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d

[ UK /dˈiː/ ]
[ US /ˈdi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. denoting a quantity consisting of 500 items or units

How To Use d In A Sentence

  • The difficulties of the next year or two will, no doubt, reawaken the pro-euro lobby.
  • Three tall memorial archways inscribed with Chinese characters stand outside the temple.
  • Ask for an aged standing rib roast from the forequarter, trimmed and chined; bring to room temperature before roasting.
  • When we see her, we remember that hot July day doing five knots pulling Jess and Jerry on a tube and Russ skippering his first yacht.
  • I'm just a little bit caught in the middle. Life is a maze and love is a riddle, I don't know where to go, can't do it alone.
  • He described the sequence of events leading up to the robbery.
  • He was a cute little beggar, looked like you as well.
  • Mix together with as few stirs as possible - mixing too much will make the muffins too dense and heavy. The Sun
  • The buildings are usually gabled, with rows of tiles along the ridges of the roofs.
  • If you wonder about ‘furphy’, as I did, here's a gloss and explanation.
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