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Sentences with cross

cross
C c
  • She was partly to blame for failing to look as she crossed the road. [VERB noun]
  • The Defford to Eckington road crosses the river half a mile outside Eckington. [VERB noun]
  • That place was like a cross between hell and jail.
  • She cut an improvised cross from the head of a cork and dampened the ash by adding water.
  • ...the intersection where Main and Center Streets cross. [VERB]
  • I normally never write into magazines but Mr Stubbs has finally crossed the line. [VERB noun]
  • We assume that the parents that initiate the cross are pure inbred lines.
  • With the pointed end of a potato peeler or a small, sharp knife, cut out the core of the tomatoes and lightly mark a cross on their undersides.
  • Berg tilts his head and a mischievous look crosses his face. [VERB noun]
  • Round her neck was a cross on a silver chain.
  • If you really want to help, volunteer to make dinner or do laundry so Mom can cross a few things off her list.
  • If George W Bush had enjoyed the right to vote in this country two weeks ago he would have thought twice about putting his cross against any candidate representing the Conservative Party.
  • 'Holy Mother of God!' Marco crossed himself. [VERB pronoun-reflexive]
  • My wife is much cleverer than me; it is a cross I have to bear.
  • He was extremely poor, illiterate and kept himself to himself, but liked attending church processions and carrying the cross or the pictures of Saints.
  • Only a few minutes had gone when the Welshman flung in an inviting right-foot cross to the back post.
  • Put a tick next to those activities you like and a cross next to those you dislike.
  • Cheques/postal orders should be crossed and made payable to Newmarket Promotions. [be VERB-ed]
  • This feeling coupled with the feeling of guilt that they are in some way or fashion responsible for their charge's condition is indeed a difficult cross to bear.
  • His ability to cross the ball and pass it over very long distances absolutely astonishes people.
  • Jill crossed her legs and rested her chin on one fist, as if lost in deep thought. [VERB noun]
  • If you ever cross him, forget it, you're finished. [VERB noun]
  • Did they cross the bridge?
  • Most hybrid striped bass that consumers purchase are a cross between female white bass and male striped bass.
  • 'Ha!' It was a cross between a laugh and a bark.
  • Le Tissier hit an accurate cross to Groves.
  • The center of the cross indicates the position of the breakpoints with moderate precision.
  • But persuading our English neighbours to cross the Border is a bigger problem than anyone thought.
  • The Army boys had personnel carriers blockading the cross streets.
  • The women are cross and bored.
  • He used his own pain, following the example of Christ on the cross, to share with compassion the pain of others.
  • I am also cross that there may have been an assumption that private day nurseries are all just a licence to make money.
  • Cross and Crescent
  • He's a cross between a dictator and a saint
  • What do you get if you cross a carrier pigeon with a woodpecker?
  • We crossed the road
  • The two trains crossed
  • To cross one's legs
  • His opponent crosses him at every turn
  • A cross timber
  • The Distinguished Service Cross
  • cross your fingers
  • Where two streets cross one another
  • cross your t's
  • To cross the ocean
  • The bridge crosses a river
  • The wires were crossed
  • cross street, cross ventilation
  • At cross purposes
  • The guard crossed the child at the traffic light.
  • Put a cross for a wrong answer and a tick for a right one.
  • To cross oneself.
  • Criminals were commonly executed on a wooden cross.
  • She made the cross after swearing.
  • Cross at the intersection.
  • She was wearing a cross on her necklace.
  • It's a cross I must bear.
  • A quick cross of the road.
  • Don't be cross with me.
  • cross timbers.
  • A cross-endorsement of political candidates; cross-marketing of related services.
  • And Stamford Bridge erupted with joy as Florent Malouda slotted in a cross from Drogba, who had stayed just onside.
  • They were at cross purposes with each other.
  • I shall tell your fortune, but you must first cross my palm with silver.
  • She frowned and crossed her arms. to cross the letter t Cross the box which applies to you. An indulgent playmate, Grannie would lay aside the long scratchy-looking letter she was writing (heavily crossed ‘to save notepaper’) and enter into the delightful pastime of ‘a chicken from Mr Whiteley's’.
  • Her elegant clothes and those two splendid rings had been acquired on the cross.
  • Why did the chicken cross the road? You need to cross the street at the lights. Ships crossing from starboard have right-of-way. Your kind letter crossed mine. He crossed the ball into the penalty area. England cut loose at the end of the half, Ashton, Mark Cueto and Mike Tindall all crossing before the break.
  • "You'll rue the day you tried to cross me, Tom Hero!" bellowed the villain. to cross me from the golden time I look for
  • They managed to cross a sheep with a goat.
  • At the end of each row were cross benches which linked the rows.
  • His actions were perversely cross to his own happiness.
  • She was rather cross about missing her train on the first day of the job. Please don't get cross at me. (or) Please don't get cross with me.
  • cross interrogatoriescross marriages, as when a brother and sister marry persons standing in the same relation to each other
  • She walked cross the mountains.
  • The Lorentz force is q times v cross B.
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