เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

acquirable การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • If you don't find this verbiage acquirable, then you may want to do some lateral thinking.
  • According to the objectives, mathematics has important involuntarily acquirable subconscious elements that need to be enhanced in students.
  • Methamphetamine use is an increasing problem in Australia, as it becomes more readily available and easily acquirable for people to receive.
  • A " Grow Book " requires the player to create items through alchemy to unlock slots containing stat boosts acquirable by distributing AP ( Ability Points ) gained during battle.
  • Available missions are scattered across the planets of the solar system, the pocket dimension known as The Void through completing junctions on other planets or through Void Fissures, small volatile rifts which react with acquirable Void Relics.
  • It was slated to include more of " Blood Omen "'s role-playing game aspects and a wider breadth of acquirable abilities, though the team was handicapped by the release of the PlayStation 2.
  • "You're never too old to learn, " said Bob Kerrey, co-chair of the writing commission and president of the New School University in New York City . " It's a skill that is acquirable ."
  • Acquirable special abilities include, for example, jump boost, generating multiple decoy characters, cloaking, sound triangulation ( sounds produce visual effects that show where they originate ), and highlighting enemies even through walls, all of which have different upgrade levels.
  • NTT DoCoMo Inc ., Vodafone and Cingular " started to converge on us as a very attractive target, " Chakrin said . " We were the only ( wireless-only ) company that's publicly traded, and so we were acquirable ."
  • The sources of the Sublime are of two kinds : inborn sources ( " aspiration to vigorous concepts " and " strong and enthusiastic passion " ) and acquirable sources ( rhetorical devices, choice of the right lexicon, and " dignified and high composition " ).
  • Integration into Indian tribes was not difficult, as Indians typically accepted persons based not on ethnic or racial characteristics, but on learnable and acquirable designators such as " language, culturally appropriate behavior, social affiliation, and loyalty . " Non-Indian captives were often adopted into society, including, famously, Mary Jemison.