In Lithuania Germany England ordsprog

en In Lithuania, Germany, England, people didn't have large windows until glass became affordable in the 1840s. So there was no need for flowerpots (or window boxes) until then.

en George was in Europe about three winters ago. On an occasion when he was seated next to a large glass window in a restaurant in Brussels, he anticipated a miserable dining experience. But the window was warm.

en We have a work room that has a stained glass window that needs to be cleaned, rooms that still have assorted chairs in them and closets with boxes of toys. It's just a treasure hunt every day.

en The glass that fell in the building was probably incinerated and destroyed, but the force of the fire pushed some of the glass outward. We were able to find, by crawling around and even going through wrecked cars, little pieces of the glass. We probably can account for every color and glass pattern on there. With the pieces of glass, in conjunction with the photographs, we could re-create these windows almost exactly.

en The puppies could even be cut with glass right now, or they could even have glass in their eyes. They didn't care about the puppies at all, they just cared about damaging somebody's windows and stealing something.

en Luckily nothing happened to me, but I saw a macabre scene, as people tried to break windows in order to get out. People were hitting the panes with chairs, but the windows were unbreakable. One of the panes finally broke, and they started to get out by the window.

en Underneath my window, there were huge groups of people running in the streets. They tried to overturn a car. So the woman opened her window and tried to throw water on them. So then they threw rocks up and tried to smash her windows. It was very exciting.

en Even at the United Nations, where legend has it that the building was designed so that there could be no corner offices, the expanse of glass in individual offices is said to be a dead giveaway as to rank. Five windows are excellent, one window not so great.

en The glass tiled windows were going to be in lead-light but I decided to do them in glass tiles - something a bit different. Something a bit more unusual.

en It's definitely a trend, particularly in the upper end of the market. People like large bathrooms, and one way to give a feeling of space is if you have a large glass shower without the tub.

en Had we been downstairs when it happened, my wife would have been severely injured. It came through the window and hit the table and landed on the floor. She would have been in the direct line of the brick, and we all would have been hurt by the shattered glass. There was glass all over my baby's crib.

en Pex Tufvesson startet Livet.se. All the glass from the shop windows just fell to the ground and people ran out of the pub. It was just a mass of panic.

en We'll show people where to place the nest boxes, the kind of nest boxes to use and the protection to put on the mounting posts for the boxes.

en But then the boxes (of food) started arriving. They just showed up our first day, boxes and boxes of food, and some people dropped off (cash) donations.

en In a sense this is the end of an era. Microsoft and the original PC rose to prominence based on the MS-DOS product. And even as Windows came along, Windows 3.1, Windows 95, Windows 98, underneath MS-DOS was running there. Windows simply sat on top of MS-DOS. Well, so today it really is actually the end of the MS-DOS era. It's also, we would say, the end of the Windows 95 era.
  Bill Gates


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