Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
There was no point in climbing the foin, she wouldn't be up there.
Away in the distance, beyond the foin, the land became fertile and fields began, enclosed by dry stone walls.
He could see the river winding away from its source in the springs of Pierce Foin.
By mid-afternoon they were on the lower slopes of Lustley Foin.
Sainfoin is derived from Old French sain foin ("healthy hay").
Ye warned me--besides, your figgers for the random walk worked foin."
Somewhere among the crags of limestone that made a broad shelf along part of the foin's lowest slopes.
From here the Foinmen were hidden by the bulk of Ringer's Foin with the rock on its top like a bell.
Le Char de foin (unpublished).
"Next week I shall be writing about moorland walks and suggesting an itinerary that takes in the ever-attractive Tower Foin."
Och, foin indeed it were that blessed day tae find that at the least ane o' the get o' me loins had not died.
And then King Arthur smote Sir Mordred under the shield, with a foin of his spear throughout the body more than a fathom.
A little cluster of it was growing among the damp rock ledges between Big Allen and Mottle Foin near where the Hilder ran down.
Beneath where he stood, under the western slopes of the foin and the wastes of Goughdale, was a network of subterranean chambers and passages and galleries.
She rode past Silk Mill and Donaise, Foin, Slaughterbridge, and the Place de la Premiere Attaque.
The following afternoon, all the characters arrive under different pretexts at Faradel's bachelor flat, to the bemusement of the concierge Madame Foin (Darry Cowl).
Grasses mentioned are hard grass, spire grass, "foreign artificial" grass and two English grasses: La Lauren and St. Foin.
You could see Knamber Foin from here, a bleak mass of rubble rising out of a plain that was grey, smoky-looking with the leafless boughs of ten thousand little birch trees.
He parked in Loomlade and took the path that ran between Loomlade Foin and Big Allen, the direction in which Manciple had surely indicated the party was veering.
He was glad of the moon, for he had been walking away from the road and the quarry for a long time and had reached the rising, stony ground at the foot of the foin.
He started in the cabarets of Paris at the age of 17, and was subsequently accompanied on his first album by the pianist/composer Mireille, whose song Couchés dans le foin became a great success.
Among his composition students at Lewis and Clark College were Greg Bowers, Erika Foin, Hoe Yeong KIm, Duncan Nielson, Myrna Schloss, and Sophia Serghi.
The ensemble has commissioned many works for Wind Band, including pieces by Kenneth Amis, Kenny Werner, Erica Foin, Forrest Larson, Ran Blake, Guillermo Klein, Evan Ziporyn, and others.
To see thee fight, to see thee foin, to see thee traverse; to see thee here, to see thee there; to see thee pass thy punto, thy stock, thy reverse, thy distance, thy montant.
With a caramelized crust and a meltingly tender interior, they were topped with deep-fried "foin d'ognoasse" (the second growth of spring onions) and fresh morels, and sat on a subtle blend of juices from the sweetbreads, tinged with cream, vinegar and port.