Lithuanian English Dictionary

lietuvių kalba - English

dar in English:

1. more


I want more.
When people meet, first impressions determine more than 50 percent of whatever happens next.
Blow by blow, her punches got more intense.
Tom claims he doesn't watch much TV, but he watches more than three hours every day.
If you don't start treating people with a little more respect, people may start avoiding you like the plague.
A lot of people who have up until now been spending money having a good time now need to be more careful with their money.
Between 1820 and 1973, the United States admitted more than 46 million immigrants.
For quantities of 20 or more, we can allow you a special discount of 10% on the prices quoted.
In all my travels I've never seen a more beautiful mountain than Everest.
Because his family traveled from place to place, Cesar Chavez attended more than thirty schools as a child.
Food and drink were served in such profusion at the wedding that the bride and groom began to wonder if they should not have invited more guests.
Generally speaking, college students have more free time than high school students.
The errors apparent in his results are due more to carelessness than faulty procedures.
Her technique is superb, but she needs to play with more expression.
You can't easily put photos on an iPad from more than one computer. However, you can email photos to yourself from various computers and download these photos to your iPad.

2. still


I'm still sleepy.
He turned the bottle upside down and shook it, but still the honey wouldn't come out.
I have tried every diet that has ever been published and I still haven't lost weight.
I just started learning flower arrangement last month, so I'm still a beginner.
No matter how much you try to convince people that chocolate is vanilla, it'll still be chocolate, even though you may manage to convince yourself and a few others that it's vanilla.
I never for a moment imagined that I would still be doing this kind of thing at my age.
If my mother had still been alive, she would have helped me at that time.
It is impossible for a growing child to keep still for an hour.
Although I have studied English at school for the past six years, I'm still not good at speaking it.
I'd still be spinning my wheels if I hadn't gotten that scholarship.
I was just wondering if Tom could possibly still be at school.
Despite Trang's constant affirmations of love, Spenser is still afraid someday she will fall out of love with him.
I thought doing this would be easy, but we've been working all day and we're still not finished.
In some areas of the world, you can still get sued if you slander or libel a deceased person.
there is no wind outside. It's very still.

3. yet


Haven't you decided yet?
The prisoners would have to go through yet one more hardship.
When he came to Tokyo for the first time, this college had not been opened yet.
No sooner is one lie out of your mouth than you're telling yet another.
It was cold last night, yet he didn't wear a coat.
You will yet regret it.
Eventually I'd like to settle down and have a family, but not yet.
If you have not yet paid this bill, please let us hear from you.
This time I hadn't converted my money yet, so I needed to change Yen into Yuan.
I am not sure yet if I will go to a university or get a job.
I might have done well on yesterday's test, but I do not know the results yet.
Do you think this jelly's firm enough to eat yet?
If you haven't driven a bike yet, you should give it a shot.
The point of true mutual understanding has not yet been reached between Japan and China.
Everything around him was blown to pieces, yet he escaped without a scratch.

English word "dar"(yet) occurs in sets:

1000 populiariausių angliškų terminų: 251 - 300