dictionnaire gaélique - Anglais

Gàidhlig - English

eòlach Anglais:

1. experienced experienced


By the end of the century, the earth will have experienced a dramatic increase in temperature.
I experienced horse riding.
That's what they call 'prejudice'! It's wrong to make your mind up on something you've never experienced!
Google shows a special colorless version of its logo to countries that have experienced recent tragedy.
The postwar has experienced several long periods of continuous strong prosperity, among which are the Jinmu Boom and the Iwato boom.
It has happened that people sleeping with the fan on have experienced a freezing of the stomach, as well as a local air pressure stress leading them to feel unwell.
Having never married, he experienced fatherhood vicariously through his nieces and nephews.
No matter how experienced is the woman, a pure young man will be able to enjoy a pure love.
Benjamin called the sense of awe and reverence experienced before a great work of art "aura".
People that have experienced so-called 'lucid dreams' often describe them as being 'more real than reality'. They also describe reality after waking up from a 'lucid dream' to be like a 'whimsical dream'.
When Chokichi thought listlessly about this winter, and the similar winter before and the one before that, he vividly experienced the fact that as people grow older, they gradually lose their happiness.
Let me ask you something, Dad, she began, in a tone of patiently controlled exasperation that every experienced parent is familiar with.
You should take her advice as she’s very experienced and she knows how to do things properly.
You can tell from the jargon alone that these instructions were written for experienced builders and not the average consumer.