Voorbeelden van het gebruik van Another stone in het Engels en hun vertalingen in het Nederlands
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Colloquial
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Medicine
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Financial
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Computer
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Ecclesiastic
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Official/political
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Programming
Why another stone?
Just in case there's another stone.
So another stone is wrong.
May I see another stone?
So another stone is wrong.
I beg your pardon. May I see another stone?
So another stone is wrong. Whoa.
Even if we don't find the relic, another stone will do.
So another stone is wrong. Whoa!
But every stone I uncover just leads to another stone.
There's another stone in play.
We remain silent and we throw another stone into the water.
Oh, another stone sticking out of the ground.
A stone slides until it hits another stone already on the board.
Oh, another stone sticking out of the ground.
I merrily went on to the next commission, another stone coat of arms this time.
Another stone will do. Even if we don't find the relic.
In Lithography it is used to grind the stone, with another stone or with a levigator.
Throw another stone and I will sew a doormat with your mop!
Apart from the date above the door there is another stone remembering who built the mill(11) and when.
so don't kill them as they find there exit in seconds under another stone.
Todd's passing another stone, so Colton
was withheld by the apprehension that a new PC would only mean another stone around my neck.
It's probably another stone, but we will do some imaging to rule out anything more serious.
A piece will begin to fill a column from the bottom,& ie; it will fall down until it reaches the ground level or another stone. After a move is done it is the turn of the other player.
He showed me a photograph of another stone which had been found in Elbow Lake with inexplicable circular markings.
sympathy to one or another stone.
John found a round stone and he… he worked it with another stone like a pestle and mortar so the first stone had a hole in it.
Another stone in the western financial pond may be a Russian default on its $700 billion in foreign debt,
Ocelus was a local British deity, to whom another stone was inscribed at Caerwent,