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单词 Conjure
例句
(1) He could conjure coins from behind people's ears.
(2) Her grandfather taught her to conjure.
(3) How am I expected to conjure up a meal for six of his friends with almost nothing in the fridge?
(4) I can't simply conjure up the money out of thin air.
(5) When we think of adventurers, many of us conjure up images of larger-than-life characters trekking to the North Pole.
(6) I conjure you to hear my plea.
(7) Be on your guard, I conjure you.
(8) Nothing could conjure away his melancholy.
(9) What does the word "feminist" conjure up for you?
(10) I conjure you most earnestly to reconsider your position.
(11) Somehow we have to conjure up another $10,000.
(12) They managed to conjure a victory.
(13) She's very good at magic; she can conjure a rabbit out of a hat.
(14) Unfortunately, I can't just conjure up the money out of thin air!
(15) Dieting always seems to conjure up images of endless salads.
(16) He strained to conjure up her face and voice(http:///conjure.html), but they had vanished.
(17) I cannot but conjure up the memories of the good old days.
(18) For some people, the word 'England' may still conjure up images of pretty gardens and tea parties.
(19) It is the business of a novelist to conjure up into existence the world of imagination.
(20) Thirteen years ago she found herself having to conjure a career from thin air.
(21) Dieting always seems to conjure up images of endless cottage cheese salads.
(22) The woman practising witchcraft claimed that she could conjure up the spirits of the dead.
(23) Can you conjure up a picture of the imperial life in ancient Egypt?
(24) Carruthers, a name to conjure with!
(25) Does it conjure up some primal urge from within?
(26) Here are names the selectors might conjure with.
(27) What does that word conjure up for you?
(28) In those days Churchill was still a name to conjure with.
(29) The mere mention of the words "heart failure", can conjure up, to the layman, the prospect of imminent death.
(30) The House of the Blue Lagoon - now there's a name to conjure with!
(1) He could conjure coins from behind people's ears.
(2) Her grandfather taught her to conjure.
(3) In those days Churchill was still a name to conjure with.
(4) How am I expected to conjure up a meal for six of his friends with almost nothing in the fridge?
(5) The mere mention of the words "heart failure", can conjure up, to the layman, the prospect of imminent death.
(6) I can't simply conjure up the money out of thin air.
(7) When we think of adventurers, many of us conjure up images of larger-than-life characters trekking to the North Pole.
(8) The woman practising witchcraft claimed that she could conjure up the spirits of the dead.
(31) She had never permitted herself to conjure it up.
(32) There is a name to conjure with and let slip easily of the tongue.
(33) Staring at his back, she tried to conjure up the image of him lover-like, tender, and failed.
(34) He tried to conjure up an image of Henry Dark, but nothing came to him.
(35) Homeworking / teleworking Homeworking used to conjure up images of hard-pressed workers licking envelopes or schoolwork that we never wanted to do.
(36) It was during the night that she would conjure up this picture of herself; in the daytime she was practical.
(37) We can conjure them away only by observing things under conditions in which the cues to three-dimensional perception are inoperative.
(38) His name would immediately conjure a mood of lonely alienation.
(39) This is partly because the word itself tends to conjure up the picture of performing some type of vigorous sport.
(40) They are, in the most fundamental sense, magical: they weave spells, they conjure something out of nothing.
(41) Silly me, I have begun to conjure up an image of Newt Gingrich as a man more used than using.
(42) After using the relaxation exercise you then conjure up a positive emotional experience.
(43) His design had to reveal the pattern and phrasing of the dream world he wished to conjure up.
(44) It's just hard for your Earth dwellers to conjure these all out of a hat in the midst of frustration.
(45) It will take a masterly spin doctor to conjure upbeat images from a bleak Kansas youth.
(45) try its best to gather and create good sentences.
(46) Stephen told me she was distressed when he died ... and now I think somebody is trying to conjure up the dead.
(47) There was no pause among them, no need to conjure either the memory or the boat itself.
(48) The first cassation seems to conjure up the beauty of music in a summer garden at night.
(49) Memories grow less vivid, recent experiences are unshared, and imagined caresses across the kilometres become harder to conjure.
(50) Relaxed by sleep, he allowed his mind to conjure up the big house on the boulevard du Cange.
(51) I had no idea that a composer could conjure the sounds of trumpets, horns and trombones from a string orchestra.
(52) The threat of computer terrorists may be enough to conjure money for research from Congress.
(53) Although I try to conjure Belinda from wherever she is in some form-any form she chooses-I fail.
(54) Do they conjure up the impression that children are engaged in some form of pre-Victorian drudgery at school?
(55) The trick is to use the person's name to conjure up a picture in your mind.
(56) I think she is trying to conjure up a storm.
(57) The imagery and language help conjure up the bleak picture of death in the two poems.
(58) The pope was still trying to conjure up support for Otto.
(59) This drawback is offset by the chance to create absolutely anything words can conjure up.
(60) Even now I find it harder to conjure up memories of Kennedy, harder to fall back under that inexplicable spell.
(61) I came to London to lay ghosts, not to conjure them up.
(62) Do film-makers just make use of the kookaburra to conjure up exotic tropical atmosphere - or are there birds with similar calls?
(63) Darker purples can conjure gloominess and sadness.
(64) Curtis O'Keefe was a name to conjure with.
(65) I conjure up the memories of the good old days.
(66) Ahead of us gleamed a radiance, enfolding every wish life could conjure, enfolding life itself.
(67) After the ceremony we are invited to lunch with the Archbishop of Canterbury – and there's a name to conjure with!
(68) On the merger scene his is a name to conjure with.
(69) To their sharpened minds it was easy to conjure pictures of all kinds of incompetency and blindness and indeed, cowardice.
(70) Chiaroscuro is the painters solution for shaping objects from the darkness, wielding one to conjure the other.
(71) An architect, artist and former NASA illustrator, american artist Kurt Wenner 's amazingly detailed street artworks conjure images of both Baroque religious murals and a Salvor Daliesque surrealism.
(72) For MOST of us, pawnshops conjure up images of the down-and-out, an alcoholic Ray Mill and in the classic The Lost Weekend.
(73) The real picture is more horrific and stronger but one must conjure up all the associative thoughts and emotions it evokes.
(74) What about Volkswagen? VW used to conjure up a rust - pocked campervan or knackered Beetle.
(75) It made influential screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga a name to conjure with, and kick-started a series of audacious films by Mexican directors that dominated non-Anglophone films throughout the decade.
(75) Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
(76) The words "Cote d'Azur" conjure up images of sunny days in Mediterranean cafes.
(77) We wave the "white flag" to call a truce, surrender, or show we are unarmed. A "white lie" is a harmless untruth, while "white magic" is good magic. White may conjure up negative images as well.
(78) I conjure you by all that is holy to desist.
(79) Those three words from Shakespeare's Richard III were originally meant to conjure up images of a malevolent King raging against a cruel world.
(80) I have just known that yours is a name to conjure with.
(81) The Living Receiver is often (blessed) with a Fourth Dimensional Power(s). These include increased strength, telekinesis, mind control, and the ability to conjure fire and water.
(82) VW used to conjure up a rust - pocked campervan or knackered Beetle.
(83) Mention it to one person, and it will conjure images of potheads lost in a spaced-out stupor.
(84) Lupin uses this spell to conjure a splint and bandages for Ron's broken leg ( PA 19 ).
(85) As a result, last November when Favreau sat down to write the first draft of the inaugural address, he could conjure up his master's voice as if an accomplished impersonator.
(86) How easy was it to persuade Depp to conjure up yet another enigmatic oddball?
(87) Fermilab cosmologist Scott Dodelson also finds a unified theory logical, but doesn't think a big departure from the standard model is required to conjure one up.
(88) In 1935, to conjure away the grimness of mass unemployment and the threat of Hitler.
(89) Part of her phallic potency was always to conjure the chaos about to break out unless we buckled under.
(90) Instead of relegating himself to one media, Tuominen employs photography, printmaking, and painting, often mixing the techniques together to conjure the impression of memory.
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更新时间:2025/3/15 5:11:40