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    Sinónimos y Definiciones Ir a sinónimos

    Usar "cork" en una oración

    cork oraciones de ejemplo

    cork


    corked


    corking


    corks


    1. At a serving trolley nearby, Mohammed pops a cork, winks at the princess, who nods slightly


    2. to the sky like a cork, where she sees and grabs


    3. The water spigot was a colorful little dolphin with a cork in his mouth


    4. I don’t think he even salvaged his cork and ox-hide ball from the wreckage of Uncle Clemon’s ship


    5. It is about ten minutes later, maybe twelve, when the cork on her line begins to jiggle


    6. We had rubbed burnt cork into our skin to blacken it and stop the whiteness showing up in the dark and we had balaclavas on our heads


    7. lid and prodded the cork ceiling with a window


    8. the cork off the bottle


    9. Books considered the two inches of liquid left, removed and replaced the cork a couple times, but ultimately set the bottle back down without taking a swig


    10. She had wandered into "Cork" and the three O'Neills surrounded her, staring

    11. Betty had never cared for "Cork" but now the hot worried faces of its girls appealed to her


    12. Marcia removed the cork with a squeak that emphasised the quietness in the room, then poured them both a drink


    13. O’Donnell finally selected one of the bottles of liqueur and drew the cork


    14. He replaced the cork, slid the bottle back into its carton and climbed out of the truck


    15. pop my cork!” Lani held up the bottle as she sunk into the water


    16. feelings were coming out and the cork was open at last


    17. Hundreds of the animals graze contentedly in the long shadows cast by cork


    18. He pulled the cork from the schnapps bottle with


    19. his teeth, poured the glass full from it, spit out the cork,


    20. "Wait a sec," and popped the cork

    21. The bottle smoked a bit, giving the authentic impression it had never been opened—something she’d achieved by injecting her surprise through the cork rather than removing it


    22. In fact, he blew his cork and said a few choice things about Wanda Panagopoulos that George Becker, had he heard them, would have willingly added to the woman's yearly job review


    23. I popped off the cork out the window


    24. I don’t know what they use, or gas pressure to pop the cork out


    25. I was holding back the tide by force of will, but tension was building, like carbonation behind a cork


    26. He bobbed like a cork


    27. You pop the cork and refill your glass


    28. I heard movement in the kitchen and the sound of a cork being


    29. He took a bottle of white wine from the fridge, removed the cork and pouring two glasses from it, offered her one which she gratefully accepted


    30. He was married to a woman from cork named Rosemary

    31. FOIL AND REMOVED THE WIRE CAGE &INALLY HOLDING THE CORK BETWEEN THE lNGERS OF HIS LEFT


    32. HAND HE TWISTED THE BOTTLE WITH HIS RIGHT HAND RESULTING IN AN ALMIGHTY POP AS THE CORK


    33. He also learned that she had declined a Chef’s course in Cork at the time and was grateful to God that she had


    34. Peter had gone to London as a young man, it was there that he met and married his wife Rosemary a girl from Cork


    35. wires holding the cork in the champagne bottle and pushed


    36. The root beer directions also said to keep the jug on its side and capped with a cork, if possible


    37. Had I done that, the cork would have shot out and there would have been some liquid on the floor, but certainly no explosion


    38. Matthews tore the foil from the neck of the bottle and briefly struggled with the cork whose release of air was completely consumed by the thunder outside


    39. There was a wicked look in the man’s eyes as his muscles tightened and his grasp grew stronger until there was a pop like the sound of a cork from champagne, and the woman went limp in his hands


    40. "The champagne cork I'm popping after I beat you," she said, as she pushed me over and took off

    41. or something similar, and she probably injected it through the cork


    42. audible sound that resembled a cork popping on a champagne bottle


    43. the jars mouth I tamped a round of cork that had been coated


    44. He attempts to withdraw the cork several times, but fails,


    45. From the moment he was kicked off the ledge, his world became one of white and foaming water, spinning and tossing him like a cork


    46. The turret hatches opened like Champagne cork plugs under the internal pressure from the explosion and jet of hot plasma


    47. The second sound of a cork popping from a champagne bottle sent another searing pain through his shoulder and up his neck


    48. The two men moved out to the patio where Sue was freeing the cork on a bottle of wine


    49. I popped the cork on the Dom and handed him the bottle


    50. Jeanne answered him with a big smile as she made the bottle cork pop out












































    1. At his side stood a fishing basket, corked round the top and studded with lethal-looking hooks


    2. corked at her table, as promised by the man at the door


    3. ‘Here, try this,’ Shoop corked the wine and hurled it at Jim, ‘Tastes like


    4. was corked into a bottle because it was a ghost who is to be always kept engaged in some kind


    5. He then corked the hole


    6. Andrew corked the water skin


    7. When the bubbles stopped, he lifted the heavy bag out of the water, corked it, and put it over his shoulder


    8. Marian's will had a method of assisting itself by taking from her pocket as the afternoon wore on a pint bottle corked with white rag, from which she invited Tess to drink


    9. I found a curious test-tube rack of corked vials of sand


    10. In his pocket was a bottle, carefully corked, empty save for a little

    11. She corked the bottle and stood it in a small cupboard


    1. Mai Bell continued holding the pillow over the bucking girl, while her husband ran around the bed and picked up the bottle, quickly corking it


    2. speed, and corking up the opening below


    3. “Well that’s a damn shame,” Smyth said, “he is mainly responsible for me having such corking good statistics this year


    4. "What wonder is it if Roland was so good a knight and so valiant as everyone says he was, when, after all, he was enchanted, and nobody could kill him save by thrusting a corking pin into the sole of his foot, and he always wore shoes with seven iron soles? Though cunning devices did not avail him against Bernardo del Carpio, who knew all about them, and strangled him in his arms at Roncesvalles


    5. After corking the vase tightly down, he carried it to one of his friends, a


    1. Corks popped and champagne spewed


    2. he could hear the sound of some corks popping


    3. more than a few people who were popping champagne corks when they heard that he’d been gunned down


    4. the heading Double Celebration for British Writer, was a paragraph that read Champagne Corks were already popping for Loyd Larcher on publication of the omnibus edition of his novels, when The Booksel er’s Guild announced


    5. Behind the bar, Adele and Joe popped the corks on bottles of champagne


    6. Heads of social organizations, institutions, the concept of a Supreme head-being: God, the making of bread by cutting off the heads of grain, the head of a bed, the head of a burning cigar or cigarette: knocked of as ashes: getting ‘ahead’, the concept of progress as the most important thing in life, competition: getting ahead of your competition, the concept of competitive elimination: ‘heads will fall’, ‘if you are not up to snuff’, snuff: sneezing your head off by taking a pinch of snuff to clear your head, giving ‘head’ sexually, warheads, bombs, firearms, bullets, artillery: any weapon that shoots something: slingshots, arrows, spears, rocks, the heading of a page, a header in grammar, the heading on a page, the heading on a sentence, the heading on a paragraph, somersaults, head-over-heels, crowns, the crowns of Corinthian pillars, pillars do not have heads: all pillars are decapitated, all segments of pillars: all decapitated columns, the idea of decapitating pillars of the community, the idea of dethroning kings, the eating of fruit like grapes, apples, etc; all edible things like coconuts, papaya,, unpeeling the head of a banana and eating it, all vegetables in the shape of a head like onions, cabbage, lettuce, the picking of leaves, the picking of fruits, the picking of beans: all drug foods the picking of spices: creating every single drug we call food, ice cream cones, all ice cream in the shape of a decapitated head, all food portions in the shape of a head, all toppings on all food, decapitated flowers, the Rose Parade: hundreds of millions of decapitated heads of flowers, all fire with flames that are decapitated, all fireworks, the crushing of spices, the picking of decapitated heads like mushrooms, eating nuts, cracking their shell, eggs, corks and bungs used to seal barrels and bottles, the tops of bottles, the sealing and taking off the tops of bottles, jars; all tools that have a head, the head of a hammer, nails, the head of a nail, pounding the head of a nail, the cutting off of the heads of large trees before decapitating them, cutting off the heads of animals to kill them and eat them, all mathematics: the counting of heads, or I’s and adding them up, the using of tools to create decapitated segments, all sports, all balls used in sports, the hitting of all balls, ping-pong, badminton, bowling, bowling pins: the decapitation of bowling pins by a bowling ball, kingpins, kings, jewelry, stickpins with diamond heads on them, canes, walking sticks with metal heads, staffs, any artifact denoting being the head of something, scepters, globes, flyswatters, turbans, musical instruments that blare out sound: decapitating it; using holes in wood and brass instruments to decapitate the natural sound into a shorter wavelength, all fretted and unfretted musical instruments, pressing on a fret to make the note shorter, like a violin or guitar, drums, drumsticks, cymbals, the heads of shoelaces, the detached mentality called the ego: decapitated and disconnected from all the other needs and energy flows of a human being, the concept of life after death as a detached form of spirit, the structure of all hierarchy, all capitalist companies and corporate bodies being ruled and controlled by detached heads of business, the capitalization of letters at the head of a word or sentence or paragraph: especially in ancient sacred Christian texts: where the first capital letter is huge, the eating of fish by decapitating them first, the use of all drugs, narcotics wine, coffee, pills: to create a disconnection between the brain and the rest of the human being, the concept of anesthesia, using drugs to numb the brain or prevent it from feeling the body’s pain, all cultures that value stoicism, macho pigs who cannot love, the concept of the hero as a stone face refusing to face the truth, refusing to feel love, refusing to feel any emotion whatsoever, refusing to cry, the stone carvings of all the ancient Kings, the decapitated carvings of all Kings on coins, the insane idea of all kings ruling by only using their decapitated heads as decapitated coins to spread their authority, all stone busts, plaster busts, the stone faces of all heroes in modern media who refuse to feel human emotion, ping-pong, the computer game: pong, King Kong: the King cut off from State: King Kong falling off the Empire State building: all the video games that are based upon decapitated heads decapitating other heads, which are all based on the old arcade pinball machines that shot decapitated heads that bounced around scoring points hitting and scoring on as many stationary targets of decapitated heads as possible, the decapitation of hair… haircuts, shaving daily, cutting your nails, the idea of assassination as a political tool, the concept of character assassination used in all human societies to cut off people who are thought too uppity or stick out too much, and do not conform… the detached form of observation that only use instruments for the eye: microscopes, telescopes, star-gazing, stamp collecting, the collections of anything from bric-a-brac to gold coins, portraits, still pictures of decapitated heads, cameos, brooches, belt buckles, shoe buckles, still photographs of decapitated heads, talking heads, heads on celluloid talking, heads on screens, moving pictures of talking heads, the idea of a leader as a talking head, all pictures on money of decapitated heads, mouthpieces, microphones, the idea of one person speaking for another, speechwriters, lawyers, politicians, amplified music coming out of a loudspeaker, amplifiers of singing-talking heads, the idea of doing nothing but talking as being the only form of social activity allowed in polite societies, the heads of shoelaces, all knots, topknots, tying hair into knots, the idea of cutting up sounds into words, into letters, into decapitated abstract symbols of meaning separated from thee body of the meaning by segmentation, all segmented forms of tool-use, all tools that segment things into decapitated heads, all decapitated forms of awareness-thinking-feeling, all forms of specialization, all segmented ways of living-doing-seeing, decapitating the natural order of things into decapitated insane pieces: decapitating a family into age groups, decapitating a community into alienated isolated individuals, all mass butchery of living animals by cutting off their heads, morse code, ticker tape, all digitalization of signals into meaningless decapitated codes, the invention of the glass tube: the first decapitated head that could mechanically receive and send energy through nerves called wires, the invention of the transistor: the first sold decapitated head that could send and receive signals, the invention of microchips: tiny decapitated heads with their own tiny brain circuits that could perform more complicated functions than the first huge glass-blown giants called vacuum tubes: because there was nothing inside them, all glass blowing, blowing up molten glass with hot air and then decapitating it to make a glass vase or bottle, all containers from bottles, jars, gourds, ladles, to pitchers and teapots with decapitated lids, all containers, chests, holding treasure, wealth, valuables, all spices and decapitated herbs, all furniture made from decapitating trees, all houses made into decapitated heads where the people living inside them only use their heads and not their hearts or bodies, the steam engine: decapitating steam to explode out in puffs of decapitated destroyed power, all wheels, all round wheels used in machines, all watches, with dials pointing at the decapitated numbers of a disconnected circle, the decapitation of all circles into wedges, pie slices, the invention of the wedge, the invention of the axe as a metal decapitated head to stick on a wooden decapitated piece of branch, all idols, all icons, all figureheads, all abstract symbols representing the head, the pinnacle, the top, the apex, the height of anything, all hierarchical awareness and structures that deem the head as the most valuable, the best, the most noble, etc; Jack-in the Box, all boxes, everything that is put into a box or container, FedEx: the obsession of transporting boxes and parcels, the song; ‘Pop goes the Weasel’, all mass-produced goods that are boxed and shipped, the detachment of specialized labor and work, the creation of holes, digging, all mining, piston heads, engine heads, everything that is called the ‘head’ of something, the froth on the top of a glass of beer,: to be blown away, the use of all zeros and ones: as in Japanese Zeros decapitating American ships, zeros and ones being created and then decapitated inside computers, the use of all zeros and ones in mathematics, scalping, the taking of heads, the shrinking of heads: which the computer microchip is the latest evolution of, …


    7. His first movement was to free himself by a violent push from the encircling arms of his mother, and to rush forward to the casket from whence the count had taken the phial of elixir; then, without asking permission of any one, he proceeded, in all the wilfulness of a spoiled child unaccustomed to restrain either whims or caprices, to pull the corks out of all the bottles


    8. There was a great deal of confusion and laughter and noise, the noise of orders and counter-orders, of knives and forks, of corks and glass-stoppers


    9. Popped corks, splashes of beerfroth, stacks of empties


    10. Round his neck hangs a rosary of corks ending on his breast in a corkscrew cross

    11. But for now hers was simply one of the swirl of glamorous faces who drifted in and out of Joseph and Magda Goebbels’s stately home, popping the corks from champagne bottles, being feted by their host and hostess, celebrating one another and their youth and their good looks, dancing late into the night, singing, watching films, and talking of racial purity while little Hilde Goebbels lay asleep in a cradle in a darkened room upstairs


    12. Just behind his eyes is a stippling pressure like the popping of a thousand champagne corks


    13. With the second course, a gigantic sterlet (at sight of which Ilya Rostov blushed with self-conscious pleasure), the footmen began popping corks and filling the champagne glasses


    14. It would be a mistake to write to Liege 2 for corks, and to Pau for gloves


    15. Its great screw-snout glittered bluely, ready to stab seventy feet deep and suck out corks of earth, deeper still with extensions into the heart of the planet


    16. For a moment it plunged away, bringing up moist corks of sod which it spat unceremoniously into a shaking analysis bin


    17. With the second course, a gigantic sterlet (at sight of which Ilyá Rostóv blushed with self-conscious pleasure), the footmen began popping corks and filling the champagne glasses


    18. Black, with his usual felicity, has illustrated this tendency, by supposing a great number of small magnetized needles, thrust through corks, so that they will float parallel to the surface of water, to be thrown promiscuously into a vessel of that fluid


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    Sinónimos para "cork"

    bob bobber bobfloat cork bottle cork phellem cork up float bottle-stopper