Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
She set down the floater and took a look around.
A floater was a body that had been in water for a period of time.
Many people begin to see floaters as they get older and their eyes age.
The same people who leave their floaters in the middle of the street, I guess.
I went quickly back down to my own floater, got in it and turned on its phone.
Back at the floater, they got in touch with base.
Floaters, big ones, and it looked like they were moving in.
The floater had probably spent much effort in keeping his head above water.
But tonight he ran into a floater even more dangerous than himself.
Most adults experience this type of floater at some time.
"You want me to run down the file on this floater?"
Then he dropped the floater to within a foot of the ground.
When we get a few kilometers away, I'll call the floater.
She describes herself at school as being a "floater", someone who got along with everyone.
Smith made a floater in the lane for a 5-point lead.
Remember also that floaters are usually not associated with serious eye problems.
He'd never told me about the gun connection and the floater.
She was sprawled across the floater, trying to keep him down.
Most people come to terms with the problem, after a time, and learn to ignore their floaters.
At least they could have had a floater to meet us!"
It looked like half the floaters were down, maybe fifty fish.
Floaters were usually found in clusters, but this one was all by itself.
He tells the floater to circle once, in close, and then to set down.
It was too foul a night, he told himself, for many floaters to be out.
He'd set the edge of the floater against the doorway.
The bit about the willingness to have a discussion is clearly a slap down to the Tories for floating policies they're making up on the spot.
Its CEO has been running around Washington, D.C. making announcements and floating policy recommendations that will appear to some as olive branches, but to others as bids to ward off stricter government scrutiny.