Examples of using Chiswick in English and their translations into Thai
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Old Chiswick gulped.
Living somewhere around Chiswick.
Old Chiswick foamed at the mouth.
His Grace the Duke of Chiswick, sir.
Old Chiswick gave a kind of moaning howl.
Living somewhere around Chiswick.
The Duke of Chiswick, you know.""So Jeeves told me.
By George!" said Bicky."Great heavens!" said old Chiswick.
I am sorry to say," said old Chiswick,"that it cannot go on.
Old Chiswick had sunk into an arm-chair and was looking about the room.
Jeeves filtered in with the tea. Old Chiswick took a stab at it to restore his tissues.
Old Chiswick gave Bicky a searching look; then he turned to the water-supply chappie.
Well, if you're the Duke of Chiswick, why isn't he Lord Percy Something?
Allow me to assure you, sir," he said, in a rummy kind of voice,"that I am the Duke of Chiswick.""Then that's all right," said the chappie heartily.
If the Duke of Chiswick is his uncle," I said,"why hasn't he a title?
Until we started this business of floating old Chiswick as a money-making proposition.
When I got back old Chiswick had gone to bed, but Bicky was there, hunched up in an arm-chair, brooding pretty tensely, with a cigarette hanging out of the corner of his mouth and a more or less glassy stare in his eyes.
There was a gleam of light when the brother of Bicky's pawnbroker offered ten dollars, money down, for an introduction to old Chiswick, but the deal fell through, owing to its turning out that the chap was an anarchist and intended to kick the old boy instead of shaking hands with him.
Project Yanga TV owned by the British company Chiswick Park Studios, which creates an informative and entertaining program for Africans and the African Diaspora.
To the casual and irreflective observer, if you know what I mean, it may sound a pretty good wheeze having a duke for an uncle, but the trouble about old Chiswick was that, though an extremely wealthy old buster, owning half London and about five counties up north, he was notoriously the most prudent spender in England.
He tottered into the sitting-room and buttonholed old Chiswick, who was reading the comic section of the morning paper with a kind of grim resolution.