cerberus in Vietnamese

@cerberus /'sə:bərəs/
* danh từ
- chó ba đầu (gác cổng âm phủ, trong thần thoại Hy lạp)
!sop to Cerberus
- quà đút lót (cho quan lại, người gác cổng...)

Sentence patterns related to "cerberus"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "cerberus" from the English - Vietnamese Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "cerberus", or refer to the context using the word "cerberus" in the English - Vietnamese Dictionary.

1. Unlike Cerberus, Yue's powers are heavily dependent on the power of his master.

Không giống như Ceberus, quyền năng của Yue dựa rất nhiều vào năng lượng của chủ nhân.

2. Players will "receive rewards" for collecting evidence of Cerberus' crimes.

Người chơi sẽ "nhận được phần thưởng" thu thập bằng chứng về tội ác của Cerberus.

3. Anagenesis was a neo-Cerberus organization founded by Harris Dawkins, a CDN forum member

4. Adjutants are Reapers created by Cerberus since Oleg Petrovsky took Omega

5. The investment resulted in Cerberus having an almost 17 percent stake in Avon Products.

Đầu tư dẫn đến Cerberus có gần 17% cổ phần của Avon Products.

6. During Aria's campaign to retake Omega from Cerberus in 2186, Bray helps Aria coordinate the offensive

7. Juliana Basilicus (I like space and spaceships) lost their Cerberus in C0O6-K (Wicked Creek)

8. Three antagonists are concentrated in the inner medulla: DAN (differential screening-selected gene Aberrative in neuroblastoma), PDRC (protein-related to DAN and Cerberus) and noggin

9. Atmas For Monk! Home Asura Asura Bahamut Bismarck Carbuncle Cerberus Fenrir Lakshmi Leviathan Odin Phoenix Quetzalcoatl Ragnarok Shiva Siren Sylph Valefor Alexander Caitsith Diabolos Fairy Garuda Gilgamesh Hades Ifrit Kujata Midgardsormr Pandemonium Ramuh Remora Seraph Titan Unicorn

10. It was first used by Spenser as an epithet for a thousand-tongued monster produced by Cerberus and Chimaera, a symbol of calumny (slander), which he called the Blatant beast.It was subsequently used to mean ‘clamorous, offensive to the ear’, first of people (mid 17th cent.), later of things (late 18th cent