Examples of using Lestrade in English and their translations into Slovak
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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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Official/political
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Computer
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Programming
Thank you, Lestrade.
So Lestrade needs his help.
This is Inspector Lestrade.
Lestrade, allow me to present you.
All in good time, Lestrade.
Lestrade, did Camrose play poker with you?
Impeccable timing, Lestrade.
Lestrade was there, just like we agreed.
This is Inspector Lestrade of Scotland Yard.
Lestrade, I can assist if you wish.
You would be pleased to know that Lestrade performed in his role perfectly.
Lestrade, however, shook his head like a man who is.
Thank heaven you're here, Lestrade I would almost ran out of jokes.
Lestrade: And exactly how many times did he fall out of the window?
Magic tricks might impress Inspector Lestrade, they don't work on me.
Suddenly, Lestrade is letting himself admire this mind that he's resented.
But as they work together, something starts to change, and finally in"The Adventure of the Six Napoleons," once Holmes comes in,dazzles everybody with his solution, Lestrade turns to Holmes and he says,"We're not jealous of you, Mr. Holmes.
Lestrade:"I am overjoyed with this finding, and I am convinced of my theory.
And look who it gathers: sweet Lestrade, terrifying Tom Ripley, crazy Swann, Marcel Proust himself.
Lestrade… meet Jack Stapleton, real name John Baskerville, son of Roger Baskerville, Charles' youngest brother.
Interview with Sander Lestrade about his solution to a century-old linguistic problem.
So Lestrade needs his help, resents him, and sort of seethes with bitterness over the course of the mysteries.
Uh, Inspector Lestrade, to my certain knowledge, this man hasn't eaten for several days.
Sander Lestrade, a linguist at Radboud University in The Netherlands, proposes a new solution to this notorious problem in PLOS ONE.
Lestrade now shows that Zipf's law can be explained by the interaction between the structure of sentences(syntax) and the meaning of words.
Lestrade now shows that Zipf's law can be explained by the interaction between the structure of sentences(syntax) and the meaning of words(semantics) in a text.
Sander Lestrade: Given word classes that differ in class size by orders or magnitude, some very rough power-law like distribution could be expected.
Sander Lestrade: I can imagine that this sounds a bit opaque like this; The idea is that words differ in meaning specification:"car" is more general than"SUV" but more specific than"vehicle".
Sander Lestrade: Zipf's law states that the frequency of a word in a text can be described in terms of its frequency rank such that the second most frequently used item is half as frequent as the first(frequency first item/2), the third word has one third of the frequency of the frequency of the first item(frequency first/3), etc.