augendre造句
例句与造句
- He was at war with everyone, said the journalist Jacques Augendre.
- Everyone was grateful for a breather, said the reporter Jacques Augendre.
- "He got fined for it, " Augendre said, attending his 53rd Tour.
- Augendre missed the 1947, 1952, 1954 and 1959 Tours, when he was kept in Paris to supervise other reporters'accounts.
- Tour de France archivist Jacques Augendre said Armstrong could break the record of five titles held by Merckx, Miguel Indurain, Bernard Hinault and Jacques Anquetil.
- It's difficult to find augendre in a sentence. 用augendre造句挺难的
- According to Augendre, Armstrong has a chance of breaking the record of five titles held by Miguel Indurain, Eddy Merckx, Jacques Anquetil and Bernard Hinault.
- Clowning around was more common even further back, recalled Jacques Augendre, a former French journalist known by some as " the memory of the Tour ."
- The Tour historian Jacques Augendre called Thys " a valorous rider . . . well-known for his intelligence " and said his claim " seems free from all suspicion ".
- "I wouldn't be surprised if he broke the record, " said Augendre, who began covering the Tour in 1949 . " He dominates so completely.
- Augendre began as a journalist in 1944 at " T閙oignage Chr閠ien ", a weekly, and began writing for the national sports daily, L'蓂uipe, in February 1946.
- Augendre neglected to mention 1989 he lost it on the final stage to Paris, a time trial, to Greg LeMond to finish second by 8 ", the closest finish in tour history.
- "We can already say that he is a great champion, " said Jacques Augendre, a former journalist and now the race's official archivist, who is covering his 50th Tour de France.
- Swiss-born French man Pierre Brambilla, a rider in the 1940s and early 50s, once left the pack and paid an innkeeper to fill his water bottle with sugar-sweetened red wine, Augendre said.
- Ten kilometres from the summit, said the journalist Jacques Augendre, Mall閖ac was : " Streaming with sweat, haggard and comatose, he was zigzagging and the road wasn't wide enough for him . . . He was already no longer in the real world, still less in the world of cyclists and the Tour de France ."
- Ten kilometres from the summit, said the historian of the Tour de France, Jacques Augendre, Mallejac was : " Streaming with sweat, haggard and comatose, he was zigzagging and the road wasn't wide enough for him . . . He was already no longer in the real world, still less in the world of cyclists and the Tour de France . " He was hauled to the side of the road and Dumas summoned.