drinke造句
例句与造句
- An example sentence in the Kerkrade dialect is " J骴 鑣e en drinke hilt lief en zie雔 tsezame ", which means " eating and drinking well keeps one healthy ".
- In the Elizabethan era the plant was used in ales and Gervase Markham's " Countrie Farm " ( 1616 ) recommended that one should " Drinke everie morning a small draught of Eyebright wine ."
- With words common to both languages, vowel and consonant qualities are usually those of the standard ( " trinken " instead of " drinke "; " immer " instead of " emmer " ), as are the rules of morphology.
- In Ben Jonson's play, " A Tale of a Tub " ( 1633 ) Erasmus's text is explicitly quoted and expanded : " " Multa cadunt inter " you can ghesse the rest . / Many things fall betweene the cup, and lip : / And though they touch, you are not sure to drinke ."
- Bequest for the betterment of poor children : John Stow recorded the actual bequest as, " He gave tenements to the Citye for the finding and bringing up of foure poore men's children with meate, drinke, apparell, learning at the schooles in the universities, & c ., until they be preferred, and then others in their place for ever ."
- It's difficult to find drinke in a sentence. 用drinke造句挺难的
- He had more than sixteen hundred subscribers to " The Pennylesse Pilgrimage; or, the Moneylesse Perambulation of John Taylor, alias the Kings Magesties Water-Poet; How He TRAVAILED on Foot from London to Edenborough in Scotland, Not Carrying any Money To or Fro, Neither Begging, Borrowing, or Asking Meate, Drinke, or Lodging . ", published in 1618.
- He told his mother that he was to " visit the well neine dayes, and to drinke thereof three tymes in etech day, and that he would doe well, and douth to continue since to observe the same dayly, and since is cured of the vomitting disease, and douth eath and drink ever since with a great apetit and desire, and douth slipe well ."
- In holy well in St Keyne had the reputation of conferring supremacy to the marriage partner who first tasted it . ( " " The quality, that man and wife / Whose chance, or choice, attaines / First of this sacred stream to drinke / Thereby the mastery gains . " " ) There was also a ballad called 3 " The Well of St Keyne " 3.
- The final engraving, of a person in gay attire, with hat and plume, sitting and smoking at a table, is accompanied by a poem, once strangely attributed to George Wither, whose portrait the engraving was taken to be . and its burden was " Thus thinke, then drinke Tobacco . " Wither, an opponent of smoking, wrote a reply with the counter-refrain, " Thus thinke, drinke no Tobacco ."
- The final engraving, of a person in gay attire, with hat and plume, sitting and smoking at a table, is accompanied by a poem, once strangely attributed to George Wither, whose portrait the engraving was taken to be . and its burden was " Thus thinke, then drinke Tobacco . " Wither, an opponent of smoking, wrote a reply with the counter-refrain, " Thus thinke, drinke no Tobacco ."
- "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 ."