ENS造句(1) We stayed there en route for London.
(2) The selectors should resign en bloc.
(3) I stopped en route and got some wine.
(4) They left the meeting en bloc.
(5) I want a hotel room with an en suite bathroom.
(6) We stopped at Paris en route from Rome to London.
(7) Individually the children are delightful; en masse they can be unbearable.
(8) Each bedroom in the hotel has a bathroom en suite.
(9) There are reports of teachers resigning en bloc.
(10) The young folk were emigrating en masse.
(11) We'll stop for lunch en route.
(12) We must consider all the difficulties en bloc.
(13) The people marched en masse.
(14) I always enjoy winter evenings spent en famille.
(15) One of the bags was lost en route.
(16) They have arrived in London en route to the United States.
(17) The ruling committee resigned en bloc to make way for a new election.
(18) All four bedrooms in their new house are en suite.
(19) They were lost at sea when their ship sank en route for Madeira.
(20) She mentioned, en passant, that she'd been in Brighton the previous week.
(21) Again in common with many ENs, I was unsuccessful on numerous occasions.
(22) In common with many ENs I constantly attempted to update my knowledge and improve my practice.
(23) Their pay, expressed in pence per 1000 ens, varied, but was still less than a man's.
(24) Still later, in Northern Song Dynasty, Zhang Zai and Wang Fuzhi in Ming and Qing Dynasties, they start from the gas monism regard "ens" of " nonexistence " as different states of gas.
(25) The beginning of every end, and the ens of every place.
(26) Exploitation of water-soil and ecological protection are antinomy ens, and how to correspond development is a question for discussion for the subject of environment protection now.
(27) Also used as a unit for counting typesetting speed ( so many ens per hour ).
(28) How much of the process will be required for other permanent visa applicants ( eg ENS )?
(29) Their only difference in the result is "nonexistence" unity in " ens " or " ens " unity in "nonexistence".
(30) It is wrong therefore to take the mind for a processless ens, as did the old metaphysic which divided the processless inward life of the mind from its outward life.