Definition, Bedeutung & Anagramme | Englisch Wort CRADLED


CRADLED

Definitionen von CRADLED

  1. Präteritum (simple past) des Verbs cradle
  2. Partizip Perfekt (past participle) des Verbs cradle

2

Anzahl der Buchstaben

7

Ist Palindrom

Nein

15
AD
ADL
CR
CRA
DL
DLE
ED
LE
LED
RA
RAD

3

3

309
AC
ACD
ACE
ACL
ACR
AD
ADC
ADD

Beispiele für die Verwendung von CRADLED in einem Satz

  • It can involve the carrier crawling on hands and knees with the child straddling over the back like riding a horse, or with the carrier standing upright with the child hugging or cradled behind the back, often with the child's arms leaning over the carrier's shoulders and legs wrapping around the flanks.
  • The area that is now modern-day Mexico has cradled many predecessor civilizations, going back as far as the Olmec which influenced the latter civilizations of Teotihuacan (200 BC to 700 AD) and the much debated Toltec people who flourished around the 10th and 12th centuries AD, and ending with the last great indigenous civilization before the Nahuatl language was a common tongue in the region of modern Central Mexico during the Aztec Empire, but after the arrival of Europeans and the Spanish Conquest, the conquest of the Aztec empire (13 March 1325 to 13 August 1521) the common language of the region became Spanish.
  • The fame of the King, baby boy cradled in a turtle shell preserved by Béarn through the vicissitudes of revolutions, gives the castle, which did not see him grow up or die, a particular taste, and the right to claim the honor due those who give birth to supermen.
  • When Carrie sees Bandit scribbling on a napkin a picture of Charlotte cradled by suspended netting to keep her off her feet, she angrily leaves, but not before telling Bandit that she will come back only when he likes himself again.
  • Until 1995, the official Nike corporate logo for Nike featured the name "NIKE" in Futura Bold, all-caps font, cradled within the Swoosh.
  • With its unique frame, which hung rather than cradled the engine and eliminated any tubing beneath it, both saving weight and lowering the bike’s center of gravity, the Vision's performance and roadholding were far ahead of its time.
  • Marysville is cradled between two of Victoria's best motorcycling roads, the Black Spur & The Reefton Spur.
  • According to the police report, when found by hotel employees he was attired in the style he affected at his lavish dinner parties: "black Tux with white shirt, bow tie, white suspenders, black socks and shoes", with a telephone cradled in his ear and a Walkman headset containing a cassette tape of Mozart's "A Little Night Music".
  • He was quickly pulled up by jockey Chris Antley, who dismounted and cradled the horse's fractured foreleg to prevent further injury.
  • The fleet-footed Thompson arrived just in time, planted his feet, and made a surreal leap – seemingly sensing in some sort of inexact prayer, where the ball was – and cradled it into his glove's web, retiring the side and preserving another Phillies win, in that magical 1993 season, high-fiving center fielder Lenny Dykstra all the way to the visiting dugout.
  • " Tom Milne of The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote, "Fulsomely cradled in slow motion and caressing dissolves, sprinkled with cultural references to Dante and idealistic philosophies, indulging much lachrymose drivel about first love and its irreparable loss, this Son of Love Story similarly tries to prove that the spirit of romance is not dead and proceeds to administer a cruel coup de grâce.
  • Refusing shelter and, at risk of his life with blood oozing from his ears, nose and mouth, firing his machine gun cradled in his bandaged left arm with his right hand, he continued to lead his men against another ruthless German assault throughout the entire afternoon.
  • Triggering her maternal instincts, Bhadrakali gently picked up the baby and cradled him, her anger dissolving into a sense of protectiveness.
  • With its flowing and wave-like movements, Pulsing perhaps recalls a body-memory of the foetal experience in the womb, where the baby is constantly subject to rhythmic pulsation, or of being cradled and rocked during infancy.
  • A grandmother or maternal aunt next cradled the infant in her arms; with a finger covered in lustral saliva, she massaged the baby's forehead and lips, a gesture meant to ward off the evil eye.
  • Benji and Laska traveled in a “Mouse House” that cradled the mouse and held food, water, and dehumidifying chemicals.
  • Situated west of Dasht Kech in the Dasht Tehsil of Kech District, Kashap boasts a unique location south of Mand and cradled by the majestic Sohor Munkh mountains to the west.
  • Cunningham's 1950 painting Elusion, in which a small, haloed form is cradled within a larger ethereal shape, was taken by some viewers to depict a madonna and child.
  • In June 1962 the Thorp Brothers of New York transferred it a Masonite support, with the back veneered in mahogany and cradled to resemble a work on a wooden board.
  • The B-type desk set was followed by a wall-mounted hand telephone set, designated as the type C handset mounting, also referred to as a hangup telephone, with the handset hanging on one side of the unit in a switchhook fork that cradled only the receiver cup.



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