Toto sú slová examples súvisiace s part. Kliknutím na ľubovoľné slovo prejdete na stránku s podrobnosťami jeho slova. Alebo, prejdite na definíciu part.
They've enlarged the kitchen by building over part of the garden.
Politeness is traditionally part of the British character.
Taking responsibility for yourself is part of the process of growing up.
The old city around the cathedral is the most colourful part of town.
Detach the lower part of the form from this letter and return it to the above address.
This part of the book isn't very interesting, so I'm going to skip over it.
It's a real fiddle to assemble because of all the small parts.
Each part of the organization operates independently of the others.
His trip to Egypt was part holiday and part official state visit.
A person can be part of all four populations, or none, or one, or two, or three.
This was perhaps a performance error on her part.
The machine can make parts by the thousand.
Paths permitting additional direct effects are also included as part of the model.
The positive part aims to show that adoption and practice are sufficient to create the fundamental plans of a legal system.
An important part of planning slurry utilization and management system is estimating the amount of nutrients available for land application.
This realization on the part of the players materalizes in two ways.
Second, if a plan exists which is unambiguously in everyone's interest, then the individual players will not hesitate to choose their part of the plan.
Consumption was part of the ordinary life, still represented, albeit often precariously, by the home front.
Part of the answer lies in the phonetic redundancy of the signal itself, and the rest in the effects of that redundancy on auditory processing.
Phonetic transcription reveals that many of children's early uses of wh- words are phonetically reduced and part of fixed sequences.
Despite all of this ethnolinguistic variety, the legal process of obtaining a protective order operates, for the most part, quite systematically.
This is particularly clear in the case of research protocols which have become part and parcel of modern oncology.
For the most part, the returning soldiers were welcomed home warmly.
The second part returns to the idea that an excess of privatisation has led to a 'tragedy of the anti-commons'.