Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
He and his companion looked up and down the platform, totteringly.
He vacated the chair at the transmitter and disappeared totteringly down the hall.
During the last two months, two hospitals have lost their accreditations and one other came totteringly close.
They'd been homeless on occasion, hungry more often than not; still, her father had always gotten back on his feet, however totteringly.
He got totteringly to his feet.
She wore shoes with totteringly high heels.
"Well, brother, you're still alive an' kickin'," he called to me, as I was totteringly dragged from my cell into the corridor of dungeons.
Bassett flexed his arm-muscles in quest of what possible strength might reside in such weakness, and dragged himself slowly and totteringly to his feet.
OLD LANSCOMBE moved totteringly from room to room, pulling up the blinds.
Will the rebel alliance seek to persuade Moscow to keep fuel and flour flowing until Afghanistan stands again as totteringly on its feet as it did before the Soviet military occupation?
"Gentlemen," said the Professor, standing up, albeit somewhat totteringly, at the end of the table, and balancing his high old- fashioned wine glass in his bony hand, "I must now explain to you what is the cause of this festivity."
"Here comes Eradicate," announced Tom, with a look back toward his chum, and a moment later the aged colored man, who had evidently started on the chase with Koku, but who had been left far behind, swung totteringly around the corner of the house.
Then Fafhrd and the Mouser strode toward their table, while old Ourph settled down on his hams, his gaze unwavering, and Groniger almost totteringly sidled toward the bar, like a man surprised at midday by a sleepwalking fit and thoroughly astounded at it.
Skipper was unheeding of Jerry because of the fever that wrenched his flesh and chilled his bones, that made his head seem to swell monstrously, that glazed the world to his swimming eyes and made him walk feebly and totteringly like a drunken man or a man very aged.