How To Use Disgorge In A Sentence

  • Cars drew up to disgorge a wedding party.
  • All three buses stopped outside the pool, and each disgorged a tumbling jumbling pile of wee kiddies, clutching their swim-bags and chattering like flocks of birds on a nature programme.
  • `Open, sesame," Rhodes said stolidly, and Virtual One began to disgorge streaming ribbons of data into the air.
  • The pipe disgorges sewage into the sea.
  • It is known to harass birds as large as Red-tailed Hawks or vultures, causing them to disgorge food.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • At the base of the camp, a recent avalanche had disgorged burlap sacks, old door frames, mortar boxes, rolls of bailing wire, and pieces of fiberglass.
  • By now the cross-country vehicle had disgorged its complement of heavyweight occupants, also dressed in identical blue suits.
  • Circling seagulls swooped down and ate what Agnes had disgorged.
  • Instant cash, the product which is disgorged from ATM machines, could only be born in a network.
  • The court then concluded that the civil disgorgement remedy provides an appropriate "guidepost" for computing how much of the gain is attributable to the "deception" of insider trading. TheRacetotheBottom - Headline News
  • If the hook is easily accessible then the use of a disgorger or long nose pliers will enable the hook to be removed often without taking the fish from the water.
  • When the train disgorged its passengers at Queen Street, there was a huge communal feeling of pent-up anger yet nowhere to vent it.
  • They quickly identified the one that had collected the papers earlier in the day and were able to pinpoint where it was later scheduled to disgorge its contents.
  • The result is likely to be disgorgement of significant amounts of money as restitution, says one official.
  • France was made to disgorge the enormous gains she had made under Napoleon, but there was no attempt to reduce her to a second-rate power and she was speedily welcomed back into the comity of nations.
  • Flies disgorge digestive fluid onto their food to soften it up.
  • Was this extraordinary house about to disgorge a genuine Whistler? WHISTLER IN THE DARK
  • On the back label was a hand-printed date of when the wine was "disgorged," when the sediment in the neck of a bottle of bubbly was removed and the temporary cap replaced by a real cork. How to Read a Wine Label
  • Alas, on freeing his pooch from the bathroom a second time he realised it had disgorged the contents of the first meal all over the floor.
  • The SEC hopes to impose a fine and disgorgement of the losses Cuban avoided by selling the shares. Lawyers for Cuban could not immediately be reached for comment.
  • The band disgorged its voltaic music—a far cry from the formal waltzes, one-steps, tangos, and fox-trots to which New York had been accustomed. A Renegade History of the United States
  • In May the district judge ruled that disgorgement was available to the Government as a remedy.
  • Of course, the court may still grant a disgorgement order merely where it is satisfied that an investor has been adversely affected.
  • `Open, sesame," Rhodes said stolidly, and Virtual One began to disgorge streaming ribbons of data into the air.
  • I think their best bet is going to be suing the executives of the company to have them disgorge their ill-gotten gains.
  • The result is likely to be disgorgement of significant amounts of money as restitution, says one official.
  • Cramming facts into your head so you can disgorge them on to paper in a three-hour exam requires little if any true understanding of your subject matter.
  • (As a backup argument, Marks also contends that one type of relief he seeks under RICO - "disgorgement" - is an "equitable" form of relief, which is not subject to a rigid statute of limitations, but subject only to a more flexible doctrine of time limitation known as "laches. FORTUNE Features
  • I will add that the cork for this bottle had the biggest mushroom I have ever seen on a wine disgorged a decade ago.
  • The vanguard is there already in the monolithic casino that dominates the harbour area, where the ferries from Hong Kong disgorge their passengers.
  • The arrivals terminal has its own rhythm: the early desultory pulses of the automatic door, then the great disgorge, and finally, as the crowd wilts away, the trickle of presumably more complicated arrivals.
  • Australian ocean freighters disgorge tons of iron ore onto conveyor belts leading to a 105-meter-high blast furnace.
  • The riches he swallowed he shall disgorge ; God shall compel his belly to disown them.
  • Even if yeast autolysis ceases when the wine is disgorged, better-quality young sparkling wines with their high levels of acidity can often improve considerably with an additional year or so in bottle.
  • The elevator reached the proper level and disgorged its occupants.
  • As a result Abu Jandal disgorged a great deal of information about the terror network. The Longest War
  • Can it really be the case, it is asked, that in such circumstances the thief cannot be required to disgorge the property which, in equity, represents the stolen coins?
  • The wine must spend at least nine months on its lees before disgorgement, achieve at least four atmospheres of pressure, and attain an alcoholic strength of between 10.8 and 12.8 per cent by volume.
  • We moved around the rest of the morning, catching hardhead catfish (which Willcox unhooked with a long disgorger, to avoid the venomous spines in its dorsal and pectoral fins) and even a young goliath grouper, or jewfish (a protected species). A Keys Report: Fishing the Backcountry with Executive Editor Mike Toth
  • Gold disgorged by central banks is quickly absorbed by private monetary demand.
  • The riches he swallowed he shall disgorge ; God shall compel his belly to disown them.
  • After as short a period as 18 months (the legal minimum for nonvintage Champagne) or three years (the vintage minimum), or as long as 10 years, the bottle is "disgorged": The cap is removed; the yeast is forced out; the wine is topped off with a small "dosage" of wine and sugar (the higher the sugar level, the sweeter the resulting Champagne) and the bottle is finally corked. Bubble by Bubble
  • As far as he was concerned, I was the golden goose, and he wanted to retain a monopoly on the disposal of any eggs I might disgorge. TOY SHOP
  • The judge has forced EXIP to disgorge $400 000 in illegal profits.
  • Thus the fiduciary must disgorge the profit that he makes as a fiduciary without the informed consent of his principal and the fact that if the principal had been asked he would have agreed is irrelevant.
  • Per his suggestion, we storedthe bottleupsidedown and disgorged it underwater, allowing the yeast plug to shoot out before turning the bottle rightside up. What We Drank
  • The aftmost portion of Titan’s secondary hull, at the bottom of the central viewer, disgorged a small bright object that quickly dwindled in size until it was lost in the radiant taffy pull of local geomagnetic forces. Star Trek: Typhon Pact: Seize the Fire
  • The wine is aged on the lees in the bottle for about three years prior to disgorgement.
  • His contemporary, the geographer Strabo, argued that the sea had once been a lake and that the many rivers that disgorge into it had, in the recent past, filled it to overflowing.
  • The former CEO settled those charges too, agreeing to $45 million in disgorgement of ill-gotten gains. Mozilo PaysRecord Penalty For Securities Fraud
  • A blast of heat rushed across me as the house disgorged a ball of fire. Mercy Kill
  • They crop grief after grief, chewing the cud of grievance; for when they are full of it they disgorge and regorge the abhorred sum, and have stuff for their spleens for many The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay
  • The SEC hopes to impose a fine and disgorgement of the losses Cuban avoided by selling the shares. Lawyers for Cuban could not immediately be reached for comment.
  • Equity will intervene by way of constructive trust, not only to compel a defendant to restore the plaintiff's property to him, but also to require a defendant to disgorge property which he should have acquired, if at all, for the plaintiff.
  • I get on a train, and am disgorged on a dark, houseless Merrylee Road.
  • Was this extraordinary house about to disgorge a genuine Whistler? WHISTLER IN THE DARK
  • As of Sept. 30, the SEC was owed $657 million in fines and "disgorgement" - the surrender of ill-gotten gains - but the agency expected that $575 million of that would go uncollected. The Washington Post: National, World & D.C. Area News and Headlines - washingtonpost.com
  • Nor do they disgorge millions of tonnes of carbon dioxide - one of the main causes of the climate chaos that is triggering floods, storms and droughts around the world.
  • Some are flights of architectural fantasy providing unimaginable luxury for as little as six guests, others are huge hotel style abominations that disgorge legions of the dreaded zebra-striped minibuses.
  • One is that the small investor who made some money during the bull market, may get some back through what we call disgorgement (ph) and that some of the executives may have to hand over some money, and I think the darker lesson for people like Dick Parsons of AOL Time Warner, who have a tremendously difficult job right now, they're just going to be dealing with lawyers for the next 12 months, if not longer. CNN Transcript Aug 23, 2002
  • He tried to disgorge thoughts of Kira, to focus on where he was going and what he had to do.
  • A ferry arrives one afternoon to disgorge a gaggle of youth from neighboring islands.
  • They roar up onto the glacier in a cloud of diesel exhaust, then disgorge hundreds of tourists onto a patch of plowed ice and snow.
  • The ground had opened to disgorge a boiling stream of molten lava.
  • They readily disgorge their prey to feed their young.
  • The ship disgorged its passengers at the dock.
  • As far as he was concerned, I was the golden goose, and he wanted to retain a monopoly on the disposal of any eggs I might disgorge. TOY SHOP
  • The final stages in the process are the remuage and disgorgement.
  • As far as he was concerned, I was the golden goose, and he wanted to retain a monopoly on the disposal of any eggs I might disgorge. TOY SHOP
  • He singularly fails to mention the fact that this ban was implemented following protests from the green lobby that the funicular would disgorge hundred of thousands into an easily damaged alpine environment.
  • She was trying hard to disgorge a fish bone.
  • Instant cash, the product which is disgorged from ATM machines, could only be born in a network.
  • Tete de cuvee champagne is aged in the firm's cellars often for six to eight years, sometimes longer, before the wine is disgorged.
  • This included cork and willow floats, a disgorger, a ceramic vessel with pouring lip, a wooden bowl, a leather flask, knives and wooden knife sheaths.
  • He found it difficult at first to disgorge himself from himself: consciousness was life's large intestine. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • Ivan Boesky, the former arbitrager, agreed to pay $100 million to settle SEC charges, but half of that amount was disgorgement of illicit profits. Rajaratnam Ordered to Pay Record SEC Penalty
  • Over the millennia, the Indus river cut some 17 major and numerous minor creeks in the region as it disgorged into the Arabian Sea in the south.
  • It's tough getting executives to disgorge profits from hot IPOs.
  • Actual benefit may be thought of as a restitutionary or disgorgement measure.
  • There's nothing worse than starting fishing and being short of small essentials like shot or disgorgers.
  • Of course, the court may still grant a disgorgement order merely where it is satisfied that an investor has been adversely affected.
  • She was trying hard to disgorge a fish bone.
  • It held scores of multi-shaped machines which, for a stipulated sum, would disgorge a variety of stamps, forms, envelopes and other postal miscellanea.
  • Through the summer buses disgorge day trippers and sightseer's cars choke the narrow streets.
  • After inviting the tourists to disgorge from the coach and experience the scenery, he was stunned by their reaction.
  • Alice Paillard of Bruno Paillard, a top Champagne house, refers to disgorgement as "surgery" and the time afterward as "surgical recovery" as the wine knits itself together again. Bubble by Bubble
  • `Open, sesame," Rhodes said stolidly, and Virtual One began to disgorge streaming ribbons of data into the air.
  • Our flat merely looks as if a Pickfords van flew through the window and disgorged its contents all over the wall-to-wall.
  • It argued that the official had gotten the money as a result of his past racketeering activities, so if the money wasn't disgorged, he would benefit from his past wrongdoing.
  • The wine is aged on the lees in the bottle for about three years prior to disgorgement.
  • Of course, the court may still grant a disgorgement order merely where it is satisfied that an investor has been adversely affected.
  • By now the cross-country vehicle had disgorged its complement of heavyweight occupants, also dressed in identical blue suits.
  • The car hovered, connected with the trelliswork of the balcony and disgorged its passengers. Restoree
  • The suburban rail network, generally sardine-packed and bursting at the seams, disgorges millions of commuters daily at various stations along the way.
  • And of course there was the cornucopia of the ice machine, which disgorged a torrent of pure perfect cubes at the touch of a button.
  • We surged forward, hearts thumping, ducking to avoid water bombs and grasping hands, until we were disgorged at an open green beneath the city walls.
  • A police armoured vehicle disgorged about 30 baton-wielding riot police who charged the journalists, and seized the three as the others scattered.
  • Was this extraordinary house about to disgorge a genuine Whistler? WHISTLER IN THE DARK
  • The mountain of Curu is volcanic, a chaos of rent rocks, beetling precipices, and masses of lava that have been disgorged from the burning crater. Life in Mexico, During a Residence of Two Years in That Country
  • A wasp will disgorge food as submissive behavior.
  • You owe me 5: come on, disgorge!
  • Neither is going to increase productivity, except to the extent that a change in dividend taxation forces companies to disgorge cash they shouldn't be keeping.
  • It is designed to disgorge a benefit obtained as a result of the breach.
  • Flies disgorge digestive fluid onto their food to soften it up.
  • Cars drew up to disgorge a wedding party.
  • The former International Development Secretary invited upon herself a dumper truck of fury and scorn, which Ministers and Labour MPs have duly disgorged over her head.
  • He found it difficult at first to disgorge himself from himself: consciousness was life's large intestine. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • Boney Point is near where the Avon River disgorges into the Lake.
  • To solve the underfunding problem, the government should be forcing companies to disgorge money that was improperly diverted from plans to corporate bottom lines, thus making the plans whole.
  • The green spot may have been there to guide the young to peck at the parent's beak and make the parents disgorge food.
  • The ferry from Fajardo (a ridiculous $2.25 for the hour-long ride) disgorges hordes of weekend visitors and creates a reasonable semblance of activity for the shops and bars.
  • Then he effected a corner in horseshoe nails, and they circulated at par with legal tender, four to the dollar, till an unexpected consignment of a hundred barrels or so broke the market and forced him to disgorge his stock at a loss. AT THE RAINBOW'S END
  • She came up with the idea of riddling -- minutely turning the bottles each day so that the yeast collects near the cap, where it can all be disgorged in seconds. Vinography: A Wine Blog
  • Contrarily speaking, researches on the disgorgement of corporation in the corporate law are of insufficiency, at least not systemic.
  • After autolysis has finished, if a sparkling wine is kept on its lees, it merely remains fresher than the same wine disgorged at an earlier date.
  • As the concert progressed this balloon gave birth to a sphere, which then disgorged a giant plastic ball.
  • France was made to disgorge the enormous gains she had made under Napoleon, but there was no attempt to reduce her to a second-rate power and she was speedily welcomed back into the comity of nations.
  • It courses through Black Canyon, which, thanks to a series of fault zones, disgorges heat from the fire below.
  • At the base of the camp, a recent avalanche had disgorged burlap sacks, old door frames, mortar boxes, rolls of bailing wire, and pieces of fiberglass.
  • The Changjiang River disgorges tons of waters and muds into the ocean.
  • Schoolteacher Maria Gerencser was at home on Monday at noon when she saw the torrent of red sludge disgorged from the toxic waste reservoir four miles away. Hungarians Doubt Recovery From Sludge Disaster
  • He later entertainingly disgorged his visual and aural memories of it all—the high pulpit with the red plush pillow for the Bible, the stiff wooden pews, the “melodeon,” or primitive organ; the caterwauling choir, the dozing oldsters, and his scattered fellow captives, the other boys, their spitballs at the ready, grateful for the diversion of a dog sitting down on the stinging warhead of a pinch bug—and getting up again. Mark Twain
  • Aberystwyth and Aberdeen are typical of towns named after the rivers which disgorge their waters into the sea and which the towns grew around.
  • The dens of the amphitheatre disgorged at once a hundred lions: a hundred darts from the unerring hand of Commodus laid them dead as they run raging round the Arena. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Labor-intensive riddling and disgorgement is in constantdemand as the queue of vintages advances toward corking. Jason Feulner
  • The Changjiang River disgorges into the East Sea.
  • Shake the fish free over the side of the boat by using a disgorger if you can, every moment a fish spends out of the water every time it is handled will lessen its chances of survival when returned to the sea.
  • Our bottle had been "disgorged" -- the sediment and stuff finally separated from the wine -- in 1999, after fully 26 years of care in the caves. Rails, Romance and Really Good Wine
  • He found it difficult at first to disgorge himself from himself: consciousness was life's large intestine. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • A little more to confuse the issue: champagne evolves even further once disgorged and shipped to the UK.

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