quid造句1. She earns at least 600 quid a week.
2. I forked out ten quid for/on the ticket.
3. Can you lend me five quid?
4. He earns at least 300 quid a week.
5. It cost him five hundred quid.
6. We stumped up eight quid each.
7. I'll pay you back that two quid tomorrow.
8. It only costs a couple of quid to get in.
9. One hundred and forty quid for a pair of headphones, you've got to be joking!
10. I went through a hundred quid on my last trip to London.
11. He did me for a thousand quid for that car.
12. There's a quid pro quo for everything in politics - you'll soon learn that.
13. The government has promised food aid as a quid pro quo for the stopping of violence.
14. We paid him four hundred quid, a month's rent.
15. There would be no quid pro quo.
16. The neighbouring table are offering thirty quid on Tarzan.
17. Me, a few quid for a handful of stories.
18. Even labourers out there get fifty quid a week.
19. Maybe eighty quid a week coming in.
20. Five hundred quid for the four.
21. The appearance of a quid pro quo in the Hammer pardon is much more clear-cut than it is in the Rich case.
22. The statement is emphatic in stating that there must be a quid pro quo.
23. Please accept the use of our cottage as a quid pro quo for lending us your car.
24. You must be soft if you think I'll give you fifty quid!
25. The management have agreed to begin pay talks as a quid pro quo for suspension of strike action.
26. We could get a coffee in there but they charge two quid a throw which is a real rip-off.
27. If he said the punter had paid him fifty quid, Joe knew that was what had been paid.
28. What sort of a racehorse d'you think you get for a hundred quid?
29. I have it at home and can well understand why Carmody passed fifty quid under the table to keep Graham quiet.
30. Which was a right drag - Kensal Green was a quid cab ride from the West End which was within my pocket.