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read numberの例文

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  • The winners will be the ones who can read numbers and adapt.
  • Read number 5 of Odd nature 19 : 02, 6 July 2007 ( UTC)
  • Edow, who could not read numbers a year ago, knows what a down payment is.
  • Hands are luminescent, and it has large, easy-to-read numbers.
  • We need to read numbers stories with some skepticism.
  • I got elected because I could read numbers.
  • Using tools with standard dimensions eliminates the need to measure and read numbers off a scale.
  • Most price tags are stuck on the front of the item, in great big, easy-to-read numbers.
  • An employee who reads numbers tossed up by the ball blower keys them into the computer network linking MegaMania play stations.
  • Freamon pretends to be a con-man named Calvin and Bernard checks his story by having him prove he can read numbers.
  • Some cameras may be disguised for covert operations but the majority will be ordinary CCTV traffic cameras converted to read number plates.
  • If the patient is unconscious, emergency workers or other helpers can read numbers off the card and prove their status to the data center.
  • Bloomberg Markets magazine ran a May cover story by Adam Levy that noted Enron's secrecy, its hard-to-read numbers and the disenchantment of some investors.
  • In numeric fields, engines which are designed to read numbers take preference, while in alpha fields, engines designed to read hand written letters have higher elective rights.
  • He could, however, read numbers, and when left alone he would move his fingers about in endless intricate patterns, sometimes chanting to himself in strings of incomprehensible words.
  • "Once we teach the dogs to read numbers, we'll be on our way, " Mann, the instructor, says, " and we can just stand in the middle and watch ."
  • Other features _ different sizes for the bills, large, easy to read numbers _ were added simply to make life easier for people, especially the blind or those with impaired vision.
  • :In French, however, it would be dix virgule dix, I believe, because in France it is correct to read numbers after the point ( comma ) as if they were ordinals.
  • I understand how to read numbers relating to birthdates, but when binary numbers are aligned three in a row, in this case, specifically 222, does this have any specific meaning when relating to the weather?
  • Even below 2, 000, Americans are more likely than the British are to read numbers like 1, 234 as " twelve hundred thirty-four " instead of " one thousand two hundred ( and ) thirty-four ".
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