快好知 kuaihz


pub造句
91) Let's repair to the pub. 92) They were flung out of the pub for fighting. 93) Let's go down the pub for a drink. 94) We all decamped to the pub. 95) It's the shop to the left of the pub. 96) It's a nice pub, except for the landlord. 97) They've gone down/round to the pub for a drink. 98) The pub has a quiz night every Wednesday. 99) That gaffer going into the pub is 90 years old. 100) After the row in a pub he drove off in a huff. 101) The houses are beautiful, but there's no shop, not even a pub to go into. 102) We can meet at the pub or in the restaurant, whichever's nearer for you. 103) I'll meet you at the theatre. No, better still, let's meet in a pub and have a drink first. 104) I saw him last night in the pub with some woman draped all over him. 105) The British pub isn't just somewhere to drink - it's an institution. 106) They were seated at a table outside a pub in a pleasant piazza close by St Paul's. 107) He stood me a pint in the pub after work. 108) We're going to the pub later - are you up for it? 109) Some of the customers in the pub looked none too savoury. 110) The pub has two sorts of beer on tap . 111) They were chucked out of the pub for being too rowdy. 112) This pub used to be one of your old haunts, didn't it Jim? 113) He took me to a pub in Soho full of actor types speaking at the tops of their voices. 114) If the pub doesn't start to pay, we'll have to sell it. 115) As likely as not, the meeting will take place in the village pub. 116) Father came home from the pub very much the worse for drink. 117) The pub said that their takings were fifteen to twenty thousand pounds a week. 118) Sorry we're late-we dropped into the pub on the way. 119) There's no pub round here, leastways not that I know of. 120) a pub,licity-shy poli'tician * You've been 'work-shy all your life.