dydy造句
例句与造句
- Part of the humour for the Anglo-Irish readers of the poem is that Nees and Dydy converse with each other in broad Fingallian.
- Virgil's prince Aeneas and his noble lover Dido are transformed into a bumbling young Fingallian called'Prince'Nees and a coarse ex-nun Dydy.
- In it Nees encounters Dydy again and seeing her look pale and unwell realises that he may have been responsible for giving her the'flame'or venereal disease.
- Nees continues with an attempt to sweet talk Dydys and asks her for a'pogue', but his fears are justified and Dydy is having none of it.
- It's difficult to find dydy in a sentence. 用dydy造句挺难的