describe造句91 You describe the trains as ambling along branch-line style.
92 The first two volumes describe methods used in microscopy.
93 Can you describe the robber's physical characteristics?
94 They also describe three digital data sets.
95 The basic components we will describe are fairly typical.
96 My daughter would describe a process called heredity.
97 To describe the experience is not easy.
98 Instead, describe each step in detail.
99 It's difficult to describe how I felt.
100 One they describe as mechanistic, the other as organic.
101 Women too became celebrities, as both these books describe.
102 Could you try and describe the man you saw?
103 The aim is to describe how you learn.
104 What adjectives best describe lawyers in their fifties?
105 And yet, we still describe symbols as intellectual abstractions.
106 If so, please describe how this would be achieved.
107 Three characteristics describe the behaviour of insiders: 1.
108 Describe this in great detail and act it out.
109 Hess then proceeded to describe the ocean floor as if it were a collection of giant conveyor belts.
110 Labour will not come clean with its figures, so it is bound to describe ours as jiggery-pokery.
111 Parents should also be carefully questioned about how they are using it and should describe in detail what they do.
112 In a pilot experiment subjects attempted to describe films as they watched them in the way described by Hughes and Cole.
113 My other travelling companion, John Lawrence, would describe himself first and foremost as a writer.
114 We then went on to describe the Johnston-McClelland model of visual word recognition and the Cohort model of auditory word recognition.
115 We will adopt only two terms to describe the major functions of language and emphasise that this division is an analytic convenience.
116 Sheffield said the callers would sometimes describe to him what he did that day.
117 Adverbs Adverbs describe verbs in the same way that adjectives describe nouns.
118 Companies aide still trying to find how best to describe these new work arrangements for people.
119 Mythologies all over the world describe the intimate connection, often antipathy, between birds and snakes.
120 For example your own columns continually describe Equitable as if it is bankrupt, in trouble, or in crisis.