Examples of using "Ärmel" in a sentence and their english translations:
Roll up your sleeve.
Roll up your right sleeve.
Don't pull my sleeve.
Tom rolled up his sleeves.
Tom rolled up his sleeve.
He rolled up his sleeves.
I got down to work.
Tom's left sleeve is torn.
Tom's left sleeve was torn.
- That jumper has long arms.
- The jumper has long arms.
- That jumper's got long arms.
His sleeve touched the greasy pan.
I have an ace up my sleeve.
She held him by the sleeve.
He held her by the sleeve.
Don't wipe your nose on your sleeve.
Tom wears long sleeves when working in the garden.
Roll up your sleeves and get busy.
What do you have up your sleeve?
The sleeves of this coat have to be lengthened.
Father made a long tear in his sleeve.
A gilet is a jacket without arms.
Mary had some tricks up her sleeve.
Careful! Your sleeve is in the soup.
Tom wiped his nose on his sleeve.
There is the "Sleeves up" campaign. What's this?
Roll up your sleeves and get to work.
He wiped his nose on his sleeve.
Tom has chalk on his sleeve. Maybe he's a teacher.
The dog has bitten a hole in my sleeve.
One of the coat's sleeves is shorter than the other.
I pulled her by the sleeve, but she went on talking unconcernedly.
- The arms of his pullover were so long that they covered his hands.
- His jumper's arms were so long that they covered his hands.
- His jumper's sleeves were so long that they covered his hands.
Tom rolled up his sleeve, exposing a hideous scar.
Pat Schroeder said that you can't wring your hands and roll up your sleeves at the same time.
Don't worry about giving a speech at the wedding; you can just wing it when you get there.
"Yes," Dima replied, brushing off a piece of half-eaten fish that had gotten stuck to his right sleeve. "I'd like to buy that one there."
While Tom was picking blackberries, the thorny canes scratched his arms and legs several times. "Next time I do this," he told Mary, "I'll be sure to wear long sleeves so that I don't get so many little scratches."