warme造句

"warme"是什么意思   

例句与造句

  1. After initial resistance from the Geological Society of America, the first paper published concerning the Alamo Breccia was co-authored by John Warme, Brian Ackman, Yarmanto, and Alan Chamberlain in the 1993 " Nevada Petroleum Society Field Conference Guidebook ".
  2. In some cafes in Belgium and other areas in Europe, one who orders a " " warme chocolade " " or " " chocolat chaud " " receives a cup of steaming white milk and a small bowl of bittersweet chocolate chips to dissolve in the milk.
  3. Warme credits Bellman with a good knowledge of a literary craftsman's tools, using rhetoric and classical knowledge " to provide a theatrical backdrop for his tavern folk . " The result is an " astonishing mixture of realism and wild mythological fantasy ", set to complicated musical structures:
  4. John E . Warme, one of the geologists who first recognized the geologic anomalies as the results of a bolide, estimates that the total volume of limestone reef deposits and bedrock that was smashed, deformed, partially melted or shifted during the Alamo event at 1, 000 cubic kilometers . " Ensuing tsunamis rearranged much of the debris " he adds.
  5. In Bosnia and Herzegovina ( and also, to a lesser extent, Croatia, Slovenia ( Slovene " " re ko'alva " " ( " sells like halva " ) is a colloquial expression denoting a product's sales are very high, similar to the English expression " sells like hotcakes " or the German expression " " verkauft sich wie warme Semmeln " " ( " sells like hot bread rolls " ).
  6. It's difficult to find warme in a sentence. 用warme造句挺难的
  7. "Their manner of eating and drinking is : everie man hath a table alone, without table-clothes or napkins, and eateth with two pieces of wood like the men Chino : they drink wine of Rice, wherewith they drink themselves drunke, and after their meat they use a certain drinke, which is a pot with hote water, which they drink as hot as ever they may indure, whether it be Winter or Summer . . . The aforesaid warme water is made with the powder of a certaine hearbe called Chaa, which is much esteemed, and is well accounted among them ."
  8. :: : : That said, a pool party does give the right idea, and if you can find a good indoor pool it should work . ( Unless it's warme nough where you live to still do it outdoors . ) Perhaps it could be a broader Olympic theme-with Michael Phelps having made swimming so big, perhaps you could have some fun competitions . that would let the boys get a little silly ( when I was 12, my firends and I liked to do funny dives-perhaps a contest for most recative among boys and girls ? ) and let everyone have fun without having the full attention paid to the skin.
  9. Keayne left a 53-page will, covering a range of topics, which notably left several hundred pounds to establish the First Town-House, a building to " be used by the town and county government and be shared by the military company, with convenience for a market and conduit near by . " Remarking on the need for a covered market, he wrote : " I having long thought and considered the want of some necessary things of public concernment which may not be only comodious, but very profitable and useful for the Town of Boston, as a market place . . . useful for the country people that come with their provisions for the supply of the towne, that they may have a place to sett dry in and warme, both in cold raine and durty weather, and may have a place to leave their corne or any other things safe that they cannot sell, till they come again, which would be both an encouragement to come in and a great means to increase trading in the Towne also ."
  10. Unlike the native inhabitants living in northern Maine and Canada where the annual growing season was insufficiently long to reliably produce maize harvests ( and they, as a result, were required to live a fairly nomadic existence ) the southern New England Algonquins were " rudimentary sedentary cultivators . " Although their habitations were relatively mobile, being made of striplings fixed in a circle in the ground with their tops tied by walnut bark ( with hole for smoke from central fire inside, covered with mats of reed, hemp and hides, the one main migration of the entire population of each tribe ( including women and children ) was a biannual one and took place only from winter residence ( in warmer forested areas ) to summer habitation ( near the cornfields ) and back again . chiefly based on the writing of Roger Williams, who wrote : " their great remove is from their Summer fields to warme and thicke woodie bottomes where they winter & " Thomas Morton also noted annual ( if not more ) changes of habitation : " They use not to winter and summer in the same place, for that would be reason to make the fuell scarece; but, after the manner of the Gentry of civilized nations, remove for their pleasures & " Morton suggested that they removed to hunt, fish or even for " Revelles . " Williams, however, said that other than the removal of the entire village from winter and summer habitations, individual families or even the whole might move : to avoid flea infestations, to tend to multiple corn plots, when there was a death in the household, and in response to hostilities . " In any event these descriptions, and others, suggest the life of relatively sedentary horticulturists . } } Maize and other cultivated vegetables made up a substantial part of the Ninnimissinuok diet.
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