영어에서 Not merely 을 사용하는 예와 한국어로 번역
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Programming
-
Computer
Not merely Judge.
To live is not merely to breathe.
Not merely spoken.
The bus driver is not merely a bus driver.
Not merely footballing talent.
사람들은 또한 번역합니다
So Yahweh's wisdom is not merely theoretical.
Not merely the house where I live.
These recollections are not merely bad memories.
He is not merely a liar, therefore.
But we must be clear:Terrorists are not merely criminals.
God is not merely in heaven.
Insulating prevents heat loss and thus helps store heat for days, not merely hours.
And it's not merely associations.
Technology was a major cause of this gap, reinforcing it not merely economically but politically.
So God is not merely one God among many.
Ridding science of shoddy statistics will require scrutiny of every step, not merely the last one, say Jeffrey T.
It was not merely that Holmes changed his costume.
The ecologist warned us that petroleum was not merely a blessing but also a curse.
God is not merely like a father; He is a father.
We use the word Circle to describe these meetings not merely in reference to the way the chairs are arranged.
Not merely that Christ died for us, but that we died with Him.
The community or organization, not merely the individual, benefits(12:7).
And not merely the absence of disease or infirmity”.
Like all scriptures, the Bhagavad Gita also can be read, not merely as an act of devotion, but as a philosophical discourse as well.
Not merely does it produce their perform simpler but in addition presents maximum money benefits.
God is a transcendent reality, not merely man's traditional concept of supreme values.
Not merely that, games such as for example city developing and farm management teach players to be better managers on the whole.
God is a transcendent reality, not merely man's traditional concept of supreme values.
Socialism is not merely a question of equal distribution but also a question of planned production.
Ridding science of shoddy statistics will require scrutiny of every step, not merely the last one, say Jeffrey T. Leek and Roger D. Peng.