Nghĩa của từ in the boradest sense bằng Tiếng Hungari

alegtágabbértelembe

Đặt câu có từ "in the boradest sense"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "in the boradest sense", 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 in the boradest sense, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ in the boradest sense trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh - Hungari

1. Ultimately, Abstaining is mostly useful in the moral sense rather than in the practical sense.

2. Not in the sense of painting and sculpture, but in the sense of assisted reproductive technologies.

3. Churchgoing, in one sense, the sense in which William Saint regarded it, touched his humour

4. Gratefulness boosts your sense of belonging; your sense of belonging in turn boosts your Common Sense.

5. Explore 'Airiness' in the dictionary 1 (noun) in the sense of freshness Skylights enhance the sense of Airiness.

6. In a sense, the Blemishing effect

7. Common sense triumphed in the end.

8. Old English (in sense Animus (sense 4)): from Latin, ‘spirit, mind’.

9. Yours, in one sense.

10. Bumming in British English present participle of verb bum 2 (sense 6), bum 2 (sense 7), bum 2 (sense 8), bum 2 (sense 9)

11. Amphoteric behavior applies to acids and bases defined in the Bronsted-Lowry sense and in the wider Lewis sense.

12. This olfactory sense develops in the womb.

13. It wasn't illegal in the strict sense .

14. In the strict sense, he was neither.

15. Common sense must prevail in the end.

16. The construction is canonical in a sense.

17. But self-confidence in the sense of psychological certitude is not the same things as absolute certainty in the philosophical sense.

18. Copped in British English past participle of verb, past tense of verb see cop 1 (sense 4), cop 1 (sense 5), cop 1 (sense 6), cop 1 (sense 7), cop 1 (sense 8)

19. In a sense, she's right.

20. One sense triggers another sense.

21. In a sense he's right.

22. 6th sense, 6th sense, pfft!

23. Late 16th century (in Beluga (sense 2)): from Russian belukha (Beluga (sense 1)), Beluga (Beluga (sense 2)), both from belyĭ ‘white’.

24. In sense 1 (now the primary sense), by extension from sense 2 or from Latin -cīdium (“killing”) (e.g., homiCide is from Latin homicīda and homicīdium).

25. Circumjacent: Lying around in the sense of surrounding