Examples of using "Alice" in a sentence and their english translations:
Alice smiled.
"Mary?" Alice whispered.
I don't like Alice.
Alice is my mother.
Alice may possibly come.
Alice wears a sweet perfume.
Alice sleeps in her room.
Alice is sleeping in my room.
Alice has stunning legs.
Mary and Alice are sisters.
Alice is an English citizen.
Alice went to bed at ten.
Alice slid down the long slide.
Alice rushed into her room.
Green suits Alice.
Alice has had a cold since last Sunday.
Mary does look a bit like Alice.
Tom kissed Mary, not Alice.
Mary and Alice are sisters-in-law.
"Whose books are these?" "They are Alice's."
Alice is the best friend of Maria.
Mary and Alice wore matching outfits.
Are Mary and Alice really sisters?
She was named Alice after her aunt.
It seems that Alice is very pleased with the suit.
It was Alice who went to the concert yesterday.
Mary showed Alice her engagement ring.
Tom, Mary, John and Alice are all Canadians.
Tom, Mary, John and Alice sat around the fire.
Tom likes Mary, but Mary likes John. To make matters even more interesting, John likes Alice, but Alice likes Tom.
Johnny proposed to Alice and she accepted.
Tom and Mary were surprised to see John and Alice.
Johnny proposed to Alice and she accepted.
Marie asked Alice if she had already kissed a boy.
Alice returned home early from work with a severe headache.
Alice might have been there yesterday, but we didn't see her.
As usual with young girls, Alice loves chocolate.
There really was an Alice, but Wonderland is a figment of the imagination.
Mary and Alice both married men younger than them.
Alice will tell you that in Wonderland everything is topsy-turvy.
- Tom said Mary didn't think John did that with Alice.
- Tom said that Mary didn't think John did that with Alice.
Tom, Mary, John and Alice all went to the park to play on the merry-go-round.
Tom wondered what Mary would say if she knew he had spent the past week in Boston with Alice.
What Alice, waiting for a reply, was faced with was a sudden howl. It was a resounding noise, sharp as to burst her ear drums, loud as to reach unto the heavens.
Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank, and of having nothing to do: once or twice she had peeped into the book her sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, 'and what is the use of a book,' thought Alice 'without pictures or conversation?'