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one damn thing after another การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • News becoming more like life, just one damn thing after another.
  • When you no longer have a problem, life is one damn thing after another.
  • None of the facts are remembered because they are presented simply as one damn thing after another.
  • Cosmic evolution is more than a subjective, qualitative assertion of " one damn thing after another ".
  • In modern life it's just one damn thing after another, and we seek to explain it to one another.
  • Her overture " ODTAA ( One Damn Thing After Another ) " was premiered at Covent Garden by Adrian Boult in 1947.
  • "It's the nature of the story, which is picaresque, which translates to one damn thing after another, and another, and another.
  • Scanlan noted, " there's a sense that it's one damn thing after another _ which applies more literally in this case than in any other ."
  • As modern fictional sleuths go, none is more fun to spend time with than Robin Hudson, a reporter for the New York-based All News Network whose life is just one damn thing after another.
  • We want to bury learning by rote and the emphasis on dates, facts, places and one damn thing after another . . . We want classrooms that are jumping with mock trials and staged debates, delving into primary source materials.
  • *One other thing that worries me with the constructor articles-for the teams with a long history at least-is that it can read like " just one damn thing after another " to misquote someone or other on history.
  • McCauley isn't interested in plot as much as he is character and a lambent mood of indolent regret _ roads not taken, lovers lost to time and chance, the one damn thing after another that constitutes so much of life.
  • This all sounds about right, the last decade has been an unstable time for finance professionals in NYC, first the NASDAQ crash in March 2000, then 9 / 11, the meltdown in derivatives, Bear Stearns and just one damn thing after another.
  • (" Using a linear structure for a country like Mexico gives us the impression that it's just one damn thing after another, and that's boring, " he says . ) But the writing is rich with sounds and smells and textures; ultimately, reading " The Life and Times of Mexico " is like driving a car on a tree-lined curve.