เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

sit round การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • A group of robot customers sit round the table, attended by robot waiters.
  • On The day of lammas its traditional to sit round a fire and sing songs.
  • A lot of the problems can be sorted out if people are prepared to sit round the table and communicate.
  • Obviously, those contracts have yet to be negotiated, but the mere fact they want to sit round the table and be involved is a big plus for the club.
  • Blair told the British Broadcasting Corp . " We can either sit round, as leaders round the world, wringing our hands and condemning it or we can relaunch a political process.
  • There is a sickening interplay between the bloodletting in the streets and the game plans of the political front men for terror who sit round what innocents refer to as the " peace table ."
  • "I hope we can arrange it next week that we sit round the table and say : this is the way to go, " he told reporters in Hanover, his home town.
  • In the meantime, however, we can't afford to sit round with our ears plugged waiting for the next bomb to go off, or sheepishly holding our breath as we open the morning mail.
  • Drummers from other bands sit round the back of him to see what he's doing, but he's got his kit set so he doesn't even look at what he's hitting half the time ".
  • Speaking after meeting Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreou, Kavan said " we should concentrate our minds and our efforts on planning a way in which diplomats and politicians could once again sit round a negotiating table and find a political peaceful solution ."
  • When the movement of Modern Spiritualism first reached Europe from America in the winter of 1852 & ndash; 1853, the most popular method of consulting the spirits was for several persons to sit round a table, with their hands resting on it, and wait for the table to move.
  • It is so large that twenty people can easily sit round it; near the edge of the lid which covers it, there are holes pierced corresponding to the number of persons who are to surround it; into these holes are introduced iron rods, bent at right angles outwards, and of different heights, so as to answer to the part of the body to which they are to be applied.
  • When a child is born all its kindred sit round about it in a circle and weep for the woes it will have to undergo now that it is come into the world, making mention of every ill that falls to the lot of humankind; when, on the other hand, a man has died, they bury him with laughter and rejoicings, and say that now he is free from a host of sufferings, and enjoys the completest happiness . " " ( " Histories, 5.4 ")