1. guinea pig
They're asking for students to be guinea pigs in their research into the common cold.
We know that a hungry fox will break into hutches and eat pet rabbits and guinea pigs.
Can't you understant this? He used you as a guinea pig.
David would happily be a guinea pig for the pill.
Did you know that guinea pigs, like the ones people keep in cages as pets, actually live in the wild in South America?
I was a guinea pig.
I have three guinea pigs which I keep in a hutch.
Angličtina slovo „le cobaye„(guinea pig) se zobrazí v sadách:
animals in French – les animaux en français2. whose
Whose is it?
My next door neighbor is a virtuoso whose skills with the piano have earned him a name among music experts.
Any act whatever of a man, which causes damage to another, obliges the one by whose fault it occurred to compensate it.
In other words, the merits, etc. of making detours are the consideration of the attitudes of the landowners whose property the line would cross, the convenience of other towns and villages, as well as connection with other railway lines.
Astronomy is perhaps the science whose discoveries owe least to chance, in which human understanding appears in its whole magnitude, and through which man can best learn how small he is.
For my multi-talented sister, able do anything with ease, it seems that my commonplace self is something whose existence she finds very hard to forgive.
Rose, Juniper, Lily, and Camellia were all named after plants, as was Giant Corpse Flower, whose high school experience was far worse than theirs.
The close-cropped lawn is beautiful in the eyes of a people whose inherited bent it is to readily find pleasure in contemplating a well-preserved pasture or grazing land.
Ronpari is a word that designates those whose eyes don't look straight, but in different directions to the left and right, as if they were looking at Paris and London.
We can save on translations by giving it to an employee whose mother speaks that language. -- And I suppose you save on the cost of a doctor by seeing someone whose mother had been a doctor?
I can describe China, especially in relation to big cities like Beijing, in one sentence - China is a country whose pace of life is both fast and leisurely.
The calzone is a pizza-like turnover, filled with tomatoes and cheese, whose name comes from an Italian word for "pants."
However, what's interesting is that whilst there are people whose computer use has become a problem, there are also people who have recovered from illness because of using computers.
Claude, an autotropic boy in my class whose skin is green due to chlorophyll, dreams of foresting the moon.
Angličtina slovo „le cobaye„(whose) se zobrazí v sadách:
Les animaux - the animals