Examples of using Called it in English and their translations into Korean
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Programming
-
Computer
So I called it.
Called it that.
So we called it….
I called it that too.
This is what this lady called it.
People also translate
So we called it Seven.
At least so the company called it.
I never called it that.
That's what most people called it.
We called it power.
However it contained no proofs and Jacob Bernoulli called it an enigma rather than an explanation.
We called it champagne.
And nobody ever called it'he' or'she'.
We called it Superman.
She was the last person shot, the last one to die that day, June 17, 2015, at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church-or Mother Emanuel as we called it.
We called it shop.
Reformers from across the political spectrum believed the sudden growth of political fortunes was part of the problem- a“conspiracy of officeholders” is what George William Curtis,head of the Civil Service Reform Association, called it.
Some called it sadness.
By the end of 1754 he had made some important discoveries on the tautochrone which would contribute substantially to the new subject of the calculus ofvariations(which mathematicians were beginning to study but which did not receive the name'calculus of variations' before Euler called it that in 1766).
We called it"The Bomb".
I think it was Linda Stone who called it a“continuous partial attention.".
He called it his office.
Richard Nixon called it the"Madman Theory.".
We called it her uniform.
For a few weeks, Rod would reprimand anyone who called it“Macintosh” in his presence, but the new name never acquired any momentum.
I called it a summer from hell.
Also, sometimes it leaves its marks all over the place where you called it, they can be barely noticeable, and can look like distinct red marks from tenacious hands.
Kipling called it a City of Dreadful Night, and a century later V.S. Naipaul, Gnter Grass and Louis Malle revived its hellish image.
When it wasfirst encountered in 1941, German general Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleist called it"the finest tank in the world"[6] and Heinz Guderian affirmed the T-34's"vast superiority" over existing German armour of the period.
He called it himself a game.