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How To Use Dearly In A Sentence

  • 12: 19: "Not defending [Douay: 'revenging'] yourselves, my dearly beloved. Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • I would dearly like / love to know what he was thinking.
  • Grandmother displayed all the warmth, enthusiasm, and flamboyance that she had loved so dearly in her brother Theodore.
  • The bottom line is we would dearly love some government assistance there.
  • If there have been improvements in the NHS, they have been dearly bought.
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  • The Baiga dearly loves the common country liquor made from the mahua flower, and this is consumed as largely as funds will permit of at weddings, funerals and other social gatherings, and also if obtainable at other times. The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India Volume II
  • Flemings, and plans of bitter enmity against them; and the sight of his murdered father, with that look and tone of the old Dane, fired his spirit, and breaking from his trance of silent awe and grief, he exclaimed, "I see it, and dearly shall the traitor Fleming abye it! The Little Duke
  • He thought it without morbidity for he had loved his brother dearly. IN LOVE AND WAR
  • Lord Glenvarloch as they left him, “You shall dearly abye this insult — we will meet again.” The Fortunes of Nigel
  • The fourth person Eddie meets is the young Marguerite whom he loves dearly.
  • It cost them dearly in the end. Times, Sunday Times
  • They are the ones who will pay dearly if it all goes wrong. The Sun
  • What may cost the taxpayer dearly is appointing a new group of politicians to eminent posts with poorly-defined functions.
  • But ignoring it or treating it with condescendence, motivated by the achievements in Libya, would cost Obama dearly, especially if he fails to take decisive action in Syria or provides Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon -- as well as the regime in Damascus -- with a way out. Raghida Dergham: How Will Iran and Hezbollah Respond to the Syrian Regime's Predicament?
  • Though, as Mark Twain noted, many Britons "dearly love a lord," most of them have no idea how to address one in the vocative case or on an envelope. Peerless Titles
  • Of course to get a proper valuation would cost money which the applicants can dearly afford.
  • The weakness in their defense has already cost them dearly this season.
  • He also knows how to keep them in order without getting annoyed - a virtue some parents would dearly love.
  • Besides, being an Irish boy, he dearly loved a "shindy," and Winnipeg's wide streets provided ample room in which to dodge a too powerful enemy. Irish Ned The Winnipeg Newsy
  • Yet she could not help herself and paid dearly for this impudence.
  • My dearly beloved has always driven whatever car he craved at the time.
  • Again, though, a lot of people made uncharacteristic mistakes at inopportune moments that cost Scotland dearly.
  • This is another vital element which people so dearly miss through being unemployed. Life Without Work
  • This sudden destruction and damage to a people I feel so dearly for is a shock.
  • Okay, so passionately kissing the dearly deceased is creepy as all get out, but what about Bill Hader swapping spit with a dog? Watch: Zach Galifianakis “Pageant Talk” SNL Sketch (Video)
  • A week before the landmine blast, he had emailed home to say he loved his family dearly. The Sun
  • Every mother loves her children dearly.
  • It had been done before, to Oppenheimer, and he had paid dearly for the confidence he reposed in Warden Atherton's tool. Chapter 5
  • Even her husband, it is said, upon whose fortunes her talents and address had produced such emphatic influence, regarded her with respectful awe rather than confiding attachment; and report said, there were times when he considered his grandeur as dearly purchased at the expense of domestic thraldom. The Bride of Lammermoor
  • It puts City under pressure and cost them dearly yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • Those who dearly wish to see the public sector succeed are raising hell about squandered public money. The Sun
  • I would dearly like to see a reformation of how politicians are paid. The Sun
  • The two of them have a beautiful relationship and they both love each other very dearly.
  • In the final analysis, though, it was errors in defence that cost the Cougars dearly.
  • Then she sent for her chariot of green rushes, ornamented with May dewdrops, which she particularly valued and always collected with great care; and ordered her six short-tailed moles to carry them all back to the well-known pastures, which they did in a remarkably short time; and Sylvain and Jocosa were overjoyed to see their dearly-loved home once more after all their toilful wanderings. The Green Fairy Book
  • They were his family, and anyone who tried to hurt them would suffer dearly by his hands.
  • This is another vital element which people so dearly miss through being unemployed. Life Without Work
  • And indeed I think she would have done it off her that minute had I pressed her, but I lacked the boldness thereto; and I said: Nay, but would she bring it unto me the next time we met; and forsooth she brought it folded in a piece of green silk, and dearly have I loved it and kissed it sithence. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • Anyhow, as much as I dearly love my oven-microwave, there are certain unavoidable setbacks. Archive 2005-05-01
  • Between their mountain fastness and the dearly loved spring lay the host of the Philistines; but their love for their leader feared no enemies. A Book of Golden Deeds
  • I would dearly love to spend the time on the 20% of decent, honest, genuine victims but I really dont have the time due to having to trace knacker Ned to update him on how the investigation into his complaint of “theft of giro” is coming along. How “Police Performance” Fraud Works. « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • Meanwhile, there's a new arrival in town: the glowingly blond Archangel Raziel last seen in Lamb has come "dirtside" on a "miracle mission" involving Josh's wish and reviving the town's dearly departed. Archive 2008-12-01
  • Penguin Group Australia turns over $120 million a year from printing words but a one-word misprint has cost it dearly. Disinformation
  • It seems wonderfully natural and without vanity that he takes the Eucharist from a splendid golden challis but blesses the babies, the brides, grooms and the dearly departed from a salsa bottle. Small Brown Bishops
  • I'd dearly like to sponsor the road that goes past my house. Times, Sunday Times
  • That triumph of spin over substance has cost this administration dearly.
  • I loved the latter dearly, but everybody just knew - the two teams were not in the same league.
  • The Blues wing-back is currently in talks with the club and dearly wants to extend his stay in East Anglia.
  • I love my siblings dearly and don't begrudge them the money. Times, Sunday Times
  • These last few have been days to hold on to: bright sunshine through fat-bottomed clouds; ringlet butterflies flickering over flowering grasses; yellow-and-black-banded cinnabar moth caterpillars twitching as they spun threads to tie themselves to ragwort; bright pink lip-gloss heads of pyramidal orchids – these things once observed becoming dearly held. Country diary: Wenlock Edge
  • Britain was to pay dearly for its lack of resolve.
  • Mrs. Manning! she sometimes thought that proud title dearly purchased by listening to his daily criticisms on appearance, language, manners, which had been esteemed stylish enough in their day. Evenings at Donaldson Manor Or, The Christmas Guest
  • Only Miss Everett "croaked," and, dearly as she loved her, Tom and Some Other Girls A Public School Story
  • The Kremlin would dearly like to repeat this exercise. Times, Sunday Times
  • He would dearly love to see his mother again.
  • They are then called upon to "weave the warp, and weave the woof," perhaps, with no great propriety; for it is by crossing the _woof_ with the _warp_ that men _weave_ the _web_ or piece; and the first line was dearly bought by the admission of its wretched correspondent, "give ample room and verge enough [198]. The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. in Nine Volumes Volume the Eighth: The Lives of the Poets, Volume II
  • I love my siblings dearly and don't begrudge them the money. Times, Sunday Times
  • We used to be very close indeed and I used to love him very dearly.
  • It is not that we do not want it enough but that we want it too dearly. Times, Sunday Times
  • He had never heard anyone give more orders than his present Bishop and he dearly wanted to try his hand.
  • The Profitboss steers clear of such indulgence, for in the end everyone pays dearly for the privilege of the few.
  • Boris, who I love dearly, is furious about the rampant double standards of those dreadful Tabloid Newspapers. Archive 2007-02-18
  • I would dearly love to know where it is and have it passed over to me so that I can pass it down to my family.
  • And if that sounds like the politics of the playground, it's made all the more infantile because in many ways Cuba has plenty of things that America would dearly love and needs.
  • To acquire the friendship of their emirs, the two factions vied with each other in baseness and profusion: the dexterity of Cantacuzene obtained the preference: but the succor and victory were dearly purchased by the marriage of his daughter with an infidel, the captivity of many thousand Christians, and the passage of the Ottomans into Europe, the last and fatal stroke in the fall of the Roman empire. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • This is something that the proponents of ‘strong’ copyright would dearly love to stamp out.
  • “By my honour,” said the baron, “I would gladly know who has dared to array the poor knave thus; and I trust he should dearly aby his outrecuidance, were he the best, save one, in England.” Waverley
  • Before its end, he would take his men through a minefield, capture a trench full of German soldiers without firing a shot - and enjoy a tot of rum from a jug he clung to as dearly as life itself when he was submerged below the landing craft.
  • And they will continue to deeply aggrieve, and hinder, those who held them, and loved them, so dearly. Grant Brooke, M.Div.: Hindsight: Burying the Ghost of Ground Zero
  • In general, the agreeable fumes of the "Aina" were created by one's own inhalations; but Donjalolo deeming the solace too dearly purchased by any exertion of the royal lungs, regaled himself through those of his attendants, whose lips were as moss-rose buds after a shower. Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2)
  • Dearly Beloved’, the elderly minister started, his voice loud and booming across the abbey with the mike.
  • At present, the sands with their donkey rides, funfairs, bouncy castles and little shops selling souvenirs, postcards, buckets and spades and refreshments are dearly loved by older holiday makers and many family visitors.
  • She loved her sister dearly and always would, but sometimes Staicie had the infuriating knack of being able to effortlessly exasperate a saint.
  • This cost him dearly with one of his most practical machines - the trench digger.
  • Backs on both sides had dominated the play in that first half and every score had to be bought dearly.
  • I love that boy dearly, but when he's not-entirely-sober, he tends to spend large amounts of time staring at me somewhat blankly, which is really unnerving when I'm trying to concentrate on something else, particularly if it's something like writing, where I have to use a different portion of my brain than I do for photoshopping, or reading something, as far as I can tell. Jaxraven Diary Entry
  • I commit never to live, without thou shalt dearly abye it. Wat Tyler’s Rebellion. How the Nobles of England Were in Great Peril to Have Been Destroyed, and How These Rebels Were Punished and Sent Home to Their Own Houses
  • In consequence of this they loved him dearly.
  • It has already provided some remarkable antedatings, particularly of now recognizable new senses of core words such as ‘neglect’ and ‘dearly’.
  • But whereas the wretched Io had to pay dearly for the distinction, Europa was exceedingly fortunate.
  • Certainly, an excessive capacity for fear leads to all sorts of problems that many people would dearly love to be free of, such as phobias and panic attacks.
  • If you really want to redye a jacket -- or those gloves -- get ready to pay dearly; leather-repair experts are likely to charge $100 or more to redye your jacket. Proper Care for Leather
  • But she came in the authority and integrity of herself, that was also, most dearly, most marvelously, himself as well -- permeative, penetrative, real, a subtle breath named Foes
  • Since women voters tend to decide late in the campaign, one wrong remark can cost a candidate dearly.
  • He must so dearly have wished the first two sets could have been instantly erased from memory.
  • There could be no more fitting tribute to the dearly departed TV Burp if he was to walk off with all three. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although she would dearly love to know if it was the norm for women to follow him home!
  • I am referring to the reports of miracles, faith healers, visitations by angelic or demonic beings, ghosts or goblins, or contact with dearly departed friends and relatives.
  • This careless attitude was to cost me dearly. THE LAST OF THE GENTLEMEN ADVENTURERS: Coming of Age in the Arctic
  • We need to get rid of the stealth taxes that cost the low income families so dearly.
  • There was a flushed look on his face, as if the thrill of danger and adventure was something he dearly missed.
  • I dearly hope you've got swim shorts on, because the idea that you're reading my book reviews in the nude is more than my feeble mind can process. REVIEW: Duma Key by Stephen King
  • 'are called upon to "Weave the warp, and weave the woof," perhaps with no great propriety; for it is by crossing the _woof_ with the _warp_ that men weave the _web_ or piece; and the first line was dearly bought by the admission of its wretched correspondent, "Give ample room and verge enough. Life of Johnson, Volume 2 1765-1776
  • The Taj Mahal was constructed as a monument of eternal love by the Emperor Shah Jahan Taj Mahal for his dearly departed wife.
  • I would dearly love to hear the cry of ‘hey, fair go mate’ over here a little more often.
  • Good enough for me, I dearly hope that this school doesn't end up to be a prissy school in which everyone wears khakis and blouses all the time.
  • Yet, those brief hints do not tell us what we would dearly like to know: how the daily and festal ritual of sacrifice was carried out.
  • One of our dearly loved families is moving to Calgary, so we had a baseball-and-picnic send-off for them.
  • He's not perfect, he slips up now and then, and when it does, it always costs him dearly, but Lord, he does shuffle loose-jointedly through his adventures with a skill and grace I couldn't help but envy. Archive 2009-10-01
  • Tamsin plays Fran, a neurotic, sex-starved thirty-something who loves Bernard dearly, but is grateful for the arrival of Manny: somebody else to suffer Bernard's moods.
  • Ordinary people are paying dearly for the mistakes of this administration.
  • I should dearly love to be musical, to be able to play an instrument.
  • Don't you wish - as I dearly do - that this were written in stone above the formal entranceway to our federal Department of Education?
  • I liked that because I loved my grandmother dearly and knew she loved me just as much.
  • It is said that the player has claimed he loves his wife dearly. The Sun
  • We love him dearly and want to help him. Times, Sunday Times
  • O, how dearly will you pay for your unevangelical life if you do not repent and amend! My Life in Christ, or Moments of Spiritual Serenity and Contemplation, of Reverent Feeling, of Earnest Self-Amendment, and of Peace in God
  • It was a big race he dearly wanted to win. The Sun
  • Patrick and I love each other dearly and he still lives in Ottringham.
  • There are so many things about this country that I have grown to love dearly.
  • In the first place, because Mawley was so antipathetical to me, that I dearly loved to combat his assertions; and, secondly, on account of his disparaging my beau ideal of all that is grand and good in a writer and in man. She and I, Volume 1
  • He had done it the last time, and suffered dearly, no matter how hip people thought it was.
  • I run Excel 2007 at work (which i LOVE dearly), and was running it in compatability mode (97-2003), so that it would save in that format etc and thus be openable by me at home, and by others. August 17th, 2006
  • Britain was to pay dearly for its lack of resolve.
  • She tried to pretend she was revealing a dearly kept secret.
  • Lilly blasted a deflected shot against the bar from long range as the Americans continued to press but their profligate finishing almost cost them dearly.
  • He spoke for a while, recalling the dearly departed, and then (when all the audience were in the room) said that he would now lead them in the dead man's favourite hymn - Jerusalem. March 26th, 2006
  • They have to learn that there are people who love them dearly without knowing how to express or show their inner feelings.
  • Maureen Whelan was best described as a lady and was dearly loved by relatives, friends and neighbours.
  • All this loss - of innocence, of dearly loved creatures - and yet, there is not a word of sentimentality or taste of treacle.
  • He was a young man with a promising future and all of us will miss him dearly. The Sun
  • My parents gave me a small dog which I love dearly, but she has caused havoc by urinating on the lawn, staining it yellow.
  • We'd dearly love to grab squares of iridescent fabric and twist them into fabulously flattering Jerry Hallesque wraps.
  • One of his greatest joys in life was spending time with his family, whom he loved dearly and by whom he will be sadly missed.
  • We would dearly love to sell our flat and move to the country.
  • I would dearly like to be able to tally the total amount their varied and many fundraisers for deserving causes have accumulated over the years.
  • It's an event I would dearly love to win again and I'll be trying hard this time round.
  • ` ` By my honour, '' said the Baron, ` ` I would gladly know who has dared to array the poor knave thus; and I trust he should dearly abye his outrecuidance, were he the best, save one, in England. '' The Waverley
  • I, being particularly sensitive about such things, would dearly love it to look as professional as possible.
  • It was her sympathy, her love for him, and her implicit faith in him, which made the Prophet love her dearly.
  • Wolves would pay dearly for those misses. The Sun
  • She would be nestled in the downy pillow she loved so dearly.
  • What's more, the fixed cost of a space at home would cost dearly as well.
  • You make a bad investment that costs you dearly. Times, Sunday Times
  • My parents gave me a small dog which I love dearly, but she has caused havoc by urinating on the lawn, staining it yellow.
  • However, switching workers from final-salary to money-purchase schemes costs pensioners dearly. Times, Sunday Times
  • In accepting the position, he told the Board that he had at long last made his dearly departed mother very proud.
  • We were talking the other night about family, and he began to wax poetic about his dearly departed grandmother.
  • So dearly do we love our own voice that we cannot bear to hear it mixed with that of others -- perhaps drowned; and then our bashfulness tongue-ties us in the hush expectant of our "golden opinions," when all eyes are turned to the speechless "old man eloquent," and you might hear a tangle dishevelling itself in Neæra's hair. Recreations of Christopher North, Volume 2
  • Most heroes, being only mortal, in reality have clay feet and thus are subject to debunking and the type of revisionist history that our modern professors and academicians so dearly love.
  • A man who dearly loved to see his side win, he was never known to criticise players when they suffered defeat.
  • We would dearly love to sell our flat and move to the country.
  • And I think the one thing I could not forgive is that anyone should interfere: _anyone_, even you two whom I dearly love. Mary Gray
  • We love him dearly but seen him for a month and worried. The Sun
  • Your graciousness is something which we will dearly cherish. Special Luncheon Meeting
  • Those who dearly wish to see the public sector succeed are raising hell about squandered public money. The Sun
  • I would dearly love to speak to anyone who thinks they can help us.
  • Then someone much older than me whom I love dearly pointed out the folly of an apple tree in an urban garden: I'd be bothered non-stop by boys scrumping for apples.
  • Neville's genius was to subvert and turn round press attacks on Oz, but they could still cost dearly.
  • I don’t think they give a rat’s ass over Iran’s nuclear ambitions but they care DEARLY about anything that could cause finacial pain ie a oil embargo OR a war-induced one and they will not take kindly to any nation that would cause this. we may be able to swat Iran cuz they are small and ‘weak’, but mark my works, someone is going to ’swat’ us right back… Think Progress » ThinkFast: September 15, 2006
  • According to Dr Gerard McMahon, lecturer in HR management at the Dublin Institute of Technology, the use of unmethodical, biased and inefficient recruitment practices in Ireland are costing employers dearly.
  • She dearly wanted to see her family and persuade them to forget the ill-feeling that had split the Corosini apart.
  •     Do dearly love her; yea, beshrew the damned wrong, Poems and Fragments
  • And he had a younger sister who loved him dearly, who had no idea that he was a hobbledehoy, being somewhat of a hobbledehoy herself. The Small House at Allington
  • Hazard was almost made to pay dearly for that error. The Sun
  • They are then called upon to "weave the warp, and weave the woof," perhaps, with no great propriety; for it is by crossing the _woof_ with the _warp_ that men _weave_ the _web_ or piece; and the first line was dearly bought by the admission of its wretched correspondent, "give ample room and verge enough [198]. The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. in Nine Volumes Volume the Eighth: The Lives of the Poets, Volume II
  • Some learned to use the mischance for favors... few of us begrudged them the extra rations or trivial treats so dearly bought. THE CURSE OF CHALION
  • For example, he wa spaid dearly by JP Moragn and citigroup ... Undefined
  • But what I'd dearly love to know is what on earth made him so suspicious of me?
  • “Is not your name Leander, (said the amazed hermit) “and have I the happiness to meet with and entertain the youth whom I so dearly loved?” The Inhuman Stepmother, or the History of Miss Harriot Montague
  • You might not think it to see my trotters in trainers, but I would dearly love to be able to get away with impractical heels.
  • Though he missed her dearly, he accepted his new role and took to it with eagerness and dedication.
  • We must love one another dearly, and help one another. The Children of the New Forest
  • There's a fierce gray bird with a bending beak," that the boys loved so dearly to "declaim;" and another poem by this last author, which we all liked to read, partly from a childish love of the tragic, and partly for its graphic description of an avalanche's movement: -- A New England girlhood, outlined from memory (Beverly, MA)
  • I would dearly like our son to learn a language as he grows up in an increasingly global economy. Times, Sunday Times
  • His brother officers loved him dearly and we will remember him for his infectious smile and wicked sense of humour. Times, Sunday Times
  • Harry loved his sister very dearly, but he was not inclined to "carolling;" and the repression and constraint were soon evident through all the conventional efforts to be "merry. The Squire of Sandal-Side A Pastoral Romance
  • I would dearly like her to get in touch. The Sun
  • We should not look back unless it is to derive useful lessons from past errors, and for the purpose of profiting by dearly bought experience.
  • Over the years they had been through a lot of crises together, and she loved him dearly. DOUBLE DECEIT
  • If you refuse to cooperate with us, you will pay dearly for it.
  • But removing a fare-paying passenger to make way for an air miles traveller costs carriers dearly.
  • I love him dearly but could never contemplate having to live with him twenty four hours a day seven days a week every day of the year.
  • She sounded scornful when she said this, and William was offended, for he loved his older brother dearly.
  • Vulcan was to Venus; for he being a sweaty fuliginous blacksmith, was dearly beloved of her, when fair Apollo, nimble Mercury were rejected, and the rest of the sweet-faced gods forsaken. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • People are growing tired of suffering through wakes in funeral homes where friends and family gather around the 'dearly departed' in poorly-lit, pastel-coloured rooms.
  • Well, -- suppose it had pleased God to cast my lot some whither, that the daily work I had to do was mighty dislikeful to me; and some other maiden that I knew, had that to do withal which I would have loved dearly: -- were it ill for me to wish that my business had been like hers? Clare Avery A Story of the Spanish Armada
  • For this man, indeed, the reliques, the trappings, the minaret-crowned monuments, the barbaric chants and gold ornaments, all the thousand rich things that recalled Muscovy and the buried empire to him, and that he loved so dearly, were valuable chiefly because they were the emblems of the time that bore the happy present. Musical Portraits Interpretations of Twenty Modern Composers
  • The bride and bridegroom, for instance, love each other very dearly. The Happy Prince and Other Tales
  • 'are called upon to "Weave the warp, and weave the woof," perhaps with no great propriety; for it is by crossing the _woof_ with the _warp_ that men weave the _web_ or piece; and the first line was dearly bought by the admission of its wretched correspondent, "Give ample room and verge enough. Life of Johnson, Volume 2 1765-1776
  • And I would dearly love to be unshackled from my bookish heritage and have the culture, freedom and the nerve to join in.
  • It is a rare, though dearly bought, opportunity.
  • Ordinary people are paying dearly for the mistakes of this administration.
  • He recovered from his quintuple bypass in record time and resumed his quest to "save" the sport he dearly loves.
  • Atlantic Yards' new plans show residential buildings that seem to be doing their best to hold their tongues, make nothing more than the blandest statement possible, and pray dearly not to offend the sensibility that has made Brooklyn so attractive to new residents in the past few decades. Bruce Ratner's Exercise in Bland
  • One lapse of concentration costs you dearly at this level and any mistakes are generally punished with a goal.
  • I believe, too, that there are many analogies between the spoil of skiing, which I dearly love, and doing theoretical work in science - the challenge and sense of excitement when the slope is a little more difficult than one feels comfortable with, or the boredom if too easy, or the probable disaster if too difficult. Rudolph A. Marcus - Banquet Speech
  • He paid dearly for his careless slip.
  • What if there was a telephone to heaven ... and you called your dearly departed, and they said "i'm glad i'm not with you anymore. leave me alone. just leave me alone. Wench77 Diary Entry
  • He surrendered in October, but it was a prize too dearly bought.
  • She loved you dearly when you were born. Times, Sunday Times
  • His love for us cost him dearly. Christianity Today
  • CPA Laura Peebles , who specializes in individual income taxes at Deloitte Tax LLP in Washington and has two orange tabbies she dearly loves, has some suggestions: Unleashing Deductions for Your Pets
  • Lawrence's poem that is "slow to mate," serious novelists are often years, if not decades and decades, behind in their calculi about what matters most dearly in their native lands. The Poser And The (Former) Planet Pluto
  • This careless attitude was to cost me dearly. THE LAST OF THE GENTLEMEN ADVENTURERS: Coming of Age in the Arctic
  • But the enemy will pay dearly later, on top of what it is paying at present for its reckless policies of greed and expansionism.
  • The economic rise of China inevitably means it will play a larger political and diplomatic role, and it would dearly love to displace America as the dominant Western Pacific power.
  • But the support of the other members of the world community will be more dearly bought.
  • I will miss all of you dearly, and I will think of you when I am sipping wine, slicing saucissons and wearing my beret.
  • This worries me a little, possibly because it lacks any of those conceits of artistic expression which my vanity holds so dearly.

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