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Sentences with din

din
D d
  • They tried to make themselves heard over the din of the crowd.
  • To din an idea into someone's ears
  • We, meanwhile, struggle to din some culture into our own young people whose aspirations have been hijacked by the consumerism of big corporations.
  • Although its cries were becoming increasingly desperate as the din of barking and shouting intensified, the thought of trying to help never entered my mind.
  • An amplified quacking noise dinned from the speakers, and the image of an imprinting experiment, with a duckling following a moving wooden decoy around in circles appeared on the screen.
  • It has something to do with the book reviewing climate and the endless din buzzing around readers and publishers alike.
  • I just didn't want to add my voice to the din of noise that has filled the public square regarding this tragic woman's fate.
  • Day after day he had to din it into her that persistent work, and not ability alone, was essential for success.
  • In the background I read that towards the end of its life as a chapel in the convict period, free settlers got very cross with the fact that the convicts were making an awful din from under their pews.
  • Finding it difficult to handle them at home, many owners go in search of kennels where they are safely housed from the din and noise.
  • The people were inside and the radio was turned up loud to drown out the din of the men yelling and laughing as they drank coffee and beer.
  • Neither does the narrative din it into the viewer.
  • Animals added their noises to the din, poultry screeching and draft animals lowing as they were displayed and examined.
  • ‘Go away, I'm busy’ he yelled above the din of the sewing machine.
  • The next moment his loud shout rose over the din of battle, and swinging his hat over his head for a banner to those who pressed after, he spurred against the flying enemy.
  • None of us even thought of looking strangely at him, dinning third-year Circuit Theory into our heads.
  • Every England fan had a whooping, whistling counterpart so we shouted louder until the din was indescribable.
  • People shout to be heard over the din, loud mufflerless trucks rumble by on the street, dogs bark, a mysterious polytonal chittering in the background sounds like a great horde of rats.
  • The merry din of talk, laughter, music, and clattering dinnerware spills outside.
  • A couple of days of silence make the din seem so much louder.
  • ‘Hello darling,’ said Lewis on the other end above a loud din in the background.
  • He opened the door and the noise dinned into the office.
  • It was hard to hear anything above the din in the restaurant.
  • The plant is noisy, and she and her co-workers pass the time by shouting over the din, catching up on gossip and talking about food and cosmetics.
  • Only when the message that Labour isn't all that clever, after all, is dinned into the voters can National risk changing the subject to its own intentions.
  • While attending the lectures, the din of clashes outside the campus was audible.
  • ‘I want to come back when it's a bit quieter,’ I shouted over the din of amplified music, throbbing diesel generators and rattling joy rides.
  • In an instant, it was clear that the ward was an intolerably noisy place, flooded with a near-continuous din of screams, laughter, and loud vocalizations.
  • Pakistan claimed its first gold medal of the weightlifting program last night through Shuja-ud- din Malik in the men's 85-kilogram category.
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