Usa "minous" in una frase
minous frasi di esempio
minous
1. Ominously, 40 percent of nursing home admissions of older people can be traced to a fall
2. Wait until you meet the rest of the team,” Ackers said ominously
3. Ominous military presence in the terminal, frowning soldiers, armed to the teeth, are standing about
4. As it was he got a hard look and thunder rumbled ominously in the sky, echoing off the distant mountains for seconds
5. That explains it: I have heard about certain persons lately who, although they are illiterate, have become successful travelling salesmen and earn up to 700,000 drachmas per month! Taking into account that a salesman's commission is no higher than 10%, how do they manage to make sales of 7,000,000 drachmas every month? What do they really sell? Encyclopedias? Come on now! Nowadays you can find cheap and voluminous encyclopedias in bookstores or, even, on offer in newspapers! Why would anyone pay dearly a commercial traveller? Unless they sell other things, other ''services'', instead of books
6. One of the uncontaminated guys returns to the house with a view to exterminating the living dead, but soon he is surrounded by his ex good friends -Nestor, Nick, Apostolis and others- who look very ominous now
7. She stared out into the clear night - the stars shining brightly and the moon sailing high in the sky above the luminous horizon far in the distance
8. She immediately knew what terror it held for them when it's jaw dropped, slowly and with an ominous hiss
9. As they rounded the corner and came up the hill, they could see in the distance a lot of dark ominous clouds and lightening across the sky
10. His delighted, almost luminous grin would have revealed all I need to know about how he feels even if he hadn’t told me
11. You can imagine his surprise when the old woman produced a long length of coiled rope from under her voluminous purple overcoat
12. Sounds are amplified inside the tunnel and the gentle wash of the water against the barge takes on an ominous tone, at least that is how it feels to me
13. I floated in the comfort of this smooth, luminous primeval liquid, looking at the patterns and the shifting net of sunlight underneath, and the sand way down below, ecstatic in the thrill of being aware of simple existence in a universe without change
14. Annie greeted her great-aunt softly and settled herself into the voluminous folds of one of the armchairs
15. As he puts down the phone, Simon is almost luminous with pride
16. herself into the voluminous folds of one of the armchairs
17. “All I have is still open to you, Ava dear,” he said and she didn’t even flinch much when the thick-skinned grey hand came out of his voluminous sleeve to pat hers
18. crowd stood in ovation, not exactly cheering—it was more ominous than that—
19. There was an ominous silence
20. The stall warning alarm sounded ominously as other alarms sounded and the instrument panel lit up with flashing lights
21. ‘Marseilles? What’s it doing there?’ - ominously
22. But the signs were ominous as
23. " His voice was somewhat ominous
24. “Magnificent! I’m awed that you can pull such luminous verse out of the lightless void
25. In spite of her best efforts, she could not decipher the meanings to the nervous shifts of glances and ominous pauses that she had witnessed since even before leaving Cyrodiil
26. Why does that sound ominous? Zarko wondered
27. She opened the book with guarded hands, unsettled by the general’s ominous tone and by Maro’s retreat to the distant half of the chamber
28. Lunarey's head, which was once filled with questions about her past, her identity, her injection mark, her expensive shoes and the ominous list of murder victims, was now only filled with thoughts about the girl who had killed herself
29. The walls were dark green like the tunnels but the water itself seemed to be luminous
30. This was getting to be more ominous by the minute
31. The atmosphere was ominous
32. ’ He put his hand on the bottom seal under the open side door, leaned in ominously
33. ’ He put out his palm and then put it to his mouth in a strangely ominous gesture
34. Some of these predictions that are still to be fulfilled are extremely ominous and paint a dire picture of the world in its last seven years, before the Messiah returns to reign for a thousand years
35. An ominous year to start
36. Never mind that the area in question was the largest producer of clean bituminous coal in the country at that time
37. Dark, ominous clouds hung overhead
38. Not to be confused with voluminous
39. Nothing ominous here, thought Nathan
40. Nagging away in her mind, however, a more ominous sense that they were in genuine danger
41. He heard the hiss of air, and numerous other ominous sounds as the unit came up to speed
42. ’ L-Seven-Six's voice had mellowed in a way that seemed curiously ominous
43. A large, winged insect buzzed inside, its droning ominous
44. Another series of waves smashed onto the deck and the Calamity groaned ominously
45. The island‘s first (I believe) elected president, a practicing Marxist and former priest whose efforts at nationalizing the country‘s resources has earned him the accolades of the International Left as well as misinformed Americans who envision this thug (Aristides) as some numinous divine, has been unceremoniously overthrown by a
46. He was ordered down but refused and Shafter barked an ominous order to “Throw him off!” Scovel than came down and, infuriated, approached Shafter, yelling a tirade of obscenities at him
47. Bill O‘Reilly, playing the role of Devil‘s Advocate the other evening on The Factor, raised the argument on one of his segments that adopted children raised in a warm and loving environment by (numinous) Gay/Lesbian couples would be a preferable alternative to a violent, dysfunctional household, however traditional
48. A very loud, very ominous crack suddenly rent the air as the gable end of the house disintegrated, causing a large section of the roof to slip forward, where it canted over, then broke away
49. Another envelope; and this one was ominously from the local ODSP office
50. Only dimly did I take in the rest of the room—the clusters of potted plants in the corners, the sparse pieces of elegant furniture, the chaise longue that had a sudden, ominous significance