tales造句181. The old wives' tales that have answered the pleas of fathers for centuries are mostly ineffective.
182. You must listen to their interminable tales of marital woe.
183. Fairy tales are more than true; not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.G.K. Chesterton
184. The boat pitched and cracked all the way back to shore, with McMurphy telling grim tales about shipwrecks and sharks.
185. The time for that will come, and must come, for tales have been much neglected in favour of other work and scholarship.
186. All the same, signalmen can be a fund of unexpected tales and it is always interesting to hear their stories.
187. Don't want to hear no tales told about you from them nice nurses.
188. She'd heard sickening tales of barbarous Gestapo torture, and of prisoners who were never seen again.
189. Many tales are told of his judgements that hovered between those of Solomon and Sanders of the River.
190. No wonder we prefer the simplicity of morality tales with comforting villains.
191. She didn't want some tarted-up part-time hooker spoiling it with tales about him she couldn't possibly hope to match.
192. Second,[www.] to actually read the tales aloud from a book would take half an hour each evening.
193. What tales would Anna have told her parents about her?
194. I listened to their tales of spiritual enlightenment, past lives, cosmic futures.
195. But, as in so many old tales, the warriors get a fresh chance to strut their stuff.
196. Their musical tales of woe and spiritual import were needed more than ever.
197. Anthony Hope would hardly have supported any grandiose claims for his tales of Ruritania.
198. I've heard some pretty grim tales from people who've let property complete with furnishings to strangers.
199. This exhibition was solid and well produced, the images drifting through concocted tales of the artist's imaginings.
200. Several read both tales as moral dramas in which human sin is revealed, judged and punished.
201. Four hundred years later, the tales of the women flowered into this legend.
202. The particulars of this bishop are a union of tales.
203. The subset containing fabliaux with lavatory humour, tales concerning basic bodily functions of excretion or flatulence, are fewer in number.
204. He has a bellyful of absorbing tales.
205. We were spellbound by his tales.
206. This is true in the tales about the Changeling.
207. The Canterbury Tales exist(s) in many manuscripts.
208. It's bad manners to tell tales.
209. Mehitotsubou (above right), a large monk with a cyclopean eye, is a variant of the large shape-shifting monks commonly found in Japanese folk tales.
210. Mr Ostler plunges happily into his tales from ancient history.