Sinònims
Examples for "ex"
Examples for "ex"
1ANSWER: It's certainly possible that your ex has a history of trauma.
2Some possible new job roles for the soon-to-be-ex leader of our government.
3Methods: Several methodologies are currently being used for ex vivo Treg expansion.
4Aims: To examine whether this interaction is effective under ex vivo conditions.
5No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.
1Homer was thus at once contemporary in content and antique in form.
2The enthuriasm for installing bar rooms has created a new antique market.
3The genuine antique or fake was not on it; it was missing.
4I suspect it's an antique, probably worth a fortune in today's market.
5She opened her antique guidebook to the city, published sixty years before.
1In the past two years, disruption toppled many outmoded firms and ideas.
2City firms donate their outmoded computers because they have no resale value.
3His authoritarian style and single-minded pursuit of economic growth are now outmoded.
4Their model of insuring secondary care only is outmoded and ultimately unaffordable.
5The thesis was that computers could bypass any outmoded concerns about instinct.
1Chinaman passee lettel nex' Chinaman.
3Anyone found with such a bag on her person will immediately be classified as out of touch and hopelessly passee.
4Buds,' I have cried to them, 'do not dare to open yet, or you will be horribly passee by Easter.
5We were often in Paris, and I became as skilled in beautifying artifices as any passee wife of the Faubourg St. Germain.
1This is a cruel, fanatical, demode Arab holy war, a hand-to-hand war of native knives & barbaric tortures.
2The following "acceptance" is decidedly demode:
3The three lounge-suits of tweed, though slightly demoded, would still be vogue in this remote spot.
4"Do you mean to defy me to my face?" demoded Squire Pope, growing very red.
1Imagination, boldness, and good, old-fashioned hard work keep the good routes coming.
2Sound the alarm: the good old-fashioned relationship is under attack from technology.
3These mussels are harvested the old-fashioned way-bydredging along the sea floor.
4An old-fashioned word seems best suited to summarising the situation - unfair.
5The hotel earned her respect the old-fashioned way - through good service.
1It may seem weird to pour so much money into old-hat tech.
1Of course no-one ever suspected, because wands were so passe, these days.
2A shipp of 500 tuns could passe, soe bigg is the arch.
3Why, that old paintings evidently are quite passe to the new crowd.
4Hopping on the toxic masculinity bandwagon to sell toiletries is so passe.
5Klieg lights, rubber truncheons, and demeaning or harsh questions are passe.
6I after the old passe, all the day within doors, .
7It is a charmingly passe thing to be a gentleman in this country.
8Suddenly, the string-laden, almost light-entertainment sound of Paramor pop began to seem passe.
9However, the onset of the beat boom meant that he was becoming passe.
10They quarreled; the Spahi drew first; and then, pouf et passe!
11L'on s'accoutume difficilement a une vie qui se passe sur l'escalier.
12As smoking gets passe, tobacco companies are racing to find what takes its place.
13AND it came to passe the third day, and I sate vnder an oke.
14There is an exquisite ivory-type of Marjorie, in passe-partout, on the drawing room mantel-piece.
15Il faut que la jeunesse se passe (youth must have its day).
16The risk is that it could suddenly become outdated, passe.