快好知 kuaihz


up the river造句
1. We punted up the river. 2. We moored further up the river. 3. We took turns to row the boat up the river. 4. They dammed up the river to make a lake for their water supply. 5. The ice blocks up the river, making the upstream water unable to flow. 6. We proceeded to drift on up the river. 7. Don't fish up the river. 8. We went twenty kilometers inland, up the river. 9. Sand has silted up the river delta. 10. The tour includes boat trips up the river. 11. Navigation becomes more difficult further up the river. 12. He sailed the dinghy up the river. 13. We followed an eastward course up the river. 14. They travelled up the river valley. 15. We walked up the river to its source in the hills. 16. The wind rushing up the river shook the whole building, and the rain beat violently against the windows. 17. He could see red uniforms further up the river bank, evidence that the Lancers had found a place to cross. 18. As we walked up the river and got closer to Umbagog Lake, we entered a bog. 19. He was sent up the river for armed robbery. 20. One dark night, Farragut led seventeen Union warships up the river in a line. 21. Further up the river, the vineyards start to thin out and the orange groves and almond trees take over. 22. We leaned on the wooden rail of the bridge and looked up the river. 23. Taking too much water for household use is drying up the river. 24. Before I settled among the Tuthanach I wandered further up the river, crossing the great marsh. 24.try its best to collect and build good sentences. 25. Not a single one of the millions of fish that fought their way up the river ever returns to the sea. 26. Slowly the rhythm returned again and I eased my precarious existence up the river. 27. They had taken their boat into the edge of the forest, up the river that you saw. 28. These came from the Prescelli Mountains in Pembroke, South Wales, 245 miles away, dragged down to the sea, floated on huge rafts, brought up the River Avon, finally overland to where they are today. 29. By the time we had gone seven or eight hundred miles up the river, I had learned to be a tolerably plucky up-stream steersman, in daylight, and before we reached St. 30. Then, on April twenty-fifth, General Taylor received word that a large Mexican force had crossed the border a few kilometers up the river. A small force of American soldiers went to investigate.