How To Use Chronicle In A Sentence

  • The gossip columnist was paid to chronicle the latest escapades of the socially prominent celebrities.
  • The history of Christian missions, after all, is the chronicle of Western missionaries and their exploits, and the notion of missionaries from the East preaching to a godless Europe is the stuff of creative fiction. The Chinese are Coming
  • I told her no; gave her the names of a few funny memoirists who have chronicled their experiences dealing with weight issues in the ‘dating game,’ and sent her on her way.
  • I decided to chronicle my experience of hyperplasia with atypia for viewers of The Early Show. Good-Enough Mother
  • The London 2012 story and its main characters are well chronicled. Times, Sunday Times
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  • The film chronicles the everyday doings of a group of London schoolchildren.
  • Knight will return to work May 12 and a full report of his trip will be chronicled in the next issue of Imprint.
  • World-renowned technical artist David Kimble was hired to chronicle development of both the Intrepid racecar and its mighty 5.9L engine, for a series of cutaway illustrations.
  • Book critic Carlin Romano, who is also critic-at-large for the Chronicle of Higher Education (in which role he was a finalist last year for a Pulitzer in criticism), takes a look at that dubious aphorist, E.M. Cioran. An Inquirer trifecta ...
  • The Caliph wondered at her words and bade the tale be recorded and chronicled and laid up in his muniment-chambers. — The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • I note that skrimslis an Icelandic monster, chronicled in Fortean Times, possibly a sort of reptile living in lakes.
  • Happily, the expansions and recombinations of American businesses over the century chronicled here have had far more positive results than this author would lead us to believe.
  • A chronicle of a hurricane unforetold in 1987 remains the most famous example of a meteorological mistake. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rather, it is a final redaction of sources ranging from the Red Book of Westmarch, to Elvish Chronicles, to Gondorian records, to tales of Rohirrim which were only transcribed centuries later.
  • The full report chronicles a series of warning signs that were missed by the SEC. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her achievements are chronicled in a new biography out this week.
  • In the miniatures of an Alexandrian "Chronicle of the World", written probably during the fifth century we already find pictorial representation of the omophorion. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • The friars and their native assistants produced an immense number of grammars, dictionaries, catechisms, confessional manuals, sermon outlines, chronicles, and even religious dramas.
  • An Eagle Named Freedom (Powells City of Books, @7:30pm): An Eagle Named Freedom (Morrow) chronicles how Jeff Guidry nurtured an eaglet with two broken wings back to health — and then, when Guidry began fighting his own battle against non-Hodgkins lymphoma, the eagle guided him to fight for his own life. Portland Book Events: May 22-28 - Reading Local: Portland
  • Prostitution among dressmakers and milliners was notorious, due to the seasonal nature of the work and the lack of wages for up to eight months of the year, as Henry Mayhew reported in his 1851 series on needlewomen in the Morning Chronicle.
  • Fringe photographer and subculture chronicler Charles Gatewood quickly added mess to his extreme repertoire, and New York nightclubs began splattering their go-go dancers with liquid latex.
  • Most of these sources were narrative documents: chronicle accounts, memoirs, government records, past histories.
  • Almost all come from monastic or mendicant milieux, and are passages in annals or chronicles of the writer's abbey. A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • The story is part love story, part comedy of self-justification, and part a chronicle of an appalling crime.
  • I myself became the subject of a miracle in Sind which is duly chronicled in the family-annals of a certain The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • This link points to "Weeping Sikkim," a blog that chronicles an ongoing hunger strike by the youth of Sikkim, India to demand goverment transparency and accountability regarding hydroelectric projects in Dzongu, the homeland of the Lepcha people. Boing Boing
  • It's noticeable that the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in Alfred's time, by which time it was being written more or less contemporarily with events, records celestial phenomena, consecrations of bishops and deaths of bishops, kings and ealdormen, but not births, not even the births of King Alfred's children. Acha of Deira and Bernicia: daughter, sister, wife and mother of kings
  • The faerie folk are mentioned in the medieval chronicles and go back even further; Chaucer describes them as something people ‘no longer’ believe in.
  • The cadence, phrasing, and rhythm of the language is very similar to that found in The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and in heroic contemporary Anglo-Saxon poetry.
  • Enlisting Crumb's help, he writes a series that chronicles his mundane, day-to-day existence.
  • I no longer say that I don't believe that the Torah is an accurate historical chronicle of the Jewish people.
  • In the end, we're not quite sure if the soulless quality of the milieu he chronicles is a reflection of the world outside his head or the one inside it.
  • He would talk of his major book, said Carpenter, ‘not as a work of fiction, but as a chronicle of actual events,’ seeing himself not so much its maker as its discoverer and historian.
  • Cay Wesnigk mined the archives of the East German state film studio to chronicle the regime's rise and fall, with instructional films about threats from the West, TV shows indoctrinating children, and the East German leader Erich Honecker and his wife, Margot, waltzing at the twilight of the so-called German Democratic Republic. Reconstructive History
  • And it's an adventure whose "conclusion"—the daily performance of work—has gone relatively unchronicled in literature. Chapbook entry
  • In order to protect the guilty, Morin won't name names, which is probably just as well given the litany of scandalous events chronicled in the book.
  • Monograms on mountains is a curiosity, a visual chronicle of the monumental letterforms that are located near many American towns.
  • Nuzhat al-Zaman and the Wazir Dandan, they marvelled at the wonderful events that had betided them and bade the scribes chronicle them in books that those who came after might read. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • His book chronicles a young doctor's battle with a rare and life-threatening blood disease, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria.
  • The chronicles state that the abbey established a large farmstead - known as a grange - 20 miles away near Wharram Percy, and that a water mill was soon added.
  • Again, like today's, its doings were chronicled by an irreverent, iconoclastic press eager for celebrity gossip and social scandal.
  • With a few more helpings, I think Team Chronicle could have a shot at a bronze medal in basketball.
  • Neal Ascherson, chronicler of the great events in postwar Europe, spent the past week in court assessing a case that goes to the heart of the last century's worst crime.
  • They chronicled all the remarkable happenings of the Second World War.
  • His chronicle evokes in all its wooliness the storied past and indestructible spirit of a crucial American subculture, when folks on the stroll "worked all week, and Saturday night was their night to howl. On the Midnight Special
  • KONE plans to take "The Chronicles of the Liftman" pan India and educate as many elevator users.
  • A sometime documentary filmmaker, she traveled to the once-thriving industrial town of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in order to chronicle the lives of a generation of teenage unwed mothers.
  • She knew or guessed at the unchronicled treachery or deceit which had brought about that seemingly harsh word or deed. Red Pottage
  • The rest of the story is well chronicled. Times, Sunday Times
  • It deserves a detailed chronicle of who made it possible and how, with all the twists and turns along the way. Times, Sunday Times
  • We all gathered in a friendly Irish pub to watch the Massachusetts-based TV newsmagazine Chronicle dedicate a half-hour to the FSP.
  • Should be apparent from his stunning takedown of the “uninformed bossiness” of Strunk and White in the Chronicle of Higher Education. 2009 April « Motivated Grammar
  • Willis called "a young paragraphist for the Morning Chronicle. Famous Affinities of History — Complete
  • Fashion News by: fashion - Google News Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - 2 hours ago Be fashion forward: Aid worthy causes (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle) Uptown Girls RSS Feed
  • The media is always too quick to canonize a ballplayer for being available at his locker, for returning a phone call, for extending the simple courtesy of recalling a chronicler's first name. USATODAY.com - Hall of Famer Puckett was game to play ball
  • At the request of regularly contributing artists, the Artist's Chronicle was discontinued in 1983 in favor of a reviews section.
  • According to The San Francisco Chronicle, his game has been kaput for the whole season - and he's fallen to 24th in the rankings - as a direct result of his club trouble.
  • The last time The Chronicle published an extra was Feb. 1, 2003, when the Columbia space shuttle disintegrated over East Texas.
  • So thinks Detective Inspector Thomas Lynley, the New Scotland Yard man looking into a wealthy Cumbrian family's private deeds and secrets in the latest Lynley chronicle from Elizabeth George. In Brief: Mysteries
  • The Chronicle argues that reporters have a limited constitutional right not to disclose confidential sources.
  • But whatsoeuer our chronicles or the British histories report of this matter, it should appere by that which Cesar writeth (as partlie ye haue heard) that Britaine in those Chronicles (1 of 6): The Historie of England (3 of 8)
  • On our sixth circuit through the Bible, I had thought we might want to skip the thousand or so names in 1 Chronicles and Nehemiah.
  • The Jewish Chronicle even "reckons" that your husband is Jewish though their use of the word reckon puts their own Jewishness into question. Katie Halper: Top 10 Reasons to Stop the Blood Libel Schmear Campaign against Honorary Jew Sarah Palin
  • The details are too well chronicled to be dismissed as exaggeration, or set aside as a necessary unpleasantness in the struggle. Times, Sunday Times
  • That day, the chronicles tell us, he wore a kind of numbed look, but he also smiled. Mexico
  • Handel or his librettist found the story in Plutarch's chronicles of Roman notabilities, which had been magnificently Englished, in the 17th century, by Sir Thomas North.
  • For the record, as chronicled in Scoreboard, Baby, Seattle police detective Maryann Parker did a superb job investigating allegations that Jerramy Stevens, a walk-on-water tight end for the Washington Huskies, raped and sodomized a young virgin at a Sigma Chi party in June of 2000. Norm Stamper: Football's Sex Offenders and Their Law Enforcement Defenders
  • It is a terribly bleak chronicle with things will only get better sentiments bolted on. Times, Sunday Times
  • The San Francisco Chronicle described the two main characters as ‘two plain-spoken, quintessentially American subjects’.
  • Coogan wants his book to be a chronicle of remarkable success.
  • Contemporary chroniclers based in England had a habit of bemoaning the cost and absence of results of such campaigns.
  • The northern and central part of the South American continent was described as such in all the early chronicles and ethnohistoric accounts.
  • And, unlike the Sandy Crux Chronicles, it wouldn't be utter shash. Canada's idiot wankers: 0 for infinity.
  • This gimlet-eyed memoir is Joan Didion's meticulous chronicle of the harrowing year following the death of her husband of 40 years, the writer John Gregory Dunne, who died of a heart attack at their dinner table. Deathless Accounts Of Mourning
  • Via Ron Charles on Twitter, this direct, stat filled condemnation of the ‘publish or peril’ ethic in academe, by Mark Bauerleinin in The Chronicle of Higher Education, and a call for emphasis to be placed on one-on-one interaction and conversation: 2009 July 26 | NIGEL BEALE NOTA BENE BOOKS
  • The film forms part of an astonishing video chronicle showing how the plot unfolded. The Sun
  • I suspect it survived only because its production costs are relatively low (though, again the budget cut), while the pricey sfx required for Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles were the kiss of death. In the side of our lives where nothing is ever put straight. (2)
  • Sources of historical data include ancient inscriptions, annals, chronicles, governmental and private estate records, maritime and commercial records, personal papers, and scientific writings.
  • When he's not selling mechanical parts, Rudolph researches Star Tannery's past, which goes largely unchronicled in history books. For rural Va. town, post office delivers more than mail
  • His book chronicles more than three decades of efforts to protect Alabama's ‘gymnasiums of nature,’ the most unspoiled and unique wild lands in the state.
  • Canossa -- the _alba Canossa_, the _candida petra_ of its rhyming chronicler. Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series
  • Geoffrey K. Pullum’s takedown in the April 17 Chronicle of Higher Education called it “the overopinionated and underinformed little book that put so many people in [an] unhappy state of grammatical angst.” Books: Culture and Celebrity
  • In fact, two of my favorite recent books chronicle bizarre gustatory adventures.
  • They are diarists, confessors, intimate chroniclers of their slightly repugnant lives.
  • Revisionists would say that the romanticism of the chroniclers' reverie for that era was coloured by nostalgia for the generation lost in the first world war that choked their critical senses but the glory of Cardus's prose outweighs almost all quibbles. VVS Laxman is the latest standard bearer for the Golden Age
  • His life is chronicled in a new biography published last week.
  • 26 Miler - A chronicle of Ben's attempt to complete the Marathon Becks & Posh - … modern cokney for 'nosh' by Sam and Fred Budding Cook - Just married and trying my hands at cooking Cha Xiu Bao - What's the biggest problem in this world? BC Bloggers
  • Presently, she is writing a commentary on the Books of Chronicles for Asia Theological Association.
  • Herzog subtly chronicles this mighty, pathos-laden struggle, treating it with the seriousness it deserves without airbrushing its blind moments or gestures of excess.
  • ~ Michael Murphy, as interviewed inZig Zag Zen: Buddhism and PsychedelicsChronicle Books, 2002 posted by clocke at # Tuesday, February 28, 2006 Sri Aurobindo, Aldous Huxley and Human Potentialities
  • According to the Ipat'yevskaya Chronicle, both the chiliarch's son and the groom warned Igor of the danger.
  • In Chronicles this is clericalised in the taste of the post-exilian time, which had no feeling longer for anything but cultus and torah, which accordingly treated as alien the old history (which, nevertheless, was bound to be a sacred history), if it did not conform with its ideas and metamorphose itself into church history. Prolegomena
  • The film forms part of an astonishing video chronicle showing how the plot unfolded. The Sun
  • John looked into the chronicles of the Middle Ages last week.
  • Fans of Ray Bradbury and his The Martian Chronicles (1950) will not be disappointed with the publication of The Martian Chronicles: the Definitive Edition (late 2009) by Subterranean Press and PS Publishing, which recently acquired the rights to co-publish this long-delayed book. Archive 2009-02-01
  • What is more worthy of note is the credulity with which he swallows the fabulous inventions of the "monkish chroniclers" when set before him in English earthenware. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 19, May, 1859
  • The rents for the year 1827-28 were culled mostly from notices in the Chester Chronicle.
  • On the press benches those deputed to chronicle the roll-call of the accused had adopted a glassy-eyed fascination with the process, scanning the lists of handlers of stolen goods for genuine firestarters, mostly in vain. England riots: justice grinds on as courts sit through the night
  • Her book is not only a biography, but the detailed chronicle of a social milieu. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Harvey describes his book as a chronicle of the ‘rise and fall of the Church of Man’.
  • The London 2012 story and its main characters are well chronicled. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is good evidence to suggest that Numenius antedates Atticus, whose floruit is set around 176 (Eusebius, Chronicle, p. 207 Helm): Proclus in his 5th-c. Numenius
  • It was an appalling chronicle of events, with far-reaching, negative outcomes.
  • It chronicles where the incident happened, when, and in what circumstances.
  • And occasionally, I still find a novel that engrosses me completely, a novel like Haruki Murakami's The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (but, I have to admit, I read that book almost a decade ago). Outside of a dog...
  • The last document in OE, an annal of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle dated 1154, shows features of early Middle English.
  • Alright, so that was from the Chronicle, but even IMDB is rating it decently! I Want to Believe This Movie Won’t Suck « Skid Roche
  • Tate Gallery, from Felix Summerley to a Hollyer photograph, from the introduction of glyptography to the pictures in the _Daily Chronicle_, demand notice. Children's Books and Their Illustrators
  • It was written with newspapers before me," Southey recalled, "as fast as newspaper could be put into blank verse" (LR 1. 3n), and Woodring offers that "Few belletristic works signed by major writers can ever have come hotter from the chronicled events" (195). Introduction
  • Indeed, the celebrated ancient chronicler Plinius wrote: In Istra, the Roman patricians feel like gods!
  • I've been lucky enough to revel in this carnival metropolis since newspapers captivated readers with bristling exploits of the Zodiac Killer and Herb Caen wrote his daily columns for the San Francisco Chronicle exalting life in "Baghdad by the Bay. Red Room: Pam Tent: Home Is Where You Hang Your Hat: Why San Francisco Is It for Me
  • The details are too well chronicled to be dismissed as exaggeration, or set aside as a necessary unpleasantness in the struggle. Times, Sunday Times
  • This queen, the last of those whom the Patani chronicles acknowledge as legitimate, appears to have ruled into the 1650s.
  • The full report chronicles a series of warning signs that were missed by the SEC. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet they fixate on their differences with us, and they are faithful, sometimes gleeful, chroniclers of every American deviance from the Jacksonian creed, such as our growing economic inequality and the corruption of our political system by big money. Misfit America
  • The arrival of Cerdic and his son Cynric is recorded in the Chronicle annal for 495, but the entries concerning them are riddled with so many inconsistencies that they cannot be taken as viable historical accounts.
  • (AP) traderbob @Hillbillybarbie well then arrests should be made because it seems like a crime to me. lecrab DNA backlog still plagues HPD crime lab - Houston Chronicle lecrab Man Arrested After Threatening to Shoot His iPhone at an Apple Store [Crime] lecrab Wayne County news briefs: Nearly 80 arrested in Detroit crime sweep - Detroit Free Press mcgeneral #crime Flu cases prompt jails to restrict visits: Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • Chronicle columnist Herb Caen wrote "In this strangely flat era of" diversity, "she was the rarest of birds, an exotic creature who rose each morning to become the sun around whom thousands of lives revolved. Jessica Mitford (1917 - 1996)
  • The details are too well chronicled to be dismissed as exaggeration, or set aside as a necessary unpleasantness in the struggle. Times, Sunday Times
  • This book chronicles the series of misunderstandings. Times, Sunday Times
  • Passages from Exodus, Ruth, Ezekiel, 2 Samuel, and 1 Chronicles are balanced by those from the Synoptics.
  • As recorded severally elsewhere in these quotidian chronicles, a frequent bringer of singular annoyances is Dr. Crow.
  • The rest of the story is well chronicled. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'd tell you how, except I didn't see it because I was too busy trying to chronicle Ukraine's opener for posterity and being pestered by a fly that's buzzing around my head and won't effing eff the eff off.
  • Only a few coho were spotted and only 20 egg nests, called redds, were counted in the Lagunitas Creek watershed's two main tributaries during the annual winter survey of fish, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Saturday. Latest News - UPI.com
  • Nevertheless, neither the Chronicle nor the Historia Brittonum provides an acceptable alternative to the Bedan chronology.
  • He goes on to chronicle the genius of ‘black foremothers and forefathers’ in creating ‘powerful buffers to ward off the nihilistic threat.’
  • The novel, The Shakespeare Chronicles, was begun almost immediately but, like many avocational belles lettres, took a long time to finish. Stromata Blog:
  • This distinction between the film's narrative, or diegetic, aims and its music led Harries, in a thoughtful Chronicle of Higher Education analysis of the film, to consider the extent to which the film's music is diegetic.
  • Contemporary chroniclers mainly describe her as an adulterer and temptress.
  • Together with my contributor's copy of Wiscon Chronicles 4 and whatever ARCs I find at The Gathering today, I'm going to start having some trouble repacking. In Which I Arrive and Various Things Happen
  • The literary essays chronicle a bibliomaniac's passion and obsession with naming and collecting.
  • The book chronicles the events leading up to the war.
  • That the said eclipse took away the light from the universal parts of the world, it appeareth that Eusebius witnesseth in his chronicles, which saith that he hath read in the dictes of the Ethnicians that there was in Bithynia, which is a province of Asia the less, a great earth shaking, and also the greatest darkness that might be, and also saith that in Nicene, which is a city of The Golden Legend, vol. 5
  • It is worth interrupting the chronicle to draw attention to a hitherto unnoted irony in a political career in which ironies instructively abound.
  • Nevertheless, neither the Chronicle nor the Historia Brittonum provides an acceptable alternative to the Bedan chronology.
  • She herself has said that being a working mother is hard and has chronicled her stressful days, and has complained of late that the public is unfairly mean to her. Blythe To Gwyneth: 'Take Care Of Yourself!'
  • The showdown between a district attorney and a Houston Chronicle reporter who refuses to reveal her sources moves into federal court Monday.
  • That's a lot of high-profile hoopla for a record that's essentially a chronicle of economic and emotional poverty.
  • This time the sanguinary tale takes place in an uncomfortable meeting of her Vampire Chronicles and Mayfair Witch books.
  • She put her bike into the rack outside the Ashmolean Museum, locked it, and walked across the road, pausing to buy a copy of the Oxford Chronicle from the newsstand before she went into the Randolph Hotel. Day of the Dandelion
  • But the San Francisco Chronicle declared that it is ‘a routine thriller, with Western frills and fringes’.
  • He wrote about scissors and shears in the September 1999 issue of The Chronicle.
  • The friars and their native assistants produced an immense number of grammars, dictionaries, catechisms, confessional manuals, sermon outlines, chronicles, and even religious dramas.
  • The book chronicles in vivid detail the boy's plight, starting with the relocation of his family to the Warsaw Ghetto.
  • But in some ways, this feels more like a medieval chronicle than a modern history.
  • The film has equal parts personal portrait, historical chronicle, and transcendental rumination.
  • Her book is not only a biography, but the detailed chronicle of a social milieu. The Times Literary Supplement
  • He was a mythographer, ethnographer, and chronicler of major significance.
  • The society pages chronicled the comings and goings of young Ethel and her parents as they yachted with the Astors or took lunch at the Newport Golf Club with the Vanderbilts or watched automobile parades alongside the Sedgwicks and the Goulds. Devil Dog
  • Jeremy Lewis, who has worked extensively in publishing and has chronicled the memoirs of other significant publishers, becomes the ideal biographer to evoke the life of a publisher.
  • Franks chronicles her own gradual, setback-filled restoration of a fractured father/daughter relationship.
  • Medieval chroniclers recorded omens at all great events; for example, Froissart noted a heavy thunderstorm, an eclipse of the sun, and a hovering circle of crows before the battle of Crécy in 1346.
  • The details are too well chronicled to be dismissed as exaggeration, or set aside as a necessary unpleasantness in the struggle. Times, Sunday Times
  • This political metamorphosis is not the one chronicled this week by the mainstream press in both Mexico and the United States.
  • This book is a chronicle of that period of history.
  • Her book A pinkes fun a toyter shtot (Record Book of a Dead City), published in Warsaw in 1926, was a historical chronicle of the town of Dubove (in the Ukraine) during this devastation. Rokhl Faygnberg (Imri).
  • That the said eclipse took away the light from the universal parts of the world, it appeareth that Eusebius witnesseth in his chronicles, which saith that he hath read in the dictes of the Ethnicians that there was in Bithynia, which is a province of Asia the less, a great earth shaking, and also the greatest darkness that might be, and also saith that in Nicene, which is a city of The Golden Legend, vol. 5
  • This book chronicles the series of misunderstandings. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since I’m boring you with my afib chronicles, I should give you an update: I’m still in fibrillation but feeling much better thanks to being on a beta blocker, Toprol, which slows my heart rate and makes stairs once again no big deal. The Afib Chronicle « BuzzMachine
  • His penchant for fast cars, castles, horses, jets, yachts, game lodges and bling is well chronicled.
  • The next day the miraculous body was shewn to the multitude, though it is honestly stated by the chronicler that the whole of it, including the face, was covered with linen, the only flesh visible being through a chink left in the cerecloths at the neck.
  • The newly - published chronicle breaks down into eight major parts.
  • As I drew a still fresher soil about the rows with my hoe, I disturbed the ashes of unchronicled nations who in primeval years lived under these heavens, and their small implements of war and hunting were brought to the light of this modern day. Walden
  • While the Mughal and Rajasthani miniatures chronicled wars and durbars and musical soirées, Praneet Soi's miniatures are about love and loss, about life in a changing India.
  • Maurice Isserman and Michael Kazin, the preeminent chroniclers of the Sixties, conclude that “Nothing changed so profoundly in the United States during the 1960s as American religion.” American Grace
  • The London 2012 story and its main characters are well chronicled. Times, Sunday Times
  • He and millions of other kids who raced through the five-book series are in for another mythologically infused adventure: Riordan's The Kane Chronicles: Book One: The Red Pyramid. 'Pyramid': It's another towering Riordan tale of mythology
  • The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle suggests that the Viking armies were led by jarls as often as kings.
  • In truth it is, quite on the contrary, a proof of the post-exilian date of the Priestly Code that it makes sons of Aaron of the priests of the central sanctuary, who, even in the traditional understanding (2Chronicles xiii. 10), are in one way or other simply the priests of Prolegomena
  • The Sex and Shanghai website, which was not immediately accessible today, chronicled in racy language the exploits of the author who claimed to be an English teacher at a local university. Hoax Blogsite Causes China Furor | Impact Lab
  • Online, Stowe has chronicled plenty of drama — wild storms, exotic sealife and his girlfriend, Soanya Ahmad becoming pregnant and going ashore — even as he mixes in shout-outs to sponsors who make his isolation possible. Internet opens up sponsorship door for world explorers
  • The dozen books of Rumpole short stories endure as a gorgeous chronicle of English class battiness and the absurdities of the law.
  • And the two last are in _Golfrieds's_ Historical Chronicles, in German, folio, 1674. A Trip to Paris in July and August 1792
  • The narrator in the urban nineteenth-century Russian novel is likewise informed by a coupling of the Russian chronicle tradition with the Parisian physiological sketch, filtering via the feuilleton into the serialized novel.
  • PESCA: The Yankees would hang on to win, and the Ranger's champagne would stay corked, un-iced and unchronicled. Major League Baseball Tracks Memorabilia
  • A government source told The Chronicle Herald the province is going to lower prices at the pumps by using the so-called interrupter clause Tuesday at midnight. The Chronicle Herald - Maintenance Feed
  • We who practice this dark and comical art are observers, chroniclers who've strayed into the amorphous world of experiential stories. Anne Z. Cooke: Is Travel Writing Journalism?
  • The book is described as a gossipy chronicle of the 2008 election. Las Vegas Sun Stories: All Sun Headlines
  • The main gallery chronicles the settling of Prescott.
  • In place of reading the important late colonial chronicle of Michoacan by Pablo Beaumont, he relies on redactions of it by the prominent historian Benedict Warren.
  • It hovers so close because like life, it's often unfair, unpoetic, plain contradictory, and retrospectively embarrassing - few of Darnielle's stories have chronicled passions so unadorned and believable.
  • Now Jewish groups and schools are being given special showings of an extraordinary film which chronicles Niemann's journey in search of her father.
  • Use of the term hippie did not catch on in the mass media until early 1967, after San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb Caen began referring to hippies in his daily columns. Archive 2007-10-01
  • It chronicles some great ripostes by caddies to golfers. The Sun
  • According to one chronicler, the land remained untilled for nine years.
  • Our chronicle is representative, but as we said, incomplete.
  • And frequently in the later books, as in (1 Chronicles 12: 8) ( "buckler"); (2 Chronicles 11: 12) (It varied much in length, weight and size.) d. Smith's Bible Dictionary
  • But Perfect View, poised on a ledge above Snow Hill and beneath Richmond Heights, gazing serenely across to Bathampton and what – in my young day as a cub reporter on the Bath Chronicle – we called the Admiralty hutments: Perfect View is the real thing. Britain's best views: Bath
  • These chronicles became the handbook for future travellers and ironically, for gold prospectors and desperados planning quick gains.
  • She chronicles the emergence of the independent tondo in Florence in the 1430s and its relatively brief apogee from 1480 to 1515.
  • Her book is a compelling chronicle of her struggles immediately following the accident, throughout the acute recovery phase, and into the early stages of rehabilitation.
  • And talking of papers, I hope you read in the 'Morning Chronicle' Landor's verses to my friend and England's poet, Mr.Browning. [ The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  • ‘There is a certain amount of disagreement among the authors who write of this matter,’ the chronicler says dryly.
  • The first from Condoleezza Rice, the former secretary of State and Stanford academic, it's called "Extraordinary Ordinary People" and it chronicles her life before the Bush administration growing up in segregated Birmingham, Alabama. The Art Of Writing And Selling Memoirs
  • The episode is described by all the chroniclers and although their accounts differ in detail, the outlines are clear.
  • IN three years of exile from herself Carol had certain experiences chronicled as important by the Dauntless, or discussed by the Jolly Seventeen, but the event unchronicled, undiscussed, and supremely controlling, was her slow admission of longing to find her own people. Main Street
  • It chronicled a series of warnings. Times, Sunday Times
  • Another publication worth your consideration is the Libraries section of the Chronicle of Higher Education, September 30, 2005. Archive 2005-09-01
  • He treasures it to this day, but not for the glorious version of events that it chronicles.

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