presumably造句(181) There will presumably also be some spending money for Tubby Ben í tez in the January sales.
(182) The filigree, presumably by virtue of these fields, completely alters the structure of the granulation.
(183) Carol: Presumably important enough to make us miss Cross Fire with Pat Buchanan and Pewee Herman.
(184) But then you come to the third part of this sort of triangular absurdity, and what you get to is big financial institutions with extremely well-paid individuals, in the presumably pure free market.
(185) Generally, a given speech sample is played over the speech path , where it presumably undergoes various types of impairments during encoding, packetization, transmission, and decoding.
(186) These kids were placed on a remotely controlled disc-shaped craft, presumably to frighten Americans into "War of the World"-type hysterics.
(187) With increasing venous pressure, presumably due to passive distension of venules, the postcapillary resistance fell and the ratio of pre- to post-capillary resistance increased.
(188) The creature it belonged to ploughed against the current for a while, and then disappeared. It had presumably returned to its haunts in the murky, peaty depths of the lake.
(189) But when Blair said that Egypt's transition had to be 'managed' – presumably by the West – so as not to jeopardise the 'peace process', he was only saying openly what Washington believed.
(190) Laser-assisted uvula-palatoplasty (LAUP) is a new, effective surgical procedure for loud habitual snoring, presumably affecting up to 25% of the adult population.
(191) The petechial skin rash is related to rapid onset of thrombocytopenia. Presumably myriad fat globules become coated with platelets, thus depleting circulating platelets.
(192) The neuromas presumably arose from small perivascular nerve twigs that have been implicated in the pathogenesis of intramedullary neuromas in non-neoplastic spinal diseases.
(193) Presumably laic it is laic, because like ask for help when anything crops up, the likelihood is.
(194) In this version, the Wolf dissects Grandmother, then invites Red in for a meal of her flesh, presumably with a side of fava beans and a nice Chianti.
(195) They then have a go in what is presumably a game of chance.
(196) Houghton, Lonsdale, and presumably also the Krogers would all be blown by the defection.
(197) Epitaph writing table and, presumably is great calligrapher of the Northern Wei Liu Fang.
(198) Knightley presumably got a script for this austere but moving period piece.
(199) So true poetry for Milton, true prophetic poetry, the kind of song that can actually vie with the most perfect music of the spheres, is only accessible, and presumably only producible, by the virgin.
(200) The implication presumably is that the duct tape replaces skill.
(201) Presumably (though this has still to be proved) the hatchling sharks are eating the worms and perhaps, if their teeth are up to the necessary crunching, the clams.
(202) In a highly experimental procedure that was presumably unavailable in their home country, those doctors injected fetal stem cells into various regions of his brain.
(203) If the financial crisis and deep recession slashed Britain's productive potential, then presumably it would have done the same in America, which suffered a similarly big fallout.
(204) They have been purposefully perforated, presumably to be strung together.
(205) At present time, the most promising method is presumably to inhibit chemically the decomposition reaction of the explosive.
(206) He immediately tells the queen, who springs it on Rumpelstiltskin, who's so pissed off he throws a tantrum and runs away, presumably to ply his poorly thought-out scam in another town.
(207) Presumably at next year's Grammy Awards Lady Gaga will be encased in black pudding, with an entourage of 100 tiny baked beans.
(208) And acrimonious it is. The chief of Pakistan's top intelligence service is, for example, reported to have told lawmakers that "America is an unreliable ally," presumably in sharp contrast with China.
(209) On the other hand, the state supreme court, which presumably would have the final say on the counting of ballots, had more judges appointed by Democratic governors and was thought to be less partisan.
(210) Today and presumably for the future the schedule of the marginal efficiency of capital is, for a variety of reasons, much lower than it was in the nineteenth century.