Examples of using More elegant in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
steel bridge to span the 30-metre wide Inn River, but Maillart argued that he could build a more elegant bridge made of reinforced concrete for about the same cost.
ago as 1600 A.D., it wasn't until the Baroque era that people began finishing wood floors and using more elegant types of trees to create them.
to Samsung's 1/3-inch 20Mp image sensor, allowing more elegant smartphone designs.”.
we have to admit that the Galaxy Note 5 is the sleeker and more elegant of the two.
of that function call, but I'm hoping that there is a more elegant way to do this.
ports positioned at the back of the cabinet and slim magnetic-held grilles for a neater, more elegant look.
Well yes, if we want to notice the differences we have to look at the strap which in the Lite version is completely in black silicone at the expense of the more elegant GTR bi-material leather/ silicone strap.
For instance, according to test makers, it was(implicitly) more elegant to rotate a figure within the 2-D plane than to rotate out in 3-D space.
which is a much more elegant application of the layout that Honda has been using in other vehicles like the Pilot and Accord.
So she challenged me to make her something that was a little bit more feminine, a little bit more elegant, and lightweight, and like good tailors,
but rather to enable it to be free to experience more elegant, productive, and creative activity.
it's been made even more elegant and characterful thanks to a host of detail changes, inside and out.
except Lady Catherine and her daughter, he had never seen a more elegant woman; for she had not only received him with the utmost civility, but had even pointedly
the mid-sixteenth century and Nicholas Copernicus, who proposed the more elegant(and more correct) explanation that the
Flat screen TVs have become ever thinner and more elegant in recent years and while this makes
excepting Lady Catherine and her daughter, he had never seen a more elegant woman; for she had not only received him with the utmost civility, but had even pointedly
the mid-sixteenth century and Nicholas Copernicus, who proposed the more elegant(and more correct) explanation that the
will give you only the cheapest items, but eventually you will be able to save enough money to buy more elegant and expensive things,
Except Lady Catherine and her daughter, he had never seen a more elegant woman; for she had not only received him with the utmost civility, but had even pointedly