How To Use Anile In A Sentence

  • International discoveries of complete ceramic aquamaniles are rare, because they are delicate and easily damaged.
  • Her husband, Edgar, donated the first bells of the campanile in her memory in 1895.
  • The event will begin with a short outdoor program north of the campanile and continue with events in the Memorial Union.
  • Our babbling, anile friend, in the very looseness of her prating has let out the truth. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, October 2, 1841
  • A friend of mine was dining at a large dinner of clergymen, and a story, as true as the sausage story above given, was told regarding me, by one of those reverend divines, in whose frock sits some anile chatter-boxes, as any man who knows this world knows. Roundabout Papers
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  • Croaker expended a great deal of energy keeping the anile off his face, but Lillehammer had gone red. The Kaisho
  • The countryside of Bresse in Burgundy is not the usual place to find a Spanish-style castle, an El Dorado in miniature, complete with Castilian campaniles, arches, and Spanish occupants, constructed lovingly out of concrete.
  • The round Basilica of the Superga has a two-conched cupola in the style of Michelangelo, flanked by two tall asymmetrical campaniles.
  • Jean-Marc's aunt, Marie-Françoise, tells me that such open bell towers, or campaniles, are constructed in windy regions where it is better to go with the flow than to be beaten down by the Mistral. French Word-A-Day:
  • One of the earliest items in the hoard is the aquamanile, dating from the late 13th to early 14th-century.
  • On a moonlit winter evening, as the shore approaches, the town lays itself out beneath an electric halo, the Church of Saint-Joseph lifting its lighthouse-like campanile majestically behind.
  • Although the story is likely apocryphal, it is said that Galileo dropped balls of various weights from the top of the campanile to prove his new view of gravity.
  • Of prime importance in the realm of religious objects are gold and enamel works and aquamaniles made of bronze.
  • Hollow wares constitute a very large category, ranging from the ewers, aquamaniles and jugs of the late-medieval period to lidded and open tankards, wine-cups, christening cups and goblets.
  • The campanile is also an item of considerable beauty. Across the way, the cathedral is more magnificent still.
  • Two heated timber decks indicate the places of the priest and congregation and a clock salvaged from the 1963 chapel hangs in the skeletal campanile.
  • We suppose that this aquamanile had an exclusively secular purpose because it is similar to the sign of the zodiac used in medieval woodcuts.
  • Entiendas [e] como contratista cualquier persona que demuestre el oficio, la rudeza y buena vibra para realizar cualquier proyecto de electricidad, arte, plomería, albañilería o expresión personal; ya sea en las alturas o a nivel de "cancha". Elites TV
  • Beside the duomo is the celebrated leaning campanile. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
  • This striking piece of Scarborough Ware is technically known as a zoomorphic aquamanile - an animal shaped water vessel, in this case a ram - the applied pellets of clay represent wool.
  • Once again, being too specific results in being rather anile (anybody want to graph this?). You tell us, in the comments.
  • Basically, the aquamanile is a horizontal jug used to wash hands.
  • Statuta antiqua" (fifth century): "Subdiaconus cum ordinatur ... accipiat ... de manu archidiaconi urceolum, aquamanile et manutergium" (when a subdeacon is ordained he shall receive from the hand of the archdeacon a water-pitcher, a finger-bowl, and a manuterge) is written regarding the rite used in bestowing the subdiaconate, a ceremony in practice, of course, today. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • The campanile is a one-hundred-sixty-foot-tall bell tower with exposed concrete walls.
  • The iron campanile in Camaret. poursuivre (poor-sweevre) verb French Word-A-Day:
  • Campanile or no campanile, I must steer my boat back to Venice, where it belongs. Erica Heller: In Between Books: The 'Catch-22' of Pre- and Post-Partum Book Depression
  • Mamma's lunch was spoiled because, in pronouncing "campanile" for the first time, she rhymed it with the river Nile, and realized what she had done when some one else soon after inadvertently said it in the right way. My Friend the Chauffeur
  • After a two-year closure for seismic retrofits, the Campanile's 200-foot-high viewing platform is now open.
  • In a clearing in the forested slopes of the Seetaler Alps in Styria there is a most graceful tower - a campanile.
  • The entrance is marked by several external features including a silver cross, and a campanile with exposed bells - the tower marking out both the church to the south and the community centre to the north.
  • The '' 'Leaning Tower of Pisa' '' is the '' campanile '' (bell tower) belonging to the Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • Thu 09/21/06 11:38 PM dfg34hdb sacra rota annullamento canile azzano decimo auguste conte 1798 1857 PopWatch HeadScratcher No. 55 | EW.com
  • For instance, a small group of metal artifacts from the time of the Abbasid caliphate in Iran includes some unique bronze vessels, including an aquamanile in the form of an eagle, regarded as the earliest precisely dated bronze object from the Islamic period.
  • The campanile is three arched on all four sides, whereas the one in the picture is two arched. Contest: Identify This Spot
  • The other was anile, which led me to uncover what I like to call the Great Anile Conspiracy — a strange and almost exciting phenomenon that I hope to detail in an upcoming post. Review: Wordnik’s Thesaurus « Motivated Grammar
  • To-day, if you walk through Florence, the City of Flowers, you will still see its fairest flower of all, the tall white campanile or bell-tower, 'Giotto's tower' as it is called. Knights of Art; stories of the Italian painters
  • More unusual vessels were produced, for example lamps, chafing dishes, shallow pans and aquamaniles.
  • The top of Phyllis’ head has an opening to fill the aquamanile with water and the water runs out through the tap.
  • Most of the aquamaniles in the National Museum were used in churches, but these two were used at banquets in prosperous homes.
  • Following the program, there will be open houses at the campanile, Farm House Museum, Child Development Lab School in the Palmer Building and University Book Store.
  • Created after oriental models, aquamaniles were frequently of a profane character.
  • Given its unwieldy weight and awkward small spout and handle, this aquamanile was probably used more for display than for washing hands, all the better to allow admiring viewers to follow the drama enacted.
  • A 90-foot- high tower houses the main stair and continues the school's tradition of punctuating the campus skyline with campaniles.
  • Harmonious sound is brought to life in the piazza daily by the bells of the campanile, to which the Loggetta is attached.
  • He set his course by the campanile in San Marco Square, visible at the time from all parts of the lagoon. Erica Heller: In Between Books: The 'Catch-22' of Pre- and Post-Partum Book Depression
  • His revolutionary conception of sculpture is first exemplified in the great series of standing and seated figures for the niches of Or San Michele and for the façades of Florence Cathedral and the campanile.
  • Whether they are actuated by folly and anile devotion, or whether by arrogance and malice so that they alone may be held to possess the secrets of God, I know not: this much I do know, that I find in their writings nothing which has the air of a Divine secret, but only childish lucubrations. Theologico-Political Treatise
  • On display will be small bronze sculptures, liturgical implements, artifacts in gold, glass cabinets, altar paintings, water containers known as aquamaniles and statues.
  • An aquamanile comes with a bowl or a basin to collect the water.
  • Not too be too anile, but I think that is from A New Pilgrims Progress, not Roughing it Digesting Good Literature
  • Several new varieties of metalwork also were added to the old, especially the aquamanile, i.e., a vessel in the form of an animal, used for washing the hands, and the metal structures placed upon the altar; other articles assumed new forms. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • Learning how to simultaneously walk and chew gum will soon be added to the menu of anile crap that our self-regarding progressive school system 'facilitates'. Smoking Guns and the Morality of Parliamentary Privilege
  • The final lesson of the campanile was that towers were best seen as a whole.
  • The base of the steeple in face brick, is surmounted by a circular campanile of columns which house the carillon system.
  • Conventional Christian symbolism seems curiously played down - a handful of crosses, a pilgrimage way and a minimal campanile - but this seems in keeping with the project's deeper mystical undercurrents.
  • The exact provenance of the aquamanile is difficult to establish, but a liturgic use seems possible.
  • Elle me dit qu'elle est au campanile ou on a mangé la veille et qu'elle sera donc la dans quelques minutes, des que la nouvelle navette sera la. Pinku-tk Diary Entry
  • He catches the word campanile, and straightens, careful of his chest. Excerpt: A Thread of Grace by Mary Doria Russell
  • La Trinité was a Second Empire church designed for a fashionable congregation, with theatrical decoration and a porch campanile.
  • She says in an anile thready high cracking voice, "Oh, you're reading. An essay about how when you're reading a Kindle in public, people don't see what book you're reading.
  • Here we must mention first of all the numerous baptismal fonts of bronze, which are decorated on their outer sheathing with representations in relief and architectural ornament, next the seven-armed candelabra, door-knobs, water-vessels (aquamanile), lecterns, especially the beautiful eagle-lecterns. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • Indispensable throughout medieval Europe, aquamaniles were often used to pour water over the hands of a diner at a noble table, while an attendant would hold a basin and present a towel for him to dry his hands.
  • The aquamanile eventually evolved for secular use during the renaissance and these items found their way onto the dinner tables of the rich.
  • The two events announce themselves with clarity and precision, like a campanile knelling the final hour of the day.
  • The Medieval section includes the famous Aby crucifix, golden altars, bejewelled illustrated manuscripts, triptychs, granite fonts, chalices, ivory and aquamaniles.
  • What vegetable and fruit anile result best?
  • By Un cojín de galleta para el sofá - Albañilería on May 5, 2010 at 11: 36 am Stump Stools by Cumulus Project
  • The additional members are accommodated on the public space outside which is pinned down by the thin, tall concrete planes of the campanile.
  • Its slender campanile looms strikingly over the surrounding neighborhood. Catholic Cleveland: Historic Church Saved, But Others Still in Danger
  • And before he departed from Pistoia, although the work had not up to then been begun, he made the model of the Campanile of S. Jacopo, the principal church of that city; on which campanile, which is on the square of the said S. Jacopo and beside the church, there is this date: A.D. Lives of the Most Eminent Painters Sculptors and Architects Vol. 01 (of 10), Cimabue to Agnolo Gaddi

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