接二连三英语怎么说
- In those heady days, United created chance after chance after chance after chance.
- The debate over this final point caused the Rank board to change their calls more frequently than a bingo announcer...
- They expect it to happen 1-2-3, automatically.
- The worst thing is that he had already had several bad things happen go him.
- Swarms of tremors are usually, though not always, a sign that an eruption is coming.
- Now company after company is making massive concessions: pay rises of over 60 percent are being conceded.
- Mr Harper points out that Canada is holding back-to-back summits—doubling the cost, he says.
- But he didn't know the long line of luck that I had, and I never told him.
- The belief that bad luck comes in threes is a classic example.
- Children with cognitive irregularities are often already subjected to a barrage of tests, including MRI scans.
- The issue involved here was my repeated irresponsible behavior.
- Perhaps the worst illusion of all, the failing that leads to others, is the illusion of confidence.
- Remember confirmation bias? The belief that bad luck comes in threes is a classic example.
- In fine, fluid brush strokes Ms Messud exposes their fears and their secrets.
- They like discounts and promotions, but become annoyed with the constant messages informing them of what's new.
- Ten years ago I was nerdy, high school senior about to embark on a new chapter in my life.
- And because elections in America are so frequent, it never has to wait long for the next chance to win back the allegiance of the national electorate.
- THE RECHECKS WERE eating Nick alive.
- You're tired of logging on and coming up empty-handed.
- Shortly thereafter, financial institutions hit the skids in rapid succession.
- Further successes came hot on the heels of her first best-selling novel.
- Everyone was frightened by the strange sequence of events.
- We have been bombarded with letters of complaint.
- The room was full of journalists, all firing questions at them.
- Yet the strategy continues to fall short in a couple of key areas.