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How To Use Charioteer In A Sentence

  • This star used to belong both to Auriga, where it was known as the heel of the Charioteer ...and to the constellation Taurus, where it represented the tip of the Bull's northern horn.
  • The charioteer was a little diamond-headed fellow who straddled the neck of the dragon and moved the levers that made it go. The Lost Princess of Oz
  • The charioteer was a Nubian, wearing bracelets of gold, as well as otherwise richly attired. The pillar of fire, or, Israel in bondage
  • May thy sons be brave, victorious, good charioteers and worthy of sitting in councils of men.
  • Charioteers would steer towards their targets with just their head and shoulders above water until, 60 feet out, they would dive to a depth of about 30 feet.
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  • Also called "the commute". trishaw drivers are of the "interpretative" school of charioteering. Kottu
  • Then let him undistractedly restrain his mind, as a charioteer restrains his vicious horses.
  • The two charioteers hid their diving suits and walked into Palermo, but were promptly arrested by the carabinieri.
  • And lastly, anyone who likes may admire the Camelopard (_Camelopardalis_), between the Great Bear, Cepheus, and the Charioteer. Half-Hours with the Stars A Plain and Easy Guide to the Knowledge of the Constellations
  • Truth is not hidden from the Friend of God," replied the hasheesh-eater, "I have erred being drunken with the hasheesh, for in the desiderate city, even in London, so thick upon the ways is the white sea-sand with which the city glimmers that no sound comes from the path of the charioteers, but they go softly like a light sea-wind. Tales of Wonder
  • Capella is in the constellation Auriga the Charioteer, but since antiquity it has carried the name "Goat Star.
  • Its frontage gleams with neon, and above the gaudy porch is a statue of a four-horsed laurel-wreathed charioteer, his spear raised phallically into the dull London sky.
  • It was designed to stop any direct assault on the fort by chariots, slowing them enough to leave the charioteers exposed to attack from the warriors manning the ramparts, who would then use slingshots to rain down stones and rocks.
  • The charioteer was a little, diamond-headed fellow who straddled the neck of the dragon and moved the levers that made it go. The Lost Princess of Oz
  • When he had cut only a little, the Overseer entered the Judgment Hall, saying: "The two apostles tricked Jude and crawled under the barrier, and they shot back the bolts of the gate of the Chariot House and called a charioteer to take them to Heaven. My Neighbors Stories of the Welsh People
  • Having found another new charioteer, Hector leaped to the ground and took off with a loud yell after Teucer, throwing a stone that nearly killed him. The Trojan War
  • My charioteer was a far better specimen of the present, than foundations of long walls, ruined temples, and statues without noses, can possibly be of the past. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 55, No. 344, June, 1844
  • The shield ([Greek: aspis]), we are told by followers of Reichel, was only worn by princes who could afford to keep chariots, charioteers, and squires of the body to arm and disarm them. Homer and His Age
  • The charioteers of Tiranoc, famed throughout the land for their skill and daring, raced between their white marble cities.
  • He who holds back arisen anger as one checks a whirling chariot, him I call a charioteer; other folk only hold the reins.
  • The most important of all is a lampstand - complete with bronze legs made to look like horses' feet which archaeologists suspect may have been buried along with a famous charioteer.
  • This star used to belong both to Auriga, where it was known as the heel of the Charioteer ...and to the constellation Taurus, where it represented the tip of the Bull's northern horn.
  • The charioteers were crack units of specially-trained frogmen who sat astride a 30 ft-long torpedo which they steered into enemy harbours.
  • Auriga is depicted by a charioteer who holds a goat in his left arm and some suckling kids in his lap.
  • For as the reins give no trouble to the charioteer, but the charioteer is the cruise of all the mischief through his not holding them properly: (and therefore do they often exact a penalty of him, entangling themselves with him, and dragging him on, and compelling him to partake in their own mishap:) so is it also in the case before us. NPNF1-12. Saint Chrysostom: Homilies on the Epistles of Paul to the Corinthians
  • A golden dolphin, which had been suspended from a beam, and on which the eye of every charioteer was fixed, dropped to the ground, a blast on the 'salpinx', or war-trumpet, was sounded, and forty-eight horses flew forth as though thrown forward by one impulsion. Serapis — Volume 06
  • For Plato, the soul was an Ideal, a kind of living idea, that existed in a state of transmutability—it could change all the time—until it entered the darkness of the body, becoming “the pilot of the body, as a charioteer is the pilot of the horses who pull his chariot.” The Wonder of Children
  • Gailenga, at Telach-Maine; the buck speaking out of the bodies of the thieves in the territory of Ui-Meith; the travelling of the garron without any guide to Druimmic-Ublae, when he lay down beside the grain of wheat; the chariot, without a charioteer, [going] from Armagh to The Most Ancient Lives of Saint Patrick Including the Life by Jocelin, Hitherto Unpublished in America, and His Extant Writings
  • Meanwhile, the charioteers then move away and place their chariots in such a way that the warriors can easily get back on them if they are hard pressed by the size of the enemy.
  • Although some of its elements developed earlier in Mesopotamia, full body armour was apparently first used by Mycenaean Greek charioteers in the last few centuries of the Bronze Age.
  • – that not a prince, not a charioteer, not a bowman was there to join his hand with mine? Pharaohs, Fellahs and Explorers
  • Rumour is that in his headlong hurry, when mounting behind his yoked horses to begin the battle, he left his father's sword behind and caught up his charioteer Metiscus 'weapon; and that served him long, while Teucrian stragglers turned their backs; when it met the divine Vulcanian armour, the mortal blade like brittle ice snapped in the stroke; the shards lie glittering upon the yellow sand. The Aeneid of Virgil
  • Yea, the charioteer is the son of the King of Gabra, and it is The Coming of Cuculain

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