Sinónimos
Examples for "loaf"
Examples for "loaf"
1The men searched everywhere; there was but one loaf in the boat.
2The loaf improves in flavour for several days and needs no icing.
3Baking times vary according to the loaf size and choice of cycle.
4Put the egg in last, and carefully pour over loaf; Serve hot.
5Bake in large greased loaf pan in moderate oven about one hour.
1I remembered something Trapp had told me once about his bridge-bum days.
2The trim, khaki-garbed enlistment officer rubs elbows with the lodging house bum.
3Guess the lamp is on the bum, but you hardly need that.
4The law, missing the right quarry, descends on the slower-moving, harmless bum.
5I just couldn't resist giving him the bum's rush for a change.
1Few remained indoors, and few possessed the calmness to loll in deck-chairs.
2Tawdrily dressed girls saunter along the sidewalks, or loll from the window-sills.
3All afternoon I take it easy and loll around on the sofa.
4What should he loll in the bed for, and dirty the bedclothes?
5The latter seemed to loll on, totally heedless of such a tributary.
1To her right, skiers relaxed in the lounge around a big fire.
2The night's too wonderful to do anything except lounge around and think.
3We would swim and lounge around, then head back to the flat.
4Passengers used to lounge around, drinking free juice of tomato and watching TV.
5Police and soldiers lounge around cradling automatic weapons and enjoying the overtime bonanza.
1All afternoon I take it easy and loll around on the sofa.
2She let her head loll around as if she was possessed.
3You loll around in a pink dressing gown all morning.
4You can either keep your pyjamas on, loll around and watch telly all day.
5They'd sooner loll around and sleep in the sun and collect white men's wages for doing it.
1Next morning I got up early, and took a lounge about Saratoga.
2Then they lounge about, gossip, and quarrel a good deal, I suspect.
3He had rather lounge about all First-day at street corners with his acquaintance.
4What do you lounge about on that terrace for every evening?
5To tell you the truth, I seldom have time to lounge about in studios.
1Maybe we could drive out to the Maritimes, bum around Nova Scotia for a few days. God.
2All he's done around here since we built the anchor modifier is bum around finding his inner geek.
3In Portland, "it is fairly easy to bum around town if you have a camper of some variety as well," Pecknold adds.
4I bummed around a couple of years, feeling very sorry for myself.
5There's no reathon why you should be bumming around in the chorus.
1If you're bumming about Chef Vergennes not being the killer, look at the glass-half-full part, Nikki.
1Rag Week seems to go on for ever, it's just an excuse for them to arse around.
2Radio says it was kids arsing around.
3Bloody students arsing around again, he thought.
4The condition is that if you get any of my men killed by arsing around, I will personally shoot you.
1Now be so good as to drink your water and fuck off.'
2Right now I just wanted him to back the fuck off me.
3To tell policemen to fuck off and get a smile in return.
4If you are not classified to receive this material, fuck off, Jack.
5You don't like the terms, you can just fuck off, can't you.
1If you start frigging around with that, you're putting everything on the line.
2I know your grandfather died in his garage in Iowa City frigging around with his chainsaw while he was drunk.
1Having acquired that status, one should never waste one's time in the indulgence of one's senses.
3He could see no bearing between the two in point, and, anyway, girls were rather silly creatures to waste one's time over.
1Anyway, these days it's mostly just used to arse about, make little sculptures.
2The only thing radical he gave a rat's arse about was free radicals with unpaired electrons.
3But I'm guessing he blew fire up some Canadian arses about needing to fix that.