let me (do that)

  • 21let us suppose — used for telling someone to imagine that something is true, so that you can discuss a possible situation or its results Let us suppose that we could live anywhere we want …

    English dictionary

  • 22let slip — {v. phr.} To unintentionally reveal. * /Ellen let it slip that she had been a witness to the accident./ …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 23let slip — {v. phr.} To unintentionally reveal. * /Ellen let it slip that she had been a witness to the accident./ …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 24let\ slip — v. phr. To unintentionally reveal. Ellen let it slip that she had been a witness to the accident …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 25Let Go (Avril Lavigne album) — Let Go Studio album by Avril Lavigne Released 4 June 2002 …

    Wikipedia

  • 26let-7 microRNA precursor — Predicted secondary structure and sequence conservation of let 7 Identifiers Symbol let 7 Rfam …

    Wikipedia

  • 27let*/*/*/ — [let] (past tense and past participle let) verb 1) [T] to allow something to happen, or to allow someone to do something Alice s mum won t let her come with us.[/ex] I stepped back and let him pass.[/ex] The large windows let in a lot of… …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 28Let's roll — is a catchphrase that has been used extensively as a term to move and start an activity, attack, mission or project. For a period of time after the attacks of September 11, 2001, the phrase to some in the United States came to symbolize heroism,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 29Let It Ride (card game) — Let It Ride is a casino variation of poker, played against the casino rather than against the other players. The game s relatively slow pace and the chance to pull back two of the three bets has made Let It Ride popular with older players and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 30Let Us Now Praise Famous Men — is a book with text by American writer James Agee and photographs by American photographer Walker Evans first published in 1941 in the United States. The title is from a passage in Ecclesiasticus that begins, Let us now praise famous men, and our …

    Wikipedia