2 matching entries and 13 matching sentences.
Sentences
In the nineties, every computer started coming with a sound card, which really kicked off PC gaming.
Source: Tatoeba
Do you think your schooldays are the happiest days of your life?
Source: Tatoeba
We are in the era of atomic energy.
Source: Tatoeba
A brilliant, seductive chef turns to espionage in Napoleon-era France.
Source: Tatoeba
He and I were inseparable friends during our time together in school.
Source: Tatoeba
We should read the newspaper so as not to lag behind the times.
Source: Tatoeba
Every time I hear that song, I think of my high school days.
Source: Tatoeba
In the Edo period, moon-viewing parties were very popular.
Source: Tatoeba
It's Lulu Island, 3 August 2025. After supper—green figs tender with sunlight, sweet vinegar from yesterday’s pickled jar, and reheated Alfredo—I sat on the balcony and watched the conifer. Stillness below, a street without cars, without haste. My lime water, iced, caught the light. Michael, the Franco-Danish ufologist, has been in my conversations lately. We speak of inner things: the trance of smart devices, the mind’s eye dwindling. He says cafés aren’t cafés anymore. People forget how to look, how to linger. I tell him of Arthur in Japan—how he'd stare into blank walls like a monk gazing at emptiness. Lately I ask machines to speak like poets, and they do. They mimic Elizabethan verses and the old wistful lilt of Tagalog ballads. I pick blackberries along the path to Tim Hortons. "¡Moras!" I shout like a child. My friend Mora, whose blood flows with Andes mist, would smile. Today, I bought lemons. I meant limes, but lemons are all right. / blackberry morning— / a fig's ghost on my fingers / and the street still sleeps
Source: Tatoeba
She showed me a picture of her mother as a schoolgirl.
Source: Tatoeba
I did that once when I was a student.
Source: Tatoeba
In that age, men and women wore similar hairstyles.
Source: Tatoeba