1. get lost
I usually get lost in a new place.
Stay close to me, otherwise you'll get lost
I don't want to go with you on a date, get lost dude!
I hope he will not get lost again.
Don't get lost
We always get lost in London.
if you tell someone to get lost, you are telling them forcefully to go away
I don't want to get lost in this valley.
Why did you get lost?
We get lost every time you drive!
Tell him to get lost!
We get lost, but don't worry.
I never get lost and I never ask for directions.
英语 单词“spadaj“(get lost)出现在集合中:
Rozmowki angielskiekurs perfect2. falling
Darkness is falling.
I have trouble falling asleep because I always have a lot on my mind.
The falling of the Berlin Wall was truly a momentous occasion.
Falling rocks present a danger to climbers.
The front wheel plays an important role in two-wheeled vehicles moving without falling over.
It is still possible to make a profit when prices are falling.
Far from falling, the prices of commodities went on rising.
Falling in love is the one illogical adventure, the one thing of which we are tempted to think as supernatural, in our trite and reasonable world.
The government finances are severely constrained because of falling tax revenues.
The turbulent sands above our heads, the flinging of our swords... they're naught but falling stars in the night sky.
A recent analysis by Boeing forecasts that unless safety is improved, jet airliners could be falling out of the sky at the rate of once a week by the year 2010.
Depression is a period marked by slackening of business activity, widespread unemployment, falling prices, and wages, etc.
Attendance had been falling off and such people as did come sat about indifferently.
It's true that there are fewer children due to the falling birthrate, and there are fewer children in the school, but that is all to the good.
In the midst of the dollar falling hard against the Yen and other major Eastern currencies the Chinese Yuan, with China effectively taking a 'dollar peg' policy, has become cheap.