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telly造句
61. Next time just stay at home and switch on the telly, clever clogs. 62. She had seen him on the telly - he had been on the early evening news tooting his trumpet. 63. You see it on telly, it goes down in sections and crumples in a huge cloud of dust. 64. Why do we want to watch traffic jams on telly? 65. Unless, there's, ummm ... something good on telly, that is. 66. No more Tube, no more of your favourite bands on the telly, another dark age as regards the media. 67. The shift finishes at 2.30am, just as Britain is washing up or settling down on the sofa to watch the telly. 68. That pulse generator for switching telly channels we developed for computerising remote control of shell velocity measurements on Pendine Sands. 69. She ignored him, and turned up the sound on the telly. 70. Is that Dad mucking about with the telly again? 71. The British call a TV set a telly. 72. Whole generations are growing up addicted to the telly. 73. Last night I just stayed in and watched telly. 74. You're that bloke off the telly! 75. It's a pity that they didn't take the telly. 76. The telly is cheap, because it's a reject. 77. There is nothing good on telly. 78. The telly is a universal pacifier. 79. Her godfather was former Kojak actor Telly Savalas. 80. Did you see that film on telly last night? 81. You have to be careful what you say on telly. 82. We were watching some prog on the telly about the Evils of Drink. 83. If you had never seen a telly ad, you would be all at sea with popular culture. 84. It quickly proved to be popular with viewers and critics alike, winning four Telly Awards in2007. 85. She was also, let us be honest, for many years plumper than most telly women, and that brought her closer to us as well. 86. He didn't have too many saves to make in the Motherwell game, but I've watched him on telly a few times for Denmark and he's a very good shot-stopper. 87. Few of us believe we could be another Jonas Salk or Eleanor Roosevelt, but we could be another TV star like Telly Savalas or Suzanne Somers . 88. Last Thursday, on This Week, Andrew Neil jokily referred to his co-hosts Diane Abbott and Michael Portillo as "the chocolate Hobnob and custard cream of late-night telly".