dictionnaire gaélique - Anglais

Gàidhlig - English

iuchair Anglais:

1. key key


A good lawyer will always zero in on a key piece of evidence.
I'll leave a key with my next-door neighbour in case you get here before I do.
car key
This opportunity for success in forming a partnership is a big one; the key lies in whether you are willing to work hard and invest in it, and that is all.
The key is that Asuka abuses Shinji. So, rarely, Shinji flips and assaults Asuka. Then Asuka is surprisingly meek.
Once divorced from key questions of national culture and identity, comparative literature loses its way.
If you wind up the doll with the key on the side of its torso it will swing its arms round and go forward doing somersaults.
For code type locks that don't need a key there are 'free dial' systems where you can set any number you like and fixed types where the number is set in advance.
With the colour key program system, all colours are divided into two palettes, the "cool palette" and the "warm palette".
They also have ‘You can be serious without a suit’ as one of their key beliefs.
The Bank of Japan lowered its discount rate by half a percentage point Monday, bringing the key lending rate to 4.5%.
The success of newly-developed applications and government-forced deregulation may hold the key to achieving this economic implementation.
Do you know where my key is? I don't see it anywhere. "You must be looking for it with your eyes closed, then, cause it's on the table as always."
Those little yogurts may be guiltless, but do they really taste like key lime pie?
Alex seemed to learn nouns such as "paper," "key" and "cork," and color names such as "red," "green" and "yellow."