How To Use Doubly In A Sentence

  • It is just as well that this doubly weighty volume, which offers a lot of poems for the pound, tends to reward the effort it demands. The Times Literary Supplement
  • If we happen to be in a drought condition, all fire precautions are doubly necessary.
  • This circumstance makes this most recent vote doubly frustrating.
  • As such, and as dealing with questions of household consumption, it was a form of activity doubly appropriate for women.
  • The swivel armchair is douBly comfortaBle to sit in.
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  • The beams of wit, the lively sallies of humour, and the interchange of good fellowship, eradiated the glass in its circulation, and doubly enhanced its contents; and in amusements so truly congenial with the disposition of the Hon. Real Life In London, Volumes I. and II. Or, The Rambles And Adventures Of Bob Tallyho, Esq., And His Cousin, The Hon. Tom Dashall, Through The Metropolis; Exhibiting A Living Picture Of Fashionable Characters, Manners, And Amusements In High And Low Life
  • Part - time workers, the majority of whom are women, are doubly disadvantaged.
  • Wolf ended her life in her beloved Berlin, doubly exiled in her own country and shorn of her faith, left only with Was bleibt – what remains, the title of the account of being under surveillance by the Stasi that she wrote in 1979, and that aroused considerable controversy when published in 1990. Christa Wolf obituary
  • You must be doubly careful.
  • If this leave-taking is difficult, complex and conflict-filled for most young adults, it is doubly so for adoptees.
  • For all its faults, Elephants on the Edge deals with a fascinating and little-understood subject, which makes it doubly disappointing to find it so devoid of facts and overstuffed with opinion.
  • To render the title doubly secure, Dauversière and Olier obtained deeds to the island from Lauson and from the Hundred Canada: the Empire of the North Being the Romantic Story of the New Dominion's Growth from Colony to Kingdom
  • The new tax and the drop in house values make homeowners feel doubly penalised.Sentence dictionary
  • A story of people displaced by conflict is doubly resonant now, of course. Times, Sunday Times
  • A lie is insulting; an obvious lie is doubly insulting.
  • There is a variety in our orchards called the winesap, a doubly liquid name that suggests what might be done with this fruit. Birds and Bees, Sharp Eyes and Other Papers
  • But he wished to make assurance doubly sure, and went on still with a purpose. Daniel Deronda
  • She is immobile, has limited head and trunk control and is doubly incontinent. Times, Sunday Times
  • The fact they viewed it as such a formality makes it doubly satisfying we knocked them out. The Sun
  • He became wheelchair-bound and doubly incontinent. Times, Sunday Times
  • Your girlfriend has been doubly betrayed by the two people she thinks she can best trust and rely on. The Sun
  • Doubly terminated crystals are not uncommon.
  • We derive explicit formula for the doubly structured normwise backward error, and compare the results with the single structured case.
  • Then to add music into that makes it doubly hard. The Sun
  • They are usually suffering from some form of dementia, have had strokes, heart attacks, or are doubly incontinent.
  • The new tax and the drop in house values make homeowners feel doubly penalised.
  • I lately heard of a German named Knoche—a name doubly difficult to Americans, what with the kn and the ch—who changed it boldly to Knox to avoid being called Nokky. Chapter 10. Proper Names in America. 1. Surnames
  • It was doubly surprising to those who remain convinced that the strapping James McLaren would be in his element if cast as an inside centre, whose primary job was to take the ball up.
  • Be doubly careful. I'm sure all manner of stupid mousetrap await our toes in the dark.
  • By analyzing the relationship between basis expansion model (BEM) and Doppler spectrum, the authors propose a scheme based on fractional BEM for the estimation of doubly selective channel parameters.
  • Doubly delicious, we are supposed to believe, since we get a big word like "abutments". Chance Abutmenting (a counter-critique of Peter Schjeldahl)
  • By "here," Valentina told us she meant "Khoseni," a "country" (tiko) that exists on neither colonial - nor postcolonial-era administrative maps but whose remembered territorythe area ruled by Khosa chiefs in precolonial timesencompasses all of the critical sites of Valentina's life story: her birthplace and childhood homes (Xisangwana, Nyongane, Makuvulane); where she married (Timanguene); and the place she "was shown" when as a widow with two young daughters she moved to Facazisse, a place she choseand where she feels doubly securebecause of her lifelong association with (and marriage into) the Swiss Mission church. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • And if we've become unthinkingly certain of these unpleasantries, we can be doubly certain that the combination of the two is unthinkably unpleasant, right?
  • The calculation of the tunneling probability can be carried out by considering a doubly stochastic process.
  • Energy expenditure and allocation are determined using a combination of techniques, including body composition analysis (using extraction methods, calorimetry, and TOBEC), roosting metabolism (using standard respirometry), field metabolic rates and water flux (using doubly-labeled water), and time-activity budgets (using radiotelemetry, video monitoring, and direct observation). Contributor: Thomas Kunz
  • It's always a vulnerable feeling to put a record out but this one feels doubly vulnerable because it's so personal. The Sun
  • But her research is doubly important now that they are endangered. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such urban novels were doubly marginalised, as Scottish within a British context, and as urban within a context which identified rural, Gaelic and Scots-speaking areas as the heartland of the nation.
  • He became wheelchair-bound and doubly incontinent. Times, Sunday Times
  • These wants, papable as they are in times of peace, become doubly pressing in time of war. Ocean Steam Navigation and the Ocean Post
  • Since “culch” can be read (or said) as short for “culture”, the website’s address is doubly apt. A culchie joins Culch.ie
  • There is something doubly triumphant about a sportsman who brushes aside the years to show himself still at the height of his game. Times, Sunday Times
  • The danaid butterflies, such as the Monarch, are well recognised to be doubly defended from predators by two classes of plant-derived toxins.
  • Meanwhile Peregrine, having burst open the chamber door, found the lady in the utmost dread and consternation, and the spoils of her favourite scattered about the room; but his resentment was doubly gratified, when he learned, upon inquiry, that the person who had been so disagreeably interrupted was no other than that individual mousquetaire with whom he had quarrelled at the comedy. The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle
  • Our second goal was to measure interference by assaying the number of doubly recombinant chromosomes.
  • How he had managed it was a mystery to her, since she was doubly inhibited by his more natural manners.
  • But it's the right that has led this bitter crusade to doubly punish criminals.
  • I was doubly attracted to the house-by its size and its location.
  • My son\'s innocence died Tuesday after he saw a redheaded woman named Dora getting doubly penetrated by two marines when I Google-image-searched the words \ "Dora\" and \ "explorer\" for him. Esquire.com Article Feed
  • The simple obelus apparently denotes interest, the pointed obelus great interest, the doubly pointed obelus intense interest, and the pointing finger of a carefully drawn hand burning interest. A Sixth-Century Fragment of the Letters of Pliny the Younger A Study of Six Leaves of an Uncial Manuscript Preserved in the Pierpont Morgan Library New York
  • The disappointing return from the publicity blitz was doubly concerning as it coincided with a buoyant period for the mobile phone industry generally.
  • At intervals, he stopped, to shake the snow off the rug, and to enwrap Louise afresh; and each violent gust that met him when he turned a corner, smote him doubly; for he pictured to himself the fury with which it must hurl itself against her, sitting motionless before it. Maurice Guest
  • Water, doubly distilled over quartz, was purified by Milli-Q Plus system (Millipore, Bedford, MA).
  • As a woman on the stairs said, it must make it doubly difficult for the conductor.
  • African American authors found themselves doubly disadvantaged by the literary restrictions of the pastoral.
  • Our ability to detect doubly recombinant chromosomes depends on the genotype of the homolog after fertilization.
  • You can generate a full stop by doing the double-space input same as the iPhone anyway; so its presence is doubly unnecessary. Samsung Galaxy S II and HTC Incredible S smartphones – review
  • In the neurectomized foot it becomes doubly accidental, in that not only is it unforeseen, but that it is for some time indiscoverable. Diseases of the Horse's Foot
  • And Jurgen wondered that this should be the notion Chloris had of him, and that a gesture should be the things she remembered about him: and he was doubly assured that no woman bothers to understand the man she elects to love and cosset and slave for. Jurgen A Comedy of Justice
  • The proposal is doubly unfair, in that the same parents who would now be surcharged have already contributed disproportionately to the university system through their taxes.
  • Water, doubly distilled over quartz, was purified by Milli-Q Plus system (Millipore, Bedford, MA).
  • This stone is doubly refracting, exhibiting extremely strong dichroism, especially in the blue and the green varieties. The Chemistry, Properties and Tests of Precious Stones
  • It's doubly powerful if you know just what a yew tree represents in Scotland, and what 'Flodden' was. The Anchoress
  • I am doubly grateful, therefore, that he is here, in spite of considerable personal inconvenience.
  • He believes that, in general, plans of this nature in built-up areas should be doubly scrutinised.
  • Here's a player working doubly hard. Times, Sunday Times
  • Owing to the strong double refraction and the consequent wide separation of the two polarized rays of light traversing the crystal, an object viewed through a cleavage rhombohedron of Iceland-spar is seen double, hence the name doubly-refracting spar. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • It was doubly effective because we were leafleting the area our students come from.
  • This made my job doubly difficult; and I was one hundred per cent novice in penology. Prison Progress
  • He cannot talk and is doubly incontinent. The Sun
  • The British comedy Mean Machine is doubly unnecessary - it's not only a remake of the superior 1974 film The Longest Yard, it's also a retread of last year's Greenfingers.
  • While the survivor in the garden is doubly constructed as Jewish and female, her story serves more than a dual purpose in elaborating Semprun's theory of memory.
  • Half a dozen farm-estates formed a hectagon around it, but these belonged to ancient men who displayed themselves only as inert, gray-thatched lumps in the back of limousines on their way to the station, whither they were sometimes accompanied by equally ancient and doubly massive wives. The Beautiful and Damned
  • This sort of problem is cropping up more and more frequently and I really do urge people to be doubly careful when transferring money in this way. Times, Sunday Times
  • The generic appellations of the several species of Ferns are derived thus: _Aspidium_, from _aspis_, a shield, because the spores are enclosed in bosses; _Pteris_, from _pteerux_, a wing, having doubly pinnate fronds; or from _pteron_, a feather, having feathery fronds; Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • Residential institutions were doubly punished: admission to care was bad enough, but admission to residential care was even worse.
  • He is wheelchair-bound, doubly incontinent and increasingly confused. Times, Sunday Times
  • As there was a tendency for it to rain outside this gift idea was doubly welcome!
  • The new tax and the drop in house values make homeowners feel doubly penalised.
  • The crystals are invariably complex twins, and have the form of doubly terminated pseudo-hexagonal pyramids, like those of witherite but more acute; the faces are horizontally striated and are divided down their centre by a twin-suture, as represented in the adjoining figure. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 "Brescia" to "Bulgaria"
  • The decline in subsistence production for domestic consumption means that people are doubly disappointed, as they need to buy rice and have no income.
  • By analyzing the relationship between basis expansion model (BEM) and Doppler spectrum, the authors propose a scheme based on fractional BEM for the estimation of doubly selective channel parameters.
  • Be doubly careful when driving in fog.
  • The applicant was a doubly incontinent tetraplegic lady living in a nursing home in the west country.
  • The new tax and the drop in house values make homeowners feel doubly penalised.
  • The earth beneath the city was doubly cursed with marshiness and the instability of this quake-prone region. Ship Of Destiny
  • Although strongly doubly refracting, the hyacinth shows scarcely any dichroism and thus lacks variety of color. A Text-Book of Precious Stones for Jewelers and the Gem-Loving Public
  • Their authority doubly compromised by their status as outsiders and their dependence on the Portuguese, the first Mundlovu chiefs faced bitter opposition from local Mukavele and Khosa families, a problem that interfered with Portuguese attempts to govern the area throughout the colonial period, and whose legacy of interfamilial tension persists to this day. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • It is impossible to understand in this case, firstly, how a mutation could cause the eyes to be divided and doubly adapted to two different optic conditions, and, secondly, how at the same time a convenient 'tropism' should occur which caused the animal to swim with its eyes half in and half out of water. Hormones and Heredity
  • Yes, it's a time to be doubly, nay trebly cautious, but what about the men in blue doing their duty with enthusiasm too?
  • The new tax and the drop in house values make homeowners feel doubly penalised.
  • A two-footed half-back is doubly hard to pin down. Times, Sunday Times
  • I feel doubly ripped off. Times, Sunday Times
  • She is immobile, has limited head and trunk control and is doubly incontinent. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the tube, already doubly late, trying to get to King's Cross in time for the Intercity, I noticed in the squeeze a woman with a smut on her forehead.
  • And on top of all of that, pantomime makes things doubly difficult for itself by being family entertainment. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Saltburn trainer is doubly represented in this two-miler and Mental Pressure is preferred to her other runner, Foundry Lane.
  • To make doubly sure they would not be disturbed she turned the key in the lock.
  • Her disability made taking care of the home and raising a family doubly difficult.
  • Fritz (God Told Me To Hate Conservatives) says: tombaker says: must be doubly troubling for old dook to be reminded of teh gay at the same time hcr is being “rammed down his throat”. Think Progress » Gays Are More Dangerous Than Guns In Florida
  • And faltering now would be doubly tragic, because the tide is turning. Christianity Today
  • In this light, Mexico is doubly culpable.
  • Her daughter recently made her a grandmother, making the income from the packing job doubly important at the time.
  • The quartz occurred as slender water-clear crystals to 1 cm in length; many are doubly terminated.
  • She looked very pale and was vomiting and doubly incontinent.
  • To pay the entry fee for foreign tourists is doubly irrational. Times, Sunday Times
  • The doctor who called me bossy last week said I was doubly bossy today!
  • Energy expenditure and allocation are determined using a combination of techniques, including body composition analysis (using extraction methods, calorimetry, and TOBEC), roosting metabolism (using standard respirometry), field metabolic rates and water flux (using doubly-labeled water), and time-activity budgets (using radiotelemetry, video monitoring, and direct observation). Contributor: Thomas Kunz
  • Be doubly careful when driving in fog.
  • Now I felt doubly and bewildered. Times, Sunday Times
  • The conditions placed on karate were therefore doubly contradictory: karate needed a modernization that declared its traditionality, and it needed to found this ancientness on a history that effaced much of its past. Karate and Modernity: A Call for Comments
  • Besides several _Biblia optima in duobus voluminibus_, or complete copies of the Bible, many separate books of the inspired writers are noted down; indeed the catalogue lays before us a superb array of fine biblical treasures, rendered doubly valuable by copious and useful glossaries; and embracing many a rare Hebrew MS. Bible, _bibliotheca hebraice_, and precious commentary. Bibliomania in the Middle Ages
  • They were doubly confident after this that he would win.
  • Mars makes you doubly determined to put your plans into action. The Sun
  • Nor were these memories mutually exclusive, which was doubly chilling. THE GREAT AND SECRET SHOW
  • This makes the concurrent publication of these two books doubly welcome.
  • It gives them, as it were, the title beforehand, to make them feel how doubly miserable it must be not only not to obtain it, but to forfeit it after it had been already ours. The Christian Life Its Course, Its Hindrances, And Its Helps
  • The matter is doubly confused, because the modern arguments for fatalism often emerge from the very considerations about bivalence that Aristotle discusses in Stoicism
  • But his lost country lived again doubly dear in his memory, and regret gave him more pity for men. Nobel Prize in Literature 1933 - Presentation Speech
  • The purpose of the doubly pointed obelus is plainly indicated here, as it accompanies two of these catchwords. A Sixth-Century Fragment of the Letters of Pliny the Younger A Study of Six Leaves of an Uncial Manuscript Preserved in the Pierpont Morgan Library New York
  • Whoever writes this claptrap is truly stupid – and you are doubly stupid for reporting it. Think Progress » Two Percent
  • The discomfort from having to stand so purposelessly on the street corner has them doubly animate in recounting tales and goss.
  • Indeed, one character gives birth by Caesarian section, which I found inherently dubitable, and doubly so since both baby and mother survive the operation. Stephen Baxter, Stone Spring (2010)
  • These animals, like us, are doubly genomic.
  • It is doubly disingenuous to claim that problems with security make elections difficult.
  • They were doubly confident after this that he would win.
  • It was therefore doubly important that the physician did not deceive his patients.
  • Hyprocrisy is a sin – doubly so when it organizes - X Think Progress » Podesta Responds To Roberts’ ‘Troubling’ Comment With Call For Supreme Court To Be Televised
  • In pregnancy a high fibre diet is doubly important.
  • I am doubly sure, between Levy and Sylvia, something will be done to that effect, which could just produce a bumper harvest of votes for both, next year.
  • Part - time workers, the majority of whom are women, are doubly disadvantaged.
  • Indeed, they would be doubly nervous if they believed Ahern really was adopting such a laidback approach.
  • The silence was doubly odd because Bringweather wasn't even harrumphing or clearing his phlegmy throat.
  • Olah has recently shown that our most common electrophiles such as the acyl cation and the nitronium ion are protonated in superacidic media into doubly charged superelectrophiles. Press Release: The 1994 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • And there are some which are doubly thankful, having suffered no fatalities in either world war. Times, Sunday Times
  • The fame was for Le Sage, not Las Cases, and thus, as in England, I could observe it from a remove and savor it doubly for myself and this other self. THE DIAMOND
  • Marie was blessed with a mane of flaxen hair which normally she wore plaited and doubly looped by ribbons at her neck. ADRIENNE AND THE CHALET SCHOOL
  • The discomfort from having to stand so purposelessly on the street corner has them doubly animate in recounting tales and goss.
  • I was doubly shamed, as mine contained little more than a notebook, a camera, a sleeping bag they had lent me, and some lint.
  • Critics countered that Jakobson's structuralism was doubly dangerous because it could be confused with the real thing.
  • The Army had been doubly embarrassed by the Dugway sheep kill of March 1968.
  • The fact that President Chen appeared to give his tacit consent to such an action is doubly worrying.
  • Spinal injured people are usually doubly incontinent; compared with those horrors, walking is the least of our worries. Times, Sunday Times
  • And some of the oxalis tribe yield great returns; and cyclamens are exquisite and expensive; and the amaryllis is doubly ditto, ditto; and ixias, and many more are to be grown, if you have room, money, or opportunity. Gardening by Myself
  • Although the electric leads to the exciter were doubly shielded, they nonetheless picked up energy at 60 Hz and its harmonics from ambient fields in the laboratory.
  • So they have a doubly useful effect in helping you to consume less and not feel starving hungry all the time. Times, Sunday Times
  • Passes," in this description, functions almost as antanaclasis; physical movement and the movement of thought are doubly equivocal. _Alastor_, Apostasy, and the Ecology of Criticism
  • Judges are feeling doubly under siege: from the media and from ministers. Times, Sunday Times
  • When the memoirs of Miss Pamela Andrews appeared, the future biographer of her doubly supposititious brother was a not very young man of thirty-three, who had written a good many not very good plays, had contributed to periodicals, and had done a little work at the Bar, besides living, at least till his marriage and it may be feared later, an exceedingly "rackety" life. The English Novel
  • Adventurers fighting an amphisbaena need to be doubly careful, since both heads are capable of attacking and even swallowing assailants with ease.
  • Right now, however, it is doubly hard to be a black woman, especially one who reads newspapers or, heaven forbid, happens to be remotely newsworthy.
  • Leaves 2-3 inches long, semi-cor - date, acuminate, bright, green, shining, hispid above, fflabrous beneath, but covered with minute furfuraceous scales, visible with the microscope; their margins doubly serrated and ciliated. Exotic flora: Containing Figures and Descriptions of New, Rare, Or Otherwise Interesting Erotic ...
  • He is wheelchair-bound, doubly incontinent and increasingly confused. Times, Sunday Times
  • But he wished to make assurance doubly sure, and went on still with a purpose. Daniel Deronda
  • That way you not only make doubly sure you'll obey instructions but you constantly reinoculate yourself with your own enthusiasm. The Creature from Cleveland Depths
  • When squandered on decadence, wealth doubly harms the under-resourced.
  • And if there are children by then, it will be doubly painful.
  • This and nearby districts are also known for perfect, doubly terminated wolframite crystals to 20 cm, perched on water-clear quartz.
  • She is doubly incontinent and epileptic. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is just as well that this doubly weighty volume, which offers a lot of poems for the pound, tends to reward the effort it demands. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The _normal membrane_ is concave as a whole on its meatal aspect; it occupies a doubly oblique plane, being so placed that its superior and posterior parts are nearer the eye of the examiner than the anterior and inferior parts. Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
  • Doubly sealing these items separately keeps food fresher by sealing in moisture better.
  • He cannot talk and is doubly incontinent. The Sun
  • DNS computations for the 2D, viscous, incompressible NS equations in a doubly periodic domain have been carried out for kinematic viscosities down to sizes typically considered reasonable for real fluids. Exponential Growth in Physical Systems « Climate Audit
  • You feel doubly naked when you are acting and writing. Times, Sunday Times
  • In fact, in the Republic of Ireland, catholicism is doubly important.
  • Given that this particular antinovel is also an exploration of the chaotic subconscious of two schizophrenics, its sensate sex-and-violence imagery becomes doubly significant: a stream of subconsciousness that describes waking dreams while feeling like one.
  • The leaves are doubly hastate or halberd shaped, and somewhat wrinkled: the lower ones measure from twelve to fourteen inches in length, and from six to eight in breadth. The Field and Garden Vegetables of America Containing Full Descriptions of Nearly Eleven Hundred Species and Varietes; With Directions for Propagation, Culture and Use.
  • His attempt is doubly laudable given the rough ride that it has had inside and outside his department. Times, Sunday Times
  • This impediment no longer stood in the way; early in his term, therefore, President Lincoln signed the bill authorizing the construction of the Union Pacific -- a name doubly significant, as marking the union of the East and the West and also recognizing the sentiment of loyalty or union that this great enterprise was intended to promote. The Railroad Builders; a chronicle of the welding of the states
  • If this is true of power generation, it is doubly true of agriculture.
  • For Mozambique, a country with a wafer-thin economy, the disaster is doubly cruel.
  • This New Body Workout integrates both these elements-making it doubly effective, yet saves you time!
  • Terns and eiders had been disturbed, while eiders had been doubly hit because the pickers were depleting the mussel beds on which they feed.
  • The Peers are the natural advisers of the Crown, but the Constitution which has granted them such extraordinary privileges, makes it doubly criminal in them to attack the authority from which it is derived, and to insult the power which it is their peculiar province to uphold and protect. The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals. Vol. 2
  • Doubly or triply charged ions were selected for product ion spectra.
  • Like Passawe, he is a victim of war, but he is doubly stigmatized: as an amputee, he is often assumed to have fought in the conflict, though he has never held a gun; as a beggar and slum-dweller, he is subject to endless harassment. Robert Blair: Following Up on Kristof in Liberia: Views on Truth and Reconciliation from the Ground
  • Her passionate features, well-defined, firm, and statuesque in life, were doubly so now: her mouth and brow, beneath her purplish black hair, showed only too clearly that the turbulency of character which had made a bear-garden of his house had been no temporary phase of her existence. Wessex Tales
  • To be blithely ignorant of the difference between a founder and framer is sad, but to try and use your ignorance as some sort of argument winner is doubly pathetic. Matthew Yglesias » George Will’s Odd Aversion to Democracy
  • Changes P ASSAGE through the Kattegat is a tricky affair for a submarine, doubly so when it is necessary to be covert. The Cardinal of the Kremlin
  • It will make the trip doubly difficult. The Sun
  • It was meaningless to ask whether it did on Earth just then-doubly meaningless, given the physics here and the forgottenness yonder. The Boat of a Million Years
  • Although the electric leads to the exciter were doubly shielded, they nonetheless picked up energy at 60 Hz.
  • The fame was for Le Sage, not Las Cases, and thus, as in England, I could observe it from a remove and savor it doubly for myself and this other self. THE DIAMOND
  • Who feels no ills, should, therefore, fear them; and when fortune smiles, be doubly cautious, lest destruction come remorseless on him, and he fall unpitied.
  • But when overleverage happens it is invariably doubly dangerous. Beyond the Crash
  • Branch is now doubly determined to set an example with the armband after gaining a reputation as the quiet man of the side.
  • They were doubly confident after this that he would win.
  • Our misfortune is doubly hard to us; we have not only lost that lovely darling boy, but this poor girl, whom I sincerely love, is to be torn away by even a worse fate. Chapter 6
  • The method involved a stepwise linkage of doubly-restricted DNA fragments and re-digestion of the resultant concatamers.
  • I think she has a masculine air, and is a little forbidding at first: but when I saw her behaviour to two agreeable gentlewomen, her husband's nieces, whom, for that reason, she calls doubly hers, and heard their praises of her, I could imputer her very bulk to good humour; since we seldom see your sour peevish people plump. Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 3
  • Take a stoner to a hemp shop and he'll choose you the phattest bong; drop him in a Sports Authority and he'll come out doubly dazed and confused.
  • I was doubly blessed with two men who did things in different ways that really guided the course of my life." jessie-lynne. [email protected], Remains Returned List WWII
  • Be doubly careful when driving in fog.
  • In this sense the spectator is doubly positioned as an onlooker outside the text.
  • The decolorized zircon (jargoon) has a dispersion well up toward that of diamond and gives fairly vivid spectra on a card, but they are double, as zircon is doubly refracting. A Text-Book of Precious Stones for Jewelers and the Gem-Loving Public
  • Residential institutions were doubly punished: admission to care was bad enough, but admission to residential care was even worse.
  • Then, the arteries were doubly ligated with silk sutures simultaneously.
  • Mrs. Lloyd's chintz drapes had been drawn against the sun, and after the blaze of light outside the room seemed doubly dark. THE GREAT AND SECRET SHOW
  • The May decline was accounted for by inventory investment, while the June decline was more than doubly accounted for by net exports.

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