9 sentences with 'serve'

Example sentences and phrases with the word serve and other words derived from it.


« To serve is to give a flower that is by the roadside; to serve is to give an orange from the tree that I cultivate. »

serve: To serve is to give a flower that is by the roadside; to serve is to give an orange from the tree that I cultivate.
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« In these places where the cold is so intense, the bars, always with wooden paneling, are very warm and cozy, and to accompany the drinks, they serve thin slices of wild boar or deer ham, well smoked and prepared in oil with bay leaves and whole pepper. »

serve: In these places where the cold is so intense, the bars, always with wooden paneling, are very warm and cozy, and to accompany the drinks, they serve thin slices of wild boar or deer ham, well smoked and prepared in oil with bay leaves and whole pepper.
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« Prepare a strategy for when you eat out. Watch out for restaurants that serve buffets. »
« Likewise, the polis came to rely on mercenaries, many of whom (ironically) went on to serve the Persians after the war. »
« Political history can thus serve as an accessible starting point for newcomers to the study of history, providing a relatively easy-to-follow chronological framework. »
« "If I serve myself a huge portion of pasta on a plate and eat it on the kitchen counter, I end up serving myself more," says Andi Hessekiel (1.52 meters, 52 kilos), 39. »
« "Of course, you can put pifia on it if you want," says Antonio Pace, president of the Authentic Neapolitan Pizza Association, made up of 150 restaurant owners around the world who serve only genuine pizza. »
« To avoid civil war, the Athenians appointed Solon (638 - 558 BC), an aristocratic but just politician, to serve as tyrant and reform institutions. His most important step in restoring order was to cancel debts and eliminate debt slavery itself. »
« What is most surprising is that the vast majority of the human dna series seem to serve no purpose at all. This gibberish includes the inoperative "pseudogenes," that is, attempts by DNA, dating back perhaps millions of years, to produce new genes that never fully functioned, but have been preserved like broken toys in the attic. »

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