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Risultati per "lay" :

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Beispiele für " lay "
  • His expertise at 'swordplay' made his acting in the part of Hamlet very believable.
  • She achieved success when her first single was 'playlisted' on national radio.
  • The city park 'playgrounds' offer various slides, tubes and swings.
  • The exclusive tropical island was a millionaire's 'playground'.
  • No wonder the fanbelt is slipping: there’s too much 'play' in it.
  • Too much 'play' in a steering wheel may be dangerous.
  • They 'played' long and hard.
  • He 'plays' on three teams.
  • Who's 'playing' now?
  • I've practiced the piano off and on, and I still can't 'play' very well.
  • He 'plays' the King, and she's the Queen.
  • 'play' football, 'play' sports, 'play' games
  • I'll 'play' the piano and you sing.
  • Can you 'play' an instrument?
  • We especially like to 'play' jazz together.
  • 'Play' a song for me.
  • Do you know how to 'play' Für Elise?
  • My son thinks he can 'play' music.
  • You can 'play' the DVD now.
  • '1930': Avail yourself of our Lay-By Service — Hordern Brothers (a Sydney retailer) advertisement, 16 October 1930.
  • '1931': enables you to secure Sale Bargains without the necessity of paying in full at once. Leave a deposit, pay the balance as it suits you, and on the completion of payments the goods will be delivered in the usual way. No interest is charged. — Anthony Hordern (another Sydney retailer), advertisement describing what they called their D.P.S., January 1931
  • Both quoted in Sidney J. Baker, The Australian Language, second edition, 1966, chapter X, section 2, page 206.
  • Bruce Wayne pretends to be a 'playboy' so no one realizes he is actually the superhero Batman.
  • to 'allay' popular excitement
  • to 'allay' the tumult of the passions
  • to 'allay' the severity of affliction or the bitterness of adversity
  • Actually, we are pretty 'playful' in our romantic life.
  • John is a 'playful' fellow.
  • A party hat is a 'playful' conical hat people wear at parties.
  • A brainteaser is a 'playful' puzzle posed as a test of intelligence.
  • He was a rather 'playful' artist.
  • Carmen is not a professional anthropologist, but strictly a 'laywoman'.
  • The knight 'slew' the dragon.
  • Our foes must all be 'slain'.
  • You must 'slay' these thoughts.
  • Ha ha! You 'slay' me!
  • Layer the ribbons on top of one another to make an attractive pattern.
  • He had to 'relay' the tiles because the cement was too dry.
  • The French Open is played on clay.
  • Carmen is not a professional anthropologist, but strictly a 'layman'.
  • Let me explain it to you in 'layman's' terms.
  • 'lay' brick
  • 'lay' flooring
  • colloquial the lay of the land (rather than the standard the lie of the land).
  • Worm and parcel with the 'lay'; turn and serve the other way.
  • What was I, just another 'lay' you can toss aside as you go on to your next conquest?
  • '1805' The Lay of the Last Minstrel, Sir Walter Scott
  • The baby 'lay' in its crib and slept silently.
  • Elle a chanté sa dernière chanson en 'playback'.
  • He would sometimes 'downplay' his Princeton education by saying simply that he went to school in New Jersey.
  • The book was written for professionals, but an intelligent 'layperson' could understand most of it.
  • Without too much 'outlay' you could buy a dictionary.
  • 'play' football
  • 'play' sports
  • 'play' games
  • No part of the brain 'plays' the role of permanent memory.
  • The 'underlay' in bar 3 is unclear in Handel's manuscript.
  • colloquial the 'lay' of the land (rather than the standard the lie of the land)
  • '1805' The 'Lay' of the Last Minstrel, Sir Walter Scott.
  • They seemed more 'lay' than clerical.
  • He would need an experienced partner to 'belay' him on the difficult climbs.
  • I could only hope the remaining piton would 'belay' his fall.
  • 'Belay' that order!
  • I know her and her haunts, Her lays, leaps, and 'outlays', and will discover all. ― Francis Beaumont.
  • We saw a two-act 'play' in the theatre.
  • We were outplayed at tennis, but we outplayed them at football.