Frasi con spate (in inglese)
- Consider the spate of articles about.
- Marketing techniques went through a spate of.
- A southern state in India saw a spate of suicides.
- Yes, said Dafyd, as well as Coyle and Spate.
- It had come, too, after a spate of embarrassing losses.
- Uh-huh, yes, I know, I heard about the epidemic spate of.
- He’d have more success trying to stop a river in full spate.
- Yes, mostly, and we've had a spate of more difficult problems, too.
- She tried hard to ignore a guilty, lust-provoked spate of selfishness.
- If investors expect a normal spate of inflation to occur, long-term rates.
- As the national election drew near, a spate of Perspective articles in the New.
- A spate of hitherto unpublished obscene books came out in quick succession.
- Then she was crushed against him in a bruising embrace, listening dazed to a spate of.
- He grunted with the effort, then his much-creased face erupted in a spate of wheezing.
- All bad things bring their own spate of myths and gossip and foreclosure is no exception.
- Give me better health and a little spate of energy, and I shall try conclusions with him yet.
- They must grab Harald and get him into their boat when the tide was running at full spate back out to sea.
- What was happening? Everyone was aware of all the drunk drivers, but lately there was a real spate of them.
- This weakness may just be a spate of profit taking, or it may be in response to news or an earnings announcement.
- The creatures around him tumbled back as the man erupted in an unrestrained spate of head-bashing limb-breaking mania.
- If he had any chance of solving the spate of new problems that had collapsed all around him, old emotions, he decided, had to be reined in.
- There was a spate of drug abuse and linked crime, which quickly stopped when a newcomer, thought to be at the root of it, mysteriously died.
- For the local G-men, the taxing week had become even more taxing, what with the spate of reports and follow-up reports and non-stop phone calls.
- Recently there has been a spate of last year’s incentives suddenly being relabelled ‘vicious avoidance loopholes’ that need to be withdrawn.
- The result was a spate of money-losing government-owned mills that couldn’t compete with newer, more efficient operations in low-wage countries.
- Arriving at rivers without bridges (none of them had bridges because they were normally dry and used as roadbeds), I found they were now running in full spate.
- Monique, crossing her fingers that Robert’s recent spate of good humour would last, returned to clothes sorting, head already filling with plans for Friday’s meal.
- There’s been a spate of incidents recently which could indicate that someone, somewhere, is trying to hack into the system, so we’ve been asked to check, said Griffin.
- The phenomenal success of IBM and a few other companies was bound to produce a spate of public offerings of new issues in their fields, for which large losses were virtually guaranteed.
- People swarming in, cities doubling and trebling in numbers of inhabitants, while the fiscal guardians groan over the increasing weight of improvements and the need to care for a large new spate of indigents.
- At that time there had been a spate of kidnappings of influential people across Europe, but luckily without much success and the gang mostly didn’t get away with any ransom money; and as far as I know, nobody except Jane was killed.
- The relief rally itself may just be a spate of short-term profit taking or a short squeeze (where shorts are forced to cover their positions and buy back shares due to a surprising reversal), or it may be in response to news or an earnings announcement.
- As Tlatoani, Mocteuzoma had been quite the builder and was responsible for much of the current splendor of the Temple Precinct as well as a new palace and the general spate of stone housing which gave Tenochtitlan its splendid aspect, making it the envy of much of Anahuac.
- That John Orr had been a fire chief in Glendale, California, during a very long and devastating spate of fires that over the course of nine years had consumed sixty-five homes, acres of woodlands, and numerous retail stores and had killed four people, one of them a three-year-old boy.