dictionnaire latin - Anglais

latine - English

omne Anglais:

1. everything


Eat everything.
During the Depression in the 1930's, many wealthy people lost everything in the stock market crash.
I thought we had eaten everything in the house, but I found another box of crackers.
He is inclined to look at everything from the standpoint of its practicality and is neither stingy nor extravagant.
That proposal may be a way to kill two birds with one stone, but we also have to be careful not to get greedy and spoil everything.
Everything was exciting to me when I visited Spain for the first time.
The flowers are beginning to grow and everything is becoming green.
I'm going to speak to you with utmost candor so I want you to take everything I'm about to say at face value.
Everything accomplished starts with the dream of it, is a saying we all know to be true.
Money isn't everything, but if you have no money, you can't do anything.
My love for you won't let me tell you everything. Some things are better left unsaid.
It's still too hard to find a job. And even if you have a job, chances are you're having a tougher time paying the rising costs of everything from groceries to gas.
After a certain point, everything became a little more difficult.
The man in charge of the merry-go-round decided to make sure everything was working properly.
I never see a library without wishing I had time to go there and stay till I had read everything in it.