How To Use Annals In A Sentence
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The Pleiades are mentioned in Chinese annals in 2357 B.C.
A Field Book of the Stars
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To them it was a ‘red letter day’ that will remain in the annals of their history for generations to come.
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In time folk memory faded and with the passing of those who had lived through the events of 1903 the Gordon Bennett Race became an almost forgotten note in the annals of Irish motoring history.
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Some disputes are better left undecided in the annals of history.
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Carved on the lobstick of the Landing were many names famous in the annals of this region, Pike, Maltern, McKinley, Munn, Tyrrel among them.
The Arctic Prairies : a Canoe-Journey of 2,000 Miles in Search of the Caribou; Being the Account of a Voyage to the Region North of Aylemer Lake
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From the annals of Indian history, it can be discerned that the role of women in the society is no less than men.
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His life story was already entering the annals of tabloid folklore.
Times, Sunday Times
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The experimental technique has entered the annals of science under the name of "stochastic cooling.
Simon van der Meer, Nobel laureate in physics, dies at 85
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In the annals of innovation, new ideas are only part of the equation. Execution is just as important. Steve Jobs
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Almost all come from monastic or mendicant milieux, and are passages in annals or chronicles of the writer's abbey.
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
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I myself became the subject of a miracle in Sind which is duly chronicled in the family-annals of a certain
The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
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It was, after all, the most ambitious amphibious operation in the annals of military history until the Normandy invasion.
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In the new research, published in the journal, Annals of Rheumatic Diseases, patients were taking either a high dose of lumiracoxib, a type of drug known as a cox-2 inhibitor, high dose of ibuprofen or naproxen, which are both non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs known as NSAIDs.
The Down-Side of Pain Killers | Impact Lab
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These are not romantic, but sad stories in the annals of immigrant experiences.
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Consider one example from the annals of air pollution: the effort to reduce the effects of car exhaust on the atmosphere.
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We rely on the works of some 7th century hagiographers and the anonymous writer of the Annals of Ulster for information about his life and activities.
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But there were many cloistered Christians who studied the bible undisturbed by these shadows and doubts, and who, heedless of patristical lore and saintly wisdom, devoured the spiritual food in its pure and uncontaminating simplicity -- such students, humble, patient, devoted, will be found crowding the monastic annals, and yielding good evidence of the same by the holy tenor of their sinless lives, their Christian charity and love.
Bibliomania in the Middle Ages
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Historians call it one of the most selfless examples in the annals of science.
Christianity Today
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This episode, we can agree, adds a new chapter to the annals of bizarrerie.
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In 1952 Nash published Real Algebraic Manifolds in the Annals of Mathematics.
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His fame rests on his Annals and his Histories which related events from the death of Augustus to the Flavian period.
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What better could I have done in the smoky warmth of our hearth-fire than to con, by the light of the electric bulb dangling overhead, its annals in some such voluntarily quaint and unconsciously old-fashioned volume as Irving’s Legends of the Conquest of Spain; or to read in some such (if there is any such other) imperishably actual and unfadingly brilliant record of impressions as Gautier’s
Familiar Spanish Travels
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This commutation of a liar and an obstructor of justice will go down in the annals of American shame.
Outrage: Bush Commutes Libby Sentance
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Wellington at once resumed the offensive; Ciudad Rodrigo fell before him on January twelfth, 1812, and on April eighth, after one of the bravest and bloodiest assaults recorded in English annals, Badajoz also was carried.
The Life of Napoleon Bonaparte Vol. III. (of IV.)
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French Revolution was noteworthy in college annals, not merely for its painstaking and voluminous accuracy, but for the fact that it was the dryest, deadest, most formal, and most orthodox screed ever written on the subject.
SOUTH OF THE SLOT
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Mind you, the annals of British sportscasting contain many examples of superannuated pundits who soldier on well past their sell-by dates.
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In the annals of guests overstaying their welcome, this was a record: 1171-1922.
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To great prudence, self-control, and judgment, he united the dash, daring, and readiness of resources which have always characterized the famous sailors of the world; and in the victory which made his name renowned in naval annals, he displayed these qualities in such a high degree as to deserve the greatest credit for what he achieved as well as for what, under great temptation, he declined to do.
The Story of the Barbary Corsairs
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Sources of historical data include ancient inscriptions, annals, chronicles, governmental and private estate records, maritime and commercial records, personal papers, and scientific writings.
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Not entirely unremembered in Alaskan annals is the summer stampede of 1898 from Fort Yukon to the bench diggings of Tarwater Hill.
LIKE ARGUS OF THE ANCIENT TIMES
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He endured more than the annals of history will ever record; yet, he has remained true and faithful to the church.
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A cursory glance through the annals of history will prove this beyond doubt.
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It will form here-after a pleasing incident in the annals of our Union, giving to real history the intense interest of romance and signally marking the unpurchasable tribute of a great nation's social affections to the disinterested champion of the liberties of human-kind.
State of the Union Address (1790-2001)
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Babbage's microprogram mechanism, from Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine, 1838, Bromley, Allan G., in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, vol. 20, No. 4, 1998.
Babbage-Boole Digital Arithmetical and Logical Mill: Part 2 « The Half-Baked Maker
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More painful by far than reveries of the uncharted future is the thought of the shut and sealed annals of the past.
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This is precisely the kind of structure that proliferated in countless downtowns and suburban office parks after World War II, resulting in an epidemic of visual sterility unprecedented in the annals of civilization.
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Entering Aba, you have entered a solemn and stirring chapter to the annals of human military expedition .
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See The Fragmentary Irish Annals aka the Burgundian Annals.
Politics.ie - 3,4,5,6,7,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,27,28,29,30,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,41,42,48,49,50,52
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The signing of the Treaty of Rome was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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A cursory glance through the annals of history will prove this beyond doubt.
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The Complete Prestige Recordings is a mammoth 11 CD set in tribute to a jazz giant that left behind an ineradicable mark in the annals of modern jazz music.
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The chances must be that you've never heard of Lorna Moon, but if ever there was a Scottish writer whose story - and writing - deserve to be rescued from the dusty annals of the history books and the margins of academe, it is hers.
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Thank you Ivo, for your kind assistance in bringing back such fond memories of the great names and events that will be registered in the historic annals of Pattaya forever.
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Indeed, if we count the "Annals of the Empire," which he wrote to please the Duchess of Saxe-Gotha, he may rank also under the third remaining head among the annalistic historians.
Voltaire
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This is certain that, from the manner in which he wrote the Annals, Bracciolini gave a larger meaning to "actus" than to "actiones," the former meaning "public affairs," and the other
Tacitus and Bracciolini The Annals Forged in the XVth Century
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In the annals of video game history, Space Invaders occupies a privileged position - the first to rise from the arcade underworld to the mainstream territory of pizza parlors and ice-cream shops.
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Consider one example from the annals of air pollution: the effort to reduce the effects of car exhaust on the atmosphere.
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The signing of the Treaty of Rome was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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Finishing touches installation stained glass windows drum octagon removal scaffolding exterior interior edifice interior calcimining dome drum octagon tuckpointing cleaning floodlighting entire structure completed synchronizing closing weeks glorious twelvemonth annals Holy Faith.
Dawn of a New Day
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Rarely in the annals of human history has any people committed so much of its treasure to such a noble cause.
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Zhang Xuecheng, a famous historian and bibliographer of the Qing Dynasty, devoted all his life to giving lectures, writing and compiling history and annals.
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On this mysterious chastisement, which some think consisted in an attack of the madness called lycanthropy, as well as on the interregnum which it must have caused, Babylonian annals are silent: clever hypotheses have been devised either to explain this silence, or in scanning documents in order to find in them traces of the wanted interregnum
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
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In the annals of innovation, new ideas are only part of the equation. Execution is just as important. Steve Jobs
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Leicester's feat will go down in the annals of history as the most unlikely in any major sporting sphere.
The Sun
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So too the annalists of the Annals of Ulster, who most frequently called the Viking incomers ‘foreigners’, sometimes differentiated between ‘dark’ and ‘fair’ foreigners.
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This was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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Whoever invented the golf cart deserves an honored place in the annals of sport.
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Thus early in South African annals were the foundations laid of what we now call the Africander sentiment -- a sentiment which has become one of the main factors in the history of the country.
Impressions of South Africa
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The accepted tools of the medieval historian's trade were the classical models of composition and rhetoric, and the materials on past events provided by verbal accounts, annals, and other chronicles.
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The writer in relation to the nature of perceivable reality and what is beyond -- imperceivable reality -- is the basis for all these studies, no matter what resulting concepts are labelled, and no matter in what categorized microfiles writers are stowed away for the annals of literary historiography.
Nobel Lecture Writing And Being
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But though the Puritans never could be called remiss in respect of making due provision for the necessities of this life, yet all was done with a view to the conditions of the life to come; and in the annals of the time we read more of the prayers and fasts, the choosing of ministers, and the promotion and practice of godliness in general, than we do of any temporal matters.
The History of the United States from 1492 to 1910, Volume 1 From Discovery of America October 12, 1492 to Battle of Lexington April 19, 1775
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was reportedly late, extremely tardy, which is not exactly an innovation in the annals of rudeness.
StarTribune.com rss feed
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One of the moat brilliant of modern French writers [1] has recently remarked that, in spite of the number of years which have elapsed since the grave closed over the sorrows of Marie Antoinette, and of the almost unbroken series of exciting events which have marked the annals of France in the interval, the interest excited by her story is as fresh and engrossing as ever; that such as Hecuba and Andromache were to the ancients, objects never named to inattentive ears, never contemplated without lively sympathy, such still is their hapless queen to all honest and intelligent Frenchmen.
The Life of Marie Antoinette
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They copied not only Bibles, Psalter, scriptures, theological works, lives of the saints, church history and local annals, but also classical literature and scientific works.
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The March 1892 issue of the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science carried ‘The Basis of Interest: A Criticism of the Solution Offered by Mr. Henry George.’
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The final will be a huge undertaking for a team which could be etched in the annals of history.
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Its combination of superlative pilot and navigational skills and scientific ingenuity have earned it an indelible place in the annals of the RAF.
Times, Sunday Times
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He left few marks in the annals of economic discipline.
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Hence it is that no scholars in Europe but the most learned Italians, smit by the national genius, could have devoted their vigils to narrate the evolutions of Pantomime, to compile the annals of Harlequin, to unroll the genealogy of Punch, and to discover even the most secret anecdotes of the obscurer branches of that grotesque family, amidst their changeful fortunes, during a period of two thousand years.
A History of Pantomime
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There was a paper published in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences in 1993 by Dr James McCoy.
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I hope that our journey has helped to restore these pioneering and courageous men to their rightful place in the annals of polar history.
Times, Sunday Times
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From the annal for the year 757, misdated 755 in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which was a series of annals copied and circulated probably soon after 890.
The Early Middle Ages 500-1000
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Yes, the battles, sieges, fortunes, that he has passed ought to have brought back upon him, that from the earliest achievement in which he displayed that military genius which has placed him foremost in the annals of modern warfare, down to that last and surpassing combat which has made his name imperishable, the Irish soldiers, with whom our armies are filled, were the inseparable auxiliaries to his glory.
The Glory of English Prose Letters to My Grandson
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I doubt whether the annals of Hymen can produce a similar instance of post-obitual affection.
Journal of a Residence among the Negroes in the West Indies
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Consider one example from the annals of air pollution: the effort to reduce the effects of car exhaust on the atmosphere.
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We didn't have to wait long for the moment to come; the session was barely 3 minutes old before a new name went down in the annals of Commonwealth Games history.
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The difficulty of squeezing or pouring out the last half of a bottle of ketchup may soon be consigned to the annals of kitchen history.
Times, Sunday Times
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Certainly, these two have to be considered among the best comedy duos in the annals of TV history.
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The decision to explode two atomic bombs over a civil population will remain unanswered from the annals of history.
Global Voices in English » Japan: We will not forget Hiroshima and Nagasaki
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Our ambassador to Afghanistan, William Crosbie, may indeed go down in the annals of diplomatic dis-entante as collateral damage for his on-the-nose criticisms of Karzai - his fall-on-sword resignation offer should be declined by Ottawa - but otherwise Canada has been only peripherally impacted by the cable chatter, although there might be cause for self-preoccupied grumping even in that.
Thestar.com - Home Page
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_Stow_ in his _Annals_, calleth him, a most valiant and towardly Gentleman.
The Lives of the Most Famous English Poets (1687)
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His Thesis, on the French Revolution, was noteworthy in college annals, not merely for its painstaking and voluminous accuracy, but for the fact that it was the dryest, deadest, most formal, and most orthodox screed ever written on the subject.
SOUTH OF THE SLOT
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This was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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He has become a legend in the annals of military history.
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The elusive Monti characteristically clung to the shadows, his name seldom surfacing even in the annals of the French occult world.
The Sion Revelation
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Fact, in this instance, is far stranger and more profoundly disquieting than anything in the annals of fiction.
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It was a day that would live in infamy in the annals of medical history.
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That all changed when I saw an advertisement in the newspaper for a grand festivity sure to be remembered forever in the annals of history.
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This was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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In the annals of video game history, Space Invaders occupies a privileged position - the first to rise from the arcade underworld to the mainstream territory of pizza parlors and ice-cream shops.
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Sunday, February 24th will be recorded in the annals of the Pattaya Sports Club history as the day it passed its 3rd milestone.
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He has become a legend in the annals of military history.
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There is not in the whole annals of aerostation a more moving catastrophe than that of the unfortunate Comte Zambeccari, who, during an aerial journey on October the 7th, 1804, was cast away on the waves of the Adriatic.
Wonderful Balloon Ascents
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Taking offence, making a show of it, is a peculiarly self-theatrical, melodramatic, histrionic gesture in the annals of criticism.
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Whoever invented the golf cart deserves an honored place in the annals of sport.
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The county had waited 120 years for such an honour and this team of champions have already entered the annals of sporting history in this Midland county.
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Purchasable from the New York Academy of Sciences (visit nyas. org/annals), this densely referenced analysis covers the acute radiation inflicted on both the first-responders (called
Pacific Free Press - Hard Truths for Hard Times - Progressive opinion, dissident news
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Several drug classes that have lost their punch against the worsening strain include families that contain: penicillin, erythromycin, clindamycin, tetracycline and fluoroquinolone drugs such as Cipro, said Binh Diep, researcher at the University of California at San Francisco and first author of the study in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Resistance of Superbug Grows
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What then happened is already permanently etched in the annals of the sporting car crash.
Times, Sunday Times
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Whoever invented the golf cart deserves an honored place in the annals of sport.
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A new study in The Annals of Internal Medicine warns pregnant and post-partum women of an increased risk of blood clots.
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The herbal prescription for Ben's impotence, to "eat a bowl of tea," comes from the annals of traditional Chinese medicine.
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Recurring themes are readily discernible in the annals of history.
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Summer and fall when wind Xu, Greenfield bursts, Annals Wind Gap hole that is the habitat.
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In fact, considering what a common affliction deafness is, it does not figure very largely in the annals of literature.
Times, Sunday Times
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‘Clinical Policy for Children Younger Than Three Years Presenting to the Emergency Department With Fever’ appears in the October 2003 issue of Annals of Emergency Medicine.
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With it, he etched mother and daughter - and the stark reality of their joint lives - forever in the annals of musical history, thus rebalancing the scales of justice to the best of his ability.
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Next Sunday is another wonderful chapter in the historic annals of Carrick United Football club.
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They have had the kind of season that is so rare it will go down in the annals of baseball lore.
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Their names will probably be a mere footnote in the annals of Polish air force history, but they're fully aware of the key roles they played in assisting their NATO counterparts to take a giant leap forward.
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The astonishing success of four women singing plainsong has created yet another mystery in the annals of record sales.
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Sunday, May 1, 1960, is a date that will not be soon forgotten in the annals of Canadian steam railroading.
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Harun al-Rashid received emissaries from the Emperor Charlemagne (See 800), a fact noted in Latin annals but not in Arabic ones.
765
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Add five consecutive one-day international defeats, and the past six months have been as bad as any in the annals of cricket down under.
Times, Sunday Times
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-- The story of Lord Durie's abduction and captivity is differently told by Chambers in his _Domestic Annals of Scotland_, as far, at least, as the instigator of the kidnapping and its accomplisher are concerned.
Stories of the Border Marches
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The signing of the Treaty of Rome was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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Give me five acts, five rock bands that are going to go down in the annals of rock history as iconic.
Times, Sunday Times
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The signing of the Treaty of Rome was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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As may be easily supposed, we possess very few authentic details about a people whose written annals were burnt by the ignorant "conquistadores" and by fanatical monks, who jealously suppressed everything which might remind the conquered race of their ancient religious and political traditions.
Celebrated Travels and Travellers Part I. The Exploration of the World
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The jury went on to make note of Brando's ‘raw hypnotic energy’ and his ability to create characters ‘that will live forever in the annals of film history’.
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When I was researching the Strongbow Saga series, I several times turned to the Houston Public Library system to obtain copies of hard-to-find copies of translations of old texts, such as Frankish annals from the ninth century.
Genre Chick Interview: Judson Roberts
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The Ingimund episode is largely detailed in an Irish annalistic source, but Welsh annals mention a battle on Anglesey in 903 where ‘Ogmundr’ was defeated by the Welsh.
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Improbable Research - What's New is the blog of the Annals of Improbable Research, awarder of the annual IgNobel Prize.
Archive 2006-01-01
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He ought to have remembered that, from the earliest achievement in which he displayed that military genius which has placed him foremost in the annals of modern warfare, down to that last and surpassing combat which has made his name imperishablefrom Assaye to Waterloothe Irish soldiers, with whom your armies are filled, were the inseparable auxiliaries to the glory with which his unparalleled successes have been crowned.
I. On the Irish as "Aliens"
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Lord's annals bear witness to the first Gentlemen v Players encounter at Eton in 1806, when amateur gentry from schools and universities took on semi-professional cricketers in a match which emerged as a highlight of the calendar.
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At the time this short and simple record of the passing away of an ordinary, obscure woman attracted no more attention than the hundred similar names that constituted the necrological annals of April 25.
The No Breakfast Plan and the Fasting-Cure
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Chapters III and IV of the Annals are entirely devoted to the study of the Santal society and this study will remain a classic.
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At the end of the day which was usually long and arduous she would take dictations from her husband and that is how the Annals came to be first drafted.
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In the annals of oxymorons, this has to be among the most oxymoronic.
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Nirvana's Kurt Cobain is without a doubt one of music's most influential figures and his legacy will live forever in the annals of rock history, but in the talent department, Love is certainly no slouch.
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Its combination of superlative pilot and navigational skills and scientific ingenuity have earned it an indelible place in the annals of the RAF.
Times, Sunday Times
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It is believed to have developed from the brief annalistic entries in Easter tables, and the entries up to 449 are as brief as the single-sentence Latin annals in those tables.
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Chief among them was William T. Coleman, a name deservedly honored in the annals of San Francisco.
In the Footprints of the Padres
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When the annals of the history of Irish Boxing will be written the name of Michael Mullaney from Balla will be up there with the all-time greats.
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She fit a type easily recognized in the annals of hagiography, and it was on that basis that claims for sainthood were made.
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This should go down in the annals of history, as I've never enjoyed doing a job before, managing at best antipathy.
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It could have been one of the worst fold jobs in the annals of college basketball.
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Mr. Hughes, who offers a popular history of Rome and Roman art from antiquity to the present, finds himself more or less forced into the waggish incredulity of so many Anglo-Saxon writers at the bizarre annals of the papacy's temporal power.
The Heirloom City
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This review says the new movie is second only to Wrath in the annals of Star Trek moviedom.
April 2009
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The first documented mention of Boyan is in Byzantine annals by the historian Liutprandus.
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Following him, a Latin scholar named Ross wrote a book essentially proving that the Annals were indeed forged.
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Springing from the twin rootage of Magna Charta and the Declaration of Independence, his judicial statesmanship finds no parallel in the salient features of its achievement outside our own annals.
John Marshall and the Constitution; a chronicle of the Supreme court
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No one can compete with Tiepolo in the annals of European painting for his mythological heroes.
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Dealing with each of those rites of babyhood passage come back swiftly from the annals of motherhood memory when I needed them too, and carry a pretty short (re) learning curve anyway.
How She Move
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Purchasable from the New York Academy of Sciences (visit nyas. org/annals), this densely referenced analysis covers the acute radiation inflicted on both the first-responders (called "liquidators") and on residents nearby, who suffer chronic radioactive sicknesses.
Countercurrents.org
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In the annals of innovation, new ideas are only part of the equation. Execution is just as important. Steve Jobs
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Bumper attendance, close on 6,000, was witness to yet historic chapter in the annals of Tramore Races when the track hosted the first meeting in the new €uro currency on Year's Day.
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What better could I have done in the smoky warmth of our hearth-fire than to con, by the light of the electric bulb dangling overhead, its annals in some such voluntarily quaint and unconsciously old-fashioned volume as Irving's _Legends of the Conquest of Spain; _ or to read in some such (if there is any such other) imperishably actual and unfadingly brilliant record of impressions as
Familiar Spanish Travels
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Several hallowed records that stood for a generation and more, and long were regarded as unsurpassable, have diminished to footnotes in the annals of the game.
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This week hundreds of diners opened an unlikely chapter in the annals of civic rebellion, feasting defiantly on foie gras.
Times, Sunday Times
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Pints were raised, toasts made and car horns worn out as Ireland celebrated this famous victory, this piece of sporting history that will rank alongside the heroics of both 1990 and 1994 in the football annals.
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The annals of the marine record no example of a shipwreck so terrible as that of the Medusa frigate.
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The next flurry was caused by Matey herself and passed into the school's annals.
ADRIENNE AND THE CHALET SCHOOL
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‘The service, commitment and all of the hard efforts made by them will and have been noted forever in the annals of Indonesian history,’ he said.
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Two works on the early Baptist endeavors in the Northwest are: Baptist Annals of Oregon, 1844-1900 by C. H. Mattoon, and Baptists and the Oregon Frontier by Clifford P. Miller.
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I wondered how our love would be marked in the annals of the universe.
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The Ingimund episode is largely detailed in an Irish annalistic source, but Welsh annals mention a battle on Anglesey in 903 where ‘Ogmundr’ was defeated by the Welsh.
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The annals of the marine record no example of a shipwreck so terrible as that of the Medusa frigate.
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It may be no stretch to say that the win could go down as a momentous one in the annals of United's history.
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I hope to win an assured place in the annals of English law.
Times, Sunday Times
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She first appeared in the historical annals in 1239 as a mamlukah inmate of Turkish or Armenian origins in the Caliph al-Musta'sim's harem.
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Of him whose creation is sufficient to render the year 1849 memorable in the annals of the land much has ere now been written -- that type of a well-to-do British householder, delightful for his follies and endearing by his pluck, something of a lunatic, it must be admitted, yet more of a sportsman, and most of all a "muff" -- _Punch's_ "simple-minded Philistine paterfamilias.
The History of "Punch"
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What happened, of course, has gone down in the annals of sporting disappointment.
Times, Sunday Times
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By grace of character she was a model constitutional sovereign, and her benign reign, the longest in English annals, contributed more than the policy of any of her ministers to make the monarchy popular and permanent.
Ten Englishmen of the Nineteenth Century
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In fact, considering what a common affliction deafness is, it does not figure very largely in the annals of literature.
Times, Sunday Times
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Patients who consumed eight ounces daily of yogurt containing Lactobacillus acidophilus had a threefold decrease in infections and candidal colonization, compared with those on a yogurt-free diet, as reported by Dr. Eileen Hilton in 1992 in Annals of Internal Medicine.
The Best Alternative Medicine
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Now his name is destined to go down in the annals of football history.
The Sun
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I hope to win an assured place in the annals of English law.
Times, Sunday Times
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Arutha's deeds had been part history, part legend, but he was accounted one of the finest generals in the annals of the Kingdom.
RISE OF A MERCHANT PRINCE: BOOK TWO OF THE SERPENTWAR SAGA
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Many of the articles relating to Cambridge in the MSS. have been printed by Mr. Cooper in his _Annals of Cambridge_: some relating to Cromwell are to be found in Mr. Carlyle's work; and several, besides those which
Notes and Queries, Number 27, May 4, 1850
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Strong men were admired, and feats of physical strength - tallies of sheep shorn, fields ploughed, trees felled - went down in the annals of rural communities.
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He served as Editor of the Annals of Mathematics from 1912 to 1928.
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He will give you quality over quantity, abundance over emptiness. 1,000 years from now my father will be remembered in the annals of history as one of the greats of our time.
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Since all assertions must be carefully examined in order to benefit from what they may contain, let us consult together, if you will, - the annals of history to see what war has managed to resolve and consolidate from the earliest times to the present day.
Élie Ducommun - Nobel Lecture
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The name of Archbishop Croke will forever live in the annals of GAA history because of the remarkable footballing cathedral which bears his name.
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It could have been one of the worst fold jobs in the annals of college basketball.
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This gesture of literally taking these greatly stylised and exquisitely embellished collections to Pakistan will go down the annals of history for uniting hearts separated by miles.
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He was town clerk of Cambridge (1849-1866) and wrote the _Annals of Cambridge_
A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume I (of II)
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Unfortunately for the field of 21 middleweights, their class had one of the strangest finishes in the annals of the NPC Nationals.
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They are sundered by a bodily shame so steadfast that the criminal annals of the world, stained with all other incests and bestialities, hardly record its breach.
Ulysses
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This course is precisely a repetition of the policy of those who minified the real danger and misrepresented the grave facts to the Court of France, at a time when an honest, truthful representation might have averted the most terrible revolution in the annals of civilization.
The Arena Volume 4, No. 23, October, 1891
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Lord Bolingbroke, the Mashams, Marlboroughs, Swift, Addison, Pope, and the host of brilliant men which makes the reign of one of the feeblest women who ever sat on a throne a period of almost pre-eminent interest in English annals to men of cultivated mind subject to the influence of association.
Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 12, No. 29, August, 1873
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Incredible as it may seem to readers of the historian, the poeticule has actually contrived so far to transfigure by dint of disfiguring him that this most noble and pathetic scene in all the annals of chivalry, when passed through the alembic of his incompetence, appears in a garb of transforming verse under a guise at once weak and wordy, coarse and unchivalrous.
A Study of Shakespeare
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According to the hagiographic Dominican annals, Vaez turned to the main instigator, and, even as the arrows were flying at him, calmly said "Pila, I come to teach you the law of God, and you kill me?
How Taiwan Became Chinese
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For after scientists like K.E. von Baer and others had already declared it probable that this bathybius is only a precipitate of organic relics, no less a person than the discoverer of the bathybius, in the "Annals of
The Theories of Darwin and Their Relation to Philosophy, Religion, and Morality
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Wardin assesses him to be "the greatest pulpiteer and orator in Tennessee Baptist annals".
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They are first mentioned in Japanese annals in A.D. 549, when a number of them arrived by boat on the north of Sado Island and settled there, living on fish caught during spring and summer and salted or dried for winter use.
A History of the Japanese People From the Earliest Times to the End of the Meiji Era
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The Veritable Records were imperially compiled annals with almost daily entries, sometimes multiple entries for each day, comprised of reports from officials in the field and in the capital ministries.
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The latter part of the twentieth century is witnessing one of the greatest world wide religious resurgences ever recorded in the annals of human history.
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Fact, in this instance, is far stranger and more profoundly disquieting than anything in the annals of fiction.
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Since we have started with Tacitus' Annals, we'll work with that example where we can.
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Lord's annals bear witness to the first Gentlemen v Players encounter at Eton in 1806, when amateur gentry from schools and universities took on semi-professional cricketers in a match which emerged as a highlight of the calendar.
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Only 328 were made, and the car is now little more than a curiosity in the annals of supercar history.
Times, Sunday Times
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His theory, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine last June, prompted lots of critics to write in.
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The finishing touches of the installation of stained glass windows in the drum and octagon, the removal of scaffolding from the exterior and interior of the edifice, the interior calcimining of the dome, drum and octagon, tuck-pointing, cleaning and floodlighting the entire structure have been completed, synchronizing with the closing weeks of the glorious, twelve-month annals of the Holy Faith.
Messages to the Bahá’í World: 1950–1957
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This law is probably unique in the annals of democratic legislation and, should it pass, there is every reason to believe that torture will quickly regain its status as the interrogative method of choice.
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The term annals, though often confused with chronicles, nevertheless indicates a different class.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
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This was the greatest event in the annals of European integration.
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The study, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, followed 60 severely obese patients who were randomly assigned to either gastric bypass surgery or a more extensive procedure known as duodenal switch.
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