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  • #Nederlands

Beispiele für " dad "
  • The sheep 'skedaddled' as soon as the shepherd’s dog came near.
  • He hadn't seen his 'dad' in years.
  • 'Dad', happy Father's Day!
Beispiele für " pa "
  • I couldn't find the 'particular' model you asked for, but I hope this one will do.
  • We knew it was named after John Smith, but nobody knows which 'particular' John Smith.
  • I don't appreciate your 'particular' brand of cynicism.
  • My five favorite places are, in no 'particular' order, New York, Chicago, Paris, San Fransisco and London.
  • I didn't have any 'particular' interest in the book.
  • He is very 'particular' about his food and if it isn't cooked to perfection he will send it back.
  • poikaparka (poor boy)
  • Voi parkaa! (Poor thing!)
  • "This sentence is false" is a 'paradox'.
  • It is an interesting 'paradox' that drinking a lot of water can often make you feel thirsty.
  • Not having a fashion is a fashion; that's a 'paradox'.
  • He is a 'paradox'; you would not expect him in that political party.
  • He 'paid' him to clean the place up.
  • Crime doesn’t 'pay'.
  • It didn't 'pay' him to keep the store open any more.
  • To 'pay' attention
  • He was allowed to go as soon as he 'paid'.
  • He 'paid' for his fun in the sun with a terrible sunburn.
  • Many employers have rules designed to keep employees from comparing their 'pays'.
  • Smith is the 'principal' architect of this design.
  • The 'principal' cause of the failure was poor planning.
  • A portion of your mortgage payment goes to reduce the 'principal', and the rest covers interest.
  • Now you're in trouble! You're going to see the 'principal' for that.
  • When an attorney represents a client, the client is the 'principal' who permits the attorney, the client's agent, to act on the client's behalf.
  • My 'principal' sells metal shims.
  • a partir de l'any 1799 Urgias va ser un dels 'principals' animadors del Parnàs Alguerès
  • We could not see the sandbar due to the 'opacity' of the muddy water.
  • The 'opacity' of these decisions is troubling.
  • The 'opacity' of a clean glass window is near zero.
  • The nurse entered the hospital suite and emptied the patient's 'bedpan' each morning.
  • Lice, fleas, ticks and mites are widely spread 'parasites'.
  • '2006' [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/14/technology/14google.html?hp&ex=1158292800&en=0715e3c0dff465e2&ei=5094&partner=homepage New York Times] Its financing 'pales' next to the tens of billions that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will have at its disposal, ...
  • The cold weather intensified the 'paleness' of the landscape.
  • The Mona Lisa is one of the most famous 'paintings'.
  • Artistic 'painting' often takes longer then utilitarian house - etc. painting.
  • Some artists excel in both 'painting' and sculpture, like Michelangelo.
  • Recently converted societies often dealt harshly with signs of a return to paganism.
  • While paganism is a broad term, most forms pay close attention to the lunar and solar cycles.
  • She is 'capable' and efficient.
  • He does not need help; he is 'capable' of eating on his own.
  • As everyone knew, he was 'capable' of violence when roused.
  • That fact is not 'capable' of proof.
  • The horizontal lines on my notebook paper are parallel.
  • The railway line runs 'parallel' to the road.
  • The road runs 'parallel' with the canal.
  • The 31st 'parallel' passes through the center of my town.
  • Die Linien meines Schreibpapiers laufen exakt parallel.
  • Die eine Bahnschiene verläuft auch in der Kurve stets parallel zur anderen.
  • Die Autobahn verläuft parallel zur Eisenbahn aber in ganz unterschiedlichen Biegungen und Kurven.
  • Die Eheleute hatten nichts verabredet, so haben sie parallel (zueinander) eingekauft.
  • The three counties that form the Oklahoma panhandle were originally part of the Cimmaron Strip.
  • The very wide Texas panhandle butts up, at its north, against the Oklahoma panhandle.
  • The Florida panhandle is the area west, along the Gulf coast, of the Florida Peninsula.
  • Part of Fairfield County, Connecticut consitutes a panhandle, extending into Bronx County, New York.
  • The Royal Navy kept 'patterned' birches and 'patterned' canes at the principal dockyards as specimens, intending to standardize the main implements used for formal corporal punishment on its ships
  • The castle was 'unprepared' for the assault.
  • A set S of real numbers is called 'compact' if every sequence in S has a subsequence that converges to an element again contained in S.
  • They beat us last year, so this year's win was 'payback'.
  • The Leaning Tower of Pisa is a 'campanile'.
  • The world economy had a rough 'patch' in the 1930s.
  • I'll need to 'patch' the preamp output to the mixer
  • Forgive us our 'trespasses', as we forgive those who trespass against us — s:Bible (King James)/Matthew#Chapter The Lord's Prayer. Matthew ch6. v.14, 15
  • The traditional remedy is a bitter 'preparation' made from steamed herbs.
  • 'Parking' a car in a tight spot gave him some satisfaction. as gerund
  • His 'parking' skills needed improvement. as participial adjective
  • They will be 'parking' the aircraft in the desert for the next few months. as progressive
  • Each one of his 'parkings' of securities was a separate count on the indictment. as gerundial noun
  • 'Parking' in central London can be very difficult.
  • It can be difficult to find 'parking' in central London.
  • the 'sparkle' of a diamond.
  • When my chihuahua shook his wet body, I was spattered with smelly water.
  • His vigorous 'patronage' of the conservatives got him in trouble with progressives.
  • The restaurant had an upper class 'patronage'.
  • apartment dwellers
  • We'll do some 'sparring' to apply what we've discussed.
  • An 'expansive' research work.
  • 'Parity' is always preserved in such operations.
  • The particles' 'parities' can switch at random.
  • 'Pardon?', What did you say?, Can you say that again?
  • He turned around 'in despair', aware that he was not going to survive
  • It started as a hobby, but now my motorbike collection has become my 'passion'.
  • … to obtain the knowledge of some 'passion' of the circle.
  • The contract requires that the 'party' of the first part pay the fee.
  • I can't possibly be a 'party' to that kind of reckless behaviour.
  • The green 'party' took 12% of the vote.
  • The settlers were attacked early next morning by a scouting 'party'.
  • I'm throwing a huge 'party' for my 21st birthday.
  • We're expecting a large 'party' from the London office.
  • We 'partied' until the early hours.
  • The 'paradigm' of "go" is "go, went, gone."
  • The use of simple, primary colors in the painting gave it a 'parochial' feel
  • The United States has been accused of taking a 'parochial' view, of not being interested in international matters.
  • A monorail will be a 'panacea' for our traffic woes.
  • World War I might have continued indefinitely if not for a 'pandemic' outbreak of influenza.
  • a 'departing' train
  • 'departing' words
  • cántame un pasodoble galego (sing me a Galician march)
  • To 'anticipate' and prevent the duke's purpose. --R. Hall.
  • He would probably have died by the hand of the executioner, if indeed the executioner had not been 'anticipated' by the populace. -- w:Thomas Babington Thomas Babington Macaulay.
  • The advocate plans to 'anticipate' a part of her argument.
  • to 'anticipate' the pleasures of a visit
  • to 'anticipate' the evils of life
  • Please 'anticipate' a journey of an hour from your house to the airport
  • Little Johnny started to 'anticipate' the arrival of Santa Claus a week before Christmas.
  • The judge's 'partiality' towards the defendant caused him to be replaced, with someone who was apparently more neutral.
  • Janitors 'padlock' the gates (Del Amitri, Nothing Ever Happens)
  • That was the most 'painfully' sung rendition of "Fly Me to the Moon" that I've ever heard.
  • That was an 'appalling' waste of money.
  • When he tripped and fell in the street, several kind 'passers-by' helped him up.
  • US President Abraham Lincoln was called the Great Emancipator after issuing the 'Emancipation' Proclamation in 1863.
  • He made a careful 'comparison' of the available products before buying anything.
  • There really is no 'comparison' between the performance of today's computers and those of a decade ago.
  • We accused her of 'parasitism' in taking his hard-earned money for new dresses.
  • These laws are absolutely 'paleolithic'.
  • packed lunch
  • packed with goodness
  • The bus was packed and I couldn't get on.
  • The overall plan is well understood, but we still have to work out the 'particulars'.
  • 'Parliamentary' procedures are sometimes slow
  • Britain is a 'parliamentary' democracy
  • 'Capacitive' touchscreens are all glass and designed for use in ATMs and similar kiosk-type applications.
  • In the novel, Constanza is a 'paragon' of virtue who would never compromise her reputation.
  • Compare the tiger's coloration with that of the zebra
  • You can't compare my problems and yours
  • Astronomers have compared comets to dirty snowballs
  • We compare 'good' as 'good', 'better', 'best'
  • A sapling and a fully-grown oak tree do not compare
  • Since home plate is generally in the southwest corner to avoid glare in the batter's eyes, a 'southpaw's' pitching hand is to the south.
  • '1984'. “She wore loose black silks and black espadrilles”. Neuromancer. w:William William Gibson
  • Maybe I'm 'paranoid', but that doesn't mean that they are not out to get me.
  • I only had ten cents in my pocket, so I couldn't use the 'payphone' to call a cab.
  • This chair can be disassembled into five 'separate' pieces.
  • I try to keep my personal life 'separate' from work.
  • 'Separate' the articles from the headings.
  • If the kids get too noisy, 'separate' them for a few minutes.
  • The sauce will 'separate' if you don't keep stirring.
  • An elephant is 'comparable' in size to a double-decker bus.
  • You can't say that robbing a bank is like pickpocketing. The two are just not 'comparable'.
  • Six and forty-two are 'comparable' in the divides order, but six and nine are not.
  • "Big" is a 'comparable' adjective, since it can take the forms "bigger" and "biggest"; but "unique" is not 'comparable', except in disputed, but common, usage.
  • For some instant noodles make a 'palatable', if not especially nutritious, meal.
  • The agreement was 'palatable' to both of them.
  • The candidate spoke of his opponent 'disparagingly', but they only made him seem small for insulting a worthy adversary.
  • payer une amende - pay a fine
  • payer un service - pay for a service
  • il m'a payé 3 euros - he paid me 3 euros
  • payer la cassière - pay the cashier
  • The journalist interviewed an eye-witness who was not 'prepared' to disclose his identity.
  • A man may be 'apparently' friendly, yet malicious in heart.
  • 'Apparently' you are quite a good dancer.
  • The board of the company was decidedly 'disparate' – no two members from the same social or economic background.
  • You can 'expand' this compact umbrella to cover a large table.
  • Use the binomial theorem to 'expand' to
  • Many materials 'expand' when heated.
  • This compact umbrella 'expands' to cover a large table.
  • He's so pedantic, he 'expands' on everything!
  • The expression 'expands' to .
  • He was delighted after getting his first paycheck, but subsequently blew it all on the horses
  • a mountain 'pass'
  • "Try not the 'pass'!" the old man said. - w:Henry Wadsworth Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  • Have his daughters brought him to this 'pass'. - Shakespeare
  • Matters have been brought to this 'pass'. - w:Robert Robert South
  • A ship sailing under the flag and 'pass' of an enemy. - w:James James Kent
  • Smith was given a 'pass' after Jones' double.
  • The man kicked his friend out of the house after he made a 'pass' at his wife.
  • Common speech gives him a worthy 'pass'. - Shakespeare
  • Anyone want to trade 'passes'?
  • Beauty is a charm, but soon the charm will 'pass'. - w:John John Dryden
  • Their vacation 'passed' pleasantly.
  • The bill 'passed' both houses of Congress.
  • He attempted the examination, but did not expect to 'pass'.
  • This 'passes', Master Ford. - Shakespeare
  • As for these silken-coated slaves, I 'pass' not. - Shakespeare
  • An estate 'passes' by a certain clause in a deed.
  • 'pass' a house
  • To 'pass' commodiously this life. - w:John John Milton
  • She loved me for the dangers I had 'passed'. - Shakespeare
  • Please you that I may 'pass' This doing. - Shakespeare
  • I 'pass' their warlike pomp, their proud array. - w:John John Dryden
  • And strive to 'pass' . . . Their native music by her skillful art. - w:Edmund Edmund Spenser
  • Whose tender power 'Passes' the strength of storms in their most desolate hour. - w:George Gordon Byron
  • He 'passed' his examination.
  • The bill 'passed' the senate.
  • The waiter 'passed' biscuit and cheese.
  • The torch was 'passed' from hand to hand.
  • I had only time to 'pass' my eye over the medals. - w:Joseph Joseph Addison
  • Waller 'passed' over five thousand horse and foot by Newbridge. - w:Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Edward Hyde Clarendon
  • to 'pass' sentence - Shakespeare
  • Father, thy word is 'passed'. - Milton
  • He 'passed' the bill through the committee.
  • The senate 'passed' the law.
  • 'pass' counterfeit money
  • 'Pass' the happy news. - w:Alfred Alfred Tennyson
  • 'pass' a person into a theater or over a railroad
  • Iaquinta 'passes' it coolly into the right-hand corner as Paston dives the other way. - [http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/jun/20/world-cup-2010-italy-new-zealand-live 'The Guardian'], Rob Smyth, 20 June 2010
  • His dog has been his trusted 'companion' for the last five years.
  • He is letting her select the 'wallpapers' for the whole house.
  • The subject of a passive verb is usually a 'patient'.
  • I saw a brown paper 'parcel' on my doorstep.
  • I own a small 'parcel' of land between the refinery and the fish cannery.
  • Worm and 'parcel' with the lay; turn and serve the other way.
  • He is a Scottish nationalist and has a large collection of 'separatist' literature.
  • On rare occasions French-Canadian 'separatists' have resorted to violence.
  • The 'expansion' of metals and plastics in response to heat is well understood.
  • My new office is in the 'expansion' behind the main building.
  • "This 'expansion' requires the original game-board."
  • a 'spare' diet
  • I have no 'spare' time.
  • When his back problems kept him from lifting furniture, his skill as a 'packer' kept him employed.
  • The employer sued to recover 'overpayment' of wages.
  • We 'prepared' the spacecraft for takeoff.
  • We 'prepared' a fish for dinner.
  • We 'prepared' for a bumpy ride.
  • She 'prepared' a meal from what was left in the cupboards.
  • The Nimrods are strong on the outside, but not very good in the 'paint'.
  • I am running low on 'paint' for my marker.
  • They found a 'discrepancy' between the first set of test results and the second, and they're still trying to figure out why.
  • Throw a 'tarpaulin' over that woodpile before it gets wet.
  • She 'newspapered' one end of the room before painting the bookcase.
  • He 'newspapered' his way through the South on the sports beat, avoiding dry towms.
  • He was 'newspapered' out of public life.
  • It takes 24 hours for password changes to 'propagate' throughout the system.
  • The server 'propagates' the password file at midnight each day.
  • past glories
  • past tense
  • during the past year
  • I watched him walk past
  • the room past mine
  • count past twenty
  • past Midnight
  • While the environment is teeming with bacteria and fungi, most are not 'pathogenic'.
  • King Hrothgar thought that Grendel was 'unstoppable'.
  • He made an 'impassioned' plea for his life.
  • A psychopathic killer is on the loose.
  • The candidate made 'disparaging' remarks about his opponent, but they only made him seem small for insulting a worthy adversary.
  • The company is targeting children in their latest advertising 'campaign'.
  • She 'campaigned' for better social security.
  • Mon 'patron' m'a accordé quelques jours de vacances supplémentaires.
  • A bishop is entitled to certain episcopalian privileges.
  • 'Pap' and wors is traditionally eaten at a braai.
  • Look, that pop star’s been papped in her bikini again!
  • He got his 'comeuppance' for cheating.
  • After having an affair with a junior, her chances of promotion were seriously jeopardized.
  • Boredom is an 'occupational' hazard if you are a checkout girl.
  • We had a nice 'paddle' this morning.
  • The 'paddle' practically ousted the British cane as the spanker's attribute in the independent US
  • A sea turtle's 'paddles' make it swim almost as fast as land tortoises are slow
  • I've got only one 'spade' in my hand.
  • Your mobile is 'pants' — why don’t you get one like mine?
  • Monarchies where 'partition' isn't prohibited risk weakening trough parcellation and civil wars between the heirs
  • Construction of the new offices is proceeding 'apace'.
  • Though a 'pawn' of the gods, her departure is the precipitating cause of the Trojan War.
  • All our jewellery was in 'pawn' by this stage.
  • The 'papacy' represents the head of the Catholic Church.
  • The 'papacy' of John Paul II ended in 2005, after the pope's long battle with illness ended.
  • As a result of a childhood accident, my sister was 'hearing-impaired' and had to wear a hearing aid.
  • The candidate experienced 'unparalleled' support in the last election.
  • The hatchet cut the wood on 'impact'.
  • His spine had an impingement; L4 and L5 made 'impact', which caused numbness in his leg.
  • His friend's opinion had an 'impact' on his decision.
  • Our choice of concrete will have a tremendous 'impact' on the building's mechanical performance.
  • If fecal incontinence is caused by 'impacted' stool in the rectum, the impaction must be removed.
  • I can make the changes, but it will 'impact' the schedule.
  • When the hammer 'impacts' the nail, it bends.
  • That is a 'patent' ductus arteriosus.
  • Behind the picture was a panel on the wall
  • Today's panel includes John Smith...
  • I couldn't decide which of the 'pair' of designer shirts I preferred, so I bought the 'pair'.
  • Spouses should make a great 'pair'.
  • a pair of scissors; two pairs of spectacles; several pairs of jeans
  • but not a pair of cymbals
  • A 'pair' is harder to drive than two mounts with separate riders.
  • They turned a 'pair' to end the fifth.
  • The Pirates took a 'pair' from the Phillies.
  • She's got a gorgeous 'pair'.
  • The wedding guests were 'paired' boy-girl and groom's party-bride's party
  • I bought a wonderful 'parrot' at the pet store.
  • What kind of a 'parrot' are you? He just said that.
  • The floats and horses in the 'parade' were impressive, but the marching bands were really amazing.
  • The dinner was a 'parade' of courses, each featuring foods more elaborate than the last.
  • He was parked on Chester 'Parade'.
  • They 'paraded' around the field, simply to show their discipline.
  • They 'paraded' dozens of fashions past the crowd.
  • After the field show, it is customary to 'parade' the stands before exiting the field.
  • He has an impressive collection of bicycling 'paraphernalia', but he doesn't ride very often anymore.
  • His 'disparagement' of his opponent failed to dissuade voters.
  • She wrote an essay expounding the tenets of Scottish 'separatism'.
  • Apartheid was a government-enformed form of 'separatism' in which people received unequal social benefits based on race.
  • Did you test the software 'package' to ensure completeness?
  • The students were 'paired' to work together, reducing the number of homeworks to be graded by half.
  • The seeds were adjusted to make sure that there were good 'pairings' for the tennis tournament.
  • The author began to 'pad' her succinct stories with trite descriptions to keep up with current market trends.
  • "Obama pads delegate lead ... with win in key western state." Austin American-Statesman newspaper, May 21, 2008.
  • to 'pad' cloth
  • I heard her soft footsteps, 'pad', 'pad' along the corridor.
  • This is indeed a 'paltry' flyer about a silly product.
  • She made some 'paltry' excuse and left.
  • Could someone hope to survive on such a 'paltry' income?
  • Student grants these days are 'paltry', and many students have to take out loans.
  • They proceeded to make 'pairwise' comparisons.
  • John plans to 'pal' around with Joe today.
  • I took the car to the workshop for 'repair'.
  • If you look closely you can see the 'repair' in the paintwork
  • The car was overall in poor 'repair' before the accident. But after the workshop had it for three weeks it was returned in excellent 'repair'. But the other vehicle was beyond 'repair'.
  • our annual 'repair' to the mountains.
  • I heard the visitors 'repair' to their chambers. Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte 1850.
  • Gaul is divided into three 'parts'.
  • The 'parts' of a chainsaw include the chain, engine, and handle.
  • to do one’s 'part'
  • I want my 'part' of the bounty.
  • We all have a 'part' to play.
  • The mixture comprises one 'part' sodium hydroxide and ten 'parts' water.
  • Please turn to 'Part' I, Chapter 2.
  • The 'part' of his hair was slightly to the left.
  • The first violin 'part' in this concerto is very challenging.
  • to 'part' the curtains
  • Fred was 'part' owner of the car.
  • fyri ein 'part' - partial
  • une grande part - a large share
  • une grande part de tarte - a large portion of cake
  • pour ma 'part' - for my part, as far as I'm concerned, as for me
  • pour la 'part' de mon ami - as far as my friend's concerned, as for my friend
  • They didn't have time to 'unpack' their bags before going out to dinner.
  • They didn't have time to 'unpack' before going to dinner.
  • 'Pan'! T'es mort!
  • Czy mógłby 'pan' zamknąć drzwi? – Could you close the door?
  • Para mi desayuno, tomo 'pan' y leche.
  • paroles d'une chanson - words of a song, lyrics of a song
  • il tient parole - he keeps his word
  • Le député a la parole - the member has the floor
  • Ci vogliono fatti e non 'parole'.
  • Musica di Paolo, 'parole' di Lorenzo
  • The police officer was incapacitated by a blow to the head
  • The magician claimed he could 'telepathically' determine which card I was holding, but I knew it was a trick.
  • 'passage' of scripture
  • She struggled to play the difficult 'passages'.
  • He made his 'passage' through the trees carefully, mindful of the stickers.
  • The company was one of the prime movers in lobbying for the 'passage' of the act.
  • He 'passaged' the virus through a series of goats.
  • After 24 hours, the culture was 'passaged' to an agar plate.
  • They 'passaged' to America in 1902.
  • The 'sparseness' of the hair on his head made him long for his full haired youth.
  • pasta za zube — toothpaste
  • pasta za cipele — shoe polish
  • I went on the retreat to the monastery thinking I would be sleeping in a 'spartan' cell to discover a simple, but comfortable bedroom.
  • The 'spartan' legionnaries vowed to fight to the death.
  • After ten years as a fashion designer in the rough-and-tumble Garment District, Eloise left New York for the 'spartan' but serene life of a farmer's wife.
  • The old man’s 'pathetic' pleas for forgiveness stirred the young man’s heart.
  • You can't even run two miles? That’s 'pathetic'.
  • You're almost 26 years old and you still can't hold a real job? That's 'pathetic'.
  • I have no 'palaver' with him.
  • The home where he lived was 'palatial'.
  • In France there is an army of 'patrols' to secure her fiscal regulations. -A. Hamilton.
  • the department of 'neuropathology'
  • Alzheimer-type 'neuropathology'
  • The greatest difficulty lies in treating patients with chronic 'pain'.
  • I had to stop running when I started getting 'pains' in my feet.
  • In the final analysis, 'pain' is a fact of life.
  • The 'pain' of departure was difficult to bear.
  • Your mother is a right 'pain'.
  • You may not leave this room on 'pain' of death.
  • Interpose, on 'pain' of my displeasure. — Dryden
  • We will, by way of mulct or 'pain', lay it upon him. — Bacon
  • The wound 'pained' him.
  • It 'pains' me to say that I must let you go.
  • You will have to bring your 'passport' to prove who you are.
  • the 'page' of history
  • The patient 'paged' through magazines while he waited for the doctor.
  • I’ll be out all day, so 'page' me if you need me.
  • An SUV parked me in. Could you please 'page' its owner?
  • The youngster 'outpaced' his grandfather and ran on ahead.
  • Even at the duel, standing 10 'paces' apart, he could have satisfied Aaron’s honor.
  • I have perambulated your field, and estimate its perimeter to be 219 'paces'.
  • OHSU accelerates the 'pace' of technology spin-offs.
  • The 'pace' of the Olympic walk is much greater than normal human walking.
  • 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.
  • The sun today could 'parch' cement.
  • We used grandma's skillet to 'parch' corn.
  • The patient's mouth is 'parched' from fever.
  • We're 'parched' Hon. Could you send up an ale from the cooler?
  • The locals watched, amused, as the tourists 'parched' in the sun, having neglected to apply sunscreen or bring water.
  • 'spatula' porcina — "leg of pork"
  • The former problem student 'surpassed' his instructor's expectations and scored top marks on his examination.
  • The heavy rains threatened to 'surpass' the capabilities of the levee, endangering the town on the other side.
  • 'Pant' leg
  • Domestic 'spanking' is often endured over the knee (or lap), formal 'spanking' rather applied over a contraption such as a tresle or A-frame, with or without constraints
  • a 'spanking' pace
  • a 'spanking' breeze
  • a 'spanking' good time
  • brand 'spanking' new
  • Over het algemeen vindt men vier kleuren in een inkjetprinter. Zwart zit bijna altijd in een cartridge, de andere kleuren kunnen ook in één cartridge zitten. — In general one finds four colors in an inkjet printer. Black sits almost always in a separate cartridge, the other colors can also sit in a single cartridge.
  • These mashed potatoes aren’t cooked well, they are very 'pasty'.
  • He is 'pasty'-faced.
  • He was feeling 'pasty'.
  • The suspension bridge 'spanned' the canyon as tenuously as one could imagine.
  • The parking lot 'spans' 3 acres.
  • The novel 'spans' three centuries.
  • Terry Fox fame 'spans' globe.
  • World record! 5GHz WiFi connection 'spans' 189 miles. [http://www.engadget.com/2007/08/27/world-record-5ghz-wifi-connection-spans-189-miles/]
  • 1890: So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as she 'span'. — w:H. Rider H. Rider Haggard, w:Eric Eric Brighteyes [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/272
  • So far, I have only pieced together a 'partial' account of the incident.
  • It's easy to prove 'partial' correctness, but it's not obvious that it is also totally correct.
  • The referee is blatantly 'partial'!
  • Various European countries transferred the aviation control of their adjoining 'airspace' to Eurocontrol, while each retaining legal jurisdiction
  • The legalisation of free radios caused a bitter fight for 'airspace'.
  • Some clams have 'lifespans' far longer than those of human beings.
  • a 'multiparty' democracy
  • a 'multiparty' telephone call
  • I sent the memo to the accounting department via 'interdepartmental' mail.
  • The memo discussed a new 'interdepartmental' project that would require resources from nearly every group.
  • 3 est un nombre 'impair'. - 3 is an odd number.
  • He really 'parked' that one.
  • They stopped at a romantic overlook, shut off the engine, and 'parked'.
  • He came in and 'parked' himself in our living room.
  • 'Park' your bags in the hall.
  • We decided to 'park' our money in a safe, stable, low-yield bond fund until market conditions improve.
  • His latest statements seemed to 'depart' from party policy somewhat.
  • The house of peers was somewhat 'appalled' at this alarum. --w:Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Edward Hyde Clarendon.
  • They 'partly' finished the house so they could move in before winter.
  • The car was 'partly' visible in the garage.
  • The 'spacing' of the desks in the exam hall was intended to prevent candidates from copying each other's work.
  • Put some more 'spacing' between those two words to make them more readable.
  • I palpated his expired heart.
  • The apartment has a 'spacious' bedroom . . .
  • . . and it has a 'spacious' view of the mountains.
  • My bother had a 'palish' complexion.
  • The transport strike 'paralyzed' the city.
  • 'paper' bag
  • 'paper' plane
  • 'paper' tiger
  • to 'paper' the hallway walls
  • After they reached an agreement, their staffs 'papered' it up.
  • After having an affair with a junior, her chances of promotion were seriously 'jeopardised'
  • Pater noster, qui es in caelis, sanctificetur nomen tuum. Adveniat regnum tuum. Fiat voluntas tua, sicut in caelo et in terra. Panem nostrum quotidianum da nobis hodie, et dimitte nobis debita nostra sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostris. Et ne nos inducas in tentationem, sed libera nos a malo. Amen.
  • Those brass knobs and their hollow 'counterparts' interlock perfectly
  • The homeless man had built a little shelter, complete with cook-stove, beneath a concrete 'overpass'.
  • Gillian watched the 'overpassing' shoppers on the second floor of the mall, as she relaxed in the bench on the ground floor.
  • Marshall was really 'overpassing' his authority when he ordered the security guards to fire their tasers at the trespassers.
  • The precocious student had really 'overpassed' her peers, and was reading books written for children several years older.
  • "Don't 'overpass' those cheeses; they're really quite excellent!" gushed Terry, pointing to the buffet table.
  • 'Ships' . . . appareled to fight. --Hayward.
  • They which are gorgeously 'appareled', and live delicately, are in kings' courts. --Luke vii. 25.
  • In the New Testament the 'parables' told by Jesus convey His message, as in "The parable of the prodigal son"
  • Catholic sermons normally draw on at least one Biblical lecture, often 'parables'.
  • I am 'culpable' for stealing your money. '(Deserving Blame)'
  • The comedy movie 'parodied' the entire Western genre.
  • I could hear the patter of the burglar, so I hid in the linen closet.
  • The bullets 'pattered' in the log-cabin walls.
  • The waters of the lake were 'transparent' until the factory dumped wastes there.
  • His reasons for the decision were 'transparent'.
  • Le verre est 'transparent'.
  • Un ciel (air, lumière, etc.) 'transparent'.
  • une allusion 'transparente'.
  • La nacre des coquillages est rendue plus 'transparente' par un bain d'acide.
  • j'étais 'transparent' à ses regards.
  • Notre comptabilité est 'transparente'.
  • un mot 'transparent'.
  • Cet enfant ne saurait écrire sans 'transparent'.
  • Le soir, cette boutique avait pour enseigne un magnifique 'transparent'.
  • La présentation était trop rapide. J'ai à peine eu le temps de recopier les 'transparents'.
  • The horses carried the 'packs' across the plain.
  • A 'pack' of lies.
  • We were going to play cards, but nobody brought a 'pack'.
  • '2005', John D. Skinner and Christian T. Chimimba - The mammals of the southern African subregion‎
  • a 'pack' of thieves or knaves.
  • The ship had to sail round the 'pack' of ice.
  • 'pack' goods in a box
  • 'pack' fish in a box.
  • to 'pack' a trunk
  • the play, or the audience, 'packs' the theater.
  • 'pack' a jury or a causes.
  • to 'pack' a horse
  • 'pack' a boy off to school.
  • The doctor gave Kelly some sulfa pills and packed his arm in hot-water bags
  • to 'pack' a joint
  • to 'pack' the piston of a steam engine.
  • 'pack' someone's arm with ice.
  • Le déjeuner était 'parfait'.
  • There was no sink in the room so we 'spat' out the window.
  • If I had known you had a spittoon in the corner I would never have 'spat' on the floor.
  • Al Photoshop s'usen diferents 'capes' per tractar la imatge.
  • La 'capa' d'ozó està en perill.
  • El duc portava una 'capa' molt maca.
  • He exercised every day to avoid becoming 'paunchy' in his old age.
  • As a politician he was a well known 'panderer' to the lowest of public opinions.
  • This book on English grammar 'encompasses' all irregular verbs.
  • Drake 'encompassed' the globe.
  • The ship was really 'spanking' along.
  • The sudden 'apparition' of the Spaniards. -- w:William H. William H. Prescott.
  • The 'apparition' of Lawyer Clippurse occasioned much speculation in that portion of the world. -- w:Sir W. Sir W. Scott.
  • Which 'apparition', it seems, was you. --Tatler.
  • The heavenly bands . . . a glorious apparition. --w:John John Milton.
  • I think it is the weakness of mine eyes That shapes this monstrous 'apparition'. --
  • The neighborhood has been 'spackled' with coffee shops.
  • We 'pared' the paired pears.
  • Albrecht had to 'pare' his options down by disregarding anything beyond his meager budget.
  • Luckily, the damage from the accident was 'repairable'.
  • Let’s get in the 'ballpark', then worry about the fine details.
  • If you don’t have the exact expense total, just 'ballpark' it.
  • The radiation and chemotherapy were only 'palliatives'.
  • He remained 'passive' during the protest.
  • a.   a godparent
  • b.   a divorced or separated parent that shares custody with the other parent.
  • c.   a parent in a same-sex couple
  • The cook fried the hamburger patty then put it in a sandwich.
  • To show affection, he decided he would 'pat' the boy on the head.
  • I 'patted' the cookie dough into shape.
  • Your manager is not going to be satisfied with your 'pat' ideas for the new project.
  • He has the routine down 'pat'.
  • Pass me that 'spanner', Jake; there's just one more nut to screw in.
  • Half way through the production of Macbeth, the director found that the stage was smaller than he expected. This really threw a 'spanner' in the works.
  • You 'spanner', Rodney! I wanted a Chinese, not an Indian!
  • Het Parool — a Dutch newspaper
  • Consider the two propositions 'apart'.
  • to take a piece of machinery 'apart'.
  • A handful of examples 'apart', an English preposition precedes its complement.
  • He lost his 'papers' while travelling and had a hard time getting home.
  • para ec-march
  • Aš manau kad užtruks apie vieną parą. — I think it will take about 24 hours.
  • Nagtatrabaho si Ate Virgie 'para' sa kanyang pamilya.
  • Tumakbo ako 'para' makaabot sa kanila.
  • His 'impaired' driving skill due to alcohol caused the accident.
  • The cop gave me an 'impaired'.
  • Hyde 'Park' in London; Central 'Park' in New York
  • a 'park' of wagons, a 'park' of artillery
  • A country's tank park or artillery park
  • He needs to make this shot for 'par'.
  • He will need to 'par' every hole in order to win this game.
  • le bateau est attaqué par les pirates. - the boat is [being] attacked by pirates.
  • I will conduct some 'preparatory' research before choosing the new restaurant's location.
  • He was a man of great 'parts' but little virtue.
  • 'pallor' of the complexion
  • Many laptop computers have special function keys which turn part of the alphabetical keyboard into a numerical 'keypad'.
  • US President Abraham Lincoln was called the Great 'Emancipator' after issuing the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863.
  • De visade en dokumentär om 'apor' på teve.
  • "They showed a documentary about primates on TV."
  • Vad gör den där jävla 'apan' här?
  • "What's that bitch doing here?"
  • Det luktar 'apa' här inne.
  • "It smells terrible in here."
  • De 'apade' bara efter det jag hade skrivit.
  • "They just aped what I had written."
  • Hon 'apade' sig inför hela klassen.
  • "She monkeyed around in front of the whole class."
  • He 'accompanied' his speech with a bow.
  • The strings were 'accompanied' by two woodwinds.
  • I get far too much 'spam'.
  • I received 58 'spams' yesterday.
  • '1851', w:Herman Herman Melville, Moby-Dick
  • Tupperware 'party'
  • lingerie 'party'
  • 'par' la fenêtre
  • aller 'par' le parc
  • voyager 'par' train
  • 'par' surprise
  • Viens 'par' ici !
  • voir 'par' devant
  • le liquide est arrivé 'par' le robinet
  • 'par' tout le cinéma
  • 'par' terre
  • 'par' un beau jour
  • 'par' un soir
  • marcher 'par' deux
  • trois fois 'par' semaine
  • 'par' pure colère
  • 'par' tristesse
  • The horizontal lines on my notebook paper are 'parallel'.
  • The two railway lines are 'parallel'.
  • Care must be taken lest the machine 'parallelize' the fibers.
  • The programmers had to learn how to 'parallelize' their algorithms.
  • They erroneously 'parallelized' the symptoms of the two diseases.
  • The poor condition of the vehicle put its occupants in constant 'jeopardy'.
  • 'third-party' video game
  • 'third-party' character
  • He turned around in 'despair', aware that he was not going to survive
  • World record! 5 GHz WiFi connection 'spans' 189 miles. [http://www.engadget.com/2007/08/27/world-record-5ghz-wifi-connection-spans-189-miles/]
  • I think it is the weakness of mine eyes That shapes this monstrous 'apparition'. --w:William William Shakespeare
  • att vara 'part' i målet
  • arbetsmarknadens 'parter'
  • prvo ću skočiti ja, pa ti — I'll jump first, (and) then you
  • učenje pa odmor pa zabava — learning, then rest, then fun
  • potrošio sam sav novac, pa sam se morao vratiti kući — I've spent all of my money, so I had to return home
  • bogat je, pa ipak usamljen — he's rich, but still lonely
  • pa dobro! — well, all right!
  • pa što je s tobom? — what's wrong with you?
  • pa i ne baš — not really
  • pa što onda? — so what?
  • han vaknade med ett 'pang'
  • The children were all wearing 'anticipatory' grins in the minutes before the cake was served.
  • Halfway through the production of Macbeth, the director found that the stage was smaller than he expected. This really threw a 'spanner' in the works.
  • Often the 'anticipation' of a shot is worse than the pain of the stick.
  • He waited with great 'anticipation' for Christmas to arrive.
  • 'Parading' all her sensibility. Byron.
  • His sleeves had 'patches' on the elbows, where the material had worn away.
  • I can't afford to replace the roof, which is what it really needs. I'll have the roofer apply a 'patch'.
  • Many people use a nicotine 'patch' to wean themselves off of nicotine.
  • He had scratched his cornea so badly that his doctor told him to wear a 'patch'.
  • Is value added tax payable on planning application fees?
  • Will you 'partake' of some food?
  • Nowadays there are all kinds of potential 'parentals' besides parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles, step-parents, in-laws, older siblings and cousins, and those in civil unions.
  • The American Roman Catholic episcopate regularly meets together.
  • Bishop Smith's episcopate ran for more than 30 years.
  • Han vaknade med ett 'pang'.
  • We shared a night of 'passion' in a four-star hotel.
  • I have a strong 'passion' for opera music.
  • I finally 'repaid' my student loans, just before sending my kids to college.
  • Mennään syömään 'tapaksia'.
  • She sued the author of the biography, claiming it 'painted' her as a duplicitous fraud.
  • If you want to beat that monster, you should 'party' with a healer.
  • a 'company' of actors.
  • How are we 'parked', and bounded in a pale. — Shakespeare.
  • He was 'passing' blood in both his urine and his stool.
  • The poison had been 'passed' by the time of the autopsy.
  • You can 'park' the car in front of the house.
  • Let's 'park' that until next week's meeting.
  • When telling the scary story, he 'paused' for effect.
  • He 'paused' the video until every was quiet, then pressed Play.
  • Te 'pup' dulce.
  • Roughly, a tuple of arguments could be thought of as a vector, whereas a tuple of 'parameters' could be thought of as a covector (i.e., linear functional). When a function is called, a 'parameter' tuple becomes "bound" to an argument tuple, allowing the function instance itself to be computed to yield a return value. This would be roughly analogous to applying a covector to a vector (by taking their dot product (or, rather, matrix-product of row vector and column vector)) to obtain a scalar.
  • 'Compare' the tiger's coloration with that of the zebra.
  • You can't 'compare' my problems and yours.
  • Astronomers have 'compared' comets to dirty snowballs
  • We 'compare' 'good' as 'good', 'better', 'best'
  • A sapling and a fully-grown oak tree do not 'compare'.
  • We share a 'passion' for books.
  • He has an intense 'passion' towards saving the rain-forest.
  • We shared a night of 'passion'.
  • I have 'pale' yellow wallpaper.
  • She had 'pale' skin because she didn't get much sunlight.
  • His face turned 'pale' after hearing about his mother' death.
  • Izakaya food is basically Japanese tapas.
  • They 'passed' from room to room.
  • You will 'pass' a house on your right.
  • He 'passed' from youth into old age.
  • what will we do to 'pass' the time?
  • It will soon come to 'pass'.
  • At first, she was worried, but that feeling soon 'passed'.
  • His grandmother 'passed' yesterday.
  • His grandmother 'passed' away yesterday.
  • His grandmother 'passed' on yesterday.
  • Despite the efforts of the opposition, the bill 'passed'.
  • The bill 'passed' the Senate, but did not 'pass' in the House.
  • It isn't ideal, but it will 'pass'.
  • The estate 'passes' by the third clause in Mr Smith's deed to his son.
  • When the old king passed away with only a daughter as an heir, the throne 'passed' to a woman for the first time in centuries.
  • Please you that I may 'pass' / This doing.
  • I 'pass' their warlike pomp, their proud array.
  • She loved me for the dangers I had 'passed'.
  • She's gotten 'palsy-walsy' with her in-laws lately.
  • '1984'. “She wore loose black silks and black 'espadrilles'”. Neuromancer. William Gibson
  • It was hauling a 'capacity' load.
  • The orchestra played to a 'capacity' crowd.
  • Its 'capacity' rating was 150 tons per hour, but its actual maximum 'capacity' was 200 tons per hour.
  • There will be a 'capacity' crowd at Busch stadium for the sixth game.
  • My brother had a 'palish' complexion.
  • Bp. Burnet
  • Shakespeare
  • The American Roman Catholic 'episcopate' regularly meets together.
  • Bishop Smith's 'episcopate' ran for more than 30 years.
  • Addison
  • "Obama 'pads' delegate lead ... with win in key western state." Austin American-Statesman newspaper, May 21, 2008.
  • She had a lot of 'empathy' for her neighbor; she knew what it was like to lose a parent too.
  • C. Kingsley
  • a 'parallel' algorithm
  • The snake's 'paralyzing' venom prevented the mouse from escaping.
  • Many converted societies transformed their 'pagan' deities into saints.
  • This community has a surprising number of 'pagans'.
  • Chaucer
  • The echidna is a monotreme, which is the extremely small subset of 'oviparous' mammals.
  • A tetrade of rash, arthralgia, abdominal pain and kidney disease in a child is 'pathognomonic' for w:Henoch-Schönlein Henoch-Schönlein purpura.
  • 'Particulates' in engine oil can abrade moving parts.
  • 'patchy' clouds
  • The 'accompanying' helped her relax.
  • Westminster Review
  • author=Tobias George title=Travels through France and Italy: Containing observations on character, customs, religion, government, police, commerce, arts, and antiquities. With a particular description of the town, territory, and climate of Nice. To which is added, A register of the weather, kept during a residence of eighteen months in that city, Volume passage=This is likewise the market for their oil, and the 'paste' called macaroni, of which they make a good quantity.
  • author=Arnaud title=The childrens' companion: or, entertaining instructor for the youth of both sexes; designed, to excite attention and inculcate virtue. Selected from the works of Berquin, Genlis, Day, and passage=Vermicelli for soups, is 'paste' from Italy; so called because it looks like worms. My macaroni, 'paste' from Italy—My salop, a root ground to powder—the root of one kind of orchis.
  • author=Shawn Blore, Alexandra de title=Frommer's passage=There's a choice of three 'pastas', spaghetti, gnocchi, and fettuccini, and sauces such as a creamy Gorgonzola, porcini mushrooms, or romanesca (cream, ham, mushrooms, and peas).
  • Latham
  • past na myši — mousetrap
  • our annual 'repair' to the mountains
  • 'preparedness' for battle
  • 'preparedness' for an exam
  • Wiseman
  • 'Separative' virtue of extreme cold.
  • Boyle
  • In France there is an army of 'patrols' to secure her fiscal regulations. -A. Hamilton.
  • Most people in that region practise their own form of 'paganism'.
  • While 'paganism' is a broad term, most forms pay close attention to the lunar and solar cycles.
  • Geoffrey 'accompanied' the group on their pilgrimage.
  • His sleeves had 'patches' on the elbows where different fabric had been sewn on to replace material that had worn away.
  • Before you can fix a dam, you have to apply a 'patch' to the hole so that everything can dry off.
    or that it is temporary because it is not meant to last long or will be removed as soon as a proper repair can be made, which will happen in the near future.
  • "This 'patch' should hold until you reach the city," the mechanic said as he patted the car's hood.
  • The storms last summer washed away parts of the road so we can expect some rough 'patches' up ahead.
  • To me, a normal cow is white with black 'patches', but Sarah's from Texas and most of the cows there have solid brown, black, or red coats.
  • Doesn't that 'patch' of clouds looks like a bunny?
  • I lost my locket in this 'patch' of grass here.
  • When ice skating, be sure to stay away from reeds, there's always thin 'patches' of ice there and you could fall through.
  • I never get first place because on race track eight, right after you pass the windmill, there's a 'patch' of oil in the road that always gets me.
  • I'll need to 'patch' the preamp output to the mixer.
  • [the control panel of hovercraft The Logos has lit up after being jumped by The Hammer ]
  • Sparky: She lives again.
  • Crew member of The Hammer via radio: You want us to 'patch' an uplink to reload the software, Sparky?
  • Sparky: Yeah, that'd be swell. And can you clean the windshield while you're at it?
  • I went on the retreat to the monastery, thinking I would be sleeping in a 'spartan' cell, only to discover a simple but comfortable bedroom.
  • The 'spartan' legionaries vowed to fight to the death.
  • a 'pat' expression