No, ma'am; as soon as they are old enough, they go out to sarvice.
A saddle of mutton is the two loins together, and the back-bone running down the middle to the tail.
It is good for roasting, and particularly for corning and salting.
Some people do not stew them at all, but cut them up in very thin slices, and lay them in the crust.
One skirts the upland of which Mount Kemmel on the left is the most prominent feature.
Hundreds of thousands of eyes would look on it but there are few people who come to look at it--just ones and twos who stand diminutively in front of the great ruins and peer at them like the conventional figures in an old print.
They say the body of a drunkard keeps fresh longest of all because of the spirit in it.
If shells spared Thielt, they did not spare the roads.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "luo" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.