Examples of using "Elf" in a sentence and their english translations:
- Eleven times eleven is one hundred twenty-one.
- Eleven times eleven is one hundred and twenty-one.
It's eleven o'clock.
- A football team consists of eleven players.
- A soccer team consists of eleven players.
Today is October 11th.
Eleven o'clock is good for me.
It's about eleven o'clock.
- It is ten minutes before eleven.
- It is ten minutes to eleven.
A soccer team consists of eleven players.
I go to bed at 10.30.
I study from eight to eleven.
It is twenty minutes past ten.
You’ve had eleven bottles of beer!
I'm going to play sport at 11 o'clock.
I'm catching the 11:00 train.
Right now, it is a half past ten.
I go to bed at eleven.
You go to bed at eleven o'clock.
"What time is it?" "It is ten-thirty."
Be at the train station at eleven sharp.
After eleven seconds they can cross the street.
It's eleven and he's not coming.
I usually got to bed about eleven.
It's already eleven o'clock. I must be leaving now.
- It is already eleven.
- It's already 11.
- It's already eleven.
Never deal with a dragon and never trust an elf!
It is twenty minutes past ten.
Ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, nineteen, twenty.
Eleven o'clock is good for me.
- Be at the station at eleven on the dot.
- Be at the train station at eleven sharp.
Mary is a very beautiful woman. On a scale of one to ten, she's an eleven.
Eleven o'clock is good for me.
If a man had 11 sheep and all but 9 died, how many sheep would he have left?
The map on page 11 looks very strange. Turn it upside down. Then it becomes a familiar map to you.
He said that the last bus leaves at 10:50 p.m.
The twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac come from eleven kinds of animals originating in nature, namely the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, horse, snake, monkey, rooster, dog and pig, as well as the legendary form of the dragon, and are used as a calendar.
The dozen animal signs in the Chinese zodiac come from the eleven kinds of animals found in nature: the rat, the bull, the tiger, the hare, the snake, the horse, the lamb, the monkey, the rooster, the dog, and the pig -- and the mythical dragon; they are used as a calendar.