How To Use decalitre In A Sentence
- In short (excuse the pun), for one reason or another users in the UK would be better served by a better dictionary of abbreviations than this; US users should be alerted to the fact that the text is British, unedited for American spelling: for ` decagramme, decalitre, decametre 'read ` decagram, decaliter, decameter.' VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVIII No 2
- The company plans to increase production to 1.2mn decalitres of beer a month and to sell 10 mn decalitres a year.
- The winery can process 15,000 tons of grapes per year, producing 1 million decalitres of wine.
- The plant will have a production capacity of 20 million decalitres of beer a year.
- The winery can process 15,000 tons of grapes per year, producing 1 million decalitres of wine.
- In short (excuse the pun), for one reason or another users in the UK would be better served by a better dictionary of abbreviations than this; US users should be alerted to the fact that the text is British, unedited for American spelling: for ` decagramme, decalitre, decametre 'read ` decagram, decaliter, decameter.' VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVIII No 2
- The company plans to increase production to 1.2mn decalitres of beer a month and to sell 10 mn decalitres a year.
- In short (excuse the pun), for one reason or another users in the UK would be better served by a better dictionary of abbreviations than this; US users should be alerted to the fact that the text is British, unedited for American spelling: for ` decagramme, decalitre, decametre 'read ` decagram, decaliter, decameter.' VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVIII No 2
- The plant will have a production capacity of 20 million decalitres of beer a year.
- In short (excuse the pun), for one reason or another users in the UK would be better served by a better dictionary of abbreviations than this; US users should be alerted to the fact that the text is British, unedited for American spelling: for ` decagramme, decalitre, decametre 'read ` decagram, decaliter, decameter.' VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVIII No 2