2-Deck patience or solitaire card game.
Sinônimos
Examples for "indian"
Examples for "indian"
1Mrs Sitharaman said Indian industry felt let down by Britain's visa rules.
2Indian economy is carefully waiting for a good monsoon in coming months.
3One issue is that it misunderstood what value means to Indian consumers.
4Second, I'm a great consumer and promoter and provider of Indian food.
5He is one of thousands of Indian sailors in a similar situation.
1Battles in the streets are followed by fierce debates in the Assembly.
2You see it in the streets, in the parks, in the churches.
3They grind their points; they stir poison; they swarm in the streets.
4The shop signs were in foreign tongues; in some streets all Hebrew.
5They fed in threes and fours in the middle of the streets.
1EBONY: I have one more serious question; I know time is limited.
2However, these tests are expensive and therefore not available in resource-limited countries.
3Objective: Because public health funds are limited, programs need to be prioritized.
4Background: Public information on average has limited impact on patients' hospital choice.
5This week the OFT said real competition was, in reality, relatively limited.
1Tragedy has come Maria's way since the end of the training course.
2Ms Maria Mahon: new chief executive officer of The Irish Jobs Page.
3Aunt Maria at first said that they were too young to understand.
4Well, Maria said that her friend had left her ID at home.
5Maria Tallchief and American ballet came of age in the same moment.
1Lucas said he would press for House debate as soon as possible.
2Conclusions: Use of the LUCAS system decreased survival rate in OHCA patients.
3Photo: Lucas Marshall The loot looks good for the climbers this year.
4A key uncertainty for Nine is its level of debt, said Lucas.
5Photo: Lucas Marshall Morning comes with the start of the 12-hour competition.
1Josephine was really, really well liked by the public at that time.
2Josephine Cafagna took out third place in the news and events category.
3Josephine was beginning to identify with the style of a new generation.
4Josephine leaned out from the casement and softly joined in the refrain:
5On Sunday June 30, Josephine was in Ireland with relatives and friends.
1Napoleon at St Helena was not more unhappy than were millions of people of his day.
1So with no further a-do... number ten: Iraq and Afghanistan are dangerous.
2He clicked on 'Olya' and went to the final picture, number ten.
3It doesn't look like there's going to be a victim number ten.
4It's made it to number ten behind Paris, Vancouver, Chicago and Adelaide.
5Once it was Jonny Wilkinson who called the shots from number ten.
1By their number of Twitter followers shall ye rank and file them.
2The trusted lieutenants held the rank and file in readiness for action.
3And the rank and file-farmers and labourers-seemed fired by the same enthusiasm.
4For in the rank and file an empty stomach is not hopeful.
5The rank and file, at least, now believed firmly in the prophet.
1Look at your boat, sir; you in the red and black caps.
2It spread great wings, gorgeous in red and black, and soared aloft.
3The Pope is a bird that has a red and black plumage.
4I shall talk about the colours red and black in the clay.
5Ellis said he'd loved every minute in the red and black jersey.
1But as they sat at meat, there came tidings that a band of sixty thieves, well armed and fierce, was at the gate, demanding entrance.
1It is the easy grace of undress; not an intellectual full- dress parade.
2A bayonet looks far different from what it did on dress parade.
3Then, almost immediately after dress parade, came the hardest ordeal of all.
4I tell you one thing, Connie, these Quakers are on dress parade.
5How many weddings resulted from that day's dress parade I know not.
1Winston talks as if he were the captain of the forty thieves.'
2They then left me, and went to join the other forty thieves.
3At last the door opened again and out came the forty thieves.
4At length the door opened, and the forty thieves came out.
5There was he found by the forty thieves, who slew and quartered him.
1He lef' Hobbett's corner wid a great big forty- fo', inquirin' wha you is.
2But this was no Beaver-trap; it was a big forty-pound Bear-catcher, and he was surely caught.
3Zeb carried his big forty-four revolver.
4Even the big forty-five had a broken hammer, and the pistol, Keith thought, might have stunned a fly at close range.
5Beyond that he was pretty much addicted to golf, and then there was the big forty-two-foot cruiser he kept down at the marina.