How To Use Dead hand In A Sentence

  • Really nothing more I can add to that except used in combination with your pillow its dead handy for wrapping bottles/breakables in your suitcase.
  • Cochrane merely nodded dumbly, staring at the approaching Dead Hands. LIRAEL: DAUGHTER OF THE CLAYR
  • And, above all, there are dealers in mummies, offering for sale mysteriously shaped coffins, mummy-cloths, dead hands, gods, scarabaei -- and the thousand and one things that this old soil has yielded for centuries like an inexhaustible mine. Egypt (La Mort de Philae)
  • Given the manner in which the development of Sligo has been stifled by sectional interest, it is hoped that the same dead hand of greed does not thwart the plans of the harbour board.
  • The dead hand of bureaucracy is slowing our progress.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • We need to free business from the dead hand of bureaucracy.
  • But even then the Dead Hand functioned, the spirit inside indifferent to any physical harm. LIRAEL: DAUGHTER OF THE CLAYR
  • 8: 05: Jonathan "You'll Have to Pry My Career From My Cold, Dead Hands" Karsh, "You've heard all the candidates speak, and now it's your turn: VOTE! Gabriel Delahaye: LiveBlogging Kid Nation: Democracy Inaction
  • The greater the freedom from the dead hand of state control, the better our health service is likely to become.
  • Bozo The Neoclown says: perhaps as a “half-time show” they can exhume the remains of charlie heston and pry the gun from his “cold, dead hands” on the stairs of the capitol? Think Progress » Gun Advocates Plan DC March On 15th Anniversary Of Oklahoma City Bombing
  • He will have to outspend the $200,000 he paid to buy his election last time, after negotiating a dead hand of preference deals which looks to have cruelled his bid for re-election.
  • If the crisis is used as an excuse to bring back the dead hand of collectivist policies, it is not only destructive of short-term economic well-being but also of long-term freedom and prosperity.
  • mortmain", a word coined to represent the condition where land has come into the possession of a dead hand, or in Latin mortua manus. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
  • After the respirator is disconnected, the camera pans over to the monitor as she gradually flatlines, followed by a close-up of Julia's dead hand being held by Sally Field. April 2004
  • The core of the neoliberal argument is the need to free enterprise and initiative from the dead hand of the state.
  • Talking to reporters, Dennis Hof of the Moonlite Bunny Ranch said, "Harry Reid will have to pry the cathouse keys from my cold, dead hands. Harry Reid, prostitution and crickets
  • The "oppressive past influence" sense of both "mortmain" and "dead hand" developed from the idea of the dead exercising posthumous control over their property by dictating how it must be used after they die. Latest Articles
  • mortmain, a statute restricting the conveyance of land to the “dead hand” of a religious organization oyez, often calqued as hear ye! The Volokh Conspiracy » The influence of French words in English legal terminology
  • All looks up for Fitz until he and Nellie - doing a spot of unofficial undertaking - find a gold nugget in the dead hand of one of their clients.
  • Moses was talkng about taking away his guns from his "cold, dead hands" but The Dawg is not concerned about firearms but comestibles so here is my story. From My Cold, Dead Hands
  • State legislatures and Congress are no longer gripped as they once were by the dead hand of privilege.
  • The collection ends with mock front pages imagining the paper's distant past and future, including a news flash from its "tricentennial" year of 2056, "Grave Robbers Pry Valuable Rifle From Charlton Heston's Cold, Dead Hands. NYT > Home Page
  • Upon this granite hd a master mason was fashioning the likeness of the mummiform Pharaoh, with his arms crossed and the crook and flail gripped in his dead hands. River God
  • Then there was Marta from Spartanburg, who was fleeing the dead hand of middle-class rectitude.
  • mortgage, literally a “dead pledge”; a pledge by which the landowner remained in possession of the property he staked as security. mortmain, a statute restricting the conveyance of land to the “dead hand” of a religious organization oyez, often calqued as hear ye!, The Volokh Conspiracy » The influence of French words in English legal terminology
  • I knew it was a woman from the bungling, unmanlike way that pistol was laid in the dead hand; the only question I had to answer was _which_ woman -- Fifi, Lady Stavornell, or this wretched little hypocrite. Cleek, the Master Detective

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy