exercise
- an 'ambulatory' patient
- an 'ambulatory' electrocardiogram
- 'ambulatory' medical care
- It is obvious to everyone that Gerry absolutely 'adores' Heather.
- Like to the hore
Congealed drops, which do the morn 'adore'. - w:Edmund Edmund Spenser - He carefully 'monitored' the chemical experiment.
- The seven members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System are nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate.
- Our 'neighborhood' was our only reason to exchange hollow greetings
- We have just moved to a pleasant 'neighborhood'
- The fire alarmed the 'neighborhood.'
- He must be making in the 'neighborhood' of $200,000 per year.
- The slums and the palace were in awful 'neighborhood'.
- The radio station changed the 'format' of its evening program.
- I lost weeks of work when I inadvertently 'formatted' my hard drive.
- Acts of Parliament derogatory from the power of subsequent Parliaments bind not. --w:Blackstone.
- His language was severely censured by some of his brother peers as derogatory to their other. --w:Macaulay.
- He always managed to make people laugh at the tea table - he could pull faces so 'humorously'.
- They offered some compromises in an effort to 'ameliorate' the situation.
- I had a very 'supportive' coach who helped me.
- The schoolboy left an admonitory message on the bathroom wall.
- She's perfect for me, as she's both studious and sporty.
- My new car looks 'sporty' but is actually very practical.
- We 'motorbiked' all over the US that summer.
- With only five people able to make it to the meeting, we were barely quorate.
- Blackbeard the pirate had a 'notoriously' short temper.
- The dancer impressed the crowd with his fancy 'footwork'.
- They 'shoehorned' the extra appointment into an already packed schedule.
- Her 'forced' smile was harder and harder to keep as her critical father kept on complaining about her.
- 'horse-race' participant
- title=Aucassin et author=Unknown year=circa passage=Qui vauroit bons vers oïrOf amusement from the old storyteller
- The person had a 'record' of the event in her 'memory' in her 'brain'.
- The tourist's photographs and the tape of the police call provide a 'record' of the crime.
- We have no record of you making this payment to us.
- I still like 'records' better than CDs.
- The heat and humidity were both new 'records'.
- The team set a new 'record' for most points scored in a quarter.
- I wanted to 'record' every detail of what happened, for the benefit of future generations.
- Within a week they had 'recorded' both the song and the video for it.
- When the deed was 'recorded', we officially owned the house.
- Le 'record' du saut en hauteur a été battu par Javier Sotomayor en 1993.
- That plant is best suited to 'equatorial' climates.
- 'Forest' of criticism.
- Mais quand il eut mis fin a ses parolles, & que semblablement les 'forestz' resonnãtes se furent appaisées L’Arcadie-Trad-Massin, published 1544, Paris)
- Jessie was going to wear pants to school, but her brother persuaded her to wear shorts to preserve 'normality'.
- The larder is so disorderly, I can't even find the potatoes.
- I can't stand disorderly people.
- This box has an 'assortment' of chocolates, there's a picture on the cover so you know which is which.
- With a little 'forethought' we'd have planned for this contingency and not been stuck here now.
- This 'short-term' plan deals with the next few days.
- 'short-term' exposure
- She is so 'short-tempered' that people avoid her company.
- The house painters were each officially required to wear a 'respirator', but this was sometimes disregarded in the extreme heat.
- The cheering 'spectators' watched the fireworks.
- The lawyer 'vigorously' defended her client.
- He knocked 'vigorously' on the door.
- In his smart suit Jacob was by far the most 'sartorial' of our party.
- It's a nice car, but they are charging an 'exorbitant' price for it.
- You also have to pay 'exorbitant' interest if you have credit card debt.
- The temple was filled with 'worshippers'.
- The things he subjected me to were horrible and unforgettable
- The burglar tied up the victim with a 'cord'.
- He looped some 'cord' around his fingers.
- She felt a 'tremor' in her stomach before going on stage.
- Did you feel the 'tremor' this morning?
- I will 'portray' a king on horseback.
- faire une 'fortune'
- faire 'fortune'
- Dave was the 'former' of the company.
- The brick arch was built using a wooden 'former'.
- Fifth-'former'
- Sixth-'former'.
- 'Compensators' ensure less heat is provided to a room on a warmer day. They may be implemented mechanically, electronically or in software.
- Below the diagram is an 'explanatory' text.
- Waiter, this wine is corked. Could you bring us another bottle?
- The arrival of her new baby would inevitabley 'disorganize' her life.
- The local blacksmith made all the 'metalwork' for this reconstructed old house.
- This fossil animal is regarded as the ancestor of the horse.
- We've had three 'aborts' over the last two days.
- We've had 'aborts' on three of our last seven launches.
- Sir Richard Burton explored far into the African 'interior'.
- He used to be a 'major' in the army.
- This is 'Major' Jones.
- Midway through his second year of college, he still hadn't chosen a 'major'.
- She is a math 'major'.
- I have decided to 'major' in mathematics.
- Fortunately, Sam's pet hamster was not dead.
- Terry is one of the best 'illustrators' of children's books in the country.
- An 'absorbing' pursuit.
- four years her 'senior'
- The rain fall in April is a 'predictor' for the number of mosquitoes in May.
- The 'predictor' in the traffic lights control circuit tries to figure out how fast to change the lights.
- This soda has an artificial 'flavoring', I can taste the after taste.
- That laboratory researches topics at the 'forefront' of technology.
- The company 'haemorrhaged' money until eventually it went bankrupt.
- George has a collection of World War II 'memorabilia'.
- The 'exploration' of 'unknown' areas often was the precursor to colonization.
- Her living room had a lush Persian-style 'decor'.
- The association announced its 'endorsement' of the policy.
- The bank required that cheque 'endorsement' be witnessed by a cashier.
- Companies sometimes pay millions for product 'endorsement' by celebrities.
- Mr. Jones paid extra for the flood damage 'endorsement' on his house insurance.
- Once she obtained the 'endorsement' of her night flying hours, Joanna was approved to take the pilot's examination.
- Wanted: Accredited teacher with Grade 12 mathematics 'endorsement'.
- To transport gasoline, truckers must have a valid licence and the hazardous materials 'endorsement'.
- Je suis gynécologue de formation. I'm a trainee gynaecologist.
- He 'corrected' the position of the book on the mantle.
- It's rude to 'correct' your parents.
- '1852' [http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext97/blkhs12.txt Charles Dickens, Bleak House]: We will proceed with the hearing on Wednesday 'fortnight'.
- None of the new 'choristers' can sing in tune but they will learn soon enough.
- Jane was the 'chorister' of her congregation's choir, and that occupied much of her time on the weekends.
- It was a thoroughly 'unmemorable' performance.
- The 'prosecutor' got the witness to admit he was lying.
- Picking beans is a very 'labor-intensive' activity, there's no machine made that can do it.
- You must do your 'homework' before you can watch television.
- The speaker had certainly done his 'homework' before delivering the lecture.
- In The Four Pillars of Wisdom, he devotes a well-deserved chapter to the financial press and its weakness for "financial 'pornography'"—lurid coverage of star money managers. (Seattle Times, Auhust 4, 2002)
- He treated the sensitive subject with enough 'humor' that no one was offended.
- He was in a particularly vile 'humor' that afternoon.
- I know you don't believe my story, but 'humor' me for a minute and imagine it to be true.
- dikes may be discordant to country rock if they intrude at a high angle to the bedding
- The enormous pile of spaghetti landed on the floor in an 'amorphous' heap.
- After reading a long, 'elaborate' description, I was impressed but no wiser.
- I stared for hours at the 'elaborate' pattern in the rug.
- What do you mean you didn't come home last night? Would you care to 'elaborate'?
- Could you elaborate on the plot for your novel for me?
- The cartoon character 'Foghorn Leghorn' was obviously not actually a 'leghorn' because he was much too big.
- My 'formative' years were spent in an inner city.
- I wanted nothing more than to get out of that 'godforsaken' place without delay.
- He is a loan 'processor' with a bank.
- This computer has two 'processors', but only one keyboard.
- I'm off to the 'saltworks' again, another day another dollar.
- Let's 'collaborate' on this dictionary, and get it finished faster.
- If you 'collaborate' with the occupying forces, you will be shot.
- As the currents were changing rapidly the captain had to make many 'corrective' course changes.
- The building, towering over its surroundings with its square concrete frame and reflective walls of gold-tinted glass, was an 'eyesore' visible throughout the city.
- refuse to 'honor' the exercise of put option
- They sent the assembly back to the shop for 'rework'.
- They received the 'rework' back from the shop.
- The schedule has been pushed back because of the 'rework'.
- You'll have to 'rework' the crank assembly to incorporate the changes.
- She had been working 'desultorily' on her book for several years.
- 'More' people are arriving.
- There are 'more' ways to do this than I can count.
- I want 'more' soup.
- There's 'more' caffeine in my coffee than in the coffee you get in most places.
- He walks 'more' in the morning.
- 'more' beautiful; 'more' beautifully
- If we can sell 'more', we will turn this business into a success.
- When it comes to parties, the 'more', the merrier.
- 'máme 'more' času' – we have plenty of time
- "You must help me," she said 'imploringly'.
- He 'forfeited' his last chance of an early release from jail by repeatedly attacking another inmate.
- Because only nine players were present, the football team was forced to 'forfeit' the game.
- The politician's recent actions are an effort to 'forge' a relationship with undecided voters.
- He had to 'forge' his ex-wife's signature.
- The jury learned the documents had been 'forged'.
- The party of explorers 'forged' through the thick underbrush.
- We decided to 'forge' ahead with our plans even though our biggest underwriter backed out.
- With seconds left in the race, the runner 'forged' into first place.
- motor unit
- She has excellent motor motor skills.
- I could almost see the 'rancor' in his eyes when he challenged me to a fight.
- I am a longstanding financial 'contributor' to Amnesty International.
- He was a regular 'contributor' to Greenpeace protests.
- With her strength and intelligence, she is an important 'contributor' to the indigenous gene pool.
- William Safire has been a notable 'contributor' to the op-ed pages of the New York Times for many years.
- That was a most 'inopportune' spot for a picnic.
- The 'inopportune' arrival of the bus cut short the interesting conversation.
- The arrival of her new baby would inevitabley 'disorganise' her life.
- His 'sworn' statement convinced the judge.
- She is an 'orphan' child.
- With its government funding curtailed, the gun registry became an 'orphan' program.
- What do you do when you come across two 'orphaned' polar bear cubs?
- When you removed that image tag, you 'orphaned' the resized icon.
- Removing categories 'orphans' pages from the main category tree.
- That athlete is a real 'thoroughbred'.
- An anteater is an 'insectivore' with a long sticky tongue so it can catch its prey.
- '1604' I am the sister of one Claudio, Condemn'd upon the act of 'fornication' To lose his head; condemn'd by Angelo — Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, Act 5, Scene 1
- '1611' Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these; Adultery, 'fornication', uncleanness, lasciviousness, Idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, Envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God. — Galatians 5:19-21 KJV
- He is a great 'accumulator' of bad jokes.
- Looks like it's time to recharge the 'accumulator' again.
- He 'laboriously' climbed the steep rock face, pulling himself up inch by inch.
- The troops of my 'escort' marched at the ordinary rate. -Burke.
- This painting shows little 'organization' at first glance, but little by little the structure becomes clear.
- The 'organization' of the book is as follows.
- In response to the crisis, the nations in the region formed an 'organization'.
- If you want to be part of this 'organization', you have to follow its rules.
- Over time, the spontaneous movement had become an 'organization'.
- Soldiers were drafted compulsorily.
- The 'historicity' of Jesus is a matter of some debate among scholars.
- He skillfully took charge of the event, and 'furthermore', he stayed late after it to clean up.
- I don't want to call him 'self-absorbed' but he was more concerned with the scratch on his car than the people in the car he hit.
- We watched as the storm clouds advanced 'inexorably' closer to us.
- Make sure the 'workpiece' is properly secured in the chuck before turning on the lathe.
- Some think it most 'ornamental' to wear their bracelets on their wrists; others, about their ankles.
- 'Historically' speaking, this company has always collected payment before starting work.
- She hoisted the child 'effortlessly' and plopped him in bed.
- We were so 'poor' that we couldn't afford shoes.
- That was a 'poor' performance.
- Oh you 'poor' little thing.
- Cow's milk is 'poor' in iron.
- I received a 'poor' reward for all my hard work.
- The 'poor' are always with us.
- The 'factor' of the trading post bought the furs.
- The greatest 'factor' in the decision was the need for public transportation.
- The economy was a 'factor' in this year's budget figures.
- 3 is a 'factor' of 12, as are 2, 4 and 6.
- The 'factors' of the Klein four-group are both cyclic of order 2.
- The launch temperature was a 'factor' of the Challenger disaster.
- The witness was considered eminently credible thanks to her 'forthright' answers.
- 'Quotation'
- Tomorrow will be a 'scorcher', so carry water and use sunscreen if you're going out.
- What a 'scorcher'! See the net reverberate!
- "Like Webster's dictionary, we're 'morocco' bound."
- Her 'deportment' impressed her interviewers.
- Their 'deportment' changed visibly as the policeman approached.
- His academic 'deportment' did not match his degree record.
- The nun's 'deportment' reflected her vocation.
- This steep and dangerous climb belongs to the most difficult 'category'.
- I wouldn't put this book in the same 'category' as the author's first novel.
- One well-known 'category' has sets as objects and functions as arrows.
- The cupboards were oak and the 'worktop' granite.
- Il m'a 'informé' de la situation presente.
- As-tu 'recordé' ta leçon?
- The trip was postponed because the 'meteorological' conditions were so bad.
- The adaptive optical systems in modern astronomical telescopes compensate for atmospheric distortion by using 'deformable' mirrors.
- This putt has a big left-to right 'borrow' on it.
- Steam engine was the predecessor of diesel and electric locomotives.
- 'sorrowful' accident
- The 'senatorial' investigation involved subpoenas and testimony before Congress and, of course, went nowhere.
- First, 'categorize' incoming messages according to the needed actions.
- She will leave on the 'northbound' bus.
- He was travelling 'northbound' on the Golden Gate Bridge.
- Eu 'dorm'. Întoarce mâine.
- Ce fac? Încerc 'să dorm'!
- Ei 'dorm' ca bebeluşi.
- Due to a 'shortfall' in revenue we will have to make some cuts.
- In the sentence, “The barbecue finished before John arrived”, the 'subordinate' clause “before John arrived” specifies the time of the main clause, “The barbecue finished”.
- 'Normally', I eat breakfast at 6am, but today, I got up late and didn't eat until 9.
- Lisa ate 'normally', until she realised that she was late for choir, when she sped up.
- He was abnormally agitated, she only 'normally' so.
- A 'network' of roads crisscrossed the country.
- To get a job in today's economy, it is important to have a strong 'network'.
- The copy machine is connected to the 'network' so it can now serve as a printer.
- Many people find it worthwhile to 'network' for jobs and information.
- If we 'network' his machine to the server, he will be able to see all the files.
- "I 'foresee' in this," he says, "the breaking up of our profession." The Lamplighter - Charles Dickens, 1838
- A 'report' by the telecommunications ministry showed that the phone network has a severe capacity problem.
- For insurance reasons, I had to 'report' the theft to the local police station.
- If you do that again I'll 'report' you to the boss.
- The financial director 'reports' to the CEO.
- Andrew Marr 'reports' now on more in-fighting at Westminster.
- "Our government proposes the 'moralization' of public functions and the end of impunity for government functionaries and for individuals who violate the law and steal from the people," — Nicanor Duarte Frutos, President of Paraguay, quoted in the [http://articles.latimes.com/2004/apr/04/world/fg-smokes4 Los Angeles Times].
- There will always be lovers, till the 'world'’s end.
- People are dying of starvation all over the 'world'.
- Our mission is to travel the galaxy and find new 'worlds'.
- In the 'world' of boxing, good diet is all-important.
- a 'world' of difference
- The voltage 'regulator' stopped working and the resulting overload destroyed the device.
- He lost his job, 'for' he got into trouble.
- The astronauts headed 'for' the moon.
- I have something 'for' you.
- All those 'for' the motion raise your hands.
- He wouldn't apologize; and just 'for' that, she refused to help him.
- usage He looks better 'for' having lost weight.
- They fought 'for' days over a silly pencil.
- I will stand in 'for' him.
- I am aiming 'for' completion by end of business Thursday.
- He's going 'for' his doctorate.
- Do you want to go 'for' coffee?
- People all over Greece looked to Delphi 'for' answers.
- Can you go to the store 'for' some eggs?
- I'm saving up 'for' a car.
- Don't wait 'for' an answer.
- What did he ask you 'for'?
- Run for the hills!
- He was headed 'for' the door when he remembered.
- 'For' that to happen now is incredibly unlikely. (=It is incredibly unlikely that that will happen now.)
- All I want is 'for' you to be happy. (=All I want is that you be happy.)
- He was convicted 'for' murder.
- I'm looking 'for' my friend.
- for combines with demonstrative :Category:Esperanto correlatives to indicate that the referrent is somehow distant from the speaker:
- The inducing and accelerating of putrefaction is a subject of very universal inquiry; for 'corruption' is a reciprocal to generation. — w:Francis Francis Bacon.
- That movie is pornographically violent.
- The 'restoration' of this painting will take years.
- The 'restoration' of this medieval church involved undoing all the Victorian modifications.
- The 'restoration' of the House of Stuart took place a few years after the death of Cromwell.
- four years his 'junior'
- A goat is an example of a 'horned' animal.
- To play an 'encore'.
- Vous êtes 'encore' là?
- Voulez-vous 'encore' du pain?
- Tu en veux 'encore'?
- 'Encore' une fois.
- Je n'ai pas encore fini.
- Our company is positioned to optimize tax 'favorabilities'.
- I find that for me, my 'sponsorship' of a child via a charitable NGO provides a sense of great satisfaction.
- The company provided 'sponsorship' to the research team.
- The university awarded five 'sponsorships' to the the five most qualified applicants.
- Rain fell on the hills in 'torrents'.
- They endured a 'torrent' of inquiries.
- A 'torrent' of green and white water broke over the hull of the sail-boat.
- I got a 'torrent' of the complete works of Shakespeare the other day; I'm not sure why.
- The 'inexorability' of global warming gave people a reason to reduce automobile use...
- Will it be possible to have access to the room 'beforehand' so that we can set up chairs?
- The often exaggerated addition of /h/ before words like "out" in written Cockney is a 'hypercorrect' affectation.
- The 'authoritative' rules in this school come not from the headmaster but from the aged matron.
- This book is the world's most 'authoritative' guide to insect breeding habits.
- He instructed us in that booming, 'authoritative' voice of his.
- They 'gorged' themselves on chocolate and cake.
- Oh, look at him, isn't he gorge!
- The text has been reviewed, but the photographer hasn't delivered some of the 'artwork'.
- There is little hope that the two countries will 'normalize' relations; their governments seem to hate each other and would just as soon stay on bad terms.
- We'll need to 'normalize' these statements before we can compare them.
- After we properly 'normalize' the measurements with respect to age, gender, geography and economic considerations, there remains little evidence of a difference between the two groups.
- Heat, light, and electricity are 'absorbed' in the substances into which they pass.
- I've got 'authorization'. Call the office and you'll see.
- We've had the 'authorization' for years, but we've never gotten an appropriation.
- Only the brave know how to 'forgive'...A coward never 'forgave'; it is not in his nature. - q: Laurence Laurence Sterne
- Using large dogs to attack bound, hand-cuffed prisoners is clearly 'torture'.
- In every war there are acts of 'torture' that cause the world to shudder.
- People confess to anything under 'torture'.
- Every time she says 'goodbye' it is 'torture'!
- People who 'torture' often have sadistic tendencies.
- The 'authoritarian' government was demanding stricter laws for low-wage peasants.
- Michael was an 'authoritarian'.
- He was bitter from the 'torments' of the insipid divorce system.
- The child 'tormented' the flies by pulling their wings off.
- What lands and 'lordships' for their owner know My quondam barber. -Dryden.
- They which are accounted to rule over the Gentiles exercise 'lordship' over them. -Mark x. 42.
- "May I ask that the order be granted, if your 'lordship' so pleases?"
- We can discuss the issue tonight, but cannot vote until we have a 'quorum'.
- She is 'borrowing' my pen.
- police 'force'
- show of 'force'
- I haven't tested it, but 'theoretically' it ought to fly.
- I solved the problem 'theoretically' rather than practically.
- The 'corners' of the wire mesh were reinforced with little blobs of solder.
- The chimney 'corner' was full of cobwebs.
- Herbert bruised his shin on the 'corner' of the coffee table.
- The liquor store on the 'corner' also sold lottery tickets.
- From the four 'corners' of the earth they come. — Shakespeare
- Shining a light in the dark 'corners' of the mind
- I took a trip out to his 'corner' of town.
- On weekends, Emily liked to find a quiet 'corner' and curl up with a good book.
- In the 1970's, private investors tried to obtain a 'corner' on the silver market, but were ultimately unsuccessful.
- The pitch was just off the 'corner', low and outside.
- There are runners on the 'corners' with just one out.
- The cat had 'cornered' a cricket between the sofa and the television stand.
- The reporter 'cornered' the politician by pointing out the hypocrisy of his position on mandatory sentencing, in light of the politician's own actions in court.
- The buyers attempted to 'corner' the shares of the railroad stock, so as to facilitate their buyout.
- It's extremely hard to corner the petroleum market because there are so many players.
- As the stock car driver 'cornered' the last turn, he lost control and spun out.
- That BMW 'corners' well, but the suspension is too stiff.
- The pit 'floor' showed where a ring of post holes had been.
- Your dog’s been 'worrying' sheep again.
- The President was 'worried' into military action by persistent advisors.
- Your tone of voice 'worries' me.
- Stop 'worrying' about your test, it’ll be fine.
- I'm afflicted by 'worry' throughout the night.
- My main 'worry' is that I'll miss the train.
- 'Airborne' pollen can aggravate allergies.
- on the 'port' side
- Him I accuse/The city 'ports' by this hath enter'd — w:William Shakespeare, w:Coriolanus Coriolanus (1623), V.vi.
- And from their ivory 'port' the Cherubim,/Forth issuing at the accustomed hour, — w:John Milton, w:Paradise Paradise Lost (1667), s:Paradise Lost/Book book IV
- ...her 'ports' being within sixteen inches of the water... — w:Walter Sir W. Raleigh
- They are easily 'ported' by boat into other shires. — w:Thomas Fuller, The History of the Worthies of England
- 'Port' arms!
- ...the angelic squadron...began to hem him round with 'ported' spears. — w:John Milton, w:Paradise Paradise Lost (1667), s:Paradise Lost/Book book IV
- Gamers can't wait until a 'port' of the title is released on the new system.
- The latest 'port' of the database software is the worst since we made the changeover.
- The committee has been 'exploring' alternative solutions to the problem at hand.
- It was around that time that the expedition began 'exploring' the Arctic Circle.
- It is normal for a boy of this age to be 'exploring' his sexuality.
- He was too busy 'exploring' to notice his son needed his guidance
- The boys 'explored' all around till cold and hunger drove them back to the campfire one by one
- After the layoffs 'morale' was at an all time low, they were so dispirited nothing was getting done.
- 'Morale' is an important quality in soldiers. With good 'morale' they'll charge into a hail of bullets; without it they won't even cross a street.
- For superstitious reasons, many buildings number their 13th 'storey' as 14, bypassing 13 entirely.
- George W. Bush was 'successor' to Bill Clinton as President of the US.
- To my 'untutored' eye all the trees looked alike.
- The votes have been counted and the 'electorate' has spoken.
- The 'electorate' of Finchley borders on the electorate of Much-Binding-in-the-Marsh, splitting the new housing estate of Royal Cupolas.
- Fredrick the Great, Elector of Brandenburg and King of Prussia, commanded the most powerful 'electorate' in the Empire.
- The ship leaked like a sieve and rode like a barrel; in other words it was completely lacking in 'seaworthiness'.
- The 'majority' agreed that the new proposal was the best.
- The winner with 53% had a 6% 'majority' over the loser with 47%.
- By the time I reached my 'majority', I had already been around the world twice.
- On receiving the news of his promotion, Charles Snodgrass said he was delighted to be entering his 'majority'.
- 'uncork' a bottle of wine
- His suggestion 'uncorked' a whirlwind.
- My 'work' involves a lot of travel.
- He hasn’t come home yet, he’s still at 'work'.
- Holding a brick over your head is hard 'work'.
- It takes a lot of 'work' to write a dictionary.
- 'Work' is done against friction to drag a bag along the ground.
- It is a 'work' of art.
- William the Conqueror fortified many castles, throwing up new ramparts, bastions and all manner of 'works'.
- He’s 'working' in a bar.
- He 'worked' his way through the crowd.
- The dye 'worked' its way through.
- He 'worked' the levers.
- the mine was worked until the last scrap of ore had been extracted.
- He used pliers to 'work' the wire into shape.
- She 'works' the night clubs.
- The salesman 'works' the Midwest.
- This artist 'works' mostly in acrylics.
- The rock musician 'worked' the crowd of young girls into a frenzy.
- She knows how to 'work' the system.
- I cannot 'work' a miracle.
- He is 'working' his servants hard.
- He pointed at the car and asked, "Does it 'work'"?
- He looked at the bottle of pain pills, wondering if they would 'work'.
- My plan didn’t 'work'.
- They 'worked' on her to join the group.
- His fingers 'worked' with tension.
- This dough does not 'work' easily.
- The soft metal 'works' well.
- Japanese can be written 'horizontally' as well as vertically.
- He obtained a mortgage with the interest payments 'amortized' over the life of the loan.
- He stated the case but I did 'disaccord'.
- halotti 'tor'
- disznó'tor'
- The subway map was quite 'informational', allowing us to determine the most efficient route to our destination.
- The cud is then reswallowed and further digested by specialized 'microorganisms' that live in the rumen.
- Our meeting was a 'short' six minutes today. Every day for the past month it's been at least twenty minutes long.
- “Phone” is 'short' for “telephone” and "asap" 'short' for "as soon as possible".
- The cashier came up 'short' ten dollars on his morning shift.
- I'm 'short' General Motors because I think their sales are plunging.
- They had to stop 'short' to avoid hitting the dog in the street.
- The recent developments at work caught them 'short'.
- The boss got a message and cut the meeting 'short'.
- He cut me 'short' repeatedly in the meeting.
- His speech fell 'short' of what was expected.
- We went 'short' most finance companies in July.
- Jones smashes a grounder between third and 'short'.
- The market decline was terrible, but the 'shorts' were buying champagne.
- He closed out his 'short' at a modest loss after three months.
- This is the third time I've caught them 'shorting' us.
- Avec un pantalon, j'ai moins froid aux jambes qu'avec un 'short'.
- The statement "We agree to disagree on everything" is 'self-contradictory'.
- a commemorative plaque
- Unemployment is the norm in this part of the country.
- Attendance at a school is usually 'mandatory'.
- The ten-dollar fee was 'compulsory'.
- Such 'compulsory' measures are limited.
- the 'accessories' of a mobile phone
- Elle a le tort d'avoir trop de précipitation. Her trouble is, she's too hasty.
- Le mari n'a aucun tort. The husband is not to blame.
- Je regrette, vous avez tort. I'm afraid you are mistaken.
- Nous avons fait notre choix, à tort ou à raison. We have made our choice, rightly or wrongly.
- Most junk mail requires only a 'cursory' glance.
- The beast's 'voracious' habit led many to fear him.
- Even as a young girl, she was a 'voracious' reader.
- The Prime Minister announced a 'thorough' investigation into the death of a father of two in police custody.
- He is the most 'thorough' worker I have ever seen.
- The infested house needs a 'thorough' cleansing before it will be inhabitable.
- It is a 'thorough' pleasure to see him beg for mercy.
- I think putting oil on a burn is the 'worst' thing you can do.
- That's the 'worst' news I've had all day.
- The 'worst' storm we had last winter knocked down our power lines.
- I'm feeling really ill - the 'worst' I've felt all week.
- None of these photographs of me are good, but this one is definitely the worst.
- My sore leg hurts 'worst' when it's cold and rainy.
- This is the 'worst'-written essay I've ever seen.
- She's the 'worst'-informed of the lot.
- a very discerning car shopper, "shopper" is the 'headword'.
- You will have to bring your 'passport' to prove who you are.
- The salve made the 'soreness' go away, but with the aches gone I suddenly noticed my other pains.
- Her feet were 'sore' from walking so far.
- Joe was 'sore' at Bob for beating him at checkers.
- The school was in sore' need of textbooks, theirs having been ruined in the flood.
- They were 'sore' afraid.
- They put ointment and a bandage on the 'sore'.
- A'll gae for ma messages 'the morn'. I'll go shopping tomorrow.
- It's an old-fashioned company, with parking spaces and other perks doled out on the basis of 'seniority'.
- The construction flaw is 'incorrigible'; any attempt to amend it would cause a complete collapse.
- His black soul was too 'incorrigible' to repent, even at his execution.
- The imp is 'incorrigible': his bottom is still red from his last spanking when he plans the next prank.
- The laws of nature and mathematics are 'incorrigible'.
- The 'incorrigibles' in the prison population are either lifers or habitual reoffenders
- I wish to 'underscore' the importance of proper formatting.
- The PA system broadcast a long list of names in the morning, but it wasn't until later that they requested the 'aforementioned' students report to the health clinic.
- The judge read a list of prisoners' names. She then indicated that the 'aforementioned' were to be set free.
- Cervantes was a 'contemporary' of Shakespeare
- The early mammals inherited the earth by surviving their saurian 'contemporaries'
- 'Often contemporary' customs differ as if dating from different ages, whether they do or not
- Jessica hated covering her legs, so she rarely wore anything but 'shorts'.
- Est-ce qu'il vous reste des 'shorts' comme celui-ci en stock?
- 'circa 1170', Chrétien de Troyes, s:fr:Érec et Érec et Énide:
- The beginning art students displayed their 'horribly' executed paintings with hopeful faces.
- Then everything went 'horribly' wrong.
- The man was 'horribly' nice, yet she still wouldn't marry him.
- 'Horribly', as he was dying, his eyes reddened.
- Plenty of 'prognosticators' try to forecast the ups and downs of the market.
- Their salespeople know all the right 'buzzwords', but they can’t really help you solve your problems.
- The 'conspirators' were rounded up by the police and arrested.
- His 'conspiratorial' whispers were soft, but that just attracted more attention.
- Usage note: In this sense, the word is now used to refer to nonlawyers usually only in fixed phrases such as attorney-in-fact or power of attorney.
- an 'offshore' oil rig
- The jargon becomes a 'shorthand' for these advanced concepts.
- a lady was 'adorned' with jewels
- a man 'adorned' with noble statuary and columns
- a character 'adorned' with every Christian grace
- a gallery of paintings was 'adorned' with the works of some of the great masters
- To isolate electrical wires from the pylons supporting them, one often uses glass 'insulators'.
- This would be an 'opportune' spot for a picnic
- The 'opportune' arrival of the bus cut short the boring conversation
- The old pastor found his 'pastorate' wearying, and longed to retire.
- His 'pastorate' had been marked by several changes in church policy with regards to community outreach.
- At the denomination's annual conference, the 'pastorate' had passed a bylaw prohibiting members from performing online marriage ceremonies.
- Tracing their battles, I had many occasions to walk along Second Avenue, the 'aorta' of the Lower East Side, exploring places that were once as vibrant and tumultuous as Midtown Manhattan. [http://travel.nytimes.com/2007/01/26/travel/escapes/26yiddish.html?8dpc]
- '1905' This sort of fat instead of indicating health points to disease. This general teaching as to the 'worthlessness' of alcohol as a food had been set forth by the leaders in medical profession, and accepted largely by the rank and file of practitioners for about twenty-five years. — Carry Nation, The Use and Need of the Life of Carry A. Nation, [http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/ot2www-pubeng?specfile=/texts/english/modeng/publicsearch/modengpub.o2w&act=surround&offset=502062211&tag=Nation,+Carry+A.:+The+Use+and+Need+of+the+Life+of+Carry+A.+Nation,+1905&query=worthlessness&id=NatUsea Chapter 28.]
- After playing the children left the room in 'disorder'.
- The class was thrown into 'disorder' when the teacher left the room
- The army tried to prevent 'disorder' when claims the elections had been rigged grew stronger.
- Bulimia is an eating 'disorder'.
- The policeman received the Award of 'Meritorious' Service from his grateful department.
- Humans and birds can perceive 'color'.
- Most languages have names for the 'colors' black, white, red, and green.
- He referred to the white flag as one "drained of all 'color'".
- 'Color' has been a sensitive issue in many societies.
- a bit of local 'color'.
- Could you give me some 'color' with regards to which products made up the mix of revenue for this quarter?
- 'Color' television and movies were considered a great improvement over black and white.
- We could 'color' the walls red.
- My kindergartener loves to 'color'.
- That interpretation certainly 'colors' my perception of the book.
- (colloquial) 'Color' me confused.
- I am 'sorry' I stepped on your toes. It was an accident.
- I am 'sorry' to hear of your uncle's death.
- The storm left his garden in a 'sorry' state.
- 'Sorry'! I didn't see that you were on the phone.
- 'Sorry'? What was that? The phone cut out.
- The scientists 'performed' several experiments.
- It took him only twenty minutes to 'perform' the task.
- She will 'perform' in the play
- The magician 'performed' badly - none of his tricks worked.
- The string quartet 'performed' three pieces by Haydn.
- He proclaimed himself a 'born-again' Christian during a church retreat.
- After not picking up a shovel for twenty years, she finally saw the beauty in flowers and declared herself a 'born-again' gardener.
- To many people a 'born-again' philosophy is a fundamentalist philosophy.
- I think we can 'afford' the extra hour it will take.
- We can only 'afford' to buy a small car at the moment.
- A 'affords' his goods cheaper than B.
- A man can 'afford' a sum yearly in charity.
- Grapes 'afford' wine.
- Olives 'afford' oil.
- The earth 'affords' fruit.
- The sea 'affords' an abundant supply of fish.
- A good life 'affords' consolation in old age.
- The only way to avoid shame is to 'forgo' acting shamefully.
- She made a kind of polenta from 'cornmeal' and chicken broth, with some cheese sprinkled on top.
- He set his e-mail message's 'priority' to high.
- She needs to get her 'priorities' straight and stop playing games.
- Many colleges want to achieve football superiority.
- Il pressa l’'orange' afin d’en extraire du jus.
- Les premiers TGV atlantiques étaient 'orange'.
- I need some more 'information' about this issue.
- For your 'information', I did this because I wanted to.
- And as you can see in this slide, we then take the raw data and convert it into 'information'.
- Tous les jours, il regarde la télé le midi pour suivre les 'informations'.
- Cette 'information' nous est parvenue hier soir.
- He has a 'tenor' voice.
- Sam posted an 'inflammatory' comment in the talk page.
- Arnie est 'fort'. - "Arnie is 'strong'."
- hommes 'forts' - "'strong' men"
- Je suis 'fort' en anglais - "I am 'good' at English"
- I will try to do a better job, 'henceforth', now that I know the proper technique.
- Aside from learned literary 'borrowings', no English words derive directly from Wikipedia:Ancient Ancient Greek or Wikipedia:Koine Koine Greek, but rather via one or more languages or stages of a language (Latin, French, etc.). (from :Category:English words from Greek)
- He was my 'sponsor' when I applied to join the club.
- They were my 'sponsors' for immigration.
- And now a word from our 'sponsor'.
- Pour mieux trouver le commettant, ou le « 'sponsor' » qui financera les travaux, le chercheur définit un programme, chiffré en temps et en argent. (L'Expansion, févr. 1972, p. 30, col. 2)
- Vous voulez faire des affaires au Koweit ? Il faut d'abord trouver un 'sponsor', koweitien, savoir qu'il vous prendra un honnête pourcentage (13 à 15 %) mais refusera d'endosser le moindre risque et disparaîtra au premier accrochage. (Le Nouvel Observateur, 4 févr. 1974, p. 29, col. 2)
- First-time home buyers are feeling the squeeze of higher interest rates with mortgage 'affordability' at its worst level for 16 years.
- She's 'enamored' of her new boyfriend.
- His sense of religion 'informs' everything he writes.
- There is a great tendency to keep property 'corporately' controlled.
- He 'stubbornly' refused to quit trying, even after failing 20 times.
- w:Arabic Arabic numerals: 40
- w:Roman Roman numerals: XL
- Last: thirty (30), thirty-nine (39)
- Next: forty-one (41), fifty (50)
- But his joy was 'short-lived', for his fortunes soon changed.
- Snobs feel it's hard to call it wine with a straight-face, when the 'cork' is made of plastic.
- Look at that 'cork' statue.
- He was so loud I told him to 'cork' it.
- He 'corked' his bat, which was discovered when it broke, causing a controversy.
- The vicious tackle corked his leg.
- Le roi est 'mort'.
- Don't try to run away, you little worm!
- The 'worm' of conscience still begnaw thy soul! — Richard III, William Shakespeare
- We 'wormed' our way through the underbrush.
- He 'wormed' his way into the organization
- 'Worm' and parcel with the lay; turn and serve the other way.
- bir morona aşık oldum — I fell in love with a moron
- The Moon's 'orbit' around the Earth takes nearly one month to complete.
- In the post WWII era, several eastern European countries came into the 'orbit' of the Soviet Union.
- The convenience store was a heavily travelled point in her daily 'orbit', as she purchased both cigarettes and lottery tickets there.
- The Earth 'orbits' the Sun.
- The harried mother had a cloud of children 'orbiting' her, asking for sweets.
- A rocket was used to orbit the satellite
- The piano teacher's 'bored' look betrayed he wasn't paying much attention to his pupil's boringly stereotype rendition of the brilliantly composed etudes
- We were beset by a 'horde' of street vendors who thought we were tourists and would buy their cheap souvenirs.
- I had no 'prior' knowledge you were coming.
- His 'prior' residence was smaller than his current one.
- The doctor had known three months 'prior'.
- An 'oral' presentation
- I knocked on the vice president's 'door'
- Keep a 'door' on your anger.
- Hij schoot de bal 'door' het raam. — He kicked the ball 'through' the window.
- Dolenthousiast rende het hondje 'door' de kamer. — Very enthusiastically the puppy ran 'around' the room.
- 'Door' files kan ik niet op tijd komen. — 'Because of' traffic jams I'm unable to arrive on time.
- Ik rijd nu de stad 'door'. — I'm now driving 'through' the city.
- Dolenthousiast rende het hondje de kamer 'door'. — Very enthusiastically the puppy ran 'around' the room.
- Ondanks slecht weer ging het feest ging toch 'door.' — Despite bad weather, the party went 'on' anyway.
- Hij vermeed een confrontatie 'door' de andere kant op te lopen. — He avoided a confrontation 'by' walking the other way.
- The seamen were serving on 'shore' instead of in ships.
- The 'shores' stayed upright during the earthquake.
- My family 'shored' me up after I failed the GED.
- The workers were 'shoring' up the dock after it fell into the water.
- Have you had any 'word' from John yet?
- He sent 'word' that we should strike camp before winter.
- I give you my 'word' that I will be there on time.
- Her parents had lived in Botswana, spreading the 'word' among the tribespeople.
- Can I have a 'word' with you?
- There had been 'words' between him and the secretary about the outcome of the meeting.
- I’m not sure how to 'word' this letter to the council.
- Stock prices are heading 'north'.
- 'north' highway 1
- The web-page took a long time to load and 'errored' out.
- Remove that line of code and the script should stop 'erroring' there.
- This directory 'errors' with a "Permission denied" message.
- The block transmission 'errored' near the start and could not be received.
- The w:Geneva Conference Geneva Accord of 1954 ended the French-Indochinese War.
- The mob of angry villagers carried 'torches' and pitchforks to the vampire's castle.
- Ernst slipped and dropped his 'torch' on the flagstones, shattering the bulb and plunging us into darkness.
- Some hoodlums had 'torched' a derelict automobile, which emitted a ghastly pall of thick, black smoke that filled the street.
- The fine restaurant presented an array of 'savory' dishes; each was delicious.
- the mushrooms, meat, bread, rice, peanuts and potatoes were all good 'savory' foods.
- 'Savory' duck contrasted well with the sweet sauce.
- He was able to plea down his sentence by revealing the names of three of his 'cohorts', as well as the source of the information.
- The 18-24 'cohort' shows a sharp increase in automobile fatalities over the proximate age groupings.
- Three 'cohorts' of men were assigned to the region.
- 'moral' judgments, a 'moral' poem
- a 'moral' obligation
- a 'moral' agent
- a 'moral' certainty
- a 'moral' victory, 'moral' support
- By the time I reached the train station I was exhausted, but fortunately there was a 'porter' waiting.
- porter la baniere - to carry the banner
- The 'flavor' of this apple pie is delicious.
- 'Flavor' was added to the pudding.
- What 'flavor' of bubble gum do you enjoy?
- the 'flavor' of an experience
- His favorite 'flavor' of ...
- They agreed to a cost-of-living 'escalator'.
- Synonyms - two shillings, two bob
- I stand before you in the spirit of pure public service — not as a 'protector' of the status quo, but as an agent of change. –Jon Huntsman, Jr.
- JFK was assassinated in a motorcade.
- a 'stormy' season or a 'stormy' day
- a 'stormy' sound or 'stormy' shocks
- 'stormy' passions
- The local library, a 'portal' of knowledge.
- She 'stormed' out of the room.
- Troops 'stormed' the complex.
- En kraftig 'storm' er venta seinere i dag. Bokmål
- Ein kraftig 'storm' er venta seinare i dag. Nynorsk
- an umbrella with a handle made of 'horn'
- hunting 'horn'
- antenna 'horn'
- loudspeaker 'horn'
- There is no challenge in fighting a 'worn-out' old man.
- He still wears his old 'worn-out' shoes.
- You can barely read the 'worn-out' logo on those Sketchers.
- That game was fun, but now I'm all 'worn-out'.
- The 'worn-out' soccer players lined up to congratulate the other team.
- This year's crop of 'imports' will increase the trade deficit.
- He 'imports' Cuban cigars to the United States, which is illegal but profitable.
- The table was piled with 'odorous' lilies.
- The book tells the 'story' of two roommates.
- You’ve been telling 'stories' again, haven’t you?
- Our shop was on the fourth 'story' of the building — we had to install an elevator.
- What will she do without being able to watch her 'stories'?
- I really like the 'floral' pattern on this Chinese vase.
- The word pigs consists of two 'morphemes': pig (a particular animal) and s (indication of the plural).
- The word werewolves' consists of morphemes: "were" (~ man), "wolf" (a particular animal), "es" (plural), and "'" (indicating possessive).
- And the uncircumcised man child whose flesh of his 'foreskin' is not circumcised, that soul shall be cut off from his people; he hath broken my covenant. — Genesis 17:14, the Christian Bible.
- In primates, the 'foreskin' is present in the genitalia of both sexes and likely has been present for millions of years of evolution.
- I 'deplore' my neighbour for having lost his job.
- The UNHCR 'deplores' the recent events in Sudan.
- I 'deplore' not having listened to your advice.
- I 'deplore' how you treated him at the party.
- Many people 'deplore' the actions of a corrupt government.
- If you still feel unwell tomorrow, go see your doctor.
- Her children 'doctored' her back to health.
- They 'doctored' their apple trees by vigorous pruning, and now the dwarfed trees are easier to pick.
- We may legally 'doctor' a pet to reduce its libido.
- Mendel's discoveries showed how the evolution of a species may be 'doctored'.
- To 'doctor' the signature of an instrument with intent to defraud is an example of forgery.
- The Ancient 'censors' were part of the cursus honorum, a series of public offices held during a political career, like consuls and praetors.
- The headmaster is an even stricter 'censor' for his boarding pupils' correspondence than the enemy 'censors' had been for his own when the country was occupied.
- The man responsible for 'censoring' films has seen some things in his time.
- Occupying powers typically 'censor' anything reeking of resistance
- His manner was at best off-hand, at worst totally 'ignorant'.
- The most common numerals in Latin, as in English, are the "cardinals"...and the "'ordinals'"... — F. M. Wheelock, Wheelock’s Latin, 6th ed. revised (2005), p97
- The waiters were so 'humorous' - one even did a backflip for us, when we asked him.
- It’s only so much 'rhetoric'.
- His heroic deeds were 'immortalized' in song and tale.
- He obtained a mortgage with the interest payments 'amortised' over the life of the loan.
- He watched the little dog's antics with a 'humorless' stare.
- The weeks of working hard to look after his sick family left him looking 'careworn'.
- 'Recorded' music comes in many forms.
- an octahedron of 'fluorines'
- We will 'ornament' the windows with trim to make the room seem brighter.
- The editor 'ornamented' his plain writing, making it fancier but less clear.
- If the parser says it is good, then it must be 'well-formed' and is part of the language.
- Bears are 'omnivores', they can eat plants but they enjoy eating fish.
- They went 'outdoors' to light up their cigarettes.
- She loves the 'outdoors'.
- The rocks had stood overlooking the valley since time 'immemorial.
- The controlling party had 'apportioned' the voting districts such that their party would be favored in the next election.
- The children were required to dump all of their Halloween candy on the table so that their parents could 'apportion' it among them.
- He wandered round, cleaning up in a 'desultory' way.
- I teach a class of 'desultory' minds.
- I made a 'desultory' remark while I was talking to my friend.
- She made a 'desultory' attempt at conversation.
- The fake was easy to spot because of its inferior 'brushwork'.
- His intelligence was considered 'subnormal', but amazingly as a musician he was a genius.
- Those old machines are not very glamorous, but even 20 years after their introduction, they are still the 'workhorses' of the industry.
- A chord and the radius that bisects it are 'orthogonal'.
- The content of the message should be 'orthogonal' to the means of its delivery.
- Who is the 'circulator' of this rumor?
- You can ride the airport 'circulator' to the next terminal.
- They have to move out of their house because the bank 'foreclosed' on their mortgage.
- The design of his house incorporates a spiral staircase.
- Incorporate air into the mixture.
- The company was incorporated in 1980,
- The bombed bridge was left 'unsupported' and soon collapsed.
- This obsolete software is 'unsupported'. Please upgrade to the latest version.
- A 'comfortable' income should suffice to consider oneself rich.
- The home team is ahead by a 'comfortable' margin.
- This is the most 'comfortable' bed I've ever slept in.
- I'll be quite 'comfortable' here, what a great guestroom!
- She was glad to escape her judgmental and 'moralistic' parents.
- The most newsworthy articles should be towards the front of the paper. --'Vintage Vinyl:Steal This Book'
- I shall vote in the 'forthcoming' election.
- The money was not 'forthcoming'.
- I am really a 'forthcoming' person.
- That magazine article was 'uninformative'.
- The 'satisfactory' results of the survey led to his promotion.
- A 'tornado' is a rotating column of air, pendant from a cumulonimbus cloud, and nearly always observable as a funnel cloud or tuba. Its vortex, meters in diameter, rotates counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere, and clockwise in the southern hemisphere, with wind speeds of 160 to more than 480 kilometres per hour.
- He came out of the station and took some time to 'orientate' himself.
- 'Reporter' son amour sur quelqu'un — To transfer one's love to somebody
- Après avoir été 'reportées' de nombreuses fois, les épreuves ont finalement eu lieu.
- Il faut se 'reporter' au mois dernier pour comprendre. — We have to go back in time amonth to understand.
- Pour mieux saisir le problème, on se 'reportera' au chapitre 4. — To better understand the issue, the reader is referred to chapter 4.
- Cet idiot avait oublié de 'reporter' un 3! — That idiot forgot to carry over a 3!
- As he spoke, the knight-errant, who had remounted his 'warhorse', galloped forward to the royal stand, with a silken kerchief bound round his wounded arm. — Arthur Conan Doyle, The White Company, s:The White Company/Chapter Chapter 26.
- '2006' Most important though is the fact that, for the first time in I can barely remember how long, the ROH mounts a new production of an Italian repertory 'warhorse' that is fully on the level of the one it replaces [and indeed, in some respects, surpasses it] [...] we actually have a "Tosca". — [http://groups.google.sm/group/rec.music.opera/browse_thread/thread/f6b61851eea2a30e/c9951c6fb15d3954?lnk=raot&hl=it Google group.]
- "Srinath: India's warhorse" (headline from [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/cricket/specials/west_indies_v_india/2022023.stm BBC News])
- A cold, biting wind blew across the 'moor', and the travellers hastened their step.
- He 'scorned' her romantic advances.
- India is the world's biggest 'importer' of gold.
- The data 'importer' has crashed. Did we receive a corrupted file?
- It is a sad fact that 43% of marriages are now 'divorced'.
- Mark's parents are 'divorced'.
- The rodeo had a 'forefooting' contest.
- The 'splendour' of the Queen's coronation was without comparison.
- He got a job in a 'sporting' goods store.
- Quite 'sporting' of you to call that foul on yourself.
- A 'sporting' chance? I wouldn't call even him a long-shot?
- The haunted house was 'horrifying', from one room to the next I felt more and more like I wasn’t going to survive.
- Palestrina wrote lots of 'choral' music for the Catholic church.
- By adding "-ness", you can 'form' a noun from an adjective.
- He is 'borderline' hypoglycemic and needs to monitor his sugar intake.
- I would rather hire a talented layman than a university graduate with 'borderline' qualifications.
- Your 'borderline' remarks about my aunt's dress destroyed my evening.
- She lives on the 'borderline' between reality and madness.
- He passed the difficult class with help from his 'tutor'.
- To help pay her tuition, the college student began to 'tutor' high school students in calculus and physics.
- I found the opening times for my local branch using the Web site's store 'locator'.
- She has a lighter and 'more coloratura' voice.
- This role has the 'most coloratura' singing in the opera.
- Show us your 'lordly' might, demonstrate that you can order people and get them to obey.
- Franklin decided to improve his 'carport' by walling in the sides and turning it into a garage.
- the 'aorist' stem of a verb
- The 'fluorescent' plants shimmered in the darkness.
- The quality of 'fluorescent' lighting technology has improved dramatically in recent years.
- Her shirt was 'fluorescent' orange.
- The 'fluorescents' hummed day and night.
- Ilu forsis la chefa pordo, iris trans la longa vestibulo e apertis la pordo dil koqueyo. — He forced the main door, went through the long hall, and then opened the door of the kitchen.
- The doctor prescribed a 'soporific' to help him sleep.
- The professor delivered a 'soporific' lecture.
- In "42 ÷ 3" the 'divisor' is the 3.
- The positive 'divisors' of 6 are 1, 2 and 3.
- Anyone who tastes our food seems to 'clamor' for more.
- Thousands of demonstrators 'clamoring' the government's resignation were literally deafening, yet their cries fell in deaf ears
- After a confused murmur the audience soon 'clamored'
- His many supporters successfully 'clamor' his election without a formal vote
- One 'snorer' can keep a whole room of sleepy people awake.
- Richard obtained a 'divorce' from his wife some years ago, but hasn't returned to the dating scene.
- The Civil War split between Virginia and West Virginia was a 'divorce' based along cultural and economic, as well as geographic, lines.
- A ship captain can marry couples, but cannot 'divorce' them.
- Lucy 'divorced' Steve when she discovered that he had been unfaithful.
- The radical group voted to 'divorce' itself from the main faction and start an independent movement.
- Edna and Simon 'divorced' last year; he got the house, and she retained the business.
- He's a 'hardcore' gamer.
- That show was 'hardcore', dude.
- Let's listen to some 'hardcore'.
- South Street is the 'bisector' of Broken Dreams Boulevard.
- They were taken unawares and overcome when the room filled with a lethal, 'odorless' gas.
- He always tried to maintain a 'rapport' with his customers.
- Mind and soul 'according' well. - w:Alfred Alfred Tennyson
- This 'according' voice of national wisdom.
- That apprehends no further than this world, / And squarest thy life 'according' - Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, V-i
- Shearer finished among the top ten goal 'scorers' in 10 out of his 14 seasons in the Premier League and won the top 'scorer' title three times.
- The team was making goals so fast the 'scorer' could barely keep up.
- The candidate wearing the business suite made a 'favorable' impression.
- We made quick progress, due to 'favorable' winds.
- The rain stopped at a 'favourable' time for our tennis match.
- She says that she was born under a 'favorable' star.
- The State Department has hired hundreds of new passport , put employees to work around the clock and opened a new processing facility in Arkansas but has still been unable to meet the demand [for the issuance of new passports]. — Houston Chronicle (6/8/2007)
- After we leave the quarry, we intend to 'afforest' the land and turn it into a nature reserve
- The highest 'scoring' team will win the match.
- The 'scoring' of a tennis match is overseen by a single referee.
- 'Scoring' a basket in basketball is worth two or three points.
- Trish was an admin member on three 'forums,' and had no trouble at all when it came to moderating them.
- Zukertort represent the other most 'noteworthy' tournaments.
- He was so 'remorseful' that he voluntarily paid full restitution.
- There was a 'remorseful' look on her face.
- Considering that he was speaking 'extemporaneously', he covered the subject pretty well.
- The cold was a 'foreboder' of the nightmares of the winter that lay ahead.
- He writes respectably, but poetry is not his 'forte'.
- This 'forte' marks the climax of the second movement.
- This passage is 'forte', then there's a diminuendo to mezzo piano.
- The musicians played the passage 'forte'.
- vocali forti - stressed vowel
- please find verification for its objectionable use as an adjective'Note:' this term is considered by some to be objectionable in American English.
- please find verification for its objectionable use as a noun'Note:' this term is considered by some to be objectionable in American English.
- '2003 Winchester, Simon', The Meaning of Everything; The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary, New York: Oxford University Press. p72:
- fare qualcosa 'per sport' (to do something for fun)
- We had a small 'corral' out back where we kept our pet llama.
- Please return the shopping carts to the 'corral'.
- The wagon train formed a 'corral' to protect against Commanche attacks.
- The lawyer frantically tried to 'corral' his notes as his briefcase fell open.
- Between us, we managed to 'corral' the puppy in the kitchen.
- After we 'corralled' the last steer, we headed off to the chuck wagon for dinner.
- The cattle drivers 'corralled' their wagons for the night.
- Washing light laundry with dark may cause your clothes to 'discolor'.
- His omnipotence That to corporeal substance could add Speed almost spiritual. - Milton
- The word exit is a 'loanword' from Latin.
- Exercise is 'invigorating'.
- The cold water 'invigorated' him.
- fiindcă 'or' avea ceva pe care noi l avem, va trebui să aşteptăm puţin
- It'll nae be lang 'or' A gang ma holiday.- It'll not be long until/ before I go on holiday
- [http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1996/analysis/time/9610/14/debate.shtml "Clinton v. Dole: Let the Debates Begin"] w:Time Time (14 October 1996).
- Clinton and Dole brought different needs to the debate. For Dole it was 'do or die'. He had to hit Clinton hard but without seeming harsh, a conundrum for him all year.
- "What is pornography to one man, is the laughter of genius to another." by D.H. Lawrence as cited on page 10's "[http://www.jstor.org/pss/4506223 Confining the Pornography Dragon]" by The Cambridge Law Journal in issue 1980.
- They frequently found themselves 'short-handed' on weekends.
- When the fire alarm went off, it was a 'free-for-all'.
- Geh, 'bevor' ich rasend werde.
- 'honorary' degree
- 'honorary' citizen
- 'honorary' consul
- 'honorary' vice president
- 'honorary' member of the family
- 'circa 1170', Chrétien de Troyes, s:fr:Érec et Érec et Énide:
- I read a very 'informative' newspaper article on that subject last week.
- A fully-'restored' Volkswagon beetle will cost more.
- a library 'borrowers card
- There are two routes to get there. We're in a rush so we'll take the 'shorter' one.
- I stretched 'languorously', and then remained in bed.
- Cuttlefish skin contains 'chromatophores' that enable it to change color.
- The handbag looks nice, but 'shopworn'.
- We 'doorbelled' the whole district in an effort to get out the vote.
- 'Quotation'
- She gave the students' performances a rank 'ordering'.
- 'Ordering' has to be complete at least six weeks before expected delivery to get our best prices.
- I will conduct some 'preparatory' research before choosing the new restaurant's location.
- After dinner we had an orange 'sorbet' that was very refreshing.
- They 'reportedly' went last week, but I couldn't prove it.
- Cette chaîne de télé propose de nombreux 'reportages' sportifs.
- At the end of the marathon, her 'labored' breathing told us she was exhausted.
- Leave your 'worries' behind.
- He 'worries' that he will not have enough money to pay rent.
- 'pallor' of the complexion
- Zucchini and cauliflower seem to be widely 'scorned' vegetables.
- porter la translation=to carry the lang=frm
- porter la translation=to carry the lang=fro
- US President Abraham Lincoln was called the Great 'Emancipator' after issuing the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863.
- Bob cannot get any information out of the 'codeword' since he doesn't know what transmission bases Alice used.
- a 'short-handed' goal
- The retired cowboy showed off his 'horsemanship' by doing tricks in the saddle.
- The possession of cilia is an 'apomorphic' trait of this family.
- The genus is highly 'apomorphic'.
- The officials set to work in regular 'circumlocutory' order. -Chambers's Journal.
- That nasty remark was 'uncalled-for'.
- Can I see your 'authorization'?
- 'correctional' officer, 'correctional' policy, 'correctional' services.
- En agriculture, les traceurs isotopes permettent de suivre le cycle de l’eau et ainsi d’optimiser les 'apports' au terrain.
- Spain 'borders' Portugal and France.
- He walks 'more' in the morning these days.
- You're 'more' beautiful than I ever imagined.
- I was 'more' better at English than you.
- This one smells a bit 'corky'; get me another bottle.
- my daughter likes 'scissoring' too much, she'll cut up any and all papers when she gets a hold of a pair.
- "I like cunnilingus but I go crazy when my girlfriend and I do 'scissoring'!"
- 'Words' have a longer life than deeds. – Pindar, Greek poet
- They had 'words' at the bar, but I don't know what about.
- Sì, signora - Yes, madam
- No, signore - No, ladies
- Egregia Signora - Dear Madam
- Egregie Signore - Dear Mesdames
- I'm taking 'honors' math this year.
- Most scorpionfly larvae are 'eruciform'.
- 'Flor' de harina.
- 'Finest' flour.
- En la 'flor' de la vida.
- In the 'prime' of life.
- Hon förenade med ett utmärkt teateryttre en hög grad af intelligens, en ypperlig 'organ' och en förträfflig deklamationskonst
- She is an expert 'orienteer'.
- She travels worldwide to 'orienteer'.
- '1840' "If I had been born a corsair or a pirate, a brigand, genteel highwayman or patriot -- and they're the same thing," thought Mr. Tappertit, musing among the nine-pins, "I should have been all right. But to drag out a ignoble existence unbeknown to mankind in general -- patience! I will be famous yet. — Charles Dickens, Barnaby Rudge, http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/ot2www-pubeng?specfile=/texts/english/modeng/publicsearch/modengpub.o2w&act=surround&offset=254475515&tag=Dickens,+Charles,+1812-1870:+Barnaby+Rudge,+1840&query=corsair&id=DicBarn Chapter 34.
- The story was long and very 'wordy'.
- His 'snoring' was so loud that it woke the neighbors.
- Je suis gynécologue de formation. I'm a trainee gynaecologist.
- He has always kept an 'orderly kitchen, nothing out of place for longer than it is in use.
- We live in an 'orderly' universe; rules govern both the movements of the planets and the binding of the molecules.
- An 'orderly' gathering of citizens stood on the corner awaiting the bus.
- snäv, viktoriansk 'moral'
- Give him time to 'orient' himself within the new hierarchy.
- We will 'orient' our campaign to the youth who are often disinterested.
- I will 'orient' all of the signs to face the road.
- Let me just 'orient' myself and we can be on our way.
- 'Note:' this term is considered by some to be objectionable in American English.
- The Roberts Court seems to be the most politically conservative in living memory.
- This one-billion-dollar TV contract is the paramount example of the injustices in the game. Look at the money we make off predominately poor black kids. We're the 'whoremasters'. — Dale Brown
- Your work desk is so neat and tidy - I've never met someone so 'organized' before!
- Most of her time is spent on 'casework', rather than research.
- He was a dancer 'extraordinaire'.
- colloquial 'Color' me confused.
- The executioner was proud that he kept his axe 'razor-sharp', so no prisoner would feel any pain when his head was cut off.
- The children were all wearing 'anticipatory' grins in the minutes before the cake was served.
- The Geneva 'Accord' of 1954 ended the French-Indochinese War.
- Having a holiday is a great 'opportunity' to relax.
- I wanted to become a professional, but because of my financial situation there were no 'opportunities'.
- Try to 'orientate' your students towards the science subjects.
- The sentence was 'unsupported' by an inline citation or general bibliographic reference source notes.
- For the first time since Douglas Fairbanks Sr. 'originated' the role in the 1920 silent "The Mark of Zorro," the hero will be played by a Hispanic actor. — James Hebert, "Banderas puts his mark on 'Zorro'" San Diego Union-Tribune, 12 July 1998 p.E1
- The scheme 'originated' with the governor and council.
- In Greek mythology, Tithonus was granted immortality but not eternal youth.
- He was reluctant to behave immorally.
- I will 'portray' a king on horseback.
- For my next movie, I will be 'portraying' Shakespeare
- The internet is simply the largest network of 'networks' we know of.
- We have no 'record' of you making this payment to us.
- It's raining! Come inside 'or' you'll catch a cold!
- The team set a new 'record' for most points scored in a game.
- Hell and this world, one realm, one continent / Of easy 'thoroughfare'. ― Milton.
- The performance of the 'chorus' was awe-inspiring and exhilarating.
- The catchiest part of most songs is the 'chorus'.
- A 'chorus' of crickets
- A 'chorus' of whiners
- It was a matter of great 'import'.
- Her 'meteoric' rise to power was followed by a slow, lackluster career at the top.
- The price you're offering had better be 'north' of the highest price this company has ever traded for. - Tom Aldredge in the movie w:Barbarians at the Gate Barbarians at the Gate
- To 'force' a lock.
- I found an 'orphaned' project, half-completed before its author quit, and decided to finish it.
- The school was in 'sore' need of textbooks, theirs having been ruined in the flood.
- Han fick 'orgasm' i duschen.
- Israeli hummus is absolutely gorgeous.
- Unemployment is the 'norm' in this part of the country.
- Not eating your children is just one of those societal 'norms'.
- Minnesota is in the 'north' of the USA.
- Switzerland is 'north' of Italy.
- The 'colors' were raised over the new territory.
- Both of the perpetrators were wearing 'colors'.
- His heroic deeds were 'immortalized' in song and tale.
- Ondanks slecht weer ging het feest toch 'door.' — Despite bad weather, the party went 'on' anyway.
- She was from a large family and had many friends, so the funeral was crowded with mourning survivors.
- Using some tweezers, he 'worked' the bee sting out of his hand.
- Sì, signorina - Yes, miss
- No, signorine - No, ladies
- Egregia Signorina - Dear Madam
- Egregia Signorina Rossi - Dear Miss Rossi
- Egregie Signorine - Dear Mesdames
- Chris finally 'scored' with Pat last week.
- The 'splendor' of the Queen's coronation was without comparison.
- That show was 'hardcore', dude.
- The hostile forces were at an impasse; neither could attack with enough force and still defend against the 'retaliatory' counterattack.
- Under 'color' of law, he managed to bilk taxpayers of millions of dollars.
- Can this graph be two-'colored'?
- You can 'color' any map with four colors.
- I will try to do a better job, 'henceforth', now that I know the proper technique!
- After the shipwreck there was whisky 'galore' to be had for the taking.
- We got news that he died of a 'haemorrhage'!
- It’s 'haemorrhaging' now!
- In "a very discerning car shopper", "shopper" is the 'headword'.
- She has a great sense of 'humor', and I always laugh a lot whenever we get together.
- The sensitive subject was treated with 'humor', but in such way that no one was offended.
- "Not until the war ended and journalists were able to enter Cambodia did the world really become aware of the enormity of Pol Pot's oppression."
- Could you 'elaborate' on the plot for your novel for me?
- The 'cantors place in church is on the right of the choir
- Acts of Parliament derogatory from the power of subsequent Parliaments bind not. Blackstone.
- His language was severely censured by some of his brother peers as derogatory to their other. Macaulay.
- The person had a 'record' of the interview so she could review her notes.
- The duct tape and wire were a pretty 'corny' solution.
- He sent a bouquet of twelve red roses and a card: "Roses are red, Violets are blue, Sugar is sweet, And so are you." How 'corny' is that!
- The movie was okay, but the love scene was really 'corny'.
- The right homework will 'reinforce' and complement the lesson!
- The world's foremost 'authority' on orangutans.
- The Museum of Popular Arts showcases Portugal's finest 'handiworks'.
- There's a lot of guess'work' involved.
- Let's take the guess 'work' out of it.
- We've got some paper'work' to do before we can get started.
- With the rigors of clinical trials, there's a lot of paper 'work'
- He does 'woodwork' as a hobby.
- Friends and relatives were coming out of the 'woodwork' to celebrate his good fortune.
- So when he wants to, he can just kind of blend into the 'woodwork'.
- There are 'shortcuts' to some of my favourite applications on my desktop.
- She has a lighter and more 'coloratura' voice.
- This role has the most 'coloratura' singing in the opera.
- The 'moral' of the The Boy Who Cried Wolf is that if you repeatedly lie, people won't believe you when you tell the truth.
- We're renting a property in the city centre because we can't afford to get a 'mortgage' yet.
- The camp 'monitors' look after the children during the night, when the teachers are asleep.
- The information flashed up on the 'monitor'.
- I had a look in the 'mirror' to see if the blood had come off my face.
- We could see the lorry in the 'mirror', so decided to change lanes.
- His story is a 'mirror' into the life of orphans growing up.
- Although the content had been deleted from his blog, it was still found on some 'mirrors'.
- He tried to 'mirror' Elvis's life. He copied his fashion and his mannerisms, and even went to live in Graceland.
- The physical appearance of a candidate is a 'minor' factor in recruitment.
- a 'minor' scale.
- It is illegal to sell weapons to 'minors' under the age of eighteen.
- Not until the war ended and journalists were able to enter Cambodia did the world really become aware of the 'enormity' of Pol Pot's oppression.
- I visited a great site yesterday but forgot the URL; oh! ... luckily I didn't clear my 'history'.
- Often 'contemporary' customs differ as if dating from different ages, whether they do or not
- En kraftig 'storm' er venta seinere i dag.
- Ein kraftig 'storm' er venta seinare i dag.
- All the King's horses and all the King's Men, couldn't put Humpty together again.
- It took a lot of 'effort' to find a decent-sized, fully-furnished apartment withing walking distance of the office.
- He made a conscious 'effort' to not appear affected by the stories in the paper.
- Although he didn't win any medals, Johnson's 'effort' at the Olympics won over many fans.
- in recent 'memory'; in living 'memory'
- She has always been known as a capable 'wordsmith', but in this latest novel she also shows surprising emotional depth.
- A bad enough bruise can 'discolor' the skin.
- Those opposing the building plans were in the 'majority', so the building project was canceled.
- As you are my 'inferior', I can tell you to do anything I want.
- She finds it difficult to reach 'orgasm'.
- He can only have an 'orgasm' from masturbation.
- That chocolate cake just about gave me an 'orgasm'.
- Can I get an 'encore'? We want more!
- I need 'more' time.
- The law will come into 'force' in January.
- I have the 'authority' to penalise the staff in my department, but not the 'authority' to sack them.
- She lost all her respect and 'authority' after turning up drunk to the meeting.
- Respect my 'authority'!
- Israeli hummus is absolutely 'gorgeous'.
- If the membership function of a fuzzy set is continuous, then that fuzzy set's 'support' is an open set.
- It takes 'forever' to walk to work.
- There are much more 'foreign' students in Europe since the Erasmus scheme started.
- Eating with chopsticks was a 'foreign' concept to him.
- On an 'ordinary' day I wake up at nine o'clock, work for six hours, and then go to the gym.
- I live a very 'ordinary' life most of the time, but every year I spend a week in Antarctica.
- He looked so 'ordinary', I never thought he'd be capable of murder.
- There's a nice frilly 'border' around the picture frame.
- The 'border' between Canada and USA is the longest in the world.
- She will read your 'fortune'.
- I read about my 'fortunes' in the magazine. Apparently I will have a good love life this week, but I will have a bad week for money.
- 'Fortune' favors the brave.
- Landing the manager's job was more down to good 'fortune' than skill.
- He's amassed a small 'fortune' working in the Middle East.
- My vast 'fortune' was a result of inheritance and stock market nous.
- Her 'fortune' is estimated at 3 million dollars.
- That car must be worth a 'fortune'! How could you afford it?
- the country Myanmar or Burma
- The video rental place didn't have the film I was after, but I managed to 'torrent' it.
- She was 'worried' about her son who had been sent off to fight in the war.
- This fossil animal is regarded as the 'ancestor' of the horse.
- There are many more 'foreign' students in Europe since the Erasmus scheme started.
- I want this done 'before' Monday.
- The batsman succumbed to a 'snorter' of short balls from the bowler and nicked a thin edge to the keeper.
- The maths problem is a real 'snorter', isn't it?
- Sure they sell the product, but do they 'support' it?
- I 'support' France in the World Cup
- The government 'supports' the arts in several ways.
- The IT Department 'supports' the research organization, but not the sales force.
- I 'support' the administrative activities of the executive branch of the organization
- I don't make decisions, I just 'support' those who do.
- There were 10,000 'supporters' in the last match.
- He has always kept an 'orderly' kitchen, nothing out of place for longer than it is in use.
- Our shop was on the fourth 'story' of the building, so we had to install an elevator.
- He was four years her 'senior'.
- Théorie de linformation'.
- 45.000 persones han 'mort'
- The Investiture Controversy was a conflict between 'the Emperor' and the Pope.
- 'Corn' the horses.
- I'm terrible at sports -- I have no 'coordination'.
- Dikes may be 'discordant' to country rock if they intrude at a high angle to the bedding
- Jenny took Sam to her Year 12 'formal'.
- The word werewolves' consists of morphemes: "were" (~ man), "wolf" (a particular animal), "es" (plural), and " ' " (indicating possessive).
- Cowell
- Shelton
- It's extremely hard to 'corner' the petroleum market because there are so many players.
- My narcotics anonymous 'sponsor' became my best friend when I finally was able to do something about my meth problem.
- Raymond
- 'Collaboration' can be a useful part of the creative process.
- The husband-and-wife artists will release their new 'collaboration' in June this year.
- He has been charged with 'collaboration'.
- The heavy man 'laboriously' climbed the steep mountain, pulling himself up inch by inch.
- I work as an image 'compositor'.
- Knight
- 'Sorted' for E's & Wizz (song and album by UK band Pulp)
- That TV series has become awfully 'formulaic' in the last couple of seasons.
- All the King's horses and all the King's Men, couldn't put Humpty together again.
- Guys we can't use those overly revealing pictures in the campaign, they're too 'porn'.
- Robbie, on the other hand, on his first trip out with Clara's brother Licio, gathered twenty-three 'porcini' (more than his guide) [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=zwkjAQAAIAAJ&q=%22three+porcini%22&dq=%22three+porcini%22&hl=en&ei=SWffTt7DF4POhAe355yCBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAA]
- He 'efforted' his spirits. — Fuller.
- What's the 'story' with him?
- I tried it again; same 'story', no error message, nothing happened.
- Dunglison
- Coleridge
- Geddes
- An 'appellatory' libel ought to contain the name of the party appellant. — Ayliffe.
- Blackstone
- A 'mortal' wound.
- this new talk show will give a 'platform' to everyday men and women
- Je suis gynécologue de 'formation'. I'm a trainee gynecologist.
- It will take five 'working days' to process your application.
- My 'workday' is 8 hours.
- The steam engine was the predecessor of diesel and electric locomotives.
- a 'graduator' of instruments
- Facebook, Myspace 'et consorts' — Facebook, Myspace 'and the likes'.
- dođi s(j)edni pored mene — come and sit next to me (= lang=sh, lang=sh, lang=sh)
- metak je proletio pored mene — the bullet whizzed by me
- cesta ide pored r(ij)eke — the road goes along the river
- pored svih upozorenja — in spite of all warnings
- pored svega toga — in addition to all that
- pored ostalog — in addition to everything else
- ona nema ništa pored te prikolice — she has nothing except that trailer
- Snobs feel it's hard to call it wine with a straight face, when the 'cork' is made of plastic.
- There's a lot of 'storage' space in the loft.
- The new medical 'portal' has dozens of topical categories containing links to hundreds of sites.
- And certainly Modestine did wonders for the rest of the fore-noon, and I had a breathing space to look about me.
- It must be an 'orgasmic' experience to be an astronaut and see the earth as a little, colourful marble surrounded by blackness.
- He lived in 'north' Germany.
- She entered through the 'north' gate.
- The 'north' wind was cold.
- We headed 'north'.
- Oh, look at him: isn't he 'gorge'?
- alkalies are 'correctives' of acids
- penalties are 'correctives' of immoral conduct
- Sir M. Hale
- A 'conservatory' of life. — Jeremy Taylor.
- Burrill
- Many stations broadcast on 'shortwaves'.
- 'Shortwaves' are longer than microwaves.
- Denmark 'borders' Germany to the south
- He's trying to get a 'conforming' loan.
- Frank was 'colorblind' and had sewn small labels into his clothes to help him pick matching combinations.
- As a result of the lawsuit, the school adopted a 'colorblind' admissions policy.
- Swift
- A 'former' president.
- The former East Germany.
- The 'former' is a good idea but the latter is not.
- Bir morona aşık oldum. — I fell in love with a moron.
- The larder is so 'disorderly', I can't even find the potatoes.
- I can't stand 'disorderly' people.
- Palmyra Atoll is an 'unorganized' territory.
- "The 'foreskin' has two main functions. Firstly it exists to protect the glans penis. Secondly the foreskin is a primary sensory part of the penis, containing some of the most sensitive areas of the penis." - The Royal Australasian College of Physicians
- a 'world' of trouble
- a 'world' of embarrassment
- De Quincey
- He's very 'neighborly': he always collects my mail when I'm away on vacation.
- Him 'portioned' maids, apprenticed orphans, blest. — Alexander Pope.
- Jen has a new pair of 'sport' shoes, and a new 'sports' bra.
- I 'shoehorned' his dozen burgeoning bags into the backseat of my tiny car, and off we went.
- His staff want to 'shoehorn' an extra stop into his already packed campaigning schedule.
- Just as a monoid consists of an underlying set with a binary operation "on top of it" which is closed, associative and with an identity, a category consists of an underlying digraph with an arrow composition operation "on top of it" which is transitively closed, associative, and with an identity at each object. In fact, a category's composition operation, when restricted to a single one of its objects, turns that object's set of arrows (which would all be loops) into a monoid.
- Titanium dioxide exhibits 'trimorphism': its three forms are rutile, octahedrite, and brookite.
- The General Assembly 'authorized' the Council to take up the matter.
- The judge 'authorized' the wiretapping.
- Moore (Encyc. of Music)
- Spenser
- His dark soul was too 'incorrigible' to repent, even at his execution.
- All the King's 'horses' and all the King's Men, couldn't put Humpty together again.
- Hooper
- That program runs on the X Window System 'platform'.
- Church discipline is 'platformed' in the Bible. — Milton.
- Wiseman
- He was a most perfect knight, for he had great 'honor' and chivalry.
- His 'honor' was unstained.
- The crowds gave the returning general much 'honor' and praise.
- Audie Murphy received many 'honors', such as the Distinguished Service Cross.
- I'll let you have the 'honors', Bob—go ahead.
- The knight was 'sore' wounded.
- Ben Jonson
- The sruggle didnt end, 'nor' was it any less diminished
- his 'immortal' words
- The struggle didn't end, 'nor' was it any less diminished
- That movie is 'pornographically' violent.
- '1909', The metals are gold and silver, these being termed "'or'" and "argent". — Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, A Complete Guide to Heraldry
- '1889', In engraving, "'Or'" is expressed by dots. — Charles Norton Elvin, A Dictionary of Heraldry
- He's been in the Dodgers' 'organization' since 2003.
- And put upon him such a deal of man, That 'worthied' him, got praises of the king [...] — Shakespeare, King Lear.
- a 'stormy' season or a 'stormy' day
- Lé rouai est 'mort', lé rouai vit!
- 'Florid' psychosis.
- The test scores for this class were high.




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