单词 | Come to terms with |
例句 | 1. He couldn't come to terms with his sexuality. 2. Do you think the Arab countries will come to terms with Israel one day? 3. Counselling helped her come to terms with her grief. 4. He can come to terms with being poor. 5. It was hard to come to terms with her death after all the support she gave to me and the family. 6. This is to help her to come to terms with her early upbringing and make sense of past experiences. 7. It has taken him a long time to come to terms with his disability. 8. George and Elizabeth have come to terms with the fact that they will never have children. 9. Germany has shown real determination to come to terms with the anti-Semitism of its past. 10. He is struggling to come to terms with his dwindling authority. 11. Margery's grieving family battled to come to terms with their loss. 12. She had come to terms with the fact that her husband would always be crippled. 12. try its best to gather and build good sentences. 13. I had to come to terms with that. 14. Could she come to terms with the knowledge that they had been conceived in that dreadful place? 15. Some of us never quite come to terms with the fact that penises come in all shapes and sizes. 16. Refusing to come to terms with reality harms us and, incidentally, deceives no one else for long. 17. To understand quantum mechanics, we must come to terms with complex-number weightings. 18. They've been trying to come to terms with what's happened ever since. 19. The 50-year-old actress is struggling to come to terms with a series of disasters that have brought her life crashing round her. 20. It helps the young reader to come to terms with his or her own non-rational, unconscious-dominated behaviour. 21. Jayojit observes his parents' old-fashioned marriage; they come to terms with his modern divorce. 22. Importantly, they may in fact be helping you come to terms with the traumatic experience. 23. The party had not yet come to terms with the departure of Mrs Thatcher and was suffering an identity crisis. 24. Female speaker There's no way you can come to terms with it. 25. But men can come to terms with their suppressed longings. 26. Only by finding each other again can they hope to come to terms with their tragedy. 27. He sat at the window, staring out into the night trying to come to terms with the anger that overwhelmed him. 28. In the commercial world, this is where architects have to come to terms with their own shortcomings. 29. To understand the nature of this challenge, we must first come to terms with the concept of a physical field. 30. Four died in hospital and Emma Hartley, one of the survivors, was trying to come to terms with that. 1. He couldn't come to terms with his sexuality. 2. Do you think the Arab countries will come to terms with Israel one day? 3. It has taken him a long time to come to terms with his disability. 31. He helped her in a two-year battle against cancer and to come to terms with her double mastectomy. 32. George and Elizabeth had come to terms with the fact that they would always be childless. 33. That's the plea from those who have suffered as a result of having to come to terms with criminal behaviour. 34. If Nietzsche was to come to terms with a specialized academic career, his need of a compensatory allegiance was extreme. 35. But in his last job, Mr Redwood was just beginning to come to terms with Labour council leaders. 36. If this was the end then she needed time to come to terms with it by herself. 37. An individual's sexuality is their own affair and they will come to terms with it when they are ready to. 38. Because of this profound sense of acceptance, we understand and come to terms with our own uniqueness. 39. Volunteers handle hundreds of cases every year helping Darlington people to come to terms with being victims of crime. 40. I've had to come to terms with my deepest human frailties. 41. After the initial shock of discovering their daughter is pregnant, parents have to come to terms with this. 42. It took years for Rob to come to terms with his mother's death. 42. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day! 43. I hurt her pride and she was never able to come to terms with that. 44. Some people may come to terms with their childlessness. 45. The government has come to terms with that and will allow their use, " said Paulo Pimenta, a government federal deputy for the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul." 46. I have long since come to terms with my blindness. 47. Only now, as the news of Dolly, the sublimely oblivious sheep, becomes part of the cultural debate, are we beginning to come to terms with those soulquakes. 48. Yet, when Obama was young and trying to come to terms with his own identity, he read the autobiography and it affected him more deeply than even the works of Richard Wright and James Baldwin. 49. His great-niece , born in 1967, wanted to change her name for many years, but researching her family's hidden past for this book helped her to come to terms with her malign inheritance. 50. The people of Hyde have been trying to come to terms with Shipman's crimes. 51. This week at Balmoral, we have all been trying to help William and Harry come to terms with the devastating loss that they and the rest of us have suffered. 52. This paper focuses upon two poems by Robert Browning, "Prospice" and "To Edward FitzGerald, " in which the poet attempts to come to terms with the death of his wife, Elizabeth Barrett Browning. 53. It ensures that you'll continue to question your ways and the ways of the world, and you'll try to come to terms with your place in it, even if you never set foot on foreign soil again. 54. The history of science has been one long series of violent brainstorms as successive generations have come to terms with increasing levels of queerness in the Universe. 55. This adaptive-adolescence view, however accurate, can be tricky to come to terms with—the more so for parents dealing with teens in their most trying, contrary, or flat-out scary moments. 56. A group of old schoolfriends get together to try and come to terms with having been taught by a priest who is now exposed as a paedophile. 57. We have come to terms with them that a mass meeting shall be held next Monday. 58. I wonder whether it is, in fact, the west that finds it difficult to come to terms with Soviet history and the unapologetic way in which the Russian people are able to live with it. 59. Perhaps the biggest challenge for my faith is to come to terms with what Martin Luther called the hiddenness of God—Deus absconditus. 60. The literary equivalent of a chick flick, Oleander details one girl's attempts to come to terms with her mother while also surviving the cold and largely indifferent world of foster care. 61. There is a wholeness about the person who has come to terms with his limitations. |
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