Sinònims
Examples for "great"
Examples for "great"
1Thank you Ireland: it's a great day, for Ireland and for Europe.
2With that cherished right to vote, however, comes a great personal responsibility.
3It's a great way to start the new year. -FieldLevel Media
4Today is a great day for the future health of Australian children.
5The great problem at Yosemite today is simply finding your way around.
1Given the opportunity, and state government intentions, they're keen to encourage visitors.
2Europe in particular will be keen to near-source as much as possible.
3He said companies were extremely keen to take on the new technology.
4Our group is really keen to challenge themselves and accept the challenge.
5Of course I am. The Nationals' coalition partners are certainly not keen.
1So wouldn't it be neat to do year four and year five?
2As neat a solution a Vickers-style plan might be, questions nonetheless remain.
3Seconds later, a waiter came over to take Favor's order: whiskey neat.
4Very neat, I understand, though I've only seen it from the water.
5It's a neat solution to the transmission problem, I'll give them that.
1Real swell customer, great credit history, just a screwup down in records.
2Therefore, the first commandment for technologists is: Design technologies to swell happiness.
3The ship was still rolling heavily in the swell after the gale.
4What surprised me, however, was the huge swell of support for Kick-Ass.
5Squire must be thinking of that right now in this deeper swell.
1Turkey has also been cracking down on Islamic State networks at home.
2I've gotten fined a number of times for cracking rackets, she said.
3I hope we can keep cracking on, into the future for ever.
4If Sants really is serious about cracking down on wrongdoers, that's welcome.
5Try a cuticle oil and keep your hands moisturized to avoid cracking.
1Otherwise, Vladimir Putin may conclude he can bully countries inside the EU.
2But I shall deny him the chance to bully me in public.
3On that Twitter fight, Badu said, I just had to bully control.
4Until one day, Felicity told the bully 'enough' and it all stopped.
5Only social media makes it possible to bully on such a scale.
1There may be magnificence in the smashing; but the thing is smashed.
2In the latest demonstrations, some attacked the National Assembly building, smashing windows.
3The Wardens' chain of command is a smashing disaster at the moment.
4Furthermore, the final polls accurately predicted the smashing of Scotland's political mould.
5He tried to open the frame, and succeeded in smashing the glass.
1Which was just dandy keeno fine as far as she was concerned.
2She was sure she'd wake up the following morning feeling peachy dandy.
3In areas where there's no pesticides, they'll turn out fine and dandy.
4Ye look right a dandy in blue silk doublet and slit pantaloons.
5The dandy of the clubs had become a perambulating mass of rags.
1Punters with nifty footwork should, thus, find the package pretty good value.
2He is going to require some nifty footwork in the weeks ahead.
3Last week, Microsoft unveiled a very nifty video of its latest technology.
4Do the SEALs have some nifty new weapon for taking out sharks?
5Marchessault tied the game following a nifty sequence late in the third.
1She was sure she'd wake up the following morning feeling peachy dandy.
2If that's the way he wants it, then that's just peachy fine.
3Now, I've never been there myself, but I hear it's just peachy.
4Trust me, the rest of the album is as peachy as this.
5It was a soft peachy-pink silk that flowed easily from the shoulders.
1All the beautiful people, the flower people, the good and groovy people.
2The new gals even have groovy intruder names: Deanna, Brittney and Jamie-Lee.
3Protesters professed being on a freedom high as well as feeling groovy.
4And it is a groove; perhaps there was never anything so groovy.
5My friends are all groovy-looking types with long hair, beads, flowered polyester.
1Tell me; what's the premium now for a corking post like this?'
2He floundered in a sea of real revue, stunts, and corking effects.
3Roland, meanwhile, was reading with horrified eyes the alleged corking Scandal Page.
4A corking baseball story that fans, both young and old, will enjoy.
5I'll get these interviews, and it'll make a corking good second-day story.
1You take me somewhere where we can get a regular slap-up lunch.
2You're such a slap-up dude you'd ought to be a hotel clerk, cap.
3You had a slap-up dinner, you're three pounds to the good, and everyone is satisfied.
4I could furnish a place in slap-up style to-morrow.
5The chap who'd owned the 'ouse before 'er father 'd been a regular slap-up burglar.
1When he starts in he finishes up a job in bang-up style.
2I must say though, Bertie is doing a bang-up job of it.
3Says you're doing a bang-up job with the wraiths on your own.
4Yes, and you did a bang-up piece of work, you and Big-foot.
5I've often worked out many a puzzle while having a bang-up smoke.
1Pain's not bad right now. But it was clearly not good, either.
2Money is not bad in itself; wealth is not bad in itself.
3To invade this world is not bad breeding; it is social sacrilege.
4The personal appearance of the men of this tribe is not bad.
5He had to start thinking about it as good luck, not bad.
6It's not bad, and it's not good, just the way it is.
7Three thousand years, not bad for a system of writing, is it?
8As for me, it's really not bad this way, it's less painful.
9It's not bad monetization and a lot better than expected, he said.
10My spirits are not bad; and they ought not to be bad.
11She was not bad-hearted; she simply could not afford anything but luxuries.
12Still, Kagonesti life was not bad-in fact, Iydahoe could imagine nothing better.
13I rather flattered myself that under the circumstances it was not bad.
14The Vatican says the new Star Wars baddies are not bad enough.
15Blonde and brunette, too young for me, not bad to look at.
16Well, he is not bad; but he insists upon doing his duty.
Aquesta col·locació està formada per:
Not bad a través del temps
Not bad per variant geogràfica