How To Use Entirely In A Sentence

  • However, we still rely entirely on the generosity of the public for funding.
  • It's not entirely accurate - the book is a bit darker than that, but there is a fair bit of lovable eccentricity to the characters.
  • She captures my attention without entirely absorbing it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Much African art still seems religiously alive and therefore not entirely at home in a secular environment.
  • Fly fishers in the salt water environment need something entirely different to their freshwater counterpart on the chalk stream, as does the angler who fishes big reservoirs.
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  • I don't think you're playing devil's advocate (a word every/filmer seems to want use) simply by making entirely senseless comparisons between films like Transformers and There Will Be Blood, and ranting on with points of view that even someone in defense of Transformers would never use. Things I Noticed While Watching 20 Minutes of JJ Abrams’ Star Trek | /Film
  • The German military party -- which, as everyone knows, holds the reins of policy in Germany entirely -- have, as far as I can see, done all they could to overthrow Kerenski and set up Im Weltkriege. English
  • If you think spaceflight is a bad thing, shouldn't we eliminate it entirely? Would You Bring Back NGLT-or SLI? - NASA Watch
  • You can be morally unimpeachable for entirely selfish reasons. Times, Sunday Times
  • Despite serious technical obstacles, space agency officials are considering whether to launch a Jupiter space probe powered entirely by sunlight.
  • Little analysis was apparent in many of the early Programmes - a defect that was never entirely overcome.
  • The two merchants didn't look entirely pleased to have the players mooching off of their business, but it was obvious to the eyes of an outsider that the music was actually attracting customers.
  • Rather than a traditional neoliberal who tries to extol the virtues of trade, he prefers to just ignore its impact entirely. Matthew Yglesias » The Case for Ever-Bigger Government
  • Whether wanting is measured in quality or quantity depends entirely on the individuals concerned.
  • At my cousin's wedding some five years back, the most popular dish was a mixed vegetable fry prepared entirely on the 'tawa' griddle. Musical Cooking - Paneer Tawa Masala
  • Lightning raids in class are entirely justified. The Sun
  • He is entirely unapologetic about the violence in his movies.
  • Prayer, and receive the Sacrament every day; because they do not subject and submit themselves wholly and entirely to him that hath Light, nor deny and conquer themselves, nor give up themselves totally to God, with a perfect divesting and disinteresting of themselves: In a word, till the Soul be purified in the Fire of Inward Pain, it will never get to a State of The spiritual guide which disentangles the soul / by Michael de Molinos ; edited with an introduction by Kathleen Lyttelton and a note by H. Scott Holland.
  • The waste water is kept entirely separate from the rainwater.
  • After a cut on the face or an exudation into the lungs, the loose tissues and multiple vessels allow the proliferating cells to obtain rich nourishment; absorption can take place readily, and the part regains its normal condition entirely, while a bruise at the heel or at the withers finds a dense, inextensible tissue where the multiplying elements and exuded fluids choke up all communication, and the parts die Special Report on Diseases of the Horse
  • The point of reading Kafka's fiction is not, it seems to me, to arrive at a conclusion that the world we live in is absurd, or frightening, or grotesque, but that the world Kafka has created is self-sustaining and entirely logical. Translated Texts
  • “But suppose, Maggie, —suppose it was a man who was not conceited, who felt he had nothing to be conceited about; who had been marked from childhood for a peculiar kind of suffering, and to whom you were the day-star of his life; who loved you, worshipped you, so entirely that he felt it happiness enough for him if you would let him see you at rare moments——”15 IV. Another Love-Scene. Book V—Wheat and Tares
  • The dodder is what is called a parasitical plant; that is, a plant that lives entirely on another. Woodside or, Look, Listen, and Learn.
  • The gossip about her later proved to be entirely false.
  • How much the world revolves almost entirely around the male gaze. Times, Sunday Times
  • Good fishing for sportsmen and women also means good fortune for those who must feed their families almost entirely by fishing - loons, ospreys, bald eagles and cormorants.
  • It's beautiful, stark and entirely original. Times, Sunday Times
  • The bills are entirely regular, as impossible to impersonate as lifelong acquaintances. THE SAVAGE GIRL
  • I'm not sure the term insufferable boor is quite adequate here, I'm not saying that he's entirely without humor, but it's the sort of humor that is always tempered by a reminder of how much money he has and how he is holding it over his adult children. Outfoxed Diary Entry
  • Of course, it's not all about the image and the looks (except that, in the case of this particular preening bunch of fops in their heyday, it was almost entirely about the image and the looks).
  • The success of the operation was entirely due to his example and his rapid appreciation of the situation. Times, Sunday Times
  • Your bank balance depends entirely on your salary but your happiness balance depends solely on you.
  • But in the context of the American culture wars in the political arena, it's an entirely apt and appropriate choice.
  • But it is no longer entirely ad hoc. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is entirely possible to drink any wine with any dish, and anyone who says otherwise is talking bunkum; a respected gastro-bore friend of mine likes to drink white burgundy with stewed lamb, as he finds it brings out the texture of the meat.
  • Most importantly, if mutations have no effect on organismal fitness, the genealogy of a sample can be separated entirely from the mutational process.
  • She was arrested entirely without justification.
  • Home advantage and better preparation make that outcome entirely plausible, as long as England seize the initiative early. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although it is often used in a religious context, it is entirely appropriate to apply it to secular experiences.
  • All the males in one population sing the same song, but occasionally they invent an entirely new one.
  • It was pointed out that playing nine holes of golf on the morning of the match was not entirely the best preparation. Times, Sunday Times
  • His opinions are entirely beyond the pale.
  • Such a gesture might look to contemporary historians like an act of archival vandalism, but it was entirely characteristic of the old school to which Macmillan belonged.
  • She found that the membership list with which Hilary Roberts had supplied her was a not entirely accurate document.
  • You can test their absorption rate by seeing if they dissolve almost entirely in white vinegar within 30 minutes.
  • We learn that the cops are in cahoots with the drug dealer, but this is an incidental plot device that's entirely dropped once Philippa and Filippo are on the lam.
  • In France, industrial investment came first; in Britain, the Counterpart Fund was almost entirely used to pay wartime debts and re-float sterling.
  • So, like any good Washington pundit who imagines that proximity translates into perceptiveness, I feel entirely qualified to look into the president's eyes to get a sense of his soul. John Feffer: Barack Obama's Secret State of the Union
  • After six weeks, the ducks can be fed entirely on locally produced feed-sweet potatoes, taro, banana, pumpkin, choko, etc. 28 additional technical notes about tropical agriculture
  • Sortals are entirely formed by our minds, in the light of the properties perceived to be in the world. Substance
  • An entirely free public service, all you need to do is call her up and Geneviève will happily stop by to scope out your crib and offer suggestions on how you can better safeguard your digs from thieves.
  • A senior paediatrician who works with such families compared it to the intense love a besotted parent feels for an entirely helpless newborn. Times, Sunday Times
  • These strategies, I would argue, are entirely familiar and slightly shopworn.
  • In the meaning of practice, ecological aesthetics signifies a real mode of aesthetic construction and provides mental resources for the entirely new way of man's own reproduction.
  • And then, with a shocking crack, the lightning bolt frozen in the sky crashed to the mountaintop, and the arena went entirely dark. AMERICAN GODS
  • One she will feel is entirely warranted. The Sun
  • I'm not entirely sure that if I was in a frightening situation, that I would like Spiderman to come zinging to my rescue.
  • Yet ineptitude at the back could not entirely explain away this truly awe-inspiring spectacle.
  • Most importantly, our family entertainment consists entirely of surfing and the beach. The Sun
  • To his admirers, and they are legion, the glabrous Ailes is something else entirely — a valiant freedom-fighter standing up to the perfidious liberal media elite. Meet the fantastic Mr Fox
  • Once the substance had been entirely sucked out, all that was left was the bogus symbolism of anti-establishmentarianism and the hollow tropes of faux danger and commercialized dissent. I Saw The News On Television Today, Oh Boy
  • Studies up to that point were entirely theoretical and lacked any real practical application.
  • For example, the dark blue triangles on the pink background of the rosettes are barely perceptible in the old photograph and may be missed entirely if the viewer is not aware of the value shift.
  • If properly timed, these throws can quickly get a ball to a baseman to make a play; if it isn't, however, the ball will most likely be overthrown, missing cutoff men entirely along with its target.
  • The process of negotiation was not entirely smooth.
  • The precision in diagnosis is greatly improved, and entirely new possibilities for therapy have been opened up via the hybridoma technique. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1984 - Presentation Speech
  • With her long black skirt and fruit and flower bedecked hat she looked every inch the children's nanny and as a nursery teacher in real life it's a role she is not entirely unfamiliar with.
  • Why the men haven't been rolling up their sleeves and doing their bit is not entirely clear.
  • Until philosophers rule as kings or those who are now called kings and leading men genuinely and adequately philosophize, that is, until political power and philosophy entirely coincide, while the many natures who at present pursue either one exclusively are forcibly prevented from doing so, cities will have no rest from evils, ... nor, I think, will the human race. All the President's Lies
  • It is clear-headed and seems entirely sincere.
  • His session description very clearly demonstrates both incompetence and unethical behavior . . . regardless of Jackson's guilt or innocence which is an entirely different matter, albeit I tend not to buy the whole pure as undriven snow the Jackson sycophants are pushing. Uri Geller's Report . . .. . . on the Hypnosis Session he did with Michael Jackson . . .. . . bad trance management
  • Eccleshall's argument is very neat, but it is not entirely convincing.
  • Festival to give a reading of your new tome and found that, entirely because of a struggle between competing ideologies, your luggage had to stay at home. Times, Sunday Times
  • The simple design means assembly at the Romanian plant is done almost entirely without robots.
  • ‘We have several officers whose jobs are entirely devoted to crunching numbers for mandarins in Whitehall,’ he growls.
  • Palm oil olein is just fine, but palm kernel oil is a different beast entirely. Palm oil fights back | The Blog of Michael R. Eades, M.D.
  • We stopped at a little hut, where we saw an old woman grinding with the quern, the ancient Highland instrument, which it is said was used by the Romans, but which, being very slow in its operation, is almost entirely gone into disuse. Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides
  • Do not leave it entirely to the advertising agency or the personnel department.
  • The two problems with that choice: (1) even if 40-50\% of the population disagrees with President Obama on issues like taxes or gay rights, probably only maybe 10-20\% of the population (those whose Facebook pages include fanhood of Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity, for instance) really sees him as "tyrranical" enough for 1700s "tea party" and "constitutional convention" references to resonate; and (2) politics are cyclical enough that as bad as things look for Republicans now, it's entirely feasible to plan for a Republican rebirth in 2012 Concurring Opinions
  • And, surely enough, I was hauled up into the carriage and put just as I was into the footbag lying on the front of the carriage, which was entirely open, with not even a leather apron stretched across it. The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 12
  • The meetings were not entirely musical, or so one gathers from the early minute-books, where it is stated that at each meeting one bottle of sherry was to be provided for every three members, and one bottle of madeira for every seven members, and further that politics or religion were not to be talked during meetings. Music and Musicians
  • In fact, I thought I might have hallucinated it entirely.
  • A Los Angeles artist who gave that city's art establishment a bursting sense of pride for having nurtured such an obstreperous talent, he earned his celebrity status in part by retaining the obsessions and wounds of a smart Catholic working-class kid from the suburbs of Detroit who had never entirely assimilated to his sun-splashed California home. How Will the Future Judge Him?
  • The result is a setting that’s clearly modelled on an American high school but is populated almost entirely by kids and teachers with decidedly European accents — even when they have names like Brad and are swaggering around in letterman sweaters like an extra in Grease. The Curiosity of Chance
  • This crosslinguistic asymmetry has not received an entirely satisfactory explanation, despite the fact that resultative predication has been widely discussed from a variety of perspectives.
  • I apologized absolutely saying that I had entirely forgotten in my enthusiasm and was very sorry. Broken Lives
  • Martyrs did not entirely disappear, but they were different from their late antique predecessors; they might be bishops killed in political strife, missionaries killed by pagans, or confessors being ‘living dead’.
  • The fancy can no more soar and disport in skyey regions, the beloved object ceases at once to be celestial, and remains plodding on earth, entirely unromantic and substantial. The Virginians
  • Then comes an entirely new set of challenges: face-offs with writer friends whose essays he failed to select for the literary pastiche and fears the anthology will get skewered fatally by critics.
  • Of course, the pain associated with birthing was considered entirely natural, while the protraction of pain and suffering associated with foot-binding was altogether an intentional act of the human will.
  • There are rare instances of secret and entirely human selfishness. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Greek caesura was always much more flexible than Horace’s, and English tends to treat it as entirely movable.
  • Bad as the austerity cuts may feel here, life over there is truly harsh: poverty means something entirely different. Times, Sunday Times
  • The wingtensity pentagraph yielded shocking, yet entirely accurate, results. ZUG.com > ZUG Live
  • In fact, this mini-album seems to entirely results of an enthusiastic outburst of energy, nurtured while the man was regularly deejaying at squatters parties during the nineties.
  • Catholic Church over which Cæcilianus presides, who give their services to this holy religion, and who are commonly called clergymen, be entirely exempted from all public duties, that by any error or sacrilegious negligence they may not be drawn away from the service due to the Deity, but may devote themselves without any hindrance to their own law. A Source Book for Ancient Church History
  • Made from a composite of grass and sugar-cane pulp, the utensils are entirely natural.
  • Sometimes it feels like my childhood world was made entirely of coal tar. Times, Sunday Times
  • I admit it was entirely my fault.
  • I am not sure that he entirely succeeds in that aim. Times, Sunday Times
  • All quotes, except those cited by link, consist entirely of hearsay, malefactions, and poorly-conjured misrepresentations.
  • Though some like to dwell on that horror while others ignore it entirely, I believe it is only true to the remarkableness of America if we acknowledge both the horror of that age and the unique American triumph in overcoming it. Bart Motes: Hillary Clinton for Supreme Court
  • It is true that the dic - tionary meaning of the term symmetry has shifted since antiquity, but none of the original connotations has become obsolete, certainly not entirely so. SYMMETRY AND ASYMMETRY
  • Whether you live in or live out is entirely up to you.
  • I went with my Mama and covered myself entirely in two pieces of traditional cloth like a sarong, called a kanga here. Archive 2005-10-01
  • My tackle seemed entirely appropriate in the garage but proved cumbersome on the rocks.
  • Members of the next assembly, to be elected in February, could rewrite the rules, or throw out the supplementary pension plan entirely.
  • They relied entirely on these few weapons for their defence.
  • Upon rereading the original letter, she saw it in an entirely different light.
  • On France: I was a Francophobe before Francophobia was cool, but I actually had a splendid few days in France, surrounded by helpful strangers who were entirely accommodating to my recollection of 2 years of French, taken 15 years previous. Matthew Yglesias » The European Bogeyman
  • The once-widespread scimitar-horned oryx (Oryx dammah, EW) and bubal hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus buselaphus) have been exterminated entirely from the region. South Saharan steppe and woodlands
  • Not all the notions concerning sacrifice are entirely absent from our lives.
  • Abdomen: with an elongate clavate petiole; the first segment with an oblique yellow macula on each side, the third with a large lateral macula at its base, and the following segments entirely yellow. Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society - Vol. 3 Zoology
  • The next in seniority was entirely adverse to the invaliding, as, without he could invalide too, he would have to go to the West Indies in the place of our surgeon. Rattlin the Reefer
  • But socially he was entirely at home in those Third Republic salons where politicians mixed with aristocrats, diplomats, and writers.
  • The beach is composed entirely of the shells of "pipi" (small cockles); always, therefore, dry and pleasant to walk upon. Life of John Coleridge Patteson
  • It is of course possible to write Japanese entirely in hiragana or katakana, and that's what Japanese children start by learning to do in school before they move on to kanji.
  • But the banks are not entirely blameless victims in such crime. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is motivated entirely by self-interest.
  • His praise of her was not entirely unqualified.
  • It is fair to say that he is not entirely relaxed about this. Times, Sunday Times
  • The downstairs of the two little houses had been entirely refashioned.
  • I am familiar with a few English words employing Latin tact-in the sense of ` touch '-- tactile, taction, tactual-but the statement is completely wrong for English, in which tact means something entirely different from ` touch.' VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIII No 3
  • In the first nocturn, the Church sings lessons from the Lamentations of Jeremiah, with a special melody famous for its solemnity and beauty, and entirely appropriate to the text. Compendium of the 1955 Holy Week Revisions of Pius XII: Part 5 - Tenebrae and the Divine Office of the Triduum
  • Assistant coach Andre Human said he wasn't entirely happy with the scrumming of the Bulldogs and would be working on that.
  • It is entirely to be ascribed to the supplanting, _in the national subsistence, of a large part of home produce by an equally large part of foreign produce_. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 378, April, 1847
  • The city's wealth came almost entirely from its role as an entrepôt, moving goods from the eastern Mediterranean to Lombardy and over the Alps to northern Europe.
  • I don't myself find these questions entirely uninteresting, but are they really the preeminently "serious" kinds of questions a writer of fiction can pursue? Saying Something
  • In any case, my assertion that The Airlords Of Han is a terrible novel (racist or not) is entirely correct. The “Buck Rogers” Quandry – In Which I Contradict Previous Views « The Graveyard
  • It is not entirely their fault. Times, Sunday Times
  • The users, however, were not entirely delighted when messages with a subject starting with " - SPAM ‘began arriving in their inboxes, with blocks of technospeak at the top and no human-readable HTML messages.’
  • The general view was that they wanted affordable housing, not flats, and I think they are entirely right.
  • Miss Osborne, I say, thought that when he had given himself a little air, he would unbosom himself entirely, and prepared eagerly to listen. Vanity Fair
  • 47 The image of the child in utero as fruit hanging precariously from a tree extended back to Galen, as Constantinus believed. 48 While Aldobrandino's passage and metaphor attributed a considerable amount of agency to the fruit-fetus (note the active voice), most discussions of fetal growth and parturition portrayed the fetus as entirely passive. A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • O'Mara, a disgruntled bear of a man, contends that the case rests entirely on the credibility of Hearst, which is shaky at best.
  • Surely, some say, these elites should not be entirely exempt from pressure to adopt more climate friendly lifestyles.
  • There is a delicious irony about a campaign promising more honesty in politics through the deployment of an argument it must know to be entirely dishonest. Times, Sunday Times
  • She would scrunch up her shoulders and grin and almost convert entirely to bubbles at the very mention of the concept.
  • But you trusted entirely these rare moments of triumphant self-expression: every jink and turn by Diego Maradona at the 1986 World Cup was hard-won, brutally paid for and born out of absolute courage and commitment. World Cup 2010: How a love of Spain can make for a sterile affair
  • Some of his ideas about democracy are entirely his own.
  • Though a settler-farmer not dependent entirely on farm income for a living, even I am not able to escape this feeling of gloom and depression.
  • It is not known whether the thrusts and reverse faults represent reactivated extensional basement structures or formed entirely during basin inversion.
  • The testis was nearly entirely replaced by a thin-walled unilocular cystic mass measuring 2.0 cm in greatest dimension.
  • Some have sidecar expanders for more faders, knobs, meters or a joystick; some units are entirely self-contained.
  • The problem is that because virtual worlds are almost entirely built on the same basic rule-structure derived from DikuMUD, and because their representations of physical and graphical environments are ultimately so similar, this deep game becomes more and more known to larger and larger numbers of players over time, all the more so since World of Warcraft has evolved into the new template for all subsequence virtual-world games. The Lifetime to Master
  • He controls the time, a little in the manner of the mentally ill, of psychotics who live in an entirely subjective temporality. Ballardian » ‘Le passé composé de J. G. Ballard’: JGB on Empire of the Sun
  • Perhaps it would be best in such shows to ditch relationships entirely, making the heroine into a female James Bond who uses and discards men or a female gunslinger type who lives celibately, but each of those has problems of its own. Good News, Bad News
  • You can't really draw a comparison between the two cases - they're entirely different.
  • It seems that I turn into a bolshy, opinionated and entirely spoilt six-year-old kid at moments like this.
  • William Cecil thought it would be a good idea to replace purveyance entirely with composition and gradually this began to be the case.
  • I'm noticing that the floor is wet - entirely covered in dark liquid.
  • But executives at Britain's Rolls-Royce, which is a key supplier on current A320-family engines, said Airbus should instead wait longer and develop an entirely new plane because it would offer bigger improvements in efficiency. Rolls-Royce Isn't On Board With Airbus's Engine Plan
  • From a system design standpoint, it would be much cheaper and more efficient to ditch the daughtercard entirely, and put all of the compute hardware, both scalar (CPU) and vector Ars Technica
  • She lived entirely by spiritual values, in a world of poetry and imagination.
  • But I entirely agree with you about 'aitch' and 'shai-jool'. WordPress.com News
  • He withdrew from the game entirely before the end of that year, citing physical injuries and personal burnout.
  • Why did human oestrus fade almost entirely away so that human beings copulate when one partner is not fertile?
  • The coroner, a thin, elderly, spectacled man, dressed entirely in black, peered disapprovingly at the crowd and wearily sighed as he took his place at the table.
  • Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue said all efforts should be made to resolve the dispute until hope was extinguished entirely.
  • I couldn't win at a game of wallyball even if my competition consisted entirely of mannequins clad in movement restricting plate mail armor.
  • The stretcher configuration is also significant, for the placing of the medial stretcher well to the front, rather than mid-way between front and back legs, is entirely novel.
  • These should consist entirely of high upland in which no agricultural or forestry activities would take place.
  • The reason why by polygamical marriages among Christians the marriage of the Lord and the church is profaned, is, because there is a correspondence between that divine marriage and the marriages of Christians; concerning which, see above, n. 83-102; which correspondence entirely perishes, if one wife is joined to another; and when it perishes, the married man is no longer a The Delights of Wisdom Pertaining to Conjugial Love
  • Unfortunately for him it is not entirely populated by dorks, and the same people that can succeed in sport can also have sharp intellect.
  • As a result, blind dating isn't just for geeks and losers anymore (well, not entirely, anyway).
  • I entirely concur with his prediction that in the end we will have to withdraw from the Province.
  • So the news today from our sources with knowledge of the arrowheaded brand's product direction wasn't entirely unexpected. Jalopnik
  • These all possess an extraordinary organ situated on the neck, the well-known Y-shaped tentacle, which is entirely concealed in a state of repose, but which is capable of being suddenly thrown out by the insect when alarmed. Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection A Series of Essays
  • He has written the world's first science fiction novel entirely in Scots.
  • -- A NEW York physician has related a case in which inhalation of very dry persulphate of iron, reduced to a palpable powder, entirely arrested bleeding from the lungs, after all the usual remedies, lead, opium, etc., had failed. Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889
  • In fact, metrology is concerned with nothing less than finding a method of being able to control the constancy of the international prototype metre, the basis of the whole metric system, so accurately that not only will every change, however small, which could possibly occur in it be accurately measured, but also if the prototype were entirely lost, it could nevertheless be reproduced so exactly that no microscope could ever reveal any divergence from the original prototype. Nobel Prize in Physics 1907 - Presentation Speech
  • More than 70 per cent of Indians depend on farm incomes, and about 65 percent of the nation's farms are not irrigated, meaning they depend entirely on the rains that fall in intense bursts over the wet season. The Economic Times
  • He mixes succulents with plants that have foliage of an entirely different nature, such as asparagus fern, coleus, or curly parsley.
  • I found her behaviour brash, shocking and entirely irresistible. Times, Sunday Times
  • Which, with Angelica narrating, could be on a subject entirely unrelated to Jenny. SUMMER OF SECRETS
  • He lives almost entirely in the past, remembering life before the war and during his hellish time in a concentration camp.
  • I was also creatively excited to try something new, and what began as a research and development project became an entirely new doll.
  • In altricial birds the chicks depend entirely on their parents for food and protection.
  • Speech left me entirely then, and I am afraid I would have been most beautifully thumped, had not Sanders, the trainmaster, come over and stopped him. Danger Signals Remarkable, Exciting and Unique Examples of the Bravery, Daring and Stoicism in the Midst of Danger of Train Dispatchers and Railroad Engineers
  • For if Geras was not to sublate the realm of the social entirely to nature, he had to leave room for a nominally separate society which was underpinned by both external and human nature.
  • True, local business is not entirely absent but on the whole, foreign operators have been the first to benefit.
  • At the other extreme, it is favoured by inner-city teens who appear to communicate entirely in an impenetrable mix of street slang and patois.
  • But does this dependency on the fans change the band/audience dynamic in an entirely positive way?
  • The larval insects insert their proboscides into the bark of young shoots of certain lac-bearing trees, varieties of Ficus, draw out the sap for nutriment, and at once exude a resinous secretion which entirely covers their bodies and the twigs, often to the thickness of one-half inch. Handwork in Wood
  • Inspired by the legendary botanical gardens in Padua, Italy where the Medicis plotted the untimely, frothing ends of their enemies, an English duchess has created a garden dedicated entirely to flora deadly and/or narcotic. Alnwick Poison Gardens
  • Another feature of the chaparral often occupies the field entirely to itself, viz., the chamisal or greasewood (_Adenostoma fasciculatum_, Hook, and Arn.). The Lake of the Sky Lake Tahoe in the High Sierras of California and Nevada, its History, Indians, Discovery by Frémont, Legendary Lore, Various Namings, Physical Characteristics, Glacial Phenomena, Geology, Single Outlet, Automobile Routes, Historic Town
  • When trainees have no riskfree way of getting adequate explanations, they may draw the wrong conclusions about entirely innocent research conduct.
  • The writers have dispensed entirely with the usual gangster clichés of rap and hip-hop. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'St. Peter and St. Paul,' Guercino's 'Hagar and Abraham;' a row of old columns which were broken and lying about till the French set them upon their legs; Leonardo da Vinci's fresco, which is entirely spoilt. The Greville Memoirs A Journal of the Reigns of King George IV and King William IV, Volume 1 (of 3)
  • The decision of Government to send reinforcements to Ireland was mentioned as a prelude to the information from Vienna of the birth of a son to the Princess Nikolas: and then; having conjoined the two entirely heterogeneous pieces of intelligence, the composer adroitly interfused them by a careless transposition of the prelude and the burden that enabled him to play ad libitum on regrets and rejoicings; by which device the lord of Earlsfont might be offered condolences while the lady could express her strong contentment, inasmuch as he deplored the state of affairs in the sister island, and she was glad of a crisis concluding a term of suspense thus the foreign-born baby was denounced and welcomed, the circumstances lamented and the mother congratulated, in a breath, all under cover of the happiest misunderstanding, as effective as the cabalism of Prospero's wand among the Neapolitan mariners, by the skilful Irish development on a grand scale of the rhetorical figure anastrophe, or a turning about and about. Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • To be sure, some geologists have found flaws in certain parts of the theory, but few reject it entirely.
  • I think that our experience of the numinous is both undeniable and entirely biological: the state of spiritual peace is the result of tickling some evolved center of our brain, a bit of neurology that conferred a survival advantage on our ancestors whose numinous hallucinations of a higher order in the universe drove them to catch more antelopes, eat better, and have more babies. Boing Boing
  • If it is gone entirely, please let me know and I will relist it.
  • I spent most of my twenties carefully partitioning my life, so that my employment and my family and my sexuality were entirely segregated.
  • Everyone has something touching or amusing to say, but the movie maintains a feeling of being entirely natural and unscripted.
  • These problems were never entirely overcome.
  • By forcing crystals of germanium or silicon to grow with impurities such as boron or phosphorus, the crystals gain entirely different electrical conductive properties.
  • Take Me on the Floor, "is, uh, extremely horny, in switch-hitting ways that put, though I have to admit it's not entirely clear how the world classifies said act; their Wiki page claims" electropop, "which could mean any number of things. Play | The Rhapsody Editorial Music Blog
  • His death was not entirely unexpected.
  • Pin-sharp and coldly factual, the images are all the more valuable for being entirely unposed. The Times Literary Supplement

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