Examples of using "Trockene" in a sentence and their english translations:
Are your lips dry?
Air those shoes!
I have dry skin.
She has dry hair.
I have dry hands.
- She has dry hair.
- Her hair is dry.
Are your lips dry?
- My throat feels dry.
- My throat is parched.
My skin gets dry easily.
She has dry hair.
This means that we always have dry air here.
- She has dry hair.
- Her hair is dry.
The dry leaves formed a carpet in the central plaza.
He only cries when he needs a dry nappy.
He who constantly swims in the ocean loves dry land.
He is always busy feathering his own nest.
Tom wants to change out of his wet clothes into something dry.
She only cries when she needs a dry nappy.
Dry leaves rustled beneath his feet as he sneaked quietly up to the house.
Tom, desperate, howled: "Mary! Where are you?" from the very left edge of the sentence. "I fear I'm from now on, fully at the opposite from you" drily retorted Mary.
Many European kitchens have scales because dry ingredients are measured by weight there, unlike in America, where they are measured by volume.
Social media posts showed pictures and videos of fences, walls and backyards covered with spiders seeking dry and higher ground.