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hard by造句
1. The house stands hard by the river. 2. It was snowing hard by then. 3. She was puffing quite hard by the time she reached the office. 4. Some businesses have been hit very hard by the rise in interest rates. 5. He stood hard by me. 6. Hard by the docks, the Cunard Building was the site of a special drop-in centre for veterans of the battle. 7. Background: The New York area was hit hard by the recession, but pent-up demand is pushing up prices. 8. She was panting hard by the time she saw the narrow white ribbon that was the road to Coton. 9. He swung the steamer hard by the barge. 10. Snow was hard by the time I walked back. 11. He is hard by seventy. 12. You must study hard by any means. 13. His home is hard by the railway station. 14. Our school is hard by the railway station. 15. It'stands hard by the railroad tracks. 16. He was hit hard by the failure. 17. The cottage stood hard by the river. 18. Emerging economies are being hit hard by weakening exports and the collapse of private capital flows. 19. Hard by the bay was the abomination, the slave market at her door. 20. Consumers will be hit hard by the rise in prices. 21. Some Asian countries hit hard by recession in the late 1990 s tried to repatriate migrant workers. 22. The other group that was hit really hard by the currency revaluation was Chinese traders. 23. The house where he lived as a child is hard by the main plaza. 24. Silicon Valley computer firms and other high-tech companies have been hit hard by the lawsuits. 25. Maxine Waters, whose Los Angeles district would be hit hard by the welfare overhaul. 26. They spent that night at a cheap railway boarding house hard by the tracks. 27. Smiths make instruments for civil and military aircraft, and has already been hit hard by cuts in defence spending. 28. Small buildings, like small boats on a choppy sea, are rocked especially hard by their passing. 29. In Asia it was a bit of both. [The region] is enjoying buoyant secular growth and has not been hit so hard by cyclical downturn. 30. The estimated 1.2 billion poor people in Asia and Pacific who spend on average 60% of their income on food have been hit hard by soaring food grain prices in recent months.