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unassailed การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Maintain the shield of his ( her ) faith unassailed by the enemy [ i . e ., Satan ].
  • At early dawn it retired unassailed, leaving the relief to fight during the day, what was known as the battle of Golden's Farm.
  • He said he was deeply disturbed that Palestinian violations of the peace accords have gone unassailed while Israeli delays over security are attacked as undermining years of negotiations.
  • And " Dumb and Dumber, " the unassailed, year-end box office champ, was once again in first place over the holiday weekend.
  • But IBM and Motorola have yet to sell large volumes of computers using the chip, and Intel Corp .'s dominance of the microprocessor market remains unassailed.
  • Soon, the unassailed ugliness will have fuller sway, as the winter-lovely broom straw will be gone, replaced, again, by fresh young grasses.
  • Grace Robert wrote in 1946, " Although more than thirty years have elapsed since " Petrushka " was first performed, its position as one of the greatest ballets remains unassailed.
  • Bob Dole, once the unassailed Republican front-runner, suffered another setback in his bid for his party's presidential nomination Tuesday as he came in a distant third in a non-binding preference vote in Alaska, despite virtually unanimous backing from the party hierarchy in the state.
  • Because beyond the criticism ( some of it justified; I have " not " had the time or the inclination to concentrate on it ) of the article itself, the hostility of detractors ( as is evidenced by those who continue to focus on attack Thompson's unassailed scholarship completely without foundation, while completely ignoring the writings of others ) has been directed toward the editor and / or the very subject itself.
  • She is described in the novel, along with her sister, as a " fine women, with an air of decided fashion ", and also distainful of society in Meryton, Hertfordshire ( " [ Louisa ( and Caroline's ) ] behaviour at the assembly had not been calculated to please in general; and with more quickness of observation and less pliancy of temper than her sister, and with a judgment, too, unassailed by any attention to herself, she was very little disposed to approve them.