narrowly造句(121) Competition chili has no filler; it is simple, basic, and narrowly defined.
(122) Even the space inside the narrow arenas is narrowly proscribed, especially for singers.
(123) The council voted narrowly last month to rejoin the devolved government.
(124) She narrowly missed adding to the silverware in both the mixed and women's doubles too.
(125) It is sobering to recall that Messrs Henderson, Cartledge and Bukovsky narrowly lost the debate.
(126) Odds-on favourite last time at Haydock, he was narrowly beaten into third place, but tomorrow should prove third time lucky.
(127) He narrowly escaped drowning.
(128) In the referendum the population of Western Samoa voted narrowly in favour of the introduction of universal suffrage.
(129) Leinster did a similar demolition job on Llanelli and lost narrowly to the South-west Division.
(130) When the market closed in 1974, the piazza narrowly survived being turned into an office development.
(131) Bush narrowly beat Bill Clinton, 38 percent to 37 percent.
(132) Turning from the narrowly financial aspects, let us briefly mention some of the legal complexities of the system.
(133) A second jet disaster was narrowly averted in Bogota on Thursday.
(134) This was narrowly avoided by producing a new programming scheme, involving local sponsorship as the future funders of individual exhibitions.
(135) She narrowly failed to beat the world record in the 100 metres sprint.
(136) That, and the narrowly missed encounter with Richard Blake after the intervening four years.
(137) Conclusion From its earliest origins, rape was a narrowly defined offence.
(138) Wilder narrowly defeated his Republican opponent in November 1989, his 6,700-vote victory being confirmed only after a recount.
(139) He looked at Oliver narrowly, his terrier eyes bright and beady.
(140) He was narrowly pipped at the post on time in the prestigious Derby event and also took runner-up in another speed event.
(141) A lot of workers have very narrowly focused job skills.
(142) Secondly, the competition of economic theory is cast solely in terms of price competition and narrowly defined profit maximisation.
(143) More narrowly, purchasing departments inside organizations search for information about specific courses of action, such as the purchase of equipment.
(144) A teenage mail-room worker at the Anglian Water headquarters in Huntingdon narrowly escaped injury when the package she was handling exploded.
(145) Lord Morton went on to construe the statutory terms extremely narrowly as permitting challenge only if express statutory requirements were violated.
(146) Auroux narrowly defeated the rival candidate, Henri Emmanuelli, by 113 votes to 109.
(147) His three year-old daughter Jade narrowly escaped death when bullets were fired through the front door.
(148) Her new heavy industries were concentrated in narrowly restricted areas.
(149) For a moment Trent and Mariana were held immobile, stunned by the incredible power from which they had so narrowly escaped.
(150) But if kind is interpreted more narrowly, then it will have the effect of limiting the defendant's liability.