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    Synonymes et Définitions Aller aux synonymes

    Utiliser "harrow" dans une phrase

    harrow exemples de phrases

    harrow


    1. Later that night, when the coast was clear the suburban hiatus by the oak tree was just a distant memory, the soldier stood on Harrow hill and gazed out across his new world horizon


    2. the oak tree was just a distant memory, the soldier stood on Harrow


    3. Pigeons and swallows were trudging along stained rooftops lazily and even rats seemed attuned to the curfew, fleeing purposefully back into their shadowy nests wherever there were people left to harrow


    4. harrow the valleys after you? 11 Will you trust him, because his strength is great? or will you leave your labour to him? 12 Will you


    5. Mary, Harrow on the Hill, not far from her home, under a gray and overcast sky, although it was still unseasonably warm for the middle of June in England


    6. In the beams of the headlights he could see a huge harrow completely blocking the road ahead


    7. He was sent to Westminster School but was expelled after a year for fighting a master, he was then sent to Harrow school but that only lasted 3 days


    8. Dick met us at Harrow -on -the -Hill station and took us to lunch


    9. Harrow: A sharp threshing instrument, for leveling and breaking up the lumpy soil, and to cover seed when sown; to break or tear with a harrow


    10. As Goethe, when he had a joy or a grief, put it into a song, so Laurie resolved to embalm his love sorrow in music, and to compose a Requiem which should harrow up Jo's soul and melt the heart of every hearer

    11. It was a wonderful equipage, with six great coronets outside, and ragged things behind for I don't know how many footmen to hold on by, and a harrow below them, to prevent amateur footmen from yielding to the temptation


    12. Pocket had been educated at Harrow and at Cambridge, where he had distinguished himself; but that when he had had the happiness of marrying Mrs


    13. They came upon a group of men and women trying to move a horse-drawn harrow that had got stuck in a ditch


    14. Wulfric ’s broad back made the difference, and the harrow was freed


    15. There is a local train running through Harrow and King's Langley, which is timed in such a way that the express must have overtaken it at or about the period when it eased down its speed to eight miles an hour on account of the repairs of the line


    16. railway company to make strict inquiry as to whether a ticket was found unclaimed in the local train through Harrow and King's Langley upon the 18th of March


    17. We might add that Winston Churchill, despite his famous advice to those Harrow schoolboys, was in fact one of history’s greatest quitters


    18. As he probably had been when he’d run the harrow over Pop’s leg, said the doctor at the state mental hospital


    19. Immediately behind and below the tractor was a harrow with dozens of circular blades meant for breaking up sod


    20. The Playing Fields of Harrow

    21. The Playing Fields of Harrow: Harrow School (founded in 1572), an exclusive, elite British men’s boarding (public) school near London, was famous for its tradition of Harrow football (begun in the nineteenth century), a unique hybrid game exclusive to the school, which combines elements of both soccer and rugby (but which uses a spherical-shaped leather ball)


    22. We had, however, an aunt, my mother’s maiden sister, Miss Honoria Westphail, who lives near Harrow, and we were occasionally allowed to pay short visits at this lady’s house


    23. It is not necessary that I should prolong a narrative which has already run to too great a length by telling how we broke the sad news to the terrified girl, how we conveyed her by the morning train to the care of her good aunt at Harrow, of how the slow process of official inquiry came to the conclusion that the doctor met his fate while indiscreetly playing with a dangerous pet


    24. I hid from the night and the silence, until long after midnight, in a cabmen's shelter in Harrow Road


    25. "Where shall it come from? We have neither cattle, nor tools: neither horses, nor cows, nor plough, nor harrow


    26. So that the peasants had to plough each desiatin three times, harrow it three times, sow and mow the corn, make it into sheaves, and deliver it on the threshing ground for five roubles, while the same amount of work done by wage labour came to at least 10 roubles


    27. From the books and his conversations with the clerk he learned that, as before, two-thirds of the best arable land was cultivated by his own men, and the rest by peasants who were paid five rubles per acre—that is to say, for five rubles the peasant undertook to plow, harrow and sow an acre of land three times, then mow it, bind or press it, and carry it to the barn


    28. And besides mowing, each has some other business to do,—to plough up new land and harrow it; the women have the linen to make, bread to bake, and the washing to do; and the peasants must drive to the mill and to market; they have the official affairs of their community to attend to; they have also to provide the local government officials with means of locomotion, and to pass the night in the fields with the pastured horses


    29. Thou lovest with grief my soul to harrow;


    30. In the party were two inseparable chums, one from Bow and one from Harrow

    31. with a message and whilst awaiting a reply stood with others on "Harrow Road" watching our wounded go by


    32. To write the latter correctly, to keep the Committee informed of the amount of cement used, of fresh piles driven, of water pumped out, of concrete put in, to notify casualties, as they occurred, in a manner that might suggest the Committee's obligations under employers' liability, but did not harrow their feelings; to be at the works by nine o'clock every morning and not to leave till five; to be either in the iron shanty called the engineer's office, or supervising the making of concrete, or clambering about the massive beams and piles, or shouting through the telephone, or interviewing the ganger, or doing one of the hundred other things that were in the day's work; surely this was all that was required to be done, and he flattered himself that he had done it very well


    33. , have lent an important and beautiful “November” by Millet, showing a sloping field with a harrow lying on the foreground and a man shooting at a flock of birds from behind a tree at the top of the hill


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    Synonymes pour "harrow"

    harrow disk disturbing traumatic upsetting trying agonizing distressing