Sinônimos
Examples for "bucket"
Examples for "bucket"
1They call themselves 'the bucket list family' for a very good reason.
2Thou sattest in one bucket beneath in the pit in great dread.
3But first, hoist me up a bucket of sea water, will you?
4A few minutes later Kote returned with a bucket of soapy water.
5Is participating in an obstacle course race on your fitness bucket list?
1It can also bucket down with rain from time to time too.
2I lifted the well cover, as usual, and dropped the bucket down.
3So they let the bucket down again, and she made off.
4It can bucket down in one village, while the next village remains dry.
5The kid put his bucket down and collapsed into the girl's arms, shuddering.
1I just made a ball of snow and chucked it down.
2He chucked it down into a corner and helped himself to a cup of tea.
3Chuck it down in the coal cellar, will you?
4It is chucking it down in Regent's Park, cars are splashing pedestrians, expensive frocks and suits are getting drenched.
1I wouldn't piss down his throat if his heart was on fire.
2Make I piss down leg of I, that is come warm, now cold.
3I felt her go, just like piss down the inside of my leg.
4It didn't have the decency to really belly up and piss down on us.
5And all of them want to rip my head off and piss down my neck, Theisman thought mordantly.
1Thousands of residents have evacuated to higher ground as rain buckets down, and flooding continues.
2It's going to rain buckets here any time now. I poked him on the shoulder.
3The rain buckets down on Mayo and there is nothing for it but to bemoan another distorted and inglorious All-Ireland defeat.
4It rained buckets, it rained vats; it rained swimming pools and lakes and rivers.
5Her fly had played her false, and, being our island home, it rained buckets.
1It is very pleasant to walk there with a good catalogue, and make it rain cats and dogs outside.
2It's not going to rain cats and dogs like the cricket commentators seem to think, but there is some rain...
3It's raining cats and dogs; perfect weather to talk about holidays.
4It was raining cats and dogs, but we went swimming anyway.
5It's raining cats and dogs, and we can't get much wetter.
1It rained pitchforks and pineapples, but the hall, a large one, was completely filled.
2Raining pitchforks all the time, you understand.
3There is no credible report that it has ever yet rained pitchforks, but many other curious things have fallen.
4"But it's raining pitchforks," demurred Miss Judy.
5"You need," said he, "to have it rain pitchforks, tines downward, from this pulpit, Sunday after Sunday."
1'In my experience, children don't run away in the middle of the night, especially when it's pissing it down with rain.