refer to造句91. Still, when he makes a statement such as you refer to, I would be inclined to believe him.
92. Both the above quotations refer to severe learning difficulties but of course severe is a term open to varying interpretations.
93. The first of these we might refer to as appraisal.
94. Such concepts are unworthy of educated people and refer to anthropomorphism which has been misunderstood.
95. Pyrenees may also refer to small ewes' milk cheeses that are produced in the same area.
96. Did he refer to the high standards of social protection in this country?
97. In the present context, we are using these terms to refer to phonetic characteristics of syllables.
98. The Minister may also refer to the discretionary grants from local education authorities.
99. The various terms refer to the types of oar used, or the number of strokers involved.
100. Numbers to the right of each row refer to the nucleotide position, numbers to the left refer to amino acids.
101. For further information on Issues and Products, refer to Section 9 of this manual.
102. We shall use the term secondary radiation to refer to radiation coming from or absorbed in a plant.
103. And it was early enough for Britain's arms makers to refer to it in their autumn armaments promotions.
104. I refer to the case of Mustapha Akkawi, who was killed after being tortured in prison just over a week ago.
105. The last component of the rainbow coalition that I want to refer to is feminism.
106. Please refer to our tariff of charges for details of these services.
107. SHIme may be nonsense, or it may refer to shimmy or some other term, but it is not Yiddish.
108. The citations also refer to the provisions on which the measure is based.
109. It is to save them the need to refer to the very foundations of morality and practical reasoning generally in every case.
110. It was Adam Smith, interestingly, who first used industry to refer to manufacturing and other productive activities.
111. Face it, when wedding guests refer to the lovely spread, they may not be talking about the sandwiches.
112. It can be used to refer to some one who is physically or temperamentally very ugly: a real MEESkait.
113. Political cultures to refer to those in which there are significant proportions of both the simpler and more complex patterns of orientations.
114. These figures refer to the size of free waves in the open ocean.
115. In order to store or retrieve information we must have some means by which the computer can refer to any location.
116. A small number of nouns which refer to professions have masculine and feminine forms, with the suffix -ess indicating feminine gender.
117. They don't refer to particular cases of primary school closure in any particular location.
118. Both terms refer to styles of depicting the arms of spouses on a single shield.
119. The habitat I refer to, as you may have guessed, is the garden.
120. It is an ethical or moral judgment in the sense that ethos and mores refer to the customary practices of a group.