notoriously造句(151) OLD tyres are notoriously difficult to recycle, and often end up in landfills, but researchers at the Tubitak Marmara Research Centre in Gebze, Turkey, have come up with a novel way to deal with them.
(152) Although China is notoriously building one a new coal-fired plant each week, most of them are more efficient than similar facilities in the UK.
(153) Growing industrial towns like Birmingham and Manchester had no representation, but tiny villages sometimes had two Members of Parliament. The system was notoriously corrupt and bribery was common.
(154) The main ingredient of a semiconductor is silicon, but it might as well be pyrite, or fool's gold. That is because consistently making money out of chips is notoriously difficult.
(155) Some advocates go further and argue it could also make China's notoriously corrupt and high-handed local governments more responsive to citizens' needs.
(156) Its windows are grimy with soot from Beijing's notoriously bad air.
(157) Why do you think blenders and toaster ovens are so notoriously unromantic?
(158) Japan's institutions are notoriously unprofitable, to a large extent because of overstaffing and excess capacity.
(159) Network operators have been notoriously reluctant to allow Skype services on their mobile handsets, fearing it will cannibalise revenue earned from traditional voice calls.
(160) Millions in developmenting money has atrociously leaked onto notoriously gone to waste, in the 7 years since the fall of the Taliban.
(161) The notoriously slow Indian legal system, where cases can languish for decades, makes it easy for corrupt officials to go ahead without any fear of punishment.
(162) Dietary prescriptions are notoriously hard to follow, especially when the limitations involve protein, a ubiquitous macronutrient in Western diet.
(163) They also crossed the Golden Gate Bridge and the notoriously steep Lombard Street in San Francisco.
(164) Rainfall in the tropics is notoriously variable; variable winds; variable expenses.
(165) While there, Carrey perfected many characters, most notoriously "Fire Marshal Bill"who always went up in a blaze.
(166) What's more, Facebook may not be able to keep up the momentum of its rapid-fire growth because social-networking aficionados are notoriously fickle.
(167) China's notoriously foul air isn't just a potential showstopper for next summer's Olympic Games in Beijing.
(168) THUNDERSTORMS are notoriously unpredictable, as many a drenched picnicker can attest.
(169) His first essay in running a company was a notoriously tough undertaking.
(170) In this regard East Asian students are among the most clueless: too often incurious and self-absorbed, they are notoriously out of touch with American society, and also slow to form advocacy groups.
(171) It's based on a jailhouse confession in part, which is notoriously unreliable form of evidence.
(172) European emigres, who notoriously used to repair to the British museum to write seditious pamphlets.
(173) For example, one step in Newbold's solution involved the deciphering of anagrams , which is notoriously imprecise: the anagram ADER, for instance, can be interpreted as READ, DARE or DEAR.
(174) Even with perfect viewing conditions,[www.] the lights are notoriously hit or miss.
(175) The residual error is still large (5.377), but we console ourselves in the fact that Colorado weather is notoriously unpredictable.
(176) Sauvignon Blanc is a good match for the ham and the asparagus, a notoriously wine - unfriendly ingredient.
(177) Shanghai, the southeastern megalopolis with a population three times bigger than Greater London's, already has one of China's most notoriously under-used venues in its Formula One race-track.
(178) But they have never seen something so deeply embedded or tried to remove a line at sea from the notoriously powerful Right whale which can be dangerous when angry.
(179) The names of some are notoriously well-known: Ebola, HIV/AIDS, and the organisms responsible for toxic shock syndrome and legionnaire's disease.
(180) China's state - volunteered export data is notoriously inaccurate, tending to dramatically understate both the quantity and value.