Nghĩa của từ sit by bằng Hindi

sit by <V.>

  1. आलसी होना "How can the govt. just sit by and let this happen."

Đặt câu có từ "sit by"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "sit by", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển tiếng Anh - Hindi. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ sit by, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ sit by trong bộ từ điển Từ điển tiếng Anh - Hindi

1. You can sit by the fireplace and share stories.

2. Did you sit... by the doorway or near the front of the church?

3. How can you just sit by while that evil Fox harms the world?

4. 28 Come and sit by the fire - you look chilled to the bone.

5. Who else would sit by me uninvited like a friend from the old days?

6. Oi pushed herself clear of the sewing machine and came over to sit by Kham.

7. I'd come home and sit by her, she'd put her head on my lap, and I'd stroke it.

8. Sit by someone's bedside day and night helping them, comforting them and at the same time killing them?

9. China should not sit by and wait for foreign countries to execute plans for the joint development of resources .

10. 17 Most green thumbs sit by the fire and dream of spring blossoms, or pore over their computers, planning future plantings.

11. 5 Her time was running out , but she continued to sit by the window ,leaning her head against the window curtain , inhaling the odour of dusty cretonne .

12. I would sit by the campfire at night and look at the moon and the starry sky as the evening breezes brought in the scents of the surrounding bush.

13. Particularly strong are The Painted Woman, in which a military man Bickeringly but erotically reenacts a lost love/wartime trauma (bonus: it contains a mini-treatise a la Beerbohm or Baudelaire on the value of cosmetics); Pleasure, in which two teenage lovers sit by a pond naming the painful things

14. Assiduous (adj.) "attentive, devoted, constant in application," 1530s, from Latin assiduus "attending; continually present, incessant; busy; constant," from assidere / adsidere "to sit down to, sit by" (thus "be constantly occupied" at one's work); from ad "to" (see ad-) + sedere "to sit," from PIE root *sed-(1) "to sit." The word acquired a taint of "servile" in 18c.