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Significados de liberal sprinkling en inglés
Aún no tenemos significados para "liberal sprinkling".
Uso de liberal sprinkling en inglés
1
Indeed, there's a liberalsprinkling of such over-achievers in our top 10 teams.
2
Could this be a vinegar-scented marketing wheeze, wings with a liberalsprinkling of fomo?
3
Instead the Irish team will include a liberalsprinkling of under-21 and former youths international medalists.
4
But much talked reached his ears, most of it coarse and rough, with a liberalsprinkling of oaths.
5
Perspiration dried, and the landscape took on a sombre black velvet hue, with a liberalsprinkling of gold stars.
6
The woods are of oak chiefly, but with a liberalsprinkling of chestnut, black-walnut, hickory, and other common forest-trees.
7
Sam Snedecker and Pete Bailey were two who received a liberalsprinkling of the lime, and they vowed vengeance on Tom.
8
For life is a most chillingly vaporous affair (reminding one of washing-day in November) without a liberalsprinkling of liveliness.
9
The mill hands and their families were well-paid, thrifty, clannish Swedes, most of them, with a liberalsprinkling of Belgians and Slavs.
10
The F12, with its look-at-me lines and liberalsprinkling of logos, is, perhaps even more than most Ferraris, meant to advertise new money.
11
With this restoration of public gayety came a liberalsprinkling of uniforms to the throngs that crowded the ball-rooms, tea-gardens and gambling halls.
12
Sheringham retains a real old-fashioned charm, with fantastic ice-cream shops (rather foodie), independent boutique shops and a liberalsprinkling of good eateries.
13
In Haughey's case, however, his words about Jack Lynch could be applicable to himself only with a liberalsprinkling of the word "not".
14
More than half the team will be competing in their first Games but there is a liberalsprinkling of not just experience but real quality.
15
Deep ruts and a liberalsprinkling of small boulders collaborated to keep the horses stumbling, plunging and pitching as they strained back against the singletrees.
16
Chief executive Stuart Gulliver followed up with a liberalsprinkling of words such as "shameful" and "embarrassing" and a pledge that the bank "gets it".