Pronunciation of the English word mary.
# | Sentence | |
---|---|---|
1. | Mary! Mary! Mary! | |
2. | One day two impeccably dressed young men arrived at the home of Mary and Tom. Opening the door, Mary saw they were both wearing name tags identifying them as "Elders." Mary giggled; to her eyes, this designation seemed slightly ludicrous, as Elder Hinton was 19 and Elder Bauer was 18. | |
3. | "Tom, why are you calling me Mary?" "Aren't you Mary?" "I'm not Mary, I'm Marie!" | |
4. | She's smarter than Mary, but she's not as pretty as Mary. | |
5. | Tom likes Mary's younger sister more than he likes Mary. | |
6. | Tom, desperate, howled: "Mary! Where are you?" from the very left edge of the sentence. "I fear I'm from now on, fully at the opposite from you" drily retorted Mary. | |
7. | Tom thinks he knows how much money Mary makes, but Mary makes quite a bit more than Tom thinks she does. | |
8. | Tom likes Mary, but Mary likes John. To make matters even more interesting, John likes Alice, but Alice likes Tom. | |
9. | Tom for Mary and Mary for Tom were alternatively the subject and the object. | |
10. | He who loves Mary would love Mary. |