Understand, usually after some initial difficulty.
Sinónimos
Examples for "tumble "
Examples for "tumble "
1 We sink in water; in air we tumble ; on earth we stumble.
2 Shane Long obviously likes a tumble but is clearly a good player.
3 The tumble returned shares to levels last seen in late October 1999.
4 We don't often see power take such a tumble in this country.
5 If stock values tumble , so does the value of funds under management.
1 In India the tooth-brush consists of a twig or a little branch.
2 Once more she listened for the breaking twig and the light step.
3 Suddenly a twig was heard to snap in the thicket before him.
4 Yellow-Knobs hung up his hammock under a twig in the rose garden.
5 Then he took a twig from the bush and set him free.
1 The resulting lower prices could help the technology catch on far quicker.
2 The hinges are on one trunk and the catch on the other.
3 We think it will catch on , said Omega ATS President Mike Bignell.
4 Steel cases offered the remains of the day's catch on crushed ice.
5 Instead, the brass catch on top of the case popped open easily.
1 It seems strange, but the husband always seems to get wise last.
2 Say, will you get wise to the dude with the red necktie?
3 But what if the pirates get wise , and start wearing earplugs?
4 But, so close as this, they'd get wise in a minute.
5 You've got to get wise to the trick of holding what you get .
1 I was sure they'd get onto the list this time, but no.
2 Bastarache had managed to get onto the twenty and was heading west.
3 Just get onto that house; it looks like a mission-style switch engine.
4 But 2005, Sina opened my blog, forced me to get onto internet.
5 Lennon had one saved, with Defoe unable to get onto the rebound.
1 Bush stepped past her and snapped the latch on the office door.
2 Pete's left hand drifted down to the latch on the safety belt.
3 It finds things it can latch on to and multiplies the threat.
4 He slid the latch on the cell door across and stepped inside.
5 As I lifted the latch on the gate he opened his trap.
1 In a live environment there's no way to get it 'just right'.
2 Handing him a familiar problem was the best way to get it .
3 Where's New Zealand going to get it 's food from in 30 years?
4 We had to allow people to help us get it this far.
5 I love jollof rice, but never get it quite right at home.
1 The cotton on the hillside fields wasn't going to amount to anything.
2 We cross a gravel road with cotton on either side of it.
3 Facebook Twitter Pinterest People pick cotton on a plantation in South Carolina.
4 I just couldn't find the time to plant cotton on it this year.
5 Consequently, there were many who cultivated cotton on a small scale.
6 He stood up and laid the probe and yellow-soaked cotton on the benchtop.
7 If only other clubs could cotton on to the idea.
8 My back hurt dreadfully, and mother put some ointment and soft cotton on it.
9 These are made of coarse knitting cotton on four-post knitters.
10 You needn't think you're goin' to cotton on with me any more after this!
11 And finally, Australian travellers beginning to cotton on to the island paradise of New Caledonia.
12 He hopes others will cotton on to this healthy and eco-conscious way to get around.
13 Our freight was wheat in the lower hold, flour betwixt decks, and cotton on deck.
14 Negroes were at work on the wharf loading bales of cotton on a big ship.
15 I'm wearing dead cotton on my limbs and a blush of roses on my face.
16 Thus trees are formed; thus the cotton on which Mr. Bazley discoursed last Friday is produced.
Other examples for "cotton on"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Translations for cotton on