Pronunciation of the English word stems.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | Such trouble stems from carelessness. | |
2. | However, a new type of humor, which stems largely from America, has recently come into fashion. | |
3. | Their trouble stems from a trifling matter. | |
4. | His illness stems from his intemperance. | |
5. | At night, I put my bell pepper plants at the open window, so they can harden off a bit before I plant them outside, cause now they still have such thin stems. | |
6. | From bad stems worse. | |
7. | Can we trust his words if he uses non-official stems? | |
8. | Maltese stems from Siculo-Arabic, but all its modern accretions have been European. | |
9. | A solution to America's fiscal woes may be found in spending alone or in revenue alone, but the problem stems from a lack of balance--between both. | |
10. | From what stems this contradiction between our hopes and our reality? |