Examples of using "Terminal" in a sentence and their english translations:
We'll go to the terminal.
areas of the terminal are blocked.
Where is the south terminal?
The position is far from the terminal.
and made available at the terminal.
bring warmth and security to the terminal
Mario Hahn also guides in the terminal.
walk around the terminal with an MP.
in Terminal 1 Area B is open.
to spend the next few days in the terminal.
Back to the pastor in Terminal 1.
Your plane is not at the terminal as usual.
They don't go into the terminal without weapons.
a radio so that we can be reached in the terminal.
They live in the terminal for weeks
He slept one night in the terminal.
C is still closed, Terminal 2 too.
running through the terminal singing, says Florian Epp.
What gate number does the bus leave from?
A bus later drives the passengers to the terminal.
Thousands of people are waiting in Terminal One.
She is responsible for the security in the terminal.
She has to sleep in the terminal for one night.
We'll be on patrol in the terminal right away.
The Aschaffenburg woman is happy about the hustle and bustle in the terminal,
Now he goes over to the terminal and then goes out on the track.
At Terminal 2, an A380 is ready to go to Doha.
The church social service is in Terminal 1.
Bettina Janotta has an appointment with a colleague in Terminal B.
People get stranded in the terminal almost every day.
It's just not possible outside in the terminal.
Passengers get stranded in the terminal almost every day.
The ways in the terminal are long, many stairs, obstacles.
Nina Lenzner and Ingo Vorberg have to go to Terminal 1.
Police dog Jil sniffs around the terminal almost every day.
This is the only way they can find themselves in the huge terminal.
The 26-year-old slept in the terminal for two nights.
The airport chaplaincy is in the Christmas stress in Terminal One.
Tonight she can sleep on a cot in the terminal,
Tom was fucking Mary while translating this sentence on his Android device.
Okay, I'll send someone right away. - An emergency in the terminal.
Bread rolls, jam and scrambled eggs are waiting in their guard at Terminal 2.
- Where's the bus stop?
- Where can I catch a bus?
- Where is the bus stop?
- Where's the bus station?
- Where is the bus station?
It now goes to its parking position at the Terminal 1 building.
The car is parked in Zone E, space 97. That's out the main door, to the right and down at the end of the terminal building.
Systems in which the rules are based on usage, such as languages or customary law, are condemned to become absurd, cumbersome and contradictory, since every time a small error slips into one of their usages, it is integrated into the rules, by definition, for eternity. The more users are ignorant, the more systems degrade rapidly. English, poorly used by millions of people, natives or not, for centuries, is an example of the degradation of a system at terminal stage, no longer presenting any logic, neither in its syntax, nor its grammar, nor its vocabulary or its pronunciation. Similarly, with customary rights becoming too cumbersome and incomprehensible, the states which rely on them tend to switch to prescriptive law.