Nghĩa của từ expletive bằng Tiếng Hungari

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Đặt câu có từ "expletive"

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

1. 'Damn' is an expletive.

2. Armholes is my new favorite expletive now

3. Expletive - laced language filled her head.

4. The Parson Blurted an expletive, inflected like the profane

5. I mean, I just about ( expletive ) in my pants.

6. Please take your seats and shut the ( expletive ) up.

7. We're not going to take this ( expletive ) any more.

8. It is a " damned human race " in a not merely expletive sense.

9. If you're a basketball purist, that's the [expletive] you want to see.

10. In fact, with the release of the White House tapes, Richard Nixon made “expletive deleted” a household phrase.

11. With an expletive or two, Bianchi and Leahy ran to the corner to see where the leak was.

12. A woman in the passenger’s seat uttered an expletive about a mask and then Coughed on the driver, while using racial slurs

13. Synonyms of Blatted. to utter with a sudden burst of strong feeling. Blatted an obscene expletive before biting the dust.

14. Appetites, in addition to presenting an eclectic, expletive-laden portrait of one’s family’s fare, is also a really great cookbook

15. Bejesus (interj.) mild expletive, 1908, probably from by Jesus.Compare bejabbers (by 1821 in representations of Irish dialect), from the same source

16. ‘a Bleeping red display on the exercise machine’ 1.1 informal, humorous Used to express exasperation or annoyance, in place of an expletive

17. Bullshit (also Bullshite or bullcrap) is a common English expletive which may be shortened to the euphemism bull or the initialism B.S

18. Bloody, as an adverb, is a commonly used expletive attributive in British English, Australian English, Irish English, Indian English and a number of other Commonwealth nations

19. The word Buggery today also serves as a general expletive (mild, moderate or severe depending on the context and company), and can be used to replace the word bugger as a simple expletive or as a simile in phrases which do not actually refer literally in any sense to Buggery itself, but just use the word for its informal strength of impact, e.g

20. Gospel Singer Kirk Franklin Blasphemes God in Expletive-Laden, Violence-Threatening Triade Against Son added by Editor on March 14, 2021 View all posts by Editor →

21. Ods Bodkins was used as a mild expletive and can be heard sprinkled liberaly throughout the works of Shakespear; most notably by my favorite character Sir John Falstaff

22. Blatted an obscene expletive before biting the dust Recent Examples on the Web Your problem is that you were raised on fantasies of blatting muscle cars and Bueller-esque Ferrari Daytonas, and don’t …

23. As my explanations here are probably above your understand-ings, lattlebrattons, though as Augmentatively uncomparisoned as Cadwan, Cadwallon and Cadwalloner, I shall revert to a more expletive method which I frequently use when I have to sermo with muddlecrass pupils

24. According to multiple online dictionaries, Bejesus is a quite common mild expletive used to express surprise and/or dismay and is derived from by Jesus. But what does it mean? The phrase “you scared the by Jesus out of me” doesn’t seem to make much more sense than the derivative expression.

25. Bollocks / ˈ b ɒ l ə k s / BO-ləks is a word of Middle English origin, meaning "testicles".The word is often used figuratively in colloquial British English and Hiberno-English as a noun to mean "rubbish" or "nonsense", an expletive following a minor accident or misfortune, or an adjective to mean "poor quality" or "useless"