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How To Use Arrogate In A Sentence

  • At home in Harrogate, Leon's mother watched as news of the disaster broke, knowing of her son's plan to dive on Boxing Day.
  • He soon came to exert considerable influence on surgical practice and hospital policy at Harrogate.
  • As she drove along the narrow, winding country lanes she and an oncoming coach, carrying teenagers to school in Harrogate, slowed so both vehicles could safely pass.
  • Painter cleared of bar assault charge A SELF-employed painter and decorator was yesterday cleared of assaulting the manager of a Harrogate bar.
  • Stillington made major inroads into Harrogate's batting as they dismissed three home batsmen for ducks.
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  • Painter cleared of bar assault charge A SELF-employed painter and decorator was yesterday cleared of assaulting the manager of a Harrogate bar.
  • York probably regretted batting first on a grassy track as Harrogate's quickies, Dave Pennett and Khalid Hussain, made swift inroads so that the visitors were reduced to 59-7 after 27 overs.
  • Miss Wood, of Hereford, said the works were unlisted in a 1983 audit of Harrogate's art collection.
  • There are no plans to change the single sex status of Harrogate Ladies' College, which was established in 1893 and now takes girls aged 10 to 18 as day pupils or boarders.
  • The officers of the amphitheatre were still employed in the task of fixing the vast awning (or _velaria_) which covered the whole, and which luxurious invention the Campanians arrogated to themselves: it was woven of the whitest Apulian wool, and variegated with broad stripes of crimson. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 6
  • Patrick Sweeney, 42, has been appointed divisional commander at Harrogate.
  • Out of interest, this historical page on Harrogate Spa explains that Bergonié treatment is electrostimulation of the muscles, Nauheim treatment bathing in carbonated water (in imitation of the natural waters at Bad Nauheim), and cataphoresis a technique claimed to carry therapeutic ions into the body via an electrified pad on the skin. Bartitsu
  • Her ceramics are sought after at craft fairs in Northallerton, Harrogate and York.
  • Meanwhile dangerous icicles hanging from a railway bridge in Harrogate caused concern and were reported to Railtrack to be removed.
  • He was also second in the Yorkshire Championships at Harrogate and is currently junior champion of Yorkshire.
  • He was driven to Harrogate police station screaming abuse throughout the journey.
  • The worst of the current raids may be that many of us assumed, expected, even demanded, that the Obama administration would back off from Bush's Imperial Presidency project, in which the federal administration arrogated to itself the right to investigate, harass, and even arrest without trial anyone who they considered to be dangerous to their "national security" policies. Michael Schwartz: Unfortunately, Obama Is Expanding the Imperial Presidency
  • Gray, a former Harrogate choirboy and more recently a regular churchgoer in Newcastle, posed as a priest to rob the woman in her own home.
  • Eighty youngsters from Woodlands School, Harrogate, were given a breakfast of bacon and sausage butties to mark the start of Farmhouse Breakfast Week.
  • She arrogated to herself a certain importance.
  • In general, moralizing in some presumptive, superficial, arrogated manner, whether on ideological or “religious” grounds, generally needs to be avoided. The Volokh Conspiracy » “Do ‘Family Values’ Weaken Families?”
  • Nearly £500 was raised by women members of Harrogate Golf Club through a fashion show, raffles at a coffee morning, and whist drives.
  • Moseley edged ahead with a Stephen Nutt penalty ten minutes into the second half but when Harrogate flanker Steve Hobson was dismissed for stamping soon after, Moseley's confidence soared.
  • Harrogate are likely to again try a few new faces, having played nine debutants, including seven summer signings, in the 3-0 defeat by First Division Barnsley on Tuesday.
  • Their joint submission, hammered out in meetings between leaders of the council, would see Craven merge with Harrogate and other districts combine to create larger districts able to take on a unitary role.
  • He was flanked by two police officers and a court security officer as he stood in the glass-enclosed dock at Harrogate Magistrates Court.
  • The woman who led the capitalist counter-revolution in Poland is to address an international business convention near Harrogate.
  • The Indonesian army has not faced any external threat since 1965 yet it has arrogated enormous powers to itself inside the country.
  • The Harrogate Angling Supplies-backed star won yet again with a fine haul of 72 lb 6oz.
  • He arrogated to himself the dignity of a chair.
  • The Harrogate and Knaresborough MP said the new baccalaureate should allow higher rewards for pupils taking subjects like maths.
  • From his company's website: "Earnings increased 1,100% versus the prior comparable period" implies good news for owners of Mr. Hennessy's management company, though this "arrogated" bounty surely necessitates bad news for his fund investors, as the release also states: "Assets under management grew from $775 million on June 30, 2009 to $813 million on June 30, 2010. Managers Have a Lot of Leeway in Setting Fund Fees
  • The Environment Agency will need to obtain planning permission for the work and before an application is made there will be consultations with residents, Harrogate Council and other consultees.
  • The Princess Royal shocked delegates at the British Veterinary Association's annual conference in Harrogate in 1992 by defending docking the tails of working dogs.
  • The fleet carries passengers across the West Yorkshire network from Leeds to destinations including York, Harrogate and Sheffield.
  • The agency has told Harrogate Council that the 11-acre site beside the River Ure is within an undefended area and the risk of flooding is unacceptable.
  • They arrogated this power to themselves under the phoney mandate of ‘global economic integration’.
  • For what he and his confrères habitually arrogate to themselves is the right to impose their goals and their wisdom in place of those of all the individuals cursed to be under their sway in some way.
  • Harrogate is the fashion capital of North Yorkshire.
  • The race to join the National One ranks is hotting up with the top six separated by five points, but third-placed Harrogate can scupper sixth-placed Sedgley's hopes with a victory at Park Lane.
  • Even if the vote is held, it is clear that Washington continues to arrogate to itself the ‘right’ that it has claimed since 1914 to intervene and depose any Haitian government that fails to do its bidding.
  • The Studio will be transformed into one of Harrogate's spookiest venues for the true story of an ill-fated Victorian family.
  • Tim Hornsby, the entrepreneurial spirit behind such café bars as Fibbers in York and the Blues Bar in Harrogate, is more cautious.
  • It is doubtful that the US can successfully arrogate this privilege only to itself.
  • I do not arrogate to myself the right to decide.
  • Such jars were used in ancient Egyptian burials to store the internal organs of mummies but the jar is the only example in the Harrogate collection to contain a residue.
  • The company started out at Isabella Court in Pickering and Phylward House in Harrogate.
  • Crocuses used to be the first heralds of spring in Harrogate, but these days it is the sight of scantily clad young models around the exhibition centre.
  • Both sides have recorded good midweek results, Harrogate beating Whitley Bay 1-0 and Farsley trouncing Bradford Park Avenue 4-1.
  • I will not weary you with the verbalism, since you will be able to check it; the substance of my proclamation is this: I announce first that I have captured the English millionaire, the colossus of finance, Mr Samuel Harrogate. The Complete Father Brown
  • She arrogated to herself a certain importance.
  • Hundreds of Wharfedale supporters will be heading to Harrogate tomorrow hoping their nearest rivals are in clement mood.
  • O Harrogate, upon your bed, and there all my memory dislimns and decays. A Miscellany of Men
  • Once back in her native Harrogate, the problem was solved with Brooke once again lapping up the local tap water.
  • But when his love was not reciprocated he turned from admirer to stalker, Harrogate magistrates were told.
  • Fisher was, in fact, due to compete in the qualifying tournament for the men's competition, but was forced to concede her match after getting stuck in traffic in Harrogate.
  • The guys from the revenue via Harrogate paid me a call, not on a professional basis I hope.
  • The work is advertised in job centres across the UK - inviting flirtatious men and women to contact a website address for the Harrogate-based firm.
  • Under the fiat money system the FED has arrogated unlimited powers to itself, namely, the power to print unlimited amounts of money.
  • He arrogated to himself at certain importance.
  • Each day a team of 30 staff start work at 6am to try to keep the Harrogate District free of litter.
  • The officers of the amphitheater were still employed in the task of fixing the vast awning (or _velaria_) which covered the whole, and which luxurious invention the Campanians arrogated to themselves: it was woven of the whitest Apulian wool, and variegated with broad stripes of crimson. The Best of the World's Classics, Restricted to Prose, Vol. VI (of X)—Great Britain and Ireland IV
  • The Executive Branch arrogates the authority to become the investigator, the prosecutor, the judge, the jury, and then the executioner.
  • Now its committee, which is understood to have spent most of the £600,000 non-returnable deposit it received on Claro Road, must decide whether it can afford to appeal against Harrogate Council's decision.
  • The Harrogate resident began a campaign to restrict the use of fireworks and became part of a national lobby group that petitioned MPs for change.
  • Thyrza Primp could not do it, being occupied with moving her snuffy odds and ends to the happy haven of Harrogate. THE DISPOSAL OF THE LIVING
  • The car in which Emma was travelling ploughed into a field between Otley and Harrogate in November 2003.
  • She was not charged but was unconditionally bailed to appear at Harrogate Police Station tomorrow.
  • Centuries after the technique was pioneered, maggots are being used at Harrogate District Hospital in larvae therapy, to remove unhealthy tissue from wounds.
  • He arrogated the privilege to himself alone.
  • At the Crown Prosecution Service in Harrogate, a spokeswoman said that an interim hospital order had been placed on Payling.
  • The Victorians had a dream that Whitby could match the gilded splendour of Harrogate, and the thermal spring waters of Bath.
  • Stillington made major inroads into Harrogate's batting as they dismissed three home batsmen for ducks.
  • Cherrybank is the most northerly of the three National Collections of heathers and heaths - the others are at the Royal Horticultural Society gardens at Wisley in Surrey and Harlow Carr in Harrogate.
  • It was the state security council, chaired by successive NP government leaders including de Klerk, which had "arrogated" itself the right to determine the fate of many anti-apartheid activists inside South Africa and on foreign land, Mamoepa said. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • I shall call that the "arrogation" thesis inasmuch as, presumably, to make ourselves master of the sources of life is to arrogate to ourselves something we ought not to. Development and Negation VI: Contraception
  • Two people were killed in a three-car pile-up on the B6451, between Harrogate and Otley.
  • He describes the austerities he endured on the long road to ordination and the claims he arrogated to himself as a priest.
  • We are in the spanking new boardroom of the spanking new Harrogate Spa bottling plant.
  • What is significant, as Kee points out, is that the Roman Church assented to the role Constantine arrogated to himself.
  • She arrogated to herself a certain importance.
  • Ms Brown informs us she was treated to a capital repast and sparkling company on the way back to London after her temporary sojourn in Harrogate.
  • The car in which Emma was travelling ploughed into a field between Otley and Harrogate in November 2003.
  • Town's passage follows that of Harrogate Railway Athletic, who also reached the third qualifying round 24 hours earlier.
  • Out of interest, this historical page on Harrogate Spa explains that Bergonié treatment is electrostimulation of the muscles, Nauheim treatment bathing in carbonated water (in imitation of the natural waters at Bad Nauheim), and cataphoresis a technique claimed to carry therapeutic ions into the body via an electrified pad on the skin. Bartitsu
  • At the moment the pub is also serving a range of Daleside beers brewed in Harrogate, including Old Leg Over and Greengrass Old Rogue Ale and Black Sheep best bitter.
  • -- A title arrogated to himself by Alexander.] [Line 393: Dullness here 'seems to be incorrectly used. An Essay on Criticism
  • The concert will be in Harrogate on the 29th.
  • Harrogate planners at a subsequent meeting determined that they were minded to reject the plan anyway.
  • At Harrogate, the hosts were put in to bat on a new strip hastily prepared because the intended pitch had been flooded by Friday's deluge.
  • Tomorrow we are travelling home via Harrogate where we will call to see Daisy's other sister Janet.
  • That firm arrogated itself the right to develop this area.
  • One of the aims of the Harrogate Minstermen is to offer regular and affordable travel to away fixtures.
  • Don't easily arrogate evil motives to others.
  • The breakthrough emerged on the opening day of the three-day Great Yorkshire Show which saw huge crowds flock to the Harrogate showground attracted by the warm, sunny weather.
  • The assembly arrogated to itself the right to make changes.
  • Last Wednesday 50,000 people went through the gates of the Harrogate showground, while visitors on Tuesday and Thursday took the total to 127,152.
  • That power had been wrongly arrogated by the rogue federal regulator known as the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). Ed Mierzwinski: In The Public Interest : The More You Know, The More You Know We Need A Strong CFPB
  • When entries from the Harrogate District won in successive years it was a triumph.
  • A Harrogate toffee firm which won a worldwide reputation for its lemony sweets originally bought to take away the pungent taste of the town's spa waters, is branching out with a more chewy rival.
  • The assembly arrogated to itself the right to make changes.
  • What is significant, as Kee points out, is that the Roman Church assented to the role Constantine arrogated to himself.
  • For the dollar to fulfill the function to which it arrogated itself, winning this battle with gold was a life-and-death matter.
  • A trip to the hairdressers has become a merry experience for a group of Harrogate ladies after their local salon became one of the first in Britain to be granted a liquor licence.
  • He visited the family's home in Harrogate to show Mrs Sowerby how to cook a Christmas dinner of salmon, minted potatoes, leeks in a mildly curried cream sauce and braised cos lettuce.
  • The assembly arrogated to itself the right to make changes.
  • Earlier, Father Kevin Gleeson, a former padre at the Army Foundation College in Harrogate where Sgt Roberts was an instructor, recalled a dedicated soldier.
  • Roecliffe and Westwick Parish Council has told Harrogate Council it totally rejects the 27 static caravans, but could support the extra tourers.
  • We didn't think you'd start trying to arrogate powers to yourself that aren't yours!
  • But he was arraigned before Leeds Crown Court only last November charged with racist offences after police raided his other home in the Yorkshire town of Harrogate.
  • Recent sniping between Sarah Palin and Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Charles Krauthammer highlights the crucial distinction between rebellious attitudes that attack unfairly arrogated power and privilege and a trendy neo-populism that attacks brains. Notable
  • A monarch would attempt to arrogate power to himself.
  • The woman who led the capitalist counter-revolution in Poland is to address an international business convention near Harrogate.
  • They arrogate to themselves the power to punish people.
  • If the game does go ahead Harrogate could go top of the table as their main rivals are involved in the Tetley's Bitter Cup.
  • The government would not allow anybody to arrogate the right to themselves to reverse the victory of peace ‘our country and people achieved at a high cost in terms of loss in human lives and injury to very many’.
  • The money will, of course, go to the Yorkshire Dales and Harrogate Appeal at Airedale General Hospital.
  • Of the 10 York bridges which carry roads over railway tracks, six cross the East Coast main line, two cross the Scarborough line and two cross the Harrogate line.
  • The unmistakable signal that hunting is alive and well despite the legislation will be relayed around the world via the webcam that records events in the main ring on the Harrogate showground.
  • Millions of bank customers are still shaking their heads at the indecisive outcome of Tuesday's hole-in-the-wall discussions in Harrogate.
  • Harrogate Council shares the parish's views about the unsuitability of the location, and Tockwith Residents Association has even taken on a specialist firm of planning consultants to prepare an expert case against the development.
  • The Bantams romped to a 5-win at non-league Harrogate Town last night.
  • Harrogate's forwards won the ruck and the ball was quickly transferred across the backs for left wing Tapster to finish the move with an unconverted try.
  • The service at Harrogate is one of only a few held on Remembrance Sunday in military cemeteries in Britain.
  • Harrogate were camped in their half for the entire game and despite marking Elliot Dowley ferociously were not able to match his pace and he put away a winner in the nick of time.
  • And that was one of the things that I'm pointing out in my book, that the courts have arrogated power to themselves that should be given to the legislature.
  • Harrogate initially applied stern pressure in the afternoon singles, but the York lads countered strongly to take command.
  • The sad irony is that, so long as he arrogated the country's bear-hunting rights largely to himself, the bear population flourished.
  • Governments should not be deluded into thinking that they can arrogate to themselves powers that they do not and can not possess.
  • If the line is upgraded, it will mean more trains running between York and Harrogate.
  • He arrogated to himself at certain importance.
  • Regular show goers saw the return of the popular sheep show, including a live shearing, and the return of the Tug Of War competition, which was won by Harrogate Young Farmers.
  • West Hartlepool have lost all 14 of the league matches they have played so far this season and were thrashed by Harrogate last month at Claro Road.
  • Attractive women in smart hats are not uncommon in Harrogate, but one has been singled out for special attention.
  • Leeds, however, was dismissed in a letter as ‘a beastly place’, and Harrogate was ‘the queerest place, with the strangest people in it’.
  • Do you presume, incidentally, " I asked, 'to arrogate to yourself the rights or modesties, or the least of the prerogatives of the free woman? Renegades Of Gor
  • He said the crossing, which presently consists of stepping stones, was in the unique position of stretching from one county to another - which means permission must also be granted by Harrogate planners.
  • During a discussion at the Harrogate Crime Writing Festival Ian Rankin confessed he his surprise at the uproar caused by his-honest - reponses in an article rounding up summer choices by well-known authors. What Do You Read? Huh?
  • He held posts in London and Leeds before moving to Harrogate where he shouldered a heavy clinical load and provided an excellent service.
  • A magnificent first round game at St George's Road saw Londesbrough Park emerge with a seven-run advantage over Harrogate.
  • It is heartening that the Court was, in the end, unpersuaded by the Executive's claim that it must have the unilateral powers it had arrogated to itself because we are in the midst of the war on terror.
  • That firm arrogated itself the right to develop this area.
  • A trio of young golfers from Harrogate Golf Club won the national final of the British Heart Foundation junior golf championship.
  • We also see tremendous potential in developing our client base in Harrogate and surrounding areas.
  • A veritable fizz and sense of revival wafted up and down the Harrogate International Centre's famous circular stairway.
  • Woodall and Douglas, 35, formerly of Almsford Oval, Harrogate, deny a charge of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice by interfering with witnesses.
  • He is on loan from Harrogate Town and the North Yorkshire club did not want him cup-tied in case of a recall.

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