to a point造句(61) The flagpole tapered off to a point.
(62) Harrison strolled north to a point.
(63) Now we come to a point of divergence.
(64) Those decisions are so important that I think you should get a second opinion if you come to a point where you need the treatment required for cancer or transplantation or catastrophic indications.
(65) Luneberg lens antenna is a spherical layered medium lens antenna, and its main feature is its capability of focusing the incident wave to a point on the spherical surface.
(66) Resembling a leg of mutton in shape; tapering sharply from one large end to a point or smaller end, as a sleeve or sail.
(67) When workload demands return to a point below the threshold level, the system will de-allocate these resources and put them to other use.
(68) Jill and I did take the boat — a large, underpowered Whaler that leaked up to a point and stopped once the bottom was full — for a cruise to an amazing snorkeling spot.
(69) For small applications, like applets, it might come to a point when it takes longer to start JVM than to run an application.
(70) He will speak to a point that is pertinent , and not travel out of the record.
(71) It's not perfect, but like many instances of technological development, we tinker at it and it changes and eventually we come to a point where we like it or keep changing.http:///to a point.html
(72) This breadcrumb navigation is useful to a point, but because it's styled as a pipe-delimited list, many users may not even notice it.
(73) An assertion that pertains to a point immediately following, in the execution sequence, a specified portion of a program.
(74) He needed to come to a point where he could no more fall away from God.
(75) Officers unsparing in training their men, to a point which U.S. trainers would probably think insane.
(76) At the corner of Fifth and Madison, the wedge-shaped base of the library diminishes nearly to a point.
(77) The DAC 100 needs to be able to count up and down and consequently a reset condition should take it to a point near its mid-range.
(78) These years the accidents of structure damages and aging increase around the world; the diagnosis and analysis of bridges come to a point.
(79) Though absurdly unscientific even for its time, phrenology was remarkably prescient - up to a point.
(80) The Buddha explains nirvana as "the unconditioned" (asankhata) mind, a mind that has come to a point of perfect lucidity and clarity due to the cessation of the production of volitional formations.
(81) Grant moved forty thousand men to a point ten kilometers from Vicksburg. He told the men to put down their guns and take up digging tools.
(82) The generals have promise to a point a civilian as temperately prime minister within two weeks and to hold elections in October of next year.
(83) Those creations in extreme dark never made to a point of entry.
(84) When you come to a point where you want to live like a plant, fully unconscious, then you have come to despair of humanity.
(85) To be blessed by God, you will have to come to a point of brokenness before God.
(86) "There is a risk that domestic prices have been elevated to a point that consumers are gradually becoming more price sensitive," said independent U.S.-based analyst Paul Ting.
(87) Acuminate Describing a structure that gradually narrows to a point, such as certain leaves.
(88) John will speak to a point that is pertinent , and not travel out of the record.
(89) The audience it was created to serve—middlebrow; curious, but not too curious; engaged, but only to a point—no longer exists.
(90) The sleeves must cover stems to a point above the greatest expected snow accumulation.