How To Use Appanage In A Sentence
-
It had suited his taste to keep these things in abeyance, and to place his pride in the oaks and elms of his park rather than in any of those appanages of grandeur which a man may carry about with him.
He Knew He Was Right
-
“Will the Holy Mother receive you without an appanage?” he said in a voice of scorn.
Quentin Durward
-
But she was awed by his appearance and by the increased appanages of his sick-bed.
The American Senator
-
Festus Bailey" came to be, to the general mind, an amusing kind of appanage of his own work, which was now taken as read, but ceased to have readers.
Hawthorne and His Circle
-
It's clear that one 'fantasy' is replaced by another (the old aborigine as 'savage' accomplice/support for the colonial/conquest projectiles and today the indigenous histrionic as utopia/dreamworld scenes: necessary appanage of todays projectiles what every they might be?): Of court Zizek's typical nought is that narrator building observances our viewer of the tryst ... but if he sees through the narrator why are his activists identical to us idlers still caught in them?
Parajanov Contra Zizek (oder selbst proclaimed Brechtian Beast Z vs aSublime moving picture for magnitude of efficacy.)
-
By such men as Tom Pargeter and their like, the possibility of material misfortune attacking themselves and those who form what may be called their appanage, is never envisaged; and therefore, when such misfortune comes to them, as it does sooner or later to all human beings, the grim guest's presence is never accepted without an amazed sense of struggle and revolt.
The Uttermost Farthing
-
For the first offence, he was banished to his appanage of Dauphine, which he governed with much sagacity; for the second he was driven into absolute exile, and forced to throw himself on the mercy, and almost on the charity, of the Duke of Burgundy and his son; where he enjoyed hospitality, afterwards indifferently requited, until the death of his father in 1461.
Quentin Durward
-
The appanages grasped by himself -- the dotation and bridal outfit of the Duke of Orléans -- the dotation sought for the Duke of Nemours, and his appointment as Regent during the minority of the Count of Paris -- the
Edmond Dantès
-
These last threats, uttered more obscurely than the others, obviously concerned the person of the King, and at one time the Duke expressed his determination to send for the Duke of Normandy, the brother of the King, and with whom Louis was on the worst terms, in order to compel the captive monarch to surrender either the Crown itself, or some of its most valuable rights and appanages.
Quentin Durward
-
The West Saxon kings used Kent as a sort of appanage to be ruled as subkingdoms by West Saxon princes.
-
He himself was accustomed to do his work, out in the Islands, with many of the appanages of vice-royalty around him.
He Knew He Was Right
-
It was not sold, but is the 'appanage' of the younger sons of the house of Dacres.
Some Private Views
-
The London Hungarian Committee in 1849 quoted Article X, by Leopold II, of the House of Hapsburg, in 1790, which definitely stated that "Hungary with her appanages is a free kingdom, and in regard to her whole legal form of government (including all the tribunals) independent; that is, entangled with no other kingdom or people, but having her own peculiar consistence and constitution; accordingly to be governed by her legitimately crowned king after her peculiar laws and customs.
Memoir and Letters of Francis W. Newman
-
Isabelle de Croye, the Duke expects your Majesty will, on your part, as he on his, yield your assent to the marriage, and unite with him in endowing the right noble couple with such an appanage, as, joined to the
Quentin Durward
-
But if he were acquitted, then would her claim to be called Lady Lovel, and to enjoy the appanages of her rank, be substantiated.
Lady Anna
-
Against repeated rebellions he maintained the integrity of his mother's appanage of Aquitaine.
-
for thousands of years the chair was an appanage of state and dignity rather than an article of ordinary use
-
Long live his hollowed shipmate, the Argonaut's shamrock, appanage of a participate of your motherland's assassin!
Why is There Scientist Instead of Wisdom?
-
I consider myself as a kind of appanage to the family, for my ancestors for several generations were their _maggiordomos_.
The Dodge Club or, Italy in MDCCCLIX
-
bishoprics were received as appanages for the younger sons of great families
-
Therefore, he argued and agreed, must worlds and life be appanages to all the suns as they were appanages to the particular of his own solar system.
THE RED ONE
-
Sidonia, in spite of the whispered dislike of an illustrious personage, opened the campaign with all the full appanages of a giant of the highest standing.
Framley Parsonage
-
Younger sons of noble families proverbially come off second best in this country, but if one of them found his only 'appanage' was a mine, he would surely with some justice make a remonstrance.
Some Private Views