"I thought all your kind were put to work repairing the bridges."
In 1107 a monk called Yizhuo worked at the monastery repairing and completing religious images.
We'll put more Americans to work repairing crumbling roads and bridges.
Her father worked repairing screen and glass doors.
He worked in a motor pool repairing jeeps and tanks.
Maybe half a block away some men were working repairing the street.
For decades he worked in a state company repairing increasingly obsolete buses.
You will not find matter in the space where the astronauts work repairing the Hubble, so to speak.
Jews from the camp were put to work repairing an airfield, which was regularly bombed by Allies.
As soon as they found it, they set to work repairing the damage.
"The nanoprobes in my system are already at work repairing most of the damage, thank you."
She sailed for Okinawa on 1 August and, upon arrival on 7 August, began work repairing the damage caused to ships there by heavy enemy air attacks and long continuous operations.
Via screens and contact terminals dispersed around the city grid, Omnius spoke to robots that were at work repairing damage from the recent abortive slave rebellion.
French companies are at work repairing the Iranian oil terminal at Kharg Island, and Peugot has made cars in Iran since the start of the year.
I have lent them, among others, out to Kimash the mighty lugal, and they are hard at work repairing canals that have begun to fall into decay.
Tree surgeons have been at work repairing the J. R. O'Neal Botanical Gardens.
Even the severed limbs would regrow over time, and the nanites and regenerative retroviruses the Marines were pumped full of were already hard at work repairing the gross wounds.
Nor had this same fire happened very long since, for under the eaves white-faced hornets were still hard at work repairing their partly scorched nest.
The gate was still smashed; men were at work repairing it.
Without a doubt there was a gang at work repairing this part of the tunnel; this would necessitate a slower passage of the trains for some days perhaps, and the man knew it.