How To Use By the day In A Sentence

  • Thereupon he signed to the negress, who rose and, pointing her finger at the blonde, said: Dost thou not know that in the Koran sent down to His prophet and apostle, is transmitted the saying of God the Most High, ‘By the night when it covereth all things with darkness; by the day when it shineth forth!’ The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • February 12th, 2010 at 2: 30 pm muzz (brought to you by Screaming Yellow Zonkers) says: bizarrobrain – yea, and with the blind following of the rightwing goons that the trolls do – they are just going to get stupider and stupider by the day Think Progress » O’Reilly: There’s ‘No Evidence’ Obama Is A Socialist But He Does Believe In ‘Tyranny And Socialism’
  • She needed comfort, for her worries were multiplying by the day. COFFIN ON THE WATER
  • The tech to connect Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, cell, email, addresses and other PID is here and it improves by the day. George Weiner: Is Your Data at a Middle School Dance?
  • While the FDA dithers, the case against selling EC over the counter weakens by the day.
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  • It has become more vindictive and hyperbolic by the day, with much of the personal venom being directed at him. Times, Sunday Times
  • CCL now joins other Canadian organizations wounded by the axe of far-right ideology: KAIROS, cultural programs and producers, gay rights groups ... the list of casualties is growing by the day. Archive 2010-01-01
  • One year after the election of President Obama, as his initiatives for change collide with stubborn political realities, it gets harder by the day to recall the sunnier political realities they displaced: the soaring rhetoric of the campaign; the pomp and lift of Inauguration; even the headlong rush for results that marked his first hundred days in office. MyAppleMenu
  • They are the flavour of the month and support is growing by the day. The Sun
  • The company hires out machinery by the day.
  • Here in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe (OSCE) Mission, established by the Dayton peace accords, is leading the way in providing electronic information to Bosnia diaspora, young people, nongovernmental organizations, journalists, academics and researchers around the world through its quadrilingual Web site. Atomic Energy: Yeas And Nays
  • Whether viewed by the daylight, a little subdued, or lamplight, the scenes depicted with telling effect the different characters so vividly described by Mrs Stowe.
  • The odds on the industry surviving in its current form are lengthening by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Continually waylayed by searches for energy, for food, for ways to survive, and by the quirks of strange territory burgeoning with its own life, both mild and threatening, their journey grew longer and longer by the day. Flashback
  • Muralitharan's injured left shoulder is recovering by the day and, according to Whatmore, he is imparting as much spin as ever.
  • An act of 1646 authorized the constables of every town to require artificers and handicraftsmen "to work by the day for their neighbours in mowing, reaping of corn and inning thereof."
  • The dark spectre of relegation moves closer by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ranked among the Fortune 100 companies, their performance and market penetration is increasing by the day.
  • It is getting harder by the day to isolate the various segments of the electronic publishing industry into neat little compartments.
  • They have cars that are hired out by the day.
  • But that is ebbing by the day. The Sun
  • She was a quick learner, and her German got better by the day.
  • By the day after tomorrow little more will be heard of it. Times, Sunday Times
  • She is getting blonder and the hair softer and incredible lighter skin by the day. Pink is the New Blog | Everybody's Business Is My Business » Blog Archive » Watch: Beyoncé, ‘Why Don’t You Love Me’
  • My Spanish is growing rustier by the day, but the gist of it is: Feministing: October 2006 Archives
  • It is an issue that gets thornier by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Life continues apace, and the time I'm spending in Berkshire is going well (we'll ignore an episode today with the dog being extremely travel-sick) and all's looking more and more positive by the day.
  • We realised that without help it would surely die, as it was getting weaker by the day.
  • It is getting harder by the day to isolate the various segments of the electronic publishing industry into neat little compartments.
  • The bad news for the rest of the Premiership is that the daddy of destroyers is destined to get meaner by the day.
  • During a field trip to Pioneer Park in Mesa, a 4-year-old girl was left behind by the day-care staff.
  • My clothes, which are getting more ripped and threadbare by the day, have taken on a distinct waft of sheep's lanolin, muck and diesel. Back to the land: from London to sheep farming on Eigg
  • By the day of the race we can expect a very small field but that won't matter a jot as racing fans turn up to see one of the finest steeplechasers of all time in action at his local track.
  • Farmers aiming to raise bumper crops of purple kush are seeing their real estate options, already limited by the new state law, narrow by the day.
  • Also, big holders of the Sprott fund can redeem their shares to Sprott for solid bars of pure silver—a comfort in a world of currencies that are becoming cheesier by the day. Hi Ho, Silver: Some Fund Investors Could End Up Tarnished
  • It is all very well to talk about Pub City and Fun City, but it all happens in this poor apology of a downtown, a very long way off from the workplace that gets longer by the day with every additional vehicle they buy.
  • On 5 October there was a ceasefire, confirmed by the Dayton Peace Agreement signed on 21 November.
  • Whereby the dayspring, &c. The word dayspring {7} means the morning light, the aurora, the rising of the sun. Barnes New Testament Notes
  • The language drifts round and about fast by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • In practical terms it is clearer by the day that she is unqualified for the job. Times, Sunday Times
  • If they didn't spin, they'd suffer bad press and PR disasters by the day.
  • In short, this is a really unclassy move from a campaign that looks more scared by the day. Question Of Iowa Student Voting Flares Into Major Issue
  • The odds on the industry surviving in its current form are lengthening by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • While the krona in Iceland still has its staunch defenders, voices demanding its demise in favour of the euro grow louder by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Through the tender mercy of our God; whereby the dayspring from on high hath visited us Probably Just One Of Those Funny Coincidences
  • While the krona in Iceland still has its staunch defenders, voices demanding its demise in favour of the euro grow louder by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hanging over the window-sills, or suspended from nails in the wall, were the belts, which the soldiers had profited by the day's halt -- no very frequent occurrence with them -- to clean and pipeclay, and then had hung to dry in the sun. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 59, No. 363, January, 1846
  • The so-called “second wave” has breathed new life into a protest that was dwindling in fervor by the day. Global Voices in English » Georgia: Opposition protests enter fifth day
  • But that is ebbing by the day. The Sun
  • Moral disfavour is something you're going to have to get used to, we fear, especially if you're going to carry on preaching the condemnation of homosexuality in a culture that now very often, and more so by the day, deems that message as obsolete and objectionable as the condemnation of "miscegenation. Archive 2010-03-01
  • Group comportment had deteriorated by the day, with yours truly bearing the brunt of the collective delinquency.
  • They are the flavour of the month and support is growing by the day. The Sun
  • Of course, there will be more attacks: the country's enemies are multifarious and growing in number by the day.
  • Armed with that thought as the economic news gets bleaker by the day, a new kind of survivalism is gaining ground in our country, making the Y2K scare of a decade ago seem like a child's game. News from www.rep-am.com
  • But the PC hardware business is becoming more unprofitable by the day.
  • Moreover, Romney is the establishment personified -- a pump-and-dump takeover financier, for crying out loud -- at the very time the GOP and much of the rest of the country are becoming more anti-establishment by the day. Robert Reich: Why We May Be In Store for a Passionless Presidential Race
  • Her distraction turned to vacuity, her obsessions grew stronger by the day. SACRAMENT
  • The second of these scenarios became less plausible by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is sure something that needs cleaning, as it is getting "stinkier" by the day! Recall quid pro quo - BatesLine
  • The second of these scenarios became less plausible by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • The county has two main professional recording studios, which can be hired by the hour or by the day.
  • His street cred is rising by the day. The Sun
  • She was a quick learner, and her German got better by the day.
  • The odds on the industry surviving in its current form are lengthening by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ask any chef in an upmarket hotel in the city and he will tell you that the fans of mocktails are growing in numbers by the day.
  • The programme was relentlessly unflashy, balm in a media world that gets louder and more vulgar by the day.
  • He started with 78 followers and disciples, but the numbers increased by the day.
  • Those numbers are swelling by the day due to uncontrolled immigration. The Sun
  • While many of Shaw's grand old homes and classic row houses have been rehabbed, the Woodson home, whose condition worsens by the day, awaits rescue.
  • Group comportment had deteriorated by the day, with yours truly bearing the brunt of the collective delinquency.
  • Her eccentricities get stranger by the day.
  • But that is ebbing by the day. The Sun
  • The threat of administration and a subsequent deduction of ten league points is growing closer by the day and Stubbs is the only remaining contender to complete a rescue.
  • We are a bunch of slobs with an expensive product that gets less useful and interesting by the day.
  • The roll of honour of those otherwise engaged is long and growing by the day.
  • The second of these scenarios became less plausible by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • By the day of the party, Rowena and Sammy were entirely unpacked, the apartment was tidy, and the food preparations were on schedule.
  • That said, the response of media and government has been mixed and the resources being committed by both is rising by the day as the scale of the disaster becomes apparent.
  • She was a quick learner, and her German got better by the day.
  • On one key subject in particular, European and American attitudes diverge and are moving further apart by the day.
  • She slept soundly, the sort of slumber that only such elixirs of Morpheus could induce in one so traumatized by the day's events.
  • At the theatre her fame as a beautiful actress and singer was growing by the day. COURTESANS
  • March 22nd, 2010 at 9: 59 pm muzz (brought to you by Screaming Yellow Zonkers) says: wow – these fools and their tag-along trolls get weirder and more stupid by the day – and they think they are going to win in November – NOT! Think Progress » GOP New Orleans Congressman: Health Reform ‘At A Par With Slavery’ Because Of Nonexistent Abortion Coverage
  • And people in charge of both governments have become more bellicose by the day.
  • Her design style was said to be greatly influenced by the days in cloister: SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 1012
  • The prime minister's statement was called defeatist by Liberal finance critic John McCallum, who said it is becoming clearer by the day that the government should up the ante on stimulus, as the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development recommended this week. CTV News RSS Feed
  • She was a quick learner, and her German got better by the day.
  • The parliament is gradually getting its act together and is growing in confidence by the day.
  • They are the flavour of the month and support is growing by the day. The Sun
  • `No, the lady who comes in by the day to clean my kitchen scrubs the kitchen floor at Angel House once a week. COFFIN ON THE WATER
  • Her trips into the dangerous territory over her front doorstep became briefer and briefer by the day. COLDHEART CANYON
  • The chances of getting a top price at float were dwindling by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • The human captives in the encampment just outside of the city were becoming more discontent by the day.
  • The language drifts round and about fast by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • The asiatic lilies will lead the procession of trumpet shaped flowers, followed by the daylilies, hemerocallis. June Fun « Fairegarden

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