- And that's it, basically.
- Basically they have to offer better exercise equipment, high-end stuff, and classes.
- She retired a few months ago.
- Meir Dagan, the retired Mossad chief, talks about an Israeli strike on Iran as the stupidest thing I have ever heard.
- Eastwood plays retired gunfighter Will Munny.
- "Since I retired to this place," he wrote near the end of his life, "I have never been out of these mountains."
- He retired in 1970, on his fiftieth birthday.
- She decided to swim across the English Channel before she retired.
- Simon, how does it feel to be retired?
- Retired Coadjutor Bishop Peter Zhang Zhiyong, 80, who is not recognized by the government, was also present in the election.
- He was 52 and had retired to Stratford three years before.
- He retired in his fifties.
- He retired twelve batters in a row.
- He had buried his wife some two years before he retired.
- My father had just retired.
- It is utterly confusing to me that people do not recognize this, despite the fact that pretty much anyone who has been a student can tell the difference between their best and worst teachers.
- When younger kids learn computer science, they learn that it's not just a confusing, endless string of letters and numbers—but a tool to build apps, or create artwork or test hypotheses.
- It's so confusing switching to a new system.
- The high numbers show how very confusing it must be for consumers to sort the true from the misleading.
- Here I go again, confusing the issue.
- She slept fitfully, her mind crowded with confusing dreams.
- It was a tad confusing.
- He had a special way of fusing, or some people might say, confusing, science and fiction.
- The statement is highly confusing.
- It is all rather confusing.
- It's by far the most confusing thing I ever heard!
- Their statements are contradictory and confusing. √
- To those who are new to this system, it can sometimes be confusing.
- When younger kids learn computer science, they learn that it's not just a confusing, endless string of letters and numbers—but a tool to build apps, or create artwork, or test hypotheses.
- From the teacher's confused look, we could see that he hadn't expected that we could raise such a confusing question to him.
- What's the most confusing practice?
- We all know how confusing the remote controls for TV sets and stereo systems can be.
- Many students find the experience of attending university lectures to be a confusing and frustrating experience.
- Fortunately, the flood did not break the dike.
- Fortunately, there's another sort of parent that's a bit easier to describe: a patient parent.
- Fortunately for me, my friend saw that something was seriously wrong.
- Fortunately, I didn't got any channels showing all-night movies or I would never have gotten to bed.
- Fortunately for us, the weather changed.
- Fortunately, my heart attack was a mild one.
- Fortunately her father loves to fish, so we'll have something to talk about.