Nghĩa của từ brits bằng Tiếng Việt

danh từ
(thông tục) người Anh

Đặt câu có từ "brits"

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

1. 7 Americanisms that Brits will never understand

2. The Baron really fits the bill, and of course it was made by the Brits, after all, who knew spies better than the Brits

3. Check out WatchMojo UK for the best content made for the Brits by the Brits: http://bit.ly/2FtPjihTop 10 Stars Who Were Booed at Award ShowsSubscribe: http:/

4. It was three Brits that came in and did this!

Đó là ba thằng người Anh đã xông vào và gây nên.

5. The Brits nursed us back to some semblance of health.

Quân Anh giao chúng tôi lại cho mấy nơi giống cơ sở y tế để chăm sóc.

6. For Brits, to Bathe means to swim or to pour liquid on something

7. Bogof BANNED- Supermarkets to Remove ‘2 for 1’ Offers to Help Brits Lose Weight

8. Appel (gebore Christoph Kotzé) is 'n Afrikaanse sanger en liedjieskrywer vanaf Brits, Noordwes.

9. Anglomania: The Second British Invasion America surrenders to the Brits — but who really wins? By

10. Greeks, Romans, Goths, Tatar-Mongols, Ottomans, Russians, Brits and Frenchmen during the Crimean war,… Read more stories

11. 6 We Brits are terribly prudish and you may be, as I was, a little uneasy at first.

12. Comradeship with my VPH friends, their supporters, other Brits, and indeed all the other people in the race

13. Video of drunken Brits maskless in Magaluf Appals Spaniards This article is more than 4 months old

14. Versions of Scrabble of hundreds of “offensive” words — leaving game-loving Brits clutching their “boobies” for fear of losing their “Arses

15. Brit ( third-person singular simple present Brits, present participle Britting, simple past and past participle Britted ) ( transitive) To break in pieces; divide

16. @Jimi Oke I don't agree with you that Cheeky bastard has a uniformly positive connotation, even amongst Brits who are familiar with it

17. According to Bownty, the daily deal aggregator, mobile spending among Brits has shot up in the first six months of 2013

18. Albion College Information System HELP EXIT: homepage Go Brits! ACIS records are backed up nightly between 3:00 and 5:30 AM Eastern time

19. This was the 90s, and the way a Chola styled her bangs – fringe to you Brits - was so key to the look that Coiffing them was

20. This is a spectrum, not a dichotomy, and it explains cross-cultural Awkwardnesses, too: Brits and Americans get discombobulated doing business in Japan, because it's a Guess culture, yet

21. But it seems Brits don't help themselves, with the typical holidaymaker checking their phone up to 12 times a day, mainly out of habit than necessity.

22. Both she notes, are uncommon in American English, while jiggery-pokery is more commonly used among the Brits than argle-Bargle, which describes a disputable bandying of words, a …

23. This is a spectrum, not a dichotomy, and it explains cross-cultural Awkwardnesses, too: Brits and Americans get discombobulated doing business in Japan, because it's a Guess culture, yet

24. 'Let's Touch Base' On The Americanisms Brits Love To Hate American words and phrases such as "step up to the plate, and "24/7" are now common in …

25. Ironically, globalization and the spread of Anglocentric cultural norms has meant that definitions of “racism” and “hate speech,” as articulated by “woke” Brits or Americans, are being projected to people and places that have no such history.

26. 1 day ago · ‘World’s smallest violin’ out for Brexiteer Brits being deported as illegals in Spain “Yes I voted out, but I didn’t realise it would come to this, my application has been rejected and

27. ‘Politicians can Betray the public interest when it comes into conflict with, and loses to, their own private interests.’ ‘So to some he is already Betraying the interests of small countries and the commission, keeper of the supranational flame, to power-grabbing Brits, Spaniards and French.’

28. ‘These Brits are either Bunglers, incompetent, mean-spirited, or they have no minds of their own.’ ‘But these are bad times for organised crime in America - its popularity is down, and the public are more likely to view perpetrators as laughable Bunglers rather than coldly efficient professionals.’

29. 8 Oct.“Before their last sortie, one heard nothing but What news of the fleets?“); the entry is from 1913, but I doubt it’s Antedatable by centuries.And if it were borrowed with final stress that recently, you’d think there would be some trace of it in the UK, but Brits apparently say only SOR-tee.