ha gorge造句
- State-run media has gorged on the debate.
- Privas also has gorges to its south, east and north that provide a natural defence.
- They were involved in the Action at Fat-ha Gorge on the Little Zab and the Battle of Sharqat in October 1918.
- They took part in the Action at Fat-ha Gorge on the Little Zab and the Battle of Sharqat, in October 1918.
- They were involved in the Actions at the Fat-ha Gorge and on the Little Zab and the Battle of Sharqat in October 1918.
- The term " baroque " often conjures visions of florid colors and overblown effects, of overheated art that has gorged itself on appearance for appearance's sake.
- This lets the blood flow until the leech has gorged itself ( or been pulled off in horror, a la Katharine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart in " The African Queen " ).
- In fact, your best chance of catching the mouse is probably to wait a couple of days until the thing has gorged itself to the size of a tennis ball, then simply pick it up by the tail and plop it back in its cage.
- The Division was attached to the Tigris Corps and was involved in the Actions at the Fat-ha Gorge and on the Little Zab between the 23 & ndash; 26 October 1918 and the Battle of Sharqat between 28 & ndash; 30 October 1918.
- The brigade remained in Mesopotamia for the rest of the First World War, taking part in the Action of Khan Baghdadi ( 26 27 Match 1918 ), the Action at Fat-ha Gorge on the Little Zab ( 23 26 October 1918 ) and the Battle of Sharqat ( 28 30 October 1918 ) under the command of I Corps.
- It's difficult to see ha gorge in a sentence. 用ha gorge造句挺难的
- But what makes " Girlfight " such a chore to watch is that it isn't content to wallow in its own shamelessness; indeed, anyone who has gorged on such late-night USA Network classics as " The Next Karate Kid " ( the movie Hilary Swank made before " Boys Don't Cry " ) or the Helen Hunt TV movie " Quarterback Princess, " can only sit back and wonder : Does the director really expect us to take this stuff seriously?
- Apollonius of Tyana specifically states that Nero was called a beast : " In my travels, which have been wider than ever man yet accomplished, I have seen man, many wild beasts of Arabia and India; but this beast, that is commonly called a Tyrant, I know not how many heads it has, nor if it be crooked of claw, and armed with horrible fangs . . . . And of wild beasts you cannot say that they were ever known to eat their own mother, but Nero has gorged himself on this diet ."