快好知 kuaihz


surfeited造句
1. We must deal with pleasure as we do with honey, only touch them with the tip of the finger, and not with the whole hand for fear of surfeit. 2. A surfeit of rich food is bad for you. 3. He's still sleeping; he was surfeited with too much wine last night. 4. It's no good for your health to surfeit yourself. 5. The country has a surfeit of cheap labour. 6. Indigestion can be brought on by a surfeit of rich food. 7. Rationing had put an end to a surfeit of biscuits long ago. 8. There has been a surfeit of plays about divorce on the television recently. 9. He does nothing now , but he is surfeited in sensual pleasures after his company died. 10. Armand dozing, apparently, in a surfeit of plenty. 11. The world has a surfeit of mediocre drummers. 12. There is a surfeit of managers in the company. 13. This was about surfeit of the senses. 14. He's already had a surfeit of wives. 15. It's not excess of turkey and plum pudding that has been indigestible; it's the surfeit of news. 16. Both have been suffering from a surfeit of squash, according to the man who manages them, Norman Norrington. 17. It is a silly, redundant device that eventually drowns the film in a surfeit of plot. 18. Then, too, repeated visits to cultural monuments doubtless palled in time, natural curiosity withered by sheer surfeit. 19. Boardsailors could find a surfeit of interest for them in hall two. 20. A surfeit of rock dust blocked their vision and irritated their throats. 21. They were surfeited with entertainment. 22. They had cloyed him with obedience, and surfeited him with sweet respect and submission. 23. We are surfeited with Italian cities for the present, and much prefer to walk the familiar quarter-deck and view this one from a distance. 24. He was a large and corpulent individual, surfeited with good clothes and good eating, who judged women as another would horseflesh. 25. I could continue them till the reader was surfeited, if desirable. 26. The world is urgent with bursting life, with the wild exciting beauty of youth, but it is an impetuous beauty of the senses racing impatiently into the florid and surfeited luxury of summer.