现在英语怎么说
We now realise that it was 1, 000 years older - and very high status, perhaps made for a vizier, or even for royalty.
You can now buy a derivative that pays you if that happens.
Now, chastened by the huge amounts of capital they have had to raise to strengthen their balance-sheets, Banks are being more careful.
I've always loved my country and felt very strongly about it... but now I'm embarrassed, disappointed, let down, and ashamed.
GE's chief executive, Jeffrey Immelt, now talks like a man chastened.
Bangkok's royalist elite has been chastened by the red shirts' pulling power.
A chastened Mr Kivuitu now says he is not sure Mr Kibaki won the election.
A chastened Mr Pawlenty now appears to beconsidering an increase in the petrol tax.
It was the first time that the leaders of these two enemies had touched. The enemies had become Allies - partners in building peace.
Beverly also takes photos of the lions and her pictures have appeared in National Geographic magazines.
However, a person can't always indulge in the past, so I went back to the solid piece of land is now under my feet.
The Kindle Fire takes Amazon's wildly popular services and presents them in a solid piece of hardware with a responsive, easy-to-understand interface that works.
Now more and more people are attaching great importance of English learning. But someone has a misunderstanding. I'm no longer a younger in tens or twenties. I'm too old to learn.
Never an especially intrepid downhiller, I now ride the brakes on a steep incline like a grandfather.
For now, we have our beach community and our intrepid tribe of tourists slowly joining us - and there's not a diamond in sight.
But, with his father now out of intensive care, Zabaleta returns to training today and should be fit to face Sunderland on Sunday.
Now I can cross the Shifting Sands.
A silhouette appeared in the corner of the screen: Marjorie, getting into her car.
Bats are not the only creatures to face this difficulty today.
A girl was found in an abandoned shack near a swamp.
Case in point: Epsilon's and now Sony's (SNE) data breaches.
Cem is currently hiding out in France, avoiding a 23-year prison sentence back home.
Out of love and respect, he actually wants to take the blows. He should walk on the inside—because that's where attackers are all hiding these days.
Some activists want to pull back, viewing the situation as a dangerously unarticulated barrage of anger.