Exemplos de uso de One memory em Inglês e suas traduções para o Português
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Official/political
One memory.
Give me one memory.
One memory at a time.
Saving my life, one memory at a time.
One memory colours another.
As pessoas também se traduzem
My whole life,only one memory stayed with me.
One memory after another.
I lost two years.I do not have one memory of that time.
One memory… one single incident has made me who I am.
But above all the rest, there is one memory that torments me.
Start with one memory stick and insert it into the first channel.
Building our own unique histories one memory at a time.
One memory of discrimination was particularly convincing.
You have more conviction in one memory than I have in my entire being.
Make one memory card Playstation today should be something trivial and cheap.
Malcolm lives with his single mother andhas only one memory of his father.
There's only one memory, and it's a shared dream with Fargo as a hero.
Then maybe we could work on the one memory I would like to erase.
I only have one memory of training in the woods, but didn't seem very official.
Let's make each other a promise that every night we will talk about one memory of Mom.
Focus on one moment, one memory, and just try to be there with it.
Beyond the images Kyle described from that night,he couldn't retrieve even one memory.
He had not one memory, not one recollection, not one clue as to the nature of his own crime.
I don't want her shunted from one foster home to another without even one memory of ever having been loved.
One memory that is really important to me is when I was 8, my best friend Hannah moved into the house next door.
To hear once again burning No means to add a plus one memory to the Treasury, from which so wants to get rid of.
In fact, if I cling to one memory of this year, it would be walking down a darkened hallway with five spongy fingers grasping the handle underneath my hand.
Confusing" is what I said,as in the interchangeability of the hallways and how one memory could be confused with another memory. .
The reduced use of connectives conjoining the number of memories, and the abundance of verbless sentences or sentences with nominalizations- such as in“Races in circles traced in the sand”-, and the lack of an explicit order that would bring foreseeability to the discourse make enunciator andenunciate also experience the abrupt transition from one memory to another Level 1.
Drunk and with dreams I'm lost at the seamsMy only map I have memoriesHow else do you suggest I get back to that placeWith only one memory I never seenIt's face.