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equably การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • On his travels, Izu has found instances of Buddhism and Hinduism coexisting equably.
  • He nodded equably and made his getaway.
  • Heledd accepts her capture by Ieuan equably.
  • Vacationing Mexican children played equably in the sand while handfuls of North Americans and Europeans drifted by.
  • "In all honesty, I was not at all disappointed, " said Bergeron equably.
  • He accepted these vicissitudes equably . " Some grieved to see him reduced, but not him; these were life's deliveries.
  • To sum up, Nishidani and Tom Reedy have made it impossible, in my eyes, to edit equably and civilly on any article even remotely connected to Oxfordian studies.
  • That means advocating flexible working hours, providing for child care, enabling men to share parental duties more equably, but assuring women full and equal opportunities for jobs and careers.
  • They had not yet found a way past the main obstacles that have for so long barred Israelis and Palestinians from equably sharing their tiny, deeply symbolic, bit of the Middle East.
  • The base is more equably curved, the spirals on it are stronger . The umbilicus is smaller, and is more strongly defined, not only by the stronger carina, but by the extracarinal furrow.
  • First-time writer-director Kirk Jones'film casts Kelly as cohort to best mate Jackie O'Shea ( played by Ian Bannen ) in a ruse to spread proceeds of a winning lottery ticket equably across the citizenry of a snoozy Irish town, population 52.
  • In late 1818 or early 1819 the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce awarded its silver medal and 10 guineas ( ?0.50  ) to Mr . Alexander Bell for a three jaw lathe chuck : It is not clear how they were moved " equably " whether by a scroll or some other means.
  • Absolute, true and mathematical time, of itself, and from its own nature flows equably without regard to anything external, and by another name is called duration : relative, apparent and common time, is some sensible and external ( whether accurate or unequable ) measure of duration by the means of motion, which is commonly used instead of true time . ..
  • It arises out of the question : " What is time ? " Newton, in the " Principia " ( 1686 ), had given an unambiguous answer : " Absolute, true, and mathematical time, of itself, and from its own nature, flows equably without relation to anything external, and by another name is called duration . " This definition is basic to all classical physics.
  • In what could be considered one of America's literary hometowns, he says he works equably in the large shadow of Oxford's most famous writer, William Faulkner, who immortalized the town's residents as the Compsons and McCaslins, Sartorises and Snopeses . ( Hannah's father, William, who died recently, was an Ole Miss student when Faulkner was university postmaster, and like many townspeople then, he derisively referred to the grandiloquent writer as " Count No'Count . ")