Random good picture Not show
1. At dusk more fish come into the shallows.
2. At dusk bats appear in vast numbers.
3. Even at dusk the air was still heavy.
4. The street lights go on at dusk .
5. We arrived home at dusk.
6. We made a landfall at dusk after three weeks at sea.
7. Police called off the search for the climbers at dusk.
8. I arrived at dusk, hungry and footsore after walking all day.
9. At dusk we pitched camp in the middle of nowhere.
10. The street lights come on at dusk and go off at dawn.
11. At dusk we stopped to refuel in Cook.
12. I doll myself up at dusk.
12. Wish you will love sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
13. The ship sailed at dusk.
14. She would be back at dusk.
15. They set out at dusk on 13 September and soon discovered that they were in the wrong wadi.
16. At dusk they established a perimeter along the irrigation ditch just outside Thuan Yen.
17. He slept a little, waking in his pavilion at dusk of his own accord.
18. We trudged home at dusk when the city glows in burnished tones of copper and terra cotta.
19. He came at dusk, as soon as he dared(Sentencedict.com), when everyone was gone.
20. At dusk, passing through the countryside, everything was slowing down for the night.
21. At dusk I returned and was invited in again, this time for a tea with pound cake.
22. Tom imagined the worst some-times, especially at dusk when he felt more depressed than at any other time of day.
23. After a long drive we finally hauled into town at dusk.
24. One such method involves sprinkling the lawn with water at dusk.
25. Charlie Northrup drove his car to the Biondo farm at dusk to keep his appointment with Jack.
26. You can come along and register any time after this, bearing in mind that the walk finishes at dusk.
27. Out of Canberra you can see wombats, possums and kangaroos at dusk if you leave the main road.
28. Although the plants are dowdy looking and scentless during the day, at dusk they suddenly release a powerful ravishing scent.
29. Jarvis even sees a market for eyeshields tinted grey, for sunny-day play, or amber, for street hockey at dusk.
30. The roding male circles his territory at treetop level, patrolling boundaries with deliberation at dusk and giving the ritual eerie call.