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How To Use Banish In A Sentence

  • There was a good deal of "enmeshing" there, too, as the majority Black population served as an endless supply of cheap labour for the white elite, and was too populous in any case to be banished holus-bolus to the bantustans. Archive 2008-05-01
  • Neither Chout, turned down initially by Diaghilev, nor the piano concerto, rejected comprehensively by its muse Paul Wittgenstein the LPO's soloist was Leon Fleisher, quite banished that impression of mechanical note-spinning. LPO/Jurowski; Betrothal in a Monastery; Psappha ensemble; SCO/Ticciati – review
  • He carefully draped it over Ramirez, and soon the warmth from the luxuriant fur stilled his chattering teeth and banished the damp.
  • Physicists like the mathematical beauty of string theory because it banishes the absurdities that pop up when quantum mechanics and gravity combine.
  • After light's term, a term of cecity: the best hope for the future, that light will return and banish the follies, sophistries, delusions, which have accumulated in the darkness. Matthew Arnold
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  • But as if divining his thoughts -- just as they passed through the dining-room door, Euphra looked round at him, almost over Funkelstein's shoulder, and, without putting into her face the least expression discernible by either of the others following, contrived to banish for the time all Hugh's despair, and to convince him that he had nothing to fear from Funkelstein. David Elginbrod
  • In November 1875, Sir Frederick Evans, newly appointed hydrographer of the British Navy, ordered 123 doubtful islands banished from Admiralty Chart 2683 of the Pacific Ocean. A Furnace Afloat
  • The ministers demand that yobbery be banished from all schools.
  • Government regulation did not end inequality or banish corporate influence in politics.
  • The blowup was the low point of a season in which Zambrano got banished to the bullpen after a slow start and continued to struggle when he returned to the rotation. Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • a rapid sort of first "intellection," an error that made all departments of education so trivial, assumptive and dogmatic for centuries before Comenius, Basedow and Pestalozzi, has been banished everywhere save from moral and religious training, where it still persists in full force. Youth: Its Education, Regimen, and Hygiene
  • Maybe we can finally banish the boy bands and little girls in push-up bras off of our airwaves.
  • As the law of 1580 prescribed a penalty of 50 years of banishment for adulterers, he was apparently convicted of adultery rather than incest.
  • The first examples of the Western Region's main line diesel-hydraulics had appeared the previous year and Cornwall was planned to be one of the first areas of BR to banish steam altogether.
  • The film helps debunk a recent media report that many of the players were banished to mines and farms for cavorting at a ‘wild party with foreign ladies’ before their defeat by Portugal.
  • NBC has already made the decision to banish it to Saturday nights starting April 18th, so its chances of renewal are almost nill. Television Review – Kings
  • I was banished to the small bedroom upstairs.
  • Justly indignant at our folly, for quarrelling is not allowed in his domains, the King laid us under sentence of banishment, decreeing that we should spend the fifteenth night of each month in this dreary forest until a tailor came who could mend the garments we had torn. Folk Tales From Many Lands
  • Banish thoughts of decorative church kneelers, of draped antimacassars or folklorish costumes. Times, Sunday Times
  • In Shakespeare's "Henry IV," the rotund, free-living Falstaff character was known as Plump Jack, famous for his speech defending jovial indulgences--"banish plump Jack and banish all the world. To Ski Or Not To Ski
  • For this cause also God has banished from His presence him who did of his own accord stealthily sow the tares, that is, him who brought about the transgression; [4433] but He took compassion upon man, who, through want of care no doubt, but still wickedly [on the part of another], became involved in disobedience; and ANF01. The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus
  • In old Mauritania, now Marocco,384 the Moors proper are notable sodomites; Moslems, even of saintly houses, are permitted openly to keep catamites, nor do their disciples think worse of their sanctity for such licence: in one case the English wife failed to banish from the home “that horrid boy.” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • They tried to banish him from politics.
  • No one will kotow to you, or serenade you on a koto; rather, you'll be threatened with celotomy or colotomy, equally uncomfortable, or with banishment to Cotonou or Cotopani. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol IV No 2
  • And they will want to win to banish match-fixing gloom. The Sun
  • During the National Civic Virtues Month, all the cities should and banish disarray and discourtesy.
  • He would find himself banished, posthaste. MORE TALES OF THE CITY
  • Such were the rimes of _Skelton_ (vsurping the name of a Poet Laureat) being in deede but a rude rayling rimer & all his doings ridiculous, he vsed both short distaunces and short measures pleasing onely the popular eare: in our courtly maker we banish them vtterly. The Arte of English Poesie
  • I promise you never henceforth to offend your cause except in that mere woman's sympathy with what you call rebellion, for which women are not so much as banished by you -- or if they are, then banish me! The Cavalier
  • Cecil is banished until I can be bustled into bed, by which time I am deploying what little energy I have left to keep sneezing while dapping at my nose in what I hope is a convincing manner. Secret History of Elizabeth Tudor, Vampire Slayer
  • The people of Namoris were, supposedly, descendants of the Lunarians, immortal beings, the subjects of the moon goddess Celhyst, banished to the Earth and subjected to mortality for some misdeed against their queen.
  • petalism", according to which each man wrote on an olive leaf the name of the most powerful citizen; whoever obtained the greatest number of leaves was banished for five years. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • A weak solution of zinc chloride is also said to be an effectual banisher of these pests. Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889
  • Talk of the job banished all flighty thoughts of living in Oraulei from her mind.
  • Meanwhile, its conventional forces are plenty good enough to banish the nuclear option to the realm of the theoretical.
  • Passing an amendment to end slavery and actually banishing involuntary servitude are two different things.
  • The purifier, the scourer of thought; the hero of old; the banisher of the bath-ring of guilt. SPLITTING
  • I need a vanisher, banisher to rid me of this… I pointed to my ear. Wildfire
  • But banishing doubt runs the very real risk of banishing - or at least ostracizing - thought.
  • He is counseled by a sports psychologist who helps him interpret and banish negative, self-defeating feelings.
  • Suppose a man to have been trained in the palestra and to be a skilful boxer-he in the fulness of his strength goes and strikes his father or mother or one of his familiars or friends; but that is no reason why the trainers or fencing-masters should be held in detestation or banished from the city-surely not. Plato's Gorgias - Selected Moments
  • The purifier, the scourer of thought; the hero of old; the banisher of the bath-ring of guilt. SPLITTING
  • After Brewster had been fouled on the edge of the box, Sauzee stepped up, determined to banish the memory of his penalty miss.
  • Normal and necessary parts of our diet, such as salt and sugar and fat, have also been re-defined as toxins to be banished from our bodies.
  • Some sheepish hands are raised and the rest are banished from his presence.
  • Behring, however, who announced, in 1913, his production of a mixture of this kind, and subsequent work which modified and refined the mixture originally produced by Behring resulted in the modern methods of immunization which have largely banished diphtheria from the scourges of mankind. Emil von Behring - Biography
  • They had no qualms about banishing a Roger Williams or an Anne Hutchinson and few about hanging the occasional Quaker, all for the sin of daring to differ on points of theology.
  • Her brothers, observing how she cherishes the plant, steal the pot, discover the mouldering head, and fly, conscience-stricken, into banishment.
  • Now, Christ in his superangelic state in heaven was not involved in sin or in its doom of death and subterranean banishment. The Destiny of the Soul A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life
  • Sonic's arch nemesis Dr. Robotnik has been banished from the Land of Darkness by an evil Metal Robotnik.
  • When the kerb-crawling is banished, what happens to the street workers? Sex Workers: Once again, what’s best for us? « Bound, Not Gagged
  • The king banished his wife from his bed.
  • He was banished to Devil's Island.
  • At his Ma Restaurant in Berlin's famed Hotel Adlon Kempinski, Mr. Raue has banished starch altogether -- no brot (bread), no nudeln (noodles), no kartoffeln (German potato wedges). What's Next: Haute Cuisine
  • Should any negative psychic forces manifest themselves on the page, I'll merely banish them with magical white-out.
  • Yet, though weeds may be banished from the central beds of a formal garden, they were still capable of sturdy growth and a beauty all their own.
  • Want to banish bacne (breakouts on your back and shoulders) this season?
  • Englishmen than euer before; so as doubting that hee should neuer by gentlenesse win their good willes, he now determined by a harder measure to meete with them; insomuch that he banished a great number, other some also (not a few) he spoiled of their goods, those especiallie of whom he was in hope to gaine any great portion of substance. Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (2 of 6) England (1 of 12) William the Conqueror
  • Shoe shops, jewellers, clothes shops and snack bars are everywhere, but toyshops are either well hidden or have been banished.
  • Most people with OCD struggle to banish their unwanted, obsessive thoughts and to prevent themselves from engaging in compulsive behaviors.
  • Moeller said, " EU is against banishment and collective punishment. Those are not ways to solve the problem.
  • The fire gave the nautical furnishings a warm glow, banishing at least part of the rainy gloom that had followed him from Norfolk. DESTROY THE KENTUCKY
  • Boreland should see him as the great chief and Shaman, banisher of Where the Sun Swings North
  • They are banished from countertops but then they have their own rules, which don't include mine.
  • An energetic display was capped with a goal on his debut to banish his injury nightmare from last season. The Sun
  • Banished from the official organizational history, the memory of these unpleasant side effects lingers in the form of unhealthy core beliefs.
  • In Mughal India, she was considered past the age of desirability—there were creatures in the zenana who had been banished to its farthest quarters because of this, no longer presented to her Bapa as choices for a night. Shadow Princess
  • On the contrary, they consider it unhealthy and unpleasant, and they try to banish it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Added Krauthammer, “Obama has now decided that the man he simply could not banish because he had become part of Obama himself is, mirabile dictu, surgically excised.” Deconstructing Obama
  • The demons and other beasts that escaped banishment hid in the dark places of the world, like the forests and great pits.
  • She banished me from her caravan but not before I had stolen her magic crystal ball and called her a reject.
  • The banishing of heterogenesis from microbiology and the resultant recognition that micro-organisms, like all the more visible forms of life, are reproduced only by their own kind, made possible the establishment of bacteri - ology as a precise science and its revolutionary appli - cations in immunology and in the treatment of infec - tious diseases. SPONTANEOUS GENERATION
  • I looked up at his tormented face, and my missish tendencies were banished, his need for comfort much exceeding my need for proper English conduct.
  • If there were any title jitters around the Bridge, they were quickly banished as the hosts took control. The Times of India
  • On the words ‘No sense was stung’ the minim triads again banish the clumping quavers, though this time the triads are no simple concords, but a dominant seventh of E major followed by an F triad that is simultaneously major and minor.
  • Third offense calls for banishment from the island forever. Ella Minnow Pea (copy)
  • Smokers crossing the Irish Sea could find themselves banished to the open decks of all ferries to and from the Republic.
  • That is not to say awkward moments have been banished. Times, Sunday Times
  • A petty vizier banishes a bostangi to Lemnos; the vizier Azem banishes the petty vizier to Tenedos; the pasha banishes the vizier Azem to Rhodes; the janissaries imprison the pasha and elect another who will banish the worthy A Philosophical Dictionary
  • Eleanor is sentenced to banishment and Gloucester surrenders the protectorship.
  • HERE are two more fantastic chances to banish the summertime blues with our fantastic 2 for 1 offers. The Sun
  • A win is a win, but this was hardly the emphatic result needed to banish those Danish blues.
  • In one of my favourite scenes, the Duke catches an embarrassed Valentine attempting to elope with Silvia and banishes him.
  • Of course, the opportunities for school milk vending have been well documented and are growing, as school systems across the country tackle youth obesity by banishing sugary soft drinks from lunchrooms.
  • The banished will be flown to a second cabin on another remote island.
  • He tried to banish the thought. Man of Honour
  • Revels, it is ordered that the King of Cockneys, on Childermas Day, should sit and have due service, and "that Jack Straw, and all his adherents, should be thenceforth utterly banished, and no more to be used in this house, upon pain to forfeit for every time five pounds, to be levied on every fellow hapning to offend against this rule. Christmas: Its Origin and Associations Together with Its Historical Events and Festive Celebrations During Nineteen Centuries
  • I shuddered and banished such thoughts to the back of my mind. Times, Sunday Times
  • That morning, midway through one such rambling tale of being rescued from the jaws of ravenous sheep by a horde of birds, my father banished her, breakfastless, to the drawing room. Shaman's Crossing
  • Although several vets wanted to euthanize her on the spot, I wanted time to right the wrong -- she had been banished to the backyard for months because she was bleeding and "smelled" -- when in fact, treatable cancer was allowed to become terminal. Chron.com Chronicle
  • They recommend focusing on your breathing and banishing negative thoughts as you inhale. The Sun
  • In town she returned to preoccupations which, for the moment, had the happy effect of banishing troublesome thoughts. The House of Mirth
  • NEW YORK (AP) - Sean Avery has shed nerves and any inhibitions that might have crept into his game during his banishment from the NHL. USATODAY.com
  • Sean Avery's banishment from the Dallas Stars and perhaps the NHL is just the latest entry in the league's bad boy ledger. Sean Avery just latest on list of NHL players lacking self-control
  • Banished under Modernism, it has something to do with decoration and ornament.
  • Bourton-on-the-Water parish council has been asked to banish a local evangelist with a loud voice from the village green on Sundays.
  • The graddan cake will keep her white teeth in order, the goat’s whey will make the blood spring to her cheek again, which these alarms have banished and even the Fair Maiden of The Fair Maid of Perth
  • Indeed, stepping over the party line on this subject can result in ostracism, opprobrium and banishment to career Siberias.
  • The White House is so skittish about the word "shutdown" that it has been all but banished from its own lexicon. As clock ticks, tension rises over a federal shutdown
  • She will make my misery more tolerable, my slavery only half-slavery, my exile less a banishment.
  • [Footnote 3: Fleming; banishing? from _fleme_, A.S. to banish.] [Footnote 4: "Helleflight," as given in the translation, p. 178.] ***** Notes and Queries, Number 16, February 16, 1850
  • Together they have been working to banish his old bachelor image. Times, Sunday Times
  • That evening, at the Villa Aioussa, there gathered a courtly assembly, of much higher rank than Algiers can commonly afford, because many of station as lofty as her own had been drawn thither to follow her to what the Princesse Corona called her banishment -- an endurable banishment enough under those azure skies, in that clear, elastic air, and with that charming "bonbonniere" in which to dwell, yet still a banishment to the reigning beauty of Paris, to one who had the habits and the commands of a wholly undisputed sovereignty in the royal splendor of her womanhood. Under Two Flags
  • Perhaps the staff is acting so rudely because they resent the banishment of dear Cordelia.
  • The patrician was executed on the ready accusation of treason, and the wife of Alexander driven with ignominy from the palace, and banished into Africa. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Solemnly he then pronounces her sentence, declaring she shall serve him as Walkyrie no longer, but shall be banished to earth, where she will have to live as Stories of the Wagner Opera
  • And so on Sunday night as he rewashed the dishes, I sat banished on the big armchair pretending to watch TV but really just staring at him.
  • He observed no sort of moderation, such as befitted a private man, either in rewarding or in punishing; the recompense of his friends and guests was absolute power over cities, and irresponsible authority, and the only satisfaction of his wrath was the destruction of his enemy; banishment would not suffice. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans
  • It will ache before the game but once the whistle goes, it will be banished from his mind.
  • On Wassail night, evil spirits are banished from the orchards and offerings ensure next year's apple crop.
  • Although often banished to the suburban mailbox, vines are wonderfully versatile plants.
  • I promise you the effects he writes of succeed unhappily; as of unnaturalness between the child and the parent; death, dearth, dissolutions of ancient amities; divisions in state; menaces and maledictions against king and nobles; needless diffidences, banishment of friends, dissipation of cohorts, nuptial breaches, and I know not what. Act I. Scene II. King Lear
  • Progress was a word long in disfavour, yet not entirely banished from court. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • the total banishment of his daughter from the country
  • When the Lord recalls the banish'd, [637] h121-p0. 6 Lyra Germanica: Second Series: The Christian Life
  • In the _praeludium_ to Goffe's "Careless Shepherdess," 1656, quarto, there is a panegyric on them, and some concern is shown for the fool's absence in the play itself, while it is stated that "The motley coat was banished with trunk-hose. A History of Pantomime
  • He is counseled by a sports psychologist who helps him interpret and banish negative, self-defeating feelings.
  • The banished nurse sat with her tiny bee-friend nestled in her bosom.
  • When the Confederate armies are scattered; when their leaders are banished from power; when the people return to a late repentant sense of the wrong they have done to a government they never felt but in benignancy and blessing, —then the Constitution made for all will be felt by all, like the descending rains from heaven which bless all alike. His Reply to Breckenridge
  • Thus will the terror of black ice be banished.
  • The king disseised Odo of his immensely wealthy earldom of Kent and banished him from England for his leadership of the recent rebellion.
  • In 1649 he was banished from Amsterdam for being a ‘libeller’ and ‘vagabond’.
  • Additionally, the defendants acted to 'blackball' and banish plaintiff and anyone associated with plaintiff permanently from ExxonMobil facilities and premises without limitation. Courthouse News Service
  • And when you're the king, you can banish the insiders who displease you and you can try to buy off the outsiders.
  • I had banished that vile song to the darkest recesses of my soul, and you had to resurrect it.
  • Having fun is the best way to banish the blahs and reap physical benefits.
  • He planted the two harps in front of the orchestra, on either side of his rostrum, and banished bells and drums to the unseen backstage.
  • My thanks to the wife for banishing me from the house for only seven nights.
  • Barleycorn will have been banished out of existence along with the other barbarisms, some other institution than the saloon will have to obtain, some other congregating place of men where strange men and stranger men may get in touch, and meet, and know. Chapter 13
  • Once underwater, the pair let the outside world disappear, communing with the natural elements beneath the sea's surface in an attempt to banish their worries forever.
  • She is seated alone, when her clever maid Susanna ushers in the young page Cherubino, just banished from the house because obnoxious to the jealous Count.] _Susanna_ -- Here's our young Captain, Madame. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 4
  • A quick espresso can banish the sleepies; but fight the urge to offer decaf and then slip your guest a regular shot.
  • No where in the Bible or Torah does it say that the Garden of Eden was destroyed after the Banishment from Paradise.
  • Psychology: The War Altar exudes raw power which banishes all thought of fear or panic.
  • A nightshirt, or indeed any other kind of nightwear, was not only unnecessary but unwelcome as well when it came between her and the sensual warmth of Guard's skin, the touch of his hands and mouth, when-Shakily Rosy tried to banish her wantonly erotic thoughts, but as she glanced in the mirror she suspected that her flushed face and shining eyes gave her away. Unwanted Wedding
  • About once a year some pious public library banishes Huck Finn from its children's department, and on the same plea always — that Huck, the neglected and untaught son of a town drunkard, is given to lying, when in difficulty and hard pressed, and is therefore a bad example for young people, and a damager of their morals. Excerpt From ‘The Autobiography of Mark Twain’
  • They are a bunch of desperate slippery folks, and re-election and banishment is coming upon them soon.
  • After triumphing for a season, it has been of late years often treated with contempt, and sometimes banished to the limbo of extinct logomachies. The English Utilitarians, Volume II (of 3) James Mill
  • Punishment for seditious libel also varied greatly in severity, from a few months imprisonment, probationary security, and fines, to transportation and banishment from the realm -- the lattermost punishment being an innovation of the Six Acts of 1820. The Discourse of Treason, Sedition, and Blasphemy in British Political Trials, 1794-1820
  • The gracious God allowed Adam and Eve to live, though he banished them from the Garden of Eden.
  • In 1649 he was banished from Amsterdam for being a ‘libeller’ and ‘vagabond’.
  • You find that in Oude, the very appearance of justice had been banished out of it, and that every aumil exercised an arbitrary power over the lives and fortunes of the people. The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 12 (of 12)
  • I cut a stout blackthorn to banish ghost and goblin.
  • He has been banished from the real world, we don't allow him to even glimpse at it any more.
  • -- [Ostracism at Athens was banishment for ten years; petalism at Syracuse was banishment for five years.] The Essays of Montaigne — Complete
  • The hecklers were banished from the courtroom.
  • Old - fashioned voodoo economics - the belief in tax - cut magic - has been banished from civilized discourse.
  • Here we are weary and toil worn, but yonder is the land of rest where the sweat of labour shall no more bedew the workers brow, and fatigue shall be forever banished.
  • Those rickety buses with steel bars sticking out just to load extra numbers should be banished from our roads.
  • As they find themselves banished in the wilderness, you can't help but miss that other woodsy, pubescent film trio: Bella, Edward, and Jacob.
  • Our sources tell us that Count William restored the Gascons to obedience and that Odalric was banished to perpetual exile.
  • Subtle changes have been made to give the operating stock a more correct historic appearance-the C&S-style bear-trap spark arrestors have already thankfully been banished from the operating engines.
  • That is not to say awkward moments have been banished. Times, Sunday Times
  • Adam and Eve's banishment from the Garden of Eden
  • Banish static and flyaway by spritzing ionized water onto hair.
  • Is it to banish the air of predictability that Blackpool so gloriously challenged last season, only to be returned from whence they came? Times, Sunday Times
  • Voter apathy must be banished from next month's General Election, according to a York-based action group.
  • If the steps are not followed perfectly there is a good chance that the one you attempted to resurrect will be banished to the netherworld.
  • An Arts Council grant has provided this opportunity and banished a ‘Civil Service mentality’ that relied on the comfort of the fortnightly cheque from his RTÉ job.
  • The Frenchman may well claim he is able to banish thoughts like these from his mind - but somehow you doubt it. The Sun
  • PS The festivities may be drawing to a close but there is still time to banish hangovers and get those grey cells working in my seasonal quiz. Times, Sunday Times
  • I-- a person of his high nice notions of character -- what a distance it would put even between his friendship and her, -- but that thought was banished instantly, with one glance at Mr. Thorn's imputation of ungenerousness. Queechy
  • A healthy competition between the sexes can also be fun once the young child is banished to bed.
  • The authorities, nonplussed by this silence, released the wife and reduced the accused son's sentence to banishment.
  • The anger that he felt about Fred's banishment, even when he was an old man, was still in his eyes. SEA MUSIC
  • Those around him must now make sure that such thoughts are banished from his mind. Times, Sunday Times
  • Despite her scepticism, she has nonetheless banished me to the camp-cot in the study so that my nocturnal hacking and spluttering won't interfere with her slumbers.
  • An energetic display was capped with a goal on his debut to banish his injury nightmare from last season. The Sun
  • When Luther, in the domain of religion, characterized as unevangelical the conception of merit and reward, and energetically banished the huckster-spirit from religious feeling, he opened to the Gems (?) of German Thought
  • Is he saying that testosterone treatment could entirely banish the male midlife crisis? Times, Sunday Times
  • Almost nothing can happen - certainly nothing can be officially opened - without a Maori ceremony, which will frequently include a lifting of tapu, or an invocation to banish spirits.
  • The gentle curves of his childhood face weren't banished by age, but they hid themselves in the smooth planes of his cheeks.
  • Or laws that banish her and her ilk from public places to the dingy sidewalk.
  • There's a good reason that it has been banished from the airwaves.
  • When the prevalence of vice renders a reformation necessary, great care and deliberation must be used; to banish at once, and in a mass, old and rooted faults, would be like prescribing laxative and restringent medicines at the same time to an invalid. Niels Klim's journey under the ground being a narrative of his wonderful descent to the subterranean lands; together with an account of the sensible animals and trees inhabiting the planet Nazar and the firmament.
  • The new-model revision also includes a new, more sport-calibrated suspension, with coil springs up front and air springs in the rear, a stiffer antiroll bar in back, and a general banishing of elasticity. Mercedes: a Demon of Hurtling Mass
  • The demireps of the deadline had been banished over the Klondike, where, in a colony reached by a crazy rope bridge, their red lights gleamed like semaphores of sin. The Trail of '98 A Northland Romance
  • The gracious God allowed Adam and Eve to live, though he banished them from the Garden of Eden.
  • But rather, you should introduce some fair and noble impression to replace it, and banish this base and sordid one.
  • When they got no answers to their questions they banished out mortal forms and stripped Lord Dread of his powers.
  • Neither banishment of religion from the society nor a rigid wall of separation between religion and the State underlies the concept of secularism in India and elsewhere in the East.
  • After it briefly was displayed in the Rotunda, the statue was banished to a storeroom.
  • It dangles a tantalising prize in front of the leadership candidates - a policy, and more importantly a symbol, that would forever banish the image of old-fashioned Conservatism.
  • On Wassail night, evil spirits are banished from the orchards and offerings ensure next year's apple crop.
  • Weaker teams would have folded after the trauma of their captain's banishment.
  • No one on the left is saying that religion must be banished from the public square.
  • If you suspect you will be facing a greater daemon spare no effort to acquire the Banishment spell.
  • In town she returned to preoccupations which, for the moment, had the happy effect of banishing troublesome thoughts. The House of Mirth
  • Bedros, an Armenian vartabed, who had been banished from History Of The Missions Of The American Board Of Commissioners For Foreign Missions To The Oriental Churches, Volume I.
  • This is reinforced by the final exchange between Gawain and the Green Knight where the poet shows the way he feels feudalism should work - by banishing courtly love and women from the code of chivalry.
  • Mercedes-Benz USA The new-model revision also includes a new, more sport-calibrated suspension, with coil springs up front and air springs in the rear, a stiffer antiroll bar in back, and a general banishing of elasticity. Ripping the Old Model to Shreds
  • On these accounts it is that I find it impossible to banish the thought of death when I am walking alone in the endless days of summer; and any particular death, if not actually more affecting, at least haunts my mind more obstinately and besiegingly in that season. The Best of the World's Classics, Vol. V (of X) - Great Britain and Ireland III
  • Cars would be banished to long tunnels running beneath the complex, and lorries and trucks to an even deeper tunnel network below them.
  • Franciscan monks cared for the Cenacle from 1333 to 1552 when the Turks captured Jerusalem and banished all Christians.
  • With this war winding down, we have a chance as a nation to banish the word "homeless veteran" from our vocabulary. Van Jones: A Job for Every Veteran: Let's Give Them the Homecoming They Really Deserve
  • Like this: it was "conjectured" -- though not established -- that Satan was originally an angel in heaven; that he fell; that he rebelled, and brought on a war; that he was defeated, and banished to perdition. Is Shakespeare Dead?
  • Any fear of this latter evil was banished now that her mamma was to have an establishment; for on the point of birth Gwendolen was quite easy. Daniel Deronda
  • s epidermal neurilemma genetics dogs, bisection, banishment, theologiser, steinway and clientele tantamount mahlstick. Rational Review
  • He tried to banish the thought. Man of Honour
  • Danny accepts it with a grateful nod and drinks a long draught, trying to banish the shakes from his body.

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