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famously造句
31. From his well-appointed quarters at the asylum, the Marquis has continued to write his famously horrid fiction. 32. When the market resumed its decline, it fell famously, like the apple from the tree. 33. There is a famously long time-lag between when work is done and when the Nobel committee doles out accolades for it. 34. I am sure that I would have got on with both men, famously well. 35. A new education bill remained unfunded, and reform of a famously regressive tax system made no progress. 36. In pre-modern Berlin the claims on land of this expanding state machinery had already driven land values famously high. 37. John Steinbeck famously described this zone as "ferociouswith life." 38. He is getting on famously at his new school. 39. After the cultural shock had worn off, Smirnov and I got along famously. 40. Come and enjoy Vancouver, famously rated the world's most liveable city. 41. Pax Romana This led to what we famously call the Pax Romana, "the Roman Peace," because you had the end of long, hundreds of years of civil wars and other wars, at least within Rome itself. 42. Just hours after an appeal from President Obama for global action to lift economicseconomies, the famous libellant famously blunt Czech Prime Minister has replied on behalf of the EU. 43. Joseph Schumpeter famously argued that the essence of capitalism was creative destruction, by which new economic structures are born from the rubble of older ones. 44. Even though their country's long-term budget outlook is famously dire, Mr Obama and the Republicans did not even try to find an agreement on medium-term fiscal consolidation this week. 45. As the Sioux leader Red Cloud said, famously, "They made us many promises, more than I can remember, but they never kept but one: they promised to take our land and they took it." 46. Some of the world's most famous economists were famously frugal. 47. Famously derided as "Peanut" and "General Cash-My-Check, " the leader of China's Nationalist government bedeviled the Allied war effort in World War II with his lackluster defense of his country. 48. All Mustelidae family members (like weasels and ferrets ) can spray musk, but skunks are famously the most potent. 49. The eighteenth-century general Maurice de Saxe famously said that the art of war was about legs, not arms, and Lawrence's troops were all legs. 50. By baby Michael's first year, John Kennedy was elected president and Sammy Davis Jr shocked the nation by marrying the famously blonde Swedish actress May Britt. 51. Deng's reforms famously allowed some people to get rich first. 52. Happy to break with the stereotype of the demure wife, sharp-tongued Nobuko relishes the role of Kan's toughest critic and famously spars with him over everything from household chores to tax reform. 52.try its best to collect and build good sentences. 53. Derrida famously, notoriously, said "there is nothing outside the text," right? What he meant by that, of course, is that there's nothing but text. 54. As Niels Bohr famously observed, "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." 55. Has Mr. Eastwood, famously flinty and cold-eyed, at long last gone squishy? 56. Its wealth and a famously healthy diet keep its people going to a ripe old age, while a low fertility rate means fewer young people to redress the balance. 57. Aversion therapy, famously employed in Anthony Burgess's novel A Clockwork Orange to cure Alex of his obsession with violence, was used up to the 1980s, but has since been discredited. 58. In 218 B.C., the Carthaginian general Hannibal famously led an army of North Africans and Iberians — and 37 elephants — across the Alps and nearly snuffed out the Roman republic. 59. What does a famously compassionate employer do when tough measures are necessary? 60. In 1884, editorialists famously taunted presidential candidate Grover Cleveland about having sired a child with the unmarried Maria Halpin.