Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Some people say that the truth is stranger than fiction.
"You know what they say, truth is stranger than fiction."
Sometimes their life stories are so unusual that truth is stranger than fiction.
A perfect illustration of how truth is stranger than fiction.
All the major elements of the story are true, proving once again that truth is stranger than fiction.
The book tells a harrowing story where "truth is stranger than fiction."
Do you believe that truth is stranger than fiction?"
I have known for many years, through long observation, that truth IS stranger than fiction.
Truth is stranger than fiction - a hackneyed phrase down the years, but it was true.
"It is said that truth is stranger than fiction," he remarked.
"You've heard the old adage," he asked, "that truth is stranger than fiction?"
They say truth is stranger than fiction, and such is the case with humans attempting to control the weather.
I can believe that truth is stranger than fiction, but only so long as I can tell them apart.
Its motto was "Truth is stranger than fiction".
Truth is stranger than fiction, Mark Twain said.
In the frenzied commerce of best-selling books, truth is stranger than fiction, no matter how dull or stubborn the facts.
'In my job, old boy, I've learned that truth is stranger than fiction by a long way.'
Truth is stranger than fiction--to some people, but I am measurably familiar with it.
He has based all his brilliancy and solidity upon the hackneyed, but yet forgotten, fact that truth is stranger than fiction.
Proving that truth is stranger than fiction, Mr. Johnson's most recent course, offered last spring, was on value investing.
"Truth is stranger than fiction, I suppose, but no one will believe Belle defeated Rome."
It also made Packard's Monthly very successful and set the tone for future stories; the magazine's official slogan became "truth is stranger than fiction".
A fabulous book is always true (or at least purports to be); its motto might well be "the truth is stranger than fiction."
Truth is stranger than fiction, he discovers, for as Michael Faraday once observed, "Nothing is too wonderful to be true."
The adventures of Captain Ramage described in this book are the result, and they bear out the adage that truth is stranger than fiction.