We found 101 examples of how to use acquainted with in an English sentence.
Sentences 51 to 75 of 101.
# | Sentence | |
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51. | I have got acquainted with them. | |
52. | You assume we are all sexually stable; while on the other hand, as I have become acquainted with people, I find that they are all perverted sinners, one way or another, that the whole society is corrupt and rotten and repressed and unconscious that it exhibits its repression in various forms of social sadism. | |
53. | I got acquainted with him three years ago. | |
54. | I became acquainted with your father yesterday. | |
55. | I became acquainted with your dad yesterday. | |
56. | I became acquainted with beautiful Polish women at the university in Brazil, and I also met there some very friendly people who could speak Polish. | |
57. | I am acquainted with one Mr. Smith. | |
58. | Tom is acquainted with Mary. | |
59. | When I was in Paris, I became acquainted with two or three painters, and I went to visit their atelier from time to time. I was always fascinated by their method of work and their way of life. | |
60. | He likes mountaineering and is well acquainted with the mountains of Japan. | |
61. | Mr. Smith and I have been acquainted with each other for a long time. | |
62. | I definitely want to get acquainted with Mary. I think she is very likeable. | |
63. | This person seems well acquainted with the history of Japan. | |
64. | He seems well acquainted with the history of Japan. | |
65. | I know her, but I'm not acquainted with the rest of the family. | |
66. | From a translation I demand that it combine fidelity with sonority, and that it incorporate the genius of the language that it is written in, and not that of the original language. A good translator, therefore, needs to be intimately acquainted with the philology of a language pair. | |
67. | In my day oral proficiency was neglected because professors maintained that the purpose of studying a foreign language was to become acquainted with its literature, and not to strike up a conversation with the illiterates who happened to be its native speakers, which leads us to the conclusion that what constitutes a natural sounding sentence may be quite subjective. | |
68. | I believe Tom is acquainted with Mary. | |
69. | I think Tom is acquainted with Mary. | |
70. | We are not acquainted with each other. | |
71. | I don't care what the headmistress said. I have no desire to become acquainted with anyone. You all dislike me and I couldn't care less. | |
72. | I got acquainted with a woman in the bus. | |
73. | We're not acquainted with each other. | |
74. | It is a great honor to become acquainted with her. | |
75. | Are you acquainted with Visual Basic? |