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rubicund การใช้

"rubicund" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • I know of fecund, jocund and rubicund.
  • He was a tall, burly, rubicund man, and had good business instinct.
  • Can they cross the Rubicund together?
  • Powell later wrote a musical play, " Rubicund Castle ", which was staged at the Pavilion Theatre in Peacehaven.
  • Herndon, the rubicund old-timer who runs Gulf King, has another set of figures, which, he said, proves the opposite.
  • The image consists of a head like a big mask with a rubicund face and lion s teeth projecting downwards outside the mouth from the angles of the upper jaw.
  • A report at the time described him thus : " Mr . John Stroyan is a sturdy, stalwart, rubicund Scotsman of about forty-five years of age.
  • "This is the most distressing weather I've encountered here, " says the well-tailored, rubicund Mills, serving the 15th year of what this time must seem a life term in solitary confinement.
  • After wearing it for a certain length of time, they buy red wine and sweet cheese with the coin, according to a belief that their faces would remain beautiful and white as cheese and rubicund as the wine, all year.
  • His greatest honours might be considered to be his various nicknames among the sailors, " Billy go tight " ( given on account of his rubicund complexion ), as well as " Billy Blue ", " Coachee ", and " Mr Whip ".
  • A 1940 " Baltimore Sun " article by Amy Grief describes " a visit to his large, sunny office, situated conveniently near the print shop, where he can hear the sond of his beloved presses and be accessible to anyone who comes to him for advice, reveals a small, rubicund cheerful man with white hair, keen blue eyes and a general Pickwickian air . . . very genial, very approachable, very kindly ."
  • Describing the event to a friend sometime later, Asquith wrote; " When I fully realised what a position had been created, I saw that I could not go on without dishonour or impotence, or both . " That evening, he dined at Downing Street with family and friends, his daughter-in-law Cynthia describing the scene; " I sat next to the P . M .  he was too darling  rubicund, serene, puffing a guinea cigar and talking of going to Honolulu . " Cynthia believed that he would be back " in the saddle " within a fortnight with his position strengthened.