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“wryly”造句,怎麼用wryly造句

造句1.19W

The word "addiction" is often used loosely and wryly in conversation.

He sometimes fires people for simply not doing a good job, “unheard-of in government service,” he wryly notes.

A visiting Danish journalist said wryly, while sipping a bâja pilluarit (celebration beer), “psychologically, the state is my father, you know?”

"Cousin Lizzy, " as Fallon wryly calls her, was accused (and controversially acquitted) of killing her father and stepmother with an ax in Fall River, Mass., in 1882.

In the ''Yunnan Garden Gathering'' poem, Manicam notes wryly that the line ''Once lush forests'' being reduced to firewood would strike a chord in the heart of the environmentalist and nature lover.

Colonel Qaddafi's Green Book suggests that in a perfect state, the government disappears and the people rule, but Libyans note wryly that the colonel has never seemed to follow his own advice.

wryly造句

She smiled wryly.

It is wryly relevant today - though not in the way Murphy might have thought.

Apple responded wryly by printing the message "Don't steal music" on a plastic sticker placed on all new iPods.

On a visit 150 years ago Mark Twain wrote wryly of the three-millennia-old city: “She has looked upon the dry bones of a thousand empires, and will see the tombs of a thousand more before she dies.”

He smiled wryly.

It's the same, he added wryly, for the English. "Not only the Germans have a past.

But Douglas Elmendorf, the head of the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), observes wryly that “the closer a public plan is to a private plan, the less the gain.”

In January, the vote in favour of trying the field method was "as enthusiastic as you could get from a faculty," says Mr Nohria, wryly.

She studied him for the longest time, looking wryly amused.

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