ragpicker การใช้
- Moreover, Ragpickers are invariably looked down upon in every society.
- Keaton calls Arthur a " ragpicker " similar to herself.
- He was dressed like a ragpicker.
- His most recent production was the solo album, " The Ragpicker's Dream ."
- Shortly afterwards, in 1987, a ragpicker was hacked to death in the adjoining suburb of Matunga.
- He sold most of these in bulk to a ragpicker, and he gave away or destroyed the rest.
- However, the loss of his job forces him to work as a ragpicker, adversely affecting her family.
- Also in 2002, Knopfler released his third solo album, " The Ragpicker's Dream ".
- It is the garbage of poverty and war, and even the ragpickers would find little of value in the trash of Baghdad.
- The original production was done with Giraudoux's frequent collaborator, actor and theater director Louis Jouvet, who played the Ragpicker.
- The rest are sold to companies known as " ragpickers, " which sort and export them, executives in the business said.
- A squalid vignette in Calcutta _ as squalid as it gets in this exhibition _ depicts ragpickers going through a trash dump on a corner lot.
- In " Suttree " ( 1979 ), a homeless man known as " The Ragpicker " lives under the south end of the bridge.
- The town is mentioned in the Mark Knopfler song " Hill Farmer's Blues " from his album " The Ragpicker's Dream ".
- We stopped passers-by at random _ street urchins, ragpickers, farmers, tradesmen, free-lance gunmen _ all shattered by fighting and praying for peace.
- Other pictures describe a hidden continent of poverty, from ragpickers at riverside dumps to a family of cigarmakers who earned $ 11.25 for rolling 3, 000 cigars a week.
- She enlists the help of her fellow outcasts : the Street Singer, The Ragpicker, The Sewer Man, The Flower Girl, The Sergeant, and various other oddballs and dreamers.
- For this reason, it was considered, in its cutaneous form, to be such an occupational hazard that it was known as wool-sorter's or ragpicker's disease.
- Fiedler adapted " The Odessa Beggar " from Felix Pyat's " The Ragpicker of Paris ", a tragicomic play written on the eve of the Revolutions of 1848.
- Raffa雔li produced primarily costume pictures until 1876, when he began to depict the people of his time particularly peasants, workers, and ragpickers seen in the suburbs of Paris in a realistic style.
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