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Beispiele für "
AP
"
- I appeal unto Cæsar. --Acts xxv. 11.
- legal
- A kind of 'appeal' to the Deity, the author of wonders. -w:Francis Francis Bacon.
- a ginger 'snap'
- It'll be a 'snap' to get that finished.
- I can fix most vacuum cleaners in a 'snap'.
- He got socked with long penalty when he 'snapped' his stick over the goalie's head.
- We pick and 'snap' the green beans and the wives can 'em.
- He 'snapped' at me for the slightest mistake.
- She should take a break before she 'snaps'.
- He 'snapped' a picture of me with my mouth open and my eyes closed.
- He can 'snap' the ball to a back twenty yards behind him.
- "I just ran over your phone with my car." "Oh, 'snap'!"
- "I am Kira." "Oh 'snap'!"
- "Wasn't that John?" "Wasn't that John?" "'Snap'!"
- You might feel a little 'zap' touching a metal doorknob when the air is dry.
- They spent the whole movie 'zapping' bad guys into oblivion.
- I think they 'zapped' the processor.
- If it's not warm in the middle, 'zap' it some more.
- They 'zapped' a lot of files before realizing they had not backed up lately.
- They 'zapped' my motor's magnets.
- Then the computer went 'zap' and I lost all my work.
- The children watched in 'rapt' attention as the magician produced object after object from his hat.
- He was 'rapt' with his exam results.
- The prisoners 'escaped' by jumping over a wall.
- He only got a fine and so 'escaped' going to jail.
- The children climbed out of the window to 'escape' the fire.
- Luckily, I 'escaped' with only a fine.
- The name of the hotel 'escapes' me at present.
- When using the "bash" shell, you can 'escape' the ampersand character with a backslash.
- In your monobook.js file, you can 'escape' the apostrophe character with a backslash.
- Brion 'escaped' the double quote character on Windows by adding a second double quote within the literal.
- The prisoners made their escape by digging a tunnel
- You forgot to insert an 'escape' in the datastream.
- She 'photographs' well. The camera loves her.
- He has improved recently but keeps 'relapsing' into states of utter confusion.
- What he said really hurt my feelings, but his 'apology' sounded so sincere that I couldn't help but forgive him.
- The CEO made a public 'apology' for the scandal, and promised full cooperation with the authorities.
- The Apology of Socrates.
- He invented a new 'application' by which blood might be stanched. --Johnson.
- If a right course . . . be taken with children, there will not be much need of the 'application' of the common rewards and punishments. --w:John John Locke.
- I make the remark, and leave you to make the 'application.
- The 'application' of a theory to a set of data can be challenging.
- The iPhone 'application' VR+ connects to major social networks.
- December 31 is the deadline for MBA 'applications'.
- Their 'application' for a deferral of the hearing was granted.
- She packed her case 'rapidly' and hurried out.
- A popular myth is that sapwood is not as strong as heartwood
- The used bookshop wouldn't offer much due to the poor 'shape' of the book.
- The vet checked to see what kind of 'shape' the animal was in.
- We exercise to keep in good physical 'shape'.
- He cut a square 'shape' out of the cake.
- What 'shape' shall we use for the cookies? Stars, circles, or diamonds?
- 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.
- Although we may disagree with it, we must nevertheless 'approve' the sentence handed down by the court-martial.
- We 'approve' the measure of the administration, for it is an excellent decision.
- Note: This word, when it signifies to be pleased with, to think favorably (of), is often followed by of.
- The appellant made her submissions to the court
- My sleeping bag fell off my backpack into the water, while we were 'knapsacking' up the mountain.
- Her song enraptured the audience with vivid images of the Scandinavian landscapes.
- After the performance, the audience 'applauded' for five minutes
- Although we don't like your methods, we 'applaud' your motives.
- This new product will 'leapfrog' the competition.
- A 'soapy' taste.
- 'soapy' water
- His skin was still 'soapy' after the shower.
- Wherefore 'approached' ye so nigh unto the city? —2 Sam. xi. 20.
- But exhorting one another; and so much the more, as ye see the day 'approaching'. —Heb. x. 25.
- as he 'approaches' to the character of the ablest statesman.
- He was an admirable poet, and thought even to have 'approached' Homer. -- w:Sir William Sir William Temple.
- The 'approach' of summer. — w:Samuel Samuel Horsley.
- A nearer 'approach' to the human type. — w:Richard Richard Owen.
- The 'approach' to kings and principal persons. — w:Francis Francis Bacon.
- an 'approach' to gardening
- Do not make such 'haphazard' changes to the settings; instead, adjust the knobs carefully, a bit at a time.
- apartment dwellers
- to 'appease' the tumult of the ocean
- to 'appease' hunger or thirst
- They 'appeased' the angry gods with burnt offerings.
- An aperture between the mountains. --Gilpin.
- The back aperture of the nostrils. --Owen.
- When he 'appointed' the foundations of the earth. --Prov. viii. 29.
- Thy servants are ready to do whatsoever my lord the king shall 'appoint'. --2 Sam. xv. 15.
- He hath 'appointed' a day, in the which he will judge the world in righteousness. --Acts xvii. 31.
- Say that the emperor requests a parley ... and 'appoint' the meeting. -- Shakspeare Titus Andronicus IV iv.
- Aaron and his shall go in, and 'appoint' them every one to his service. --Num. iv. 19.
- These were cities 'appointed' for all the children of Israel, and for the stranger that sojourneth among them. --Josh. xx. 9.
- The English, being well 'appointed', did so entertain them that their ships departed terribly torn. --Hayward.
- We don't have bottled water, you'll have to get it from the 'tap'.
- We drilled a hole and then cut the threads with the proper 'tap' to match the valve's thread.
- The system was barely keeping pressure due to all of the ill advised 'taps' along its length.
- He 'tapped' a new barrel of beer.
- They can't 'tap' the phone without a warrant.
- He was known to 'tap' cable television
- 'Tap' an M3 thread all the way through the hole.
- He was so nervous he began to 'tap' his fingers on the table.
- She 'tapped' her companion on the back to indicate that she was ready to go.
- The tree, swaying in the breeze, began to 'tap' on the window pane.
- I would tap that hot girl over there. or, more informally, I'd tap that
- When Steve felt a 'tap' on his shoulder, he turned around.
- Búðin er rekin með 'tapi'.
- His sudden 'appearance' surprised me.
- There was a strange 'appearance' in the sky.
- And now am come to see . . . It thy appearance answer loud report. --w:John Milton.
- There was upon the tabernacle, as it were, the appearance of fire. --Num. ix. 15.
- For man looketh on the outward appearance. --1 Sam. xvi. 7.
- Judge not according to the appearance. --John. vii. 24.
- A person makes his 'appearance' as an historian, an artist, or an orator.
- David Beckham's first 'appearance' with the LA Galaxy at Giants Stadium against the New York Red Bulls last night drew a crowd of 66237.
- Will he now retire, After appearance, and again prolong Our expectation? --w:John John Milton.
- The patient had a small bowel obstruction and there was no appearance until after the obstruction resolved.
- I had never given much thought to the role of darkness in ordinary human affairs until I read a 'monograph' prepared by John Staudenmaier, a historian of technology and a Jesuit priest, for a recent conference at MIT. Cullen Murphy, "Hello Darkness", The Atlantic Monthly, March 1996, Volume 277, No. 3, [http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/96mar/darkness/darkness.htm pp. 22-24.]
- He summoned the waiter with a 'clap'.
- She shut her diary with a loud 'clap'.
- Off in the distance, he heard the 'clap' of thunder.
- His father's affection never went further than a handshake or a 'clap' on the shoulder.
- He wasn't careful; he caught both syphilis and the 'clap'.
- The children began to 'clap' in time with the music.
- The audience loudly 'clapped' the actress, who responded with a deep curtsey.
- It isn’t the singers they are 'clapping', it's the composer.
- He would often 'clap' his teammates on the back for encouragement.
- He 'clapped' the empty glass down on the table.
- She 'clapped' the book shut.
- He 'clapped' across the floor in his boots.
- We should 'clap' together a shelter before nightfall.
- The rival factions 'clapped' up a truce.
- The sheriff 'clapped' him in jail.
- She was the prettiest thing I'd ever 'clapped' eyes on, she was.
- He allowed a month to 'elapse' before beginning the work.
- Several days 'elapsed' before they met again.
- He went through his belongings, gradually shedding the 'trappings' of youth.
- My correspondent 'apologised' for not answering my letter.
- Cells may undergo 'apoptosis' if they have sustained unrepairable damage.
- '1974': They had assumed the wild sweet freedom of jacking off in their inviolable privacy. Their 'appetence' became resilient with repetition. (Davenport, Tatlin!)
- That was an 'appalling' waste of money.
- His lack of respect 'disappointed' her.
- I am 'disappointed' by this year's revenue.
- He is a real 'happening' guy.
- The Andy Warhol reception was a freaky 'happening'.
- The candidate selection for running mate has 'catapulted' her to the national scene.
- She has been 'catapulted' to the national scene following her selection by the candidate.
- I appreciate your efforts
- You must learn to appreciate time
- To test the power of bees to appreciate color.
- The value of his portfolio appreciated by 80% over eight years.
- Thomas Aquinas was a notable 'metaphysician'.
- Professor Jones is an eminent 'metaphysician'; she has produced more than one hundred refereed publications concerning metaphysics.
- He enjoys reading 'escapist' fiction in his free time.
- Philosophers sometimes say that 'metaphysics' is the study of the ultimate nature of the universe.
- The 'metaphysics' of Thomas Aquinas holds that all real beings have both essence and existence.
- In Aristotelian 'metaphysics' physical objects have both form and matter.
- In his Pensées, Pascal mentioned some first principles recognized within his 'metaphysics': space, time, motion, and number.
- I have a collection of books on 'metaphysics', covering astral projection, reincarnation, and communication with spirits.
- This political polemic strikes me as a protracted piece of overwrought, fog shrouded 'metaphysics'!
- Note: Fourteen such writings, or books, formed part of the Septuagint, but not of the Hebrew canon recognized by the Jews of Palestine. The Council of Trent included all but three of these in the canon of inspired books having equal authority. The German and English Reformers grouped them in their Bibles under the title Apocrypha, as not having dogmatic authority, but being profitable for instruction. The Apocrypha is now commonly omitted from the King James Bible and most other English versions of Scripture. Note: the word is normally capitalised in this usage.
- The shaped sides of the wardrobe give it a more attractive appearance.
- 'Capacitive' touchscreens are all glass and designed for use in ATMs and similar kiosk-type applications.
- He argued and hollered for so long that I finally 'capitulated' just to make him stop.
- When the boy hid father's feared cane, his bum soon found out the hard way how many sturdy 'appliances' at home can double as perfectly painful spanking 'appliance'
- I need to get an 'approval' on this purchase order.
- Words of 'approval' never seem to come from him.
- This food looks so 'appetizing.'
- In every box of matches there are 'approximately' 40 matchsticks.
- Per 100g of chocolate there are 'approximately' 11.6g of saturated fat.
- ...'approximately' 60 beats per minute.
- I almost died in a 'capricious' winter storm.
- Stringent rulers are unlikely to act 'capriciously'.
- Hurry up and 'collapse' the tent so we can get moving.
- A man may be 'apparently' friendly, yet malicious in heart.
- 'Apparently' you are quite a good dancer.
- Her frown 'telegraphed' her displeasure.
- He conveyed his teachings 'metaphorically'.
- 'Metaphorically', he was crushed.
- There are many 'biographies' of Benjamin Franklin.
- His tone was 'apologetic' as he explained what had happened.
- We must punish this 'apostate' priest.
- Many scholars consider the stories of the monk Teilo to be 'apocryphal'.
- There is an 'apocryphal' tale of a little boy plugging the dike with his finger.
- I put down some 'traps' in my apartment to try and deal with the mouse problem.
- Unfortunately she fell into the 'trap' of confusing biology with destiny.
- Close the 'trap', would you, before someone falls and breaks their neck.
- They shot out of the school gates like greyhounds out of the 'trap'.
- Have James prepare the 'trap' – I wish to visit the parson.
- To ask a person not to reveal any information
- Keep your trap shut.
- I saw your brother asking a 'trap' out last night at the bar.
- Her fingernails 'scraped' across the blackboard, making a shrill sound.
- 'Scrape' the chewing gum off with a knife. (= "remove the chewing gum with a knife by scraping")
- She tripped on a rock and 'scraped' her knee.
- He fell on the sidewalk and got a 'scrape' on his knee.
- He got in a 'scrape' with the school bully.
- I'm in a bit of a 'scrape' — I've no money to buy my wife a birthday present.
- He is letting her select the 'wallpapers' for the whole house.
- He was an able 'adapter', and could easily adjust to the differences when the company changed ownership.
- The critic gave rave reviews to the 'adapter' of the ancient play, who worked to give the text more relevance to the modern day.
- He had an 'adapter' that let him plug his phone into the car's cigarette lighter for power.
- The wall outlet sprouted an electrical monstrosity of 'adapters' plugged into 'adapters' that sparked ominously.
- We bought 'adapters' to use our three-prong plugs in the two-prong, unpolarized outlets of the old house.
- a 'well-appointed' kitchen
- I've just played this new computer game: the 'graphics' are amazing.
- The home team appeared to have the advantage throughout the game, and finally 'capitalised' on their opponents' weakness with just two minutes remaining, scoring several points in quick succession.
- In English, proper nouns should always be 'capitalised'.
- Some states require proof that a new venture is properly 'capitalised' before the state will issue a certificate of incorporation.
- If we obtain a loan using the business as collateral, the effect will be to 'capitalise' our next ten years of income, giving us cash today that we can use to buy out our competitor.
- The home team took several shots on goal but was unable to 'capitalise' until late in the game.
- the 'approaching' armies
- The army was 'approaching' from the north.
- Let me tell you how it 'happened'.
- Take an umbrella in case it 'happens' to rain.
- 'Happy' is that people, whose God is the Lord - Psalm 144:15
- The learned is 'happy' Nature to explore, The fool is 'happy' that he knows no more - w:Alexander Alexander Pope
- Chymists have been more 'happy' in finding experiments than the causes of them - Boyle
- One gentleman is 'happy' at a reply, another excels in a rejoinder - w:Jonathan Jonathan Swift
- Are you 'happy' to pay me back by the end of the week?
- The headmaster wondered what an 'appropriate' measure would be to make the pupil behave better.
- In its strict and 'appropriate' meaning. --w:Beilby Beilby Porteus.
- 'Appropriate' acts of divine worship. --w:Edward Edward Stillingfleet.
- It is not at all times easy to find words 'appropriate' to express our ideas. --w:John John Locke.
- I don't think it was 'appropriate' for the cashier to tell me out loud in front of all those people at the check-out that my hair-piece looked like it was falling out of place.
- While it is not considered 'appropriate' for a professor to date his student, there is no such concern once the semester has ended.
- All 'happiness' bechance to thee in Milan! — w:William William Shakespeare, Wikisource:The Two Gentlemen of Verona, I-i
- Some beauties yet no precepts can declare, For there's a 'happiness', as well as care. — w:Alexander Alexander Pope.
- But what happens if they build a better build a better 'mousetrap'?
- '1851' A long-skirted, cabalistically-cut coat of a faded walnut tinge enveloped him; the 'overlapping' sleeves of which were rolled up on his wrists. — Herman Melville, [http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/ot2www-pubeng?specfile=/texts/english/modeng/publicsearch/modengpub.o2w&act=surround&offset=474554796&tag=Melville,+Herman,+1819-1891:+Moby-Dick,+or,+The+Whale,+1851&query=overlapping&id=Mel2Mob Moby Dick.]
- We have two hands to 'apprehend' it. -- w:Jeremy Jeremy Taylor.
- This suspicion of Earl Reimund, though at first but a buzz, soon got a sting in the king's head, and he violently 'apprehended' it. -- w:Thomas Thomas Fuller.
- The eternal laws, such as the heroic age 'apprehended' them. --w:William William Gladstone
- The opposition had more reason than the king to 'apprehend' violence. -- w:Thomas Babington Thomas Babington Macaulay.
- It is worse to 'apprehend' than to suffer. --Rowe.
- Rice is a 'staple' in the diet of many cultures.
- Tow is flax with short 'staple'.
- Can you believe they use 'staples' to hold cars together these days?
- The rancher used 'staples' to attach the barbed wire to the fence-posts.
- Fortunately, there were 'staples' in the quay wall, and she was able to climb out of the water.
- These melons cost a shilling 'apiece'.
- 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.
- We spent all day shrink-wrapping boxes and now my feet hurt.
- 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)
- The loggers 'raped' the virgin forest
- My experienced opponent will 'rape' me at chess.
- a 'rape' of grapes.
- The script employed 'malapropism' to great effect.
- 'Malapropism' is much older as a phenomenon than it is as a word.
- The translator matched every 'malapropism' in the original with one from his own language.
- The humor comes from all the 'malapropisms'.
- Her boss was very 'approachable'.
- He erred by the 'appointment' of unsuitable men.
- the 'appointment' of treasurer
- They made an 'appointment' to meet at six.
- I'm leaving work early because I have a doctor's 'appointment'.
- To submit to the divine 'appointments'.
- According to the 'appointment' of the priests. --Ezra vi. 9.
- The cavaliers emulated their chief in the richness of their 'appointments'. --w:William H. William H. Prescott.
- I'll prove it in my shackles, with these hands Void of 'appointment', that thou liest. --w:Francis Francis Beaumont & w:John Fletcher John Fletcher
- The madman obtained a 'soapbox' which he stood on at the corner of Broadway and Wall street, to shout out his prophesy of the end of the world.
- He's been on his 'soapbox' all day about the new football coach.
- This shop stocks all the latest photographic equipment.
- I tried washing my hands with soap, but the stain wouldn't go away.
- Be sure to 'soap' yourself well before rinsing.
- Those kids 'soaped' my windows!
- (c1850): "You little thought,” said Mr. Pumblechook, 'apostrophizing' the fowl in the dish, “when you was a young fledgling, what was in store for you. Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens.
- (1894): "...she resumed her former occupation, and continued to soliloquize and apostrophize her absent handmaidens, without even appearing sensible of his presence. St.Ronan's Well, by Sir Walter Scott.
- The blue-chinned 'sapphire' can be found many parts of South America, depending on season.
- We thought the toy was still in its original packaging because it was 'shrink-wrapped'.
- An earthworm is a 'hermaphrodite'.
- 'Pap' and wors is traditionally eaten at a braai.
- Look, that pop star’s been papped in her bikini again!
- "The following Adagietto was like a long, melting 'appoggiatura' composed of smaller dying falls and languid resolutions." — New York Times, March 2, 1992
- an 'apostolical' mission
- the 'apostolic' age
- 'apostolic' faith or practice
- A great writer 'appeared' at that time.
- One ruffian escaped because no prosecutor dared to 'appear'.
- He 'appeared' quite happy with the result.
- Construction of the new offices is proceeding 'apace'.
- 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.
- I found a 'scrap' of cloth to patch the hole.
- Give the 'scraps' to the dogs and watch them fight.
- That car isn't good for anything but 'scrap'.
- We got in a little 'scrap' over who should pay the bill.
- Choking back his disappointment after his own team's splendid wins against Liverpool and Aston Villa, he said: "I've got to be humble and say we were beaten by a very good side." — Today, News Group Newspapers Ltd, 1992
- As the disappointments crowded in — the economy, Rhodesia, strife within the trade-union movement — w:Harold Wilson tried the expedient of a semi-formal inner Cabinet, or Parliamentary Committee, as he misleadingly liked to call it. — Cabinet, Hennessy, Peter, Basil Blackwell Ltd, 1990
- That movie is pornographically violent.
- 1993: w:The The Snapper — title of novel and film by w:Roddy Roddy Doyle
- My pawn was 'captured'.
- He 'captured' his opponent’s queen on the 15th move.
- The bystanders were indiscriminately gunned down by 'trigger-happy' gang members.
- Be careful when you work near him; he's 'trigger-happy' with that chain-saw.
- He was so 'trigger-happy' that he wheeled and punched me when I brushed by him in the hall.
- He has an impressive collection of bicycling 'paraphernalia', but he doesn't ride very often anymore.
- I recently 'applied' for a job as a bartender at the tavern.
- Most of the colleges she 'applied' to were ones she thought she had a good chance of getting into.
- Many of them don't know it, but almost a third of the inmates are eligible to 'apply' for parole or work-release programs.
- That rule only 'applies' to foreigners.
- It is 'inappropriate' to burp at a formal dinner.
- He does not have enough 'capital' to start a business.
- Washington D.C. is the 'capital' of the United States of America.
- The Welsh government claims that Cardiff is Europe’s youngest 'capital'.
- That is a 'capital' idea!
- Not all felonies are 'capital' crimes.
- One begins a sentence with a 'capital' letter.
- La peine 'capitale' est abolie en France depuis les années 1980.
- Es asunto de 'capital' importancia = "(This) is a very important matter"
- Lo condenaron a la pena 'capital' = "He was sentenced to death penalty" (rare, "pena de muerte" is commonly used)
- Hand me some 'tape'. I need to fix a tear in this paper.
- Did you get that on 'tape'?
- Old couples sometimes will play 'tapes' at each other during a fight.
- After the party there was 'tape' all over the place.
- Don’t fight the 'tape'.
- His pass was right on the 'tape'.
- Can you tape that together, please?
- You shouldn’t have said that. The microphone was on and we were taping.
- I've finally got this thing taped.
- the 'apex' of the building
- the 'apex' of civilization
- The Queen is an adjective figure.
- The PM's visit to the school was entirely 'apolitical'.
- The older boy won, even though his opponent had been granted a 'handicap' of five meters.
- A 'handicap' in chess often involves removal of the queen's rook.
- The candidate was heavily 'handicapped'.
- Grandpa Andy would buy the racing form the day ahead of time so he could 'handicap' the race before he even arrived at the track.
- There was a poignant 'juxtaposition' between the boys laughing in the street and the girl crying on the balcony above.
- The police officer was incapacitated by a blow to the head
- His foreboding showed his appreciation of Henry's character. —J. R. Green.
- The discrete topology is always continuous, therefore functions with discrete domains are always maps.
- f 'maps' A to B, 'mapping' to .
- The discrete topology is always continuous, therefore functions with discrete domains are always mappings.
- 'disappointing' results
- The regulators were caught 'napping' by the financial collapse.
- Egy hét 7 'napból' áll. - A week consists of 7 'days'.
- Süt a 'nap'. - The 'sun' is shining.
- Délben nem jó kimenni a 'napra'. - It's not good to go to the 'sunshine' at noon.
- by 'happenstance'
- This drug can not be used 'therapeutically' except as a placebo.
- 'Diapering' a baby is something you have to learn fast.
- He proved to be a remarkably efficient 'wrapper' of parcels.
- We need a Perl 'wrapper' for this C++ library.
- The 'captain' is the last man to leave a sinking ship.
- John Henry said to the 'captain', "A man ain't nothing but a man."
- The 'entrapment' of the victims in the wreckage made rescue difficult.
- A detective asking you to buy marijuana for a dying man would be police 'entrapment'.
- He used his business experience as a 'bootstrap' to win voters.
- Sam spent years bootstrapping himself through college.
- Bootstrapping means building the GNU C Library, GNU Compiler Collection and several other key system programs.[http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/handbook-x86.xml?part=1&chap=
- One of Batman's aliases is "The Caped Crusader".
- 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.
- For example, in the phrase "my friend Alice" the name "Alice" is in 'apposition' to "my friend".
- In English, proper nouns should always be 'capitalized'.
- Some states require proof that a new venture is properly 'capitalized' before the state will issue a certificate of incorporation.
- If we obtain a loan using the business as collateral, the effect will be to 'capitalize' our next ten years of income, giving us cash today that we can use to buy out our competitor.
- The home team took several shots on goal but was unable to 'capitalize' until late in the game.
- The home team appeared to have the advantage throughout the game, and finally 'capitalized' on their opponents' weakness with just two minutes remaining, scoring several points in quick succession.
- the mousemat 'overlapped' the edge of the desk
- The two maps 'overlapped' at the east and west edges
- The set (all men) 'overlaps' the set (vegetarians)
- They put a 'stopgap' solution in place, but need something more permanent.
- The small company uses their new product features as a 'stopgap' until they can develop a new product.
- He is making me a 'scapegoat'.
- The ship 'capes' southwest by south.
- 'capitalist' economy; 'capitalist' countries.
- 'capitalist' pigs.
- After the 'mishap' with the banana peel, he watches his step now.
- Billy spent all morning firing 'caps' with his friends, re-enacting storming the beach at Normandy.
- He wired the 'cap' to the bundle of dynamite, then detonated it remotely.
- Rio Ferdinand won his 50th 'cap' for England in a game against Sweden.<
- If he don't get outta my hood, I'm gonna 'cap' his ass.
- Who’s that 'chap' over there?
- He 'heaped' the laundry upon the bed and began folding.
- They 'heaped' praise upon their newest hero.
- The legs of the table had a slight 'taper' to them.
- The long-running game show went from offering good prizes to 'crap' in no time.
- The college student boasted of completing a 10,000-word essay on Shakespeare, but the professor judged it as utter 'crap'.
- I have to take a 'crap'
- What is that? It's just a bunch of crap
- Oh 'crap!' The other driver's going to hit my car!
- 'Crap!' I lost the game.
- What the 'crap'?!
- Aw, 'crap', I have to start over again from the beginning of the level.
- a snappy response
- You're snappy this morning - did you not sleep well?
- Here he is, looking 'snappy' in his brand-new suit.
- The film featured a 'madcap' car chase that went right through a crowded café.
- The house of peers was somewhat 'appalled' at this alarum. --w:Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Edward Hyde Clarendon.
- That knife is very 'rapier'.
- John is very quick on his feet during interviews by using his 'rapier' responses.
- We have helpers 'aplenty' but lack the skilled support.
- The boy was sitting on his mother's 'lap'
- to 'lap' a bandage around a finger
- 'lapped' in luxury
- One 'laps' roof tiles so that water can run off.
- ezen a 'lapon' - on this page
- a mai 'lap' - today’s paper
- Only once the drawing is done will the letterer 'caption' it.
- If God had given to eagles an 'appetite' to swim. -- w:Jeremy Jeremy Taylor.
- To gratify the vulgar 'appetite' for the marvelous. -- w:Thomas Babington Thomas Babington Macaulay.
- The object of 'appetite' is whatsoever sensible good may be wished for; the object of will is that good which reason does lead us to seek. --w:Richard Richard Hooker.
- Sven ordered a stack of 'flapjacks' with maple syrup, two strips of bacon, and an egg, sunny side up.
- Although I've enumerated some of the academic traditions and debates that have animated this book, it is not my purpose to offer a full 'apologia' in these brief pages. - 1999 Preface from "Gender Trouble" by Judith Butler
- The capitol building is located smack-dab in the middle of the state capital.
- 'paper' bag
- 'paper' plane
- 'paper' tiger
- to 'paper' the hallway walls
- After they reached an agreement, their staffs 'papered' it up.
- 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.
- Don't be so 'apodictic'! You haven't considered several facets of the question.
- My correspondent 'apologized' for not answering my letter.
- The pioneering Austrian composer Arnold Schönberg was the leading 'dodecaphonist'.
- The comment caused quite a 'flap' in the newspapers.
- The flag 'flapped' in the breeze.
- 'Ships' . . . appareled to fight. --Hayward.
- They which are gorgeously 'appareled', and live delicately, are in kings' courts. --Luke vii. 25.
- If the headsman's axe was sharp and his aim was true, 'decapitation' was a quick and relatively painless form of death
- The teacher gave the wayward pupil a 'rap' across the knuckles with her ruler.
- You can't act irresponsibly and then expect me to take the 'rap'.
- Kom eens heel rap hier! - You quickly get over here!
- Shut your 'yap'!
- You’re always 'yapping' - I wish you’d shut up.
- Tonight there’s a full moon, which is 'apt', since the election night will bring out the lunatics.
- This tree, if unprotected, is 'apt' to be stripped of its leaves by a leaf-cutting ant.
- An 'apt' wit. —Johnson.
- (Although I) live a thousand years, I shall not find myself so apt to die. —Shakespeare
- Don't fear the Reaper,/ We'll be able to fly. — Lyrics from Don't Fear the Reaper by w:Blue Öyster Blue Öyster Cult
- She 'slapped' him in response to the insult.
- He 'slapped' the reins against the horse's back.
- We'd better 'slap' some fresh paint on that wall.
- a gap in a fence
- He made a 'gap' by kicking a weak spot.
- We can slip through that 'gap'.
- There is a 'gap' between the roof and the gutter.
- I have a 'gap' in my schedule next Tuesday.
- I'm taking a 'gap'.
- The exploring party went through the high 'gap' in the mountains.
- At Birling 'Gap' we can stop and go have a picnic on the beach.
- Jones doubled through the 'gap'.
- I 'gapped' all the sparkplugs in my car then realized I used the wrong manual and had made them too small.
- "Isn't she a 'slap-up' woman, eh, now?" pursued he; and began enumerating her attractions, as a horse-jockey would the points of a favourite animal. — Thackeray.
- Al Photoshop s'usen diferents 'capes' per tractar la imatge.
- La 'capa' d'ozó està en perill.
- El duc portava una 'capa' molt maca.
- His nonchalance and 'aplomb' during hard times have always been his best character trait.
- He always tried to maintain a 'rapport' with his customers.
- It was 'he' told me about it.
- There was a 'door' led to the kitchen.
- 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'. --
- 'Apropos' the return home of the body of old King Nicholas of Montenegro ('Communists allow burial of Montenegro's last king', 2 October): King Alexander of Yugoslavia was his grandson, not his son-in-law.
- Clinton and I became peripherally involved with a pair of Leckford Road girls who, principally 'sapphic' in their interests, would arrange for sessions of group frolic. Christopher Hitchens, [http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/book_extracts/article7060908.ece Hitch-2
- In "I will be coming if this weather holds up", "I will be coming" is the 'apodosis'.
- 'Approximate' results or values.
- To help carry out its mission, NASA's Genesis spacecraft has on board an ion monitor to record the speed, density, temperature and 'approximate' composition of the solar wind ions.
- To 'approximate' the inequality of riches to the level of nature. --Burke.
- The telescope 'approximates' perfection. --J. Morse.
- To avoid going over budget, let's make sure we 'wrap' by ten.
- Dusty left the 'taproom' of the tavern and wandered into the small arcade in back.
- We were 'ape' over the new look.
- He went 'ape' when he heard the bad news.
- une frappe aérienne
- "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.
- flapping sails
- That faulty network card appears to be 'flapping'.
- The deteriorating ecology of the planet leads many scientists to believe we are nearing an 'apocalypse'.
- We need to reorganise the mortgage in the light of the looming financial 'apocalypse'.
- The early development of Perl 6 was punctuated by a series of 'apocalypses' by Larry Wall.
- This camera has a resolution of three megapixels.
- This is a three-megapixel camera.
- He carried a 'snapshot' of his daughter.
- The article offered a 'snapshot' of life in that region.
- 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.
- Van Eyck signed his portrait of the Arnolfinis 'slapdash' in the center of the painting.
- Interpreters need a good amount of cultural 'capital' in order to function efficiently in the profession.
- Saanko tämän 'asap'?
- The team played 'scrappily', even though everyone expected them to lose.
- We will calculate the average per-'capita'.
- Hand me some 'tape'. I need to fix a tear in this paper.
- The deponent's signature was verified in accordance with the 'apostil' to the Hague convention.
- 'Apostil' is drawn on the document itself or on a separate sheet attached to the document; it should comply with the specimen attached to the Convention. 'Apostil' may be drawn up in the official language of the issuing authority, and its provisions may be set forth in another language as well. The title “Apostille (Convention de la Haye du 5 octobre 1961)” may be given only in French. [http://www.vmp.by/en/publications/reviews/apostil.html]
- He tossed the file down 'slap' in the middle of the table.
- The possession of cilia is an 'apomorphic' trait of this family.
- The genus is highly 'apomorphic'.
- 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."
- En agriculture, les traceurs isotopes permettent de suivre le cycle de l’eau et ainsi d’optimiser les 'apports' au terrain.
- Shut your 'yapper' or I'll shut it for you!
- English and French have different rules for the 'capitalisation' of the names of weekdays.
- "Would counsel please 'approach' the bench?" asked the judge.
- to 'approach' the city
- He 'approached' the age of manhood.
- As x 'approaches' infinity, 1/x 'approaches' 0.
- Although many 'grape vines' have geographical names, those rarely reflect their real origin, if known at all
- I heard on the 'grapevine' that Jim will be leaving soon.
- They could not 'adapt' to the new climate and so perished.
- I think it is the weakness of mine eyes That shapes this monstrous 'apparition'. --w:William William Shakespeare
- Joe 'apprenticed' three different photographers before setting up his own studio.
- I 'appreciate' your efforts
- You must learn to 'appreciate' time
- To test the power of bees to 'appreciate' color.
- The value of his portfolio 'appreciated' by 80% over eight years.
- Some people say I'm shallow because I care so much about my 'appearance'
- The patient had a small bowel obstruction and there was no 'appearance' until after the obstruction resolved.
- I would 'tap' that hot girl over there.
- I'd 'tap' that.
- People are being warned not to approach the escaped prisoner.
- But what happens if they build a better build a 'better mousetrap'?
- L’avocat a donné au public un 'aperçu' de la cause.
- Donnez-moi un 'aperçu' des dépenses que j’aurai à faire.
- Ce que je vous dis là n’est qu’un 'aperçu' de la question.
- Il y a dans cet ouvrage des 'aperçus' très fins, mais rien n’est développé.
- The ambassador is a political 'appointee', not a career diplomat.
- English and French have different rules for the 'capitalisation' of the names of the days of the week.
- The Mayor claimed that the action was reasonable, but in reality the action was arbitrary and 'capricious' in nature.
- 'chapter' of accidents
- The village butcher is 'chapel'.
- That was a 'scrappy' lecture.
- He's a 'scrappy' dog and will charge at you if you taunt him.
- "While PDA or sexual irresponsibility may be considered unsuitable, it is not inappropriate for teenagers in a relationship and nearly of legal age to talk alone."
- The software patent 'landscape' has changed considerably in the last years
- He started to 'rap' after listening to the Beastie Boys
- He 'rapped' a song to his girlfriend.
- Mennään syömään 'tapaksia'.
- the 'taper' of a spire.
- The entire symphony was 'recapitulated' in the last four bars.
- Ontogeny 'recapitulates' phylogeny.
- She 'catapulted' to the national scene following her selection by the candidate.
- The floating toolbar will 'snap' to the edge of the screen when dragged towards it.
- Linglänapük e Fransänapük binons 'volapüks'.
- a 'flap' of a garment
- The envelope 'flap' seemed curiously wrinkled.
- the 'flap' of a sail; the 'flap' of a wing
- The crow slowly 'flapped' its wings.
- Winston wore a 'nightcap' to stave off the cold.
- I'll make myself a 'nightcap' of whisky and lemon before heading to bed.
- The exhausted rock singer 'collapsed' onstage and had to be taken to the hospital.
- 'cap' wages.
- That really 'capped' my day.
- Peter Shilton is the most 'capped' English footballer.
- Lo condenaron a la pena 'capital' = "He was sentenced to death penalty" (rare, "pena de muerte" is commonly used)
- 'Snap!' We've both got pink buckets and spades.
- Are you 'happy' with your internet service provider?
- The prisoners made their 'escape' by digging a tunnel.
- Izakaya food is basically Japanese tapas.
- 'Scrape' the chewing gum off with a knife.
- I 'scraped' a pass in the exam.
- The 'shaped' sides of the wardrobe give it a more attractive appearance.
- The exhausted singer 'collapsed' onstage and had to be taken to the hospital.
- I'm gonna kill that bitch for giving me 'the clap'!
- If your dick has "the drip" you probably have 'the clap' and need to go to the sex clinic.
- The children were all wearing 'caps' to protect them from the sun.
- He took the 'cap' of the bottle and splashed himself with some cologne.
- He had golden 'caps' on his teeth.
- We should put a 'cap' on the salaries, to keep them under control.
- Rio Ferdinand won his 50th 'cap' for England in a game against Sweden.
- This is a 'happening' place tonight!
- 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.
- Chaucer
- Ld. Lytton
- '2005' Peter G. Read, "Gemmology"
- There was snow on the 'cap' of the mountain.
- une 'frappe' puissante
- Insurance is expensive, but don't be so 'cheap' that you risk losing your home because of a fire.
- One of Batman's aliases is "the 'Caped' Crusader".
- An 'appellatory' libel ought to contain the name of the party appellant. — Ayliffe.
- Modern tennis racquets are made of 'graphite', fibreglass and other man-made materials.
- The Queen is an ? figure.
- My colleagues and I come to this task with open minds, we are 'apolitical' and independent of any political party.
- This game is so hard that I find myself taking a 'snapshot' every few seconds in case I get killed.
- Kingsley
- Coleridge
- The police transmitted a description of the suspect 'telegraphically'.
- Her son's letters were always 'telegraphically' brief and to the point.
- He analysed the 'chromatographic' peak
- L. Mason
- 'Thunderclaps' that make them quake. — Spenser.
- When suddenly the 'thunderclap' was heard. — Dryden.
- a 'snappish' cur
- My 'snappish' boss was never in a good mood.
- The preliminary conclusion was that the SARS virus crossed the 'xenographic' barrier from palm civet to humans.
- a good 'cheap'
- Swift
- Don't 'approach' that house.
- 'Perhaps' John will come over for dinner.
- That movie is 'pornographically' violent.
- The Queen is an 'apolitical' figure.
- I heard through the 'grapevine' that Jim will be leaving soon.
- to 'apprehend' a criminal.
- She 'captured' the sounds of a subway station on tape.
- She 'captured' the details of the fresco in a series of photographs.
- His film adaptation 'captured' the spirit of the original work.
- In her latest masterpiece, she 'captured' the essence of Venice.





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