How To Use Esteemed In A Sentence

  • He was called to the Irish bar in 1951 and has earned a reputation as an esteemed playwright, poet and biographer.
  • The teacher who can break a mainspring first and keep it from getting mended, is often the most esteemed in the community. The Lost Art of Reading
  • When Kwan shocked Hong Kong by coming out, he was already established as one of the city's best filmmakers, esteemed for his finely tuned aesthetics and perfectly realized tragic heroines.
  • Besides, he is a highly esteemed reporter who has won many prizes for his books, articles and television documentaries.
  • Bvt as it hath bene alwayes reputed a great fault to vse figuratiue speaches foolishly and indiscretly, so is it esteemed no lesse an imperfection in mans vtterance, to haue none vse of figure at all, specially in our writing and speaches publike, making them but as our ordinary talke, then which nothing can be more vnsauourie and farre from all ciuilitie. The Arte of English Poesie
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  • This second Adam Winthrop, at the age of seventeen, went to London, binding himself as an apprentice for ten years under the well-esteemed and profitable guild of the "clothiers," or cloth-workers. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 75, January, 1864
  • The Fund will support research projects intended to lead to an increased understanding of personal factors, social arrangements, social institutions and physical factors affecting the well being of disesteemed or disadvantaged persons.
  • For Verve Remixed, the label commissioned electronica acts to remix songs as esteemed as Billie Holiday’s “Don’t Explain” and as bizarre as Tony Scott’s “Hare Krishna.” Disquiet » Industry Standards
  • Perhaps I should reconsider or recheck — even if this other is an esteemed marine biologist who does know the difference. The Volokh Conspiracy » Disagreement Need Not Equal Discourtesy
  • But I’ve never been one for the male bimbo look, especially when (as the folks at Defamer reported) said male bimbo bares his, ahem, "peen" (to quote my esteemed colleague Michael Slezak), while playing the didgeridoo. The real reason Matthew McConaughey's 'Surfer, Dude' went under | EW.com
  • Some of my most esteemed journalistic colleagues have gone into battle - against each other. Times, Sunday Times
  • This plant, the succory of former days, is greatly esteemed by the French, by whom it is known as barbe de capucin. The Art of Living in Australia
  • In vain he travelled to the most esteemed saints and the most celebrated martyries. Gathering Clouds: A Tale of the Days of St. Chrysostom
  • I'm pretty sure our esteemed colleague from the NPCA would have been instantly transformed into a mumbling idiot. Judge Blocks Guns-In-Parks Rule
  • The kind of thing you find in my esteemed ancestor's books - words that haven't been spoken round here in two hundred years. A TIME OF WAR
  • The acacia, which, in Scripture, is always called 'shittah' and in the plural 'shittim,' was esteemed a sacred wood among the Hebrews. The Symbolism of Freemasonry
  • Dear Maggie, I feel I owe you an apology for abandoning your esteemed Victorian values.
  • But I've never been one for the male bimbo look, especially when (as the folks at Defamer reported) said male bimbo bares his, ahem, "peen" (to quote my esteemed colleague Michael Slezak), while playing the didgeridoo. Entertainment Weekly's PopWatch
  • There is a small bird called the ortolan, which is highly esteemed by the Italian gourmands. The Art of Stage Dancing The Story of a Beautiful and Profitable Profession
  • In response to your advertisement in today's "China Daily", I wish to apply for the position of filing clerk in your esteemed firm.
  • 8 The experience of so many princes, whom he had esteemed or endured, from the vain follies of Elagabalus to the useful rigor of Aurelian, taught him to form a just estimate of the duties, the dangers, and the temptations of their sublime station. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • It is, however, not the product "turpentine" that is most esteemed by the natives, but the fruit of the tree, a kind of drupe disposed in clusters. Scientific American Supplement, No. 288, July 9, 1881
  • Any licensee fortunate enough to receive praise from this esteemed tome can be guaranteed success beyond compare for years to come.
  • Thus, esteemed critics such as James Wood point us back to Henry James or Virginia Woolf as writers who set a standard of inner-directed realism, a realism of the mind and its subjective perceptions rather than a realism of the material world presented as a collection of facts. Experimental Fiction
  • There were elves, wizards, enchantresses, noblemen, and the esteemed king himself.
  • I could neither laugh with nor at the solemn utterances of men I esteemed ponderous asses; nor could I laugh, nor engage in my old-time lightsome persiflage, with the silly superficial chatterings of women, who, underneath all their silliness and softness, were as primitive, direct, and deadly in their pursuit of biological destiny as the monkeys women were before they shed their furry coats and replaced them with the furs of other animals. Chapter 29
  • Such ideas constellate the image of a mind whose cognitive power the age at once esteemed and feared, especially at a time when the increasingly rapid dissemination of thought and thoughts in the public sphere was becoming an activity of some socio-political concern. Introduction
  • Smith was so esteemed by his neighbors that he was elected to Congress in 1852 as an independent.
  • Lucchese to this day; it is, however, lightly esteemed, and not used at all when other corn abounds, but thrown into the hencoop to fatten poultry. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, Number 361, November, 1845.
  • By the end, it's a difficult choice for our esteemed judges to make. The Sun
  • One was a kind of thrush, the other a small dove called the ortolan, and esteemed a very great delicacy on account of its exquisite flavour. Swiss Family Robinson
  • My ablutions are esteemed the most complete of any man’s in the capital, and the mode of my abstersion the most in use. The Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan
  • In this afternoon’s Queen Speech debate (quite how our esteemed representatives can spend two days debating seven minutes worth of platitudes is beyond me), the Health Secretary, Andy Burnham, described the Tories’ shambolic health policies as an ‘omnishambles’ - very ‘hip’ phraseology stolen from an Armando Ianucci penned Malcolm Tucker rant. Smoking Guns and the Morality of Parliamentary Privilege
  • Mr. Martínez - everyone calls him Maestro - holds a title esteemed among fencers: master of arms. NYT > Home Page
  • ‘Anselmo remained amazed, and almost besides himself, hearing his friend Lothario so unexpectedly to acquaint him with those things in a time wherein he least expected them; for now he esteemed Camilla to have escaped victress from the forged assaults of Lothario, and did himself triumph for glory of her victory. The Fourth Book. VII. Wherein Is Prosecuted the History of the Curious-Impertinent
  • He is now an esteemed pundit (largely because his preparation is so meticulous) and a successful businessman. Times, Sunday Times
  • But still a shadow and resemblance of it was retained; and in the papal church itself to this day, particular confessors are esteemed competent judges of the meetness of their penitents for an admission unto the sacraments of their church. A Discourse concerning Evangelical Love, Church Peace, and Unity
  • The title of censor was esteemed more honorable than that of consul, although attended by less power: no one could be elected a second time, and they who filled it were remarkable for leading an irreproachable life; so that it was considered the chief ornament of nobility to be sprung from a censorian family. Roman Antiquities, and Ancient Mythology For Classical Schools (2nd ed)
  • Perhaps you mean that we need the moral imprimatur of this august and esteemed body.
  • It is asserted by some to possess properties fully equal to those of the I. aquifolium of Europe, the inner bark of which also yields a viscid substance called birdlime; its leaves are esteemed as a diaphoretic in the form of infusion; employed in catarrh, pleurisy, small-pox, etc. Resources of the Southern Fields and Forests, Medical, Economical, and Agricultural. Being also a Medical Botany of the Confederate States; with Practical Information on the Useful Properties of the Trees, Plants, and Shrubs
  • Kazu is also BYO, but be warned, corkage is a little steep at $5 a bottle (only slightly cheaper than the wine my esteemed colleagues and I provided…).
  • From which the esteemed author concludes that the status quo is to be maintained unless there is a really good reason (according to whom?) not to maintain them any more. The Volokh Conspiracy » “What Sort of Burden Does It Place on the University … to Strike ‘of Our Lord’ from the Diploma?”
  • ‘Our national task is to ensure that we act in a manner that reaffirms our deepest respect and support for Fifa, the esteemed Member of the Order of the Companions of OR Tambo,’ he wrote.
  • -- 'Specimens of the British Poets', by Thomas Campbell, London, 1819, ii. 134, 'sq'.] [Footnote 5: Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset [1637-1706], esteemed the most accomplished man of his day, was alike distinguished in the voluptuous court of Charles II. and the gloomy one of William III. Byron's Poetical Works, Volume 1
  • All that, and George Plimpton still set aside time for serious literature as founder of the esteemed Paris Review.
  • News of her passing was met with genuine sorrow in her home district, where she was an esteemed and highly regarded member of the community.
  • Players are justifiably esteemed for their amazing feats of athleticism.
  • Very dolent was he and sorely troubled that so young a knight should be esteemed above his fathers. French Mediaeval Romances from the Lays of Marie de France
  • Apart from a brief spell as an official with Chelsea after the last war he has remained with the Highbury club ever since and is one of its most esteemed officials.
  • The yellow, among which figure the _Cinchona calisaya, lancifolia, condaminea, micrantha, pubescens, _ etc., are placed in the first rank: the red, orange and gray are less esteemed. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 11, No. 22, January, 1873
  • I know of many systems of religion esteemed heathenish whose precepts fill the reader with shame, and provoke him to new endeavors, though it be to the performance of rites merely.
  • It is about as esteemed a vocation as the post of pox doctor 's clerk. The Sun
  • We of the civilized world are not apt to attach much credit to the latter species of exploits; but horse-stealing is well-known as an avenue to distinction on the prairies, and the other kind of depredation is esteemed equally meritorious. Primitive Love and Love-Stories
  • This complaint from an esteemed Commander is a potential game-changer. The Sun
  • It is a picture highly esteemed. DISRAELI: A Personal History
  • 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
  • Heinz Pagels, the esteemed theoretical physicist, once stated: "If you deny the objectivity of the world, unless you observe it and are conscious of it (as many prominent physicists have), then you end up with solipsism -- the belief that your consciousness is the only one. Robert Lanza, M.D.: Rethinking the Nature of Life
  • He was just being mindful of his stature as an respectable and esteemed brilliant scientifically oriented mind.
  • But his heart is hollow, and the more he is known, the less will he be loved or esteemed, and the feebler will be his influence. The Young Maiden
  • Young saithe, where available, are highly esteemed, e.g. ‘breaded’ with oatmeal and fried, as in Shetland.
  • Poets have formed what they call a poetical system of things, which though it be believed neither by themselves nor readers, is commonly esteemed a sufficient foundation for any fiction. A Treatise of Human Nature
  • The constant practice of the churches in former ages, in all their meetings for advice and counsel, to consent unto some form of wholesome words, that might be a discriminating "tessera" [symbol] of their communion in doctrine, being used in prime antiquity, -- as is manifest in that ancient symbol commonly esteemed apostolical (of the chief heads whereof mention in the like summary is made in the very first writers among them), -- having also warrant from the word of God, and being of singular use to hold out unto all other churches of the world our apprehensions of the mind of God in the chief heads of religion, may be considered. The Sermons of John Owen
  • Esteemed as an independent thinker and artist, she was a woman profoundly dependent on the financial and emotional support and approval of others, mostly men.
  • Then it was straight off to the darkroom to run off photographs of our esteemed educators in various sizes.
  • The most esteemed part of the tunny is the underneath, or "panse. Brittany & Its Byways
  • True ivory is one of the few substances to have been highly esteemed for symbolic purposes wherever it could be obtained.
  • Revered by some and reviled by many, Monsieur Arthens has been lording it over the world's most esteemed chefs for years, passing judgment on their creations, deciding their fates with a stroke of his pen, destroying and building reputations on a whim. Gourmet Rhapsody by Muriel Barbery: Book summary
  • According to your esteemed colleague Jonathan Wilson, Alania will play CSKA in the Russian cup final on 26 May, despite having failed to score so far in the competition three x 0-0 + pens, one walkover," writes Nath Jones. Do Tottenham and Fulham have to play in the Europa League? | The Knowledge
  • Grant is the ultimate other-directed figure, who wants to be loved rather than esteemed, while Firth is inner-directed and looks back to a much older, more grounded tradition. Hugh Grant and Colin Firth, the screen's leading Englishmen at 50
  • The two bankers and their esteemed guests shared a lavish four-course meal and fine wines at a table decked in a purple cloth. Times, Sunday Times
  • The hearts of war captives were the most esteemed gifts since they were won only at great expense and risk. Cultural Anthropology
  • In the introduction, Fergusson begins with a striking anecdote that reveals how highly Brown was esteemed by his fellow poets.
  • He was esteemed by his neighbours and unostentatiously prosperous. IN LOVE AND WAR
  • - Hoops Addict JoeSportsFan. com - Many of you who have followed my esteemed career know that my wheelhouse is a diverse one, inclusive of my five principal "Ms": mustaches, monkeys, mullets, Mr. T, and midgets. BallHype - Top Sports News, Videos, and Blogs
  • She sat thus for a long period, her meditations adrift in the future; and that which she foreread left her nor all sorry nor profoundly glad, for living seemed by this, though scarcely the merry and colorful business which she had esteemed it, yet immeasurably the more worth while. Chivalry
  • Because the Jets and Giants shouldn't be the only ones sitting at home getting fat this Sunday, we've ransacked the minds of some of NY's most esteemed chefs & barmen to bring you easy-to-make recipes packing flavors so explosive, you'll think Antonio Cromartie's tweeting about you. Thrillist: Super Bowl Super Snacking: Easy Grub for Game Day
  • The palsgrave of Lorraine, who had his seat at Aachen, was later esteemed the foremost in rank. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • He is now an esteemed pundit (largely because his preparation is so meticulous) and a successful businessman. Times, Sunday Times
  • I could neither laugh with nor at the solemn utterances of men I esteemed ponderous asses; nor could I laugh, nor engage in my old-time lightsome persiflage, with the silly superficial chatterings of women, who, underneath all their silliness and softness, were as primitive, direct, and deadly in their pursuit of biological destiny as the monkeys women were before they shed their furry coats and replaced them with the furs of other animals. Chapter 29
  • Rolling Thunder which occurs on Memorial Day, with 630,000 motorcycles from all over the United States and Canada, ride through the mall in D.C. For 23 years this event has happened every Memorial Day, unfortunately, the roar of 630,000 motorcycles is not enough to wake the conscience of our esteemed elected leaders, what a shame. ProWomanProLife » Abortion is everywhere
  • These things, saith Aesop after his reproving way, ought rather to have been discussed privately among ourselves, lest we be accounted antimonarchical while we desire to be esteemed friends and loyal counsellors. Essays and Miscellanies
  • The duke would have been able to receive certain esteemed visitors in the studiolo — while others waited in the salon — and proceed with them to the external loggia to conclude or continue their discussion while enjoying the magnificent view of the surrounding countryside. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • This is the Common Sage of the garden; and with the Green-leaved, which is but a sub-variety, the most esteemed for culinary purposes. The Field and Garden Vegetables of America Containing Full Descriptions of Nearly Eleven Hundred Species and Varietes; With Directions for Propagation, Culture and Use.
  • Public readings were an esteemed but ancillary activity, something an established poet might do spurred by vanity, ambition, or a shortage of funds.
  • Northern tobaccoes, and that it is mainly because they are milder that they are most esteemed. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 34, August, 1860
  • The audience was composed of cineastes, intellectuals and young men and women eager to view an explicit excursion into the sexual realm by an esteemed woman film-maker who had worked with such masters as Fellini.
  • The tendency to graze cattle, which is not hard work, and to "gad" about to cattle fairs, which are esteemed the greatest diversion the country affords, is an indication of the distinct superiority of the quick-witted Celt to the dull Saxon hind. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • The other, tall, meagre, with long grizzled hair and a wild unsettled look about the eyes, was a man of science; had written works well esteemed upon mathematics and electricity, also against the existence of any other creative power than that which he called "nebulosity," and defined to be the combination of heat and moisture. The Parisians — Volume 05
  • Gemstones are minerals esteemed for their qualities of beauty, durability, and rarity.
  • I have been receiving your esteemed fortnightly regularly, which is popular among one and all.
  • The word evoked connotations of an elite society in which Khalil was an esteemed member. Stealing Candy
  • Jim Ronan, Bekan, who died recently, was a popular and esteemed gentleman in the parish of Bekan since the family settled there in 1967.
  • He was taught to see again how Rhetoric haunts, and Rhetoric bedevils, the vindication of the clouded, especially in the case of a disesteemed Lord Ormont and His Aminta — Volume 1
  • Jeff Stober's esteemed funplex offers chef Anthony Rose's au courrent carte - veggie breakfast burritos, Southern fried chicken with pancakes - in its chi-chi dining room and lounge as well as its curbside café. NOW Magazine
  • By the end, it's a difficult choice for our esteemed judges to make. The Sun
  • He was esteemed as a literary wit.
  • During the 15th century, developing humanistic attitudes among patrons increasingly esteemed the creative contribution of the individual artist.
  • My presence in his sanctum was evidently esteemed a piece of impudence too shameful for remark.
  • Formerly it was esteemed an elegancy, though it would now be considered as a rusticism, to omit the Cicero's Brutus or History of Famous Orators; also His Orator, or Accomplished Speaker.
  • The biggest challenge of this mountain is its altitude, cold and severe climate, factors that never must be disesteemed in the intent to reach the peak of the ceiling of America
  • Of the Devanagari character we have also cast an entire new fount, which is esteemed the most beautiful of the kind in India. Life of William Carey
  • The Rev. SAMUEL TODD, my esteemed colleague in the itinerancy was a faithful brother, a sincere friend, a consistent, uniform Christian, an exemplary minister, a husband indeed, an affectionate, tender parent, which I presume will not be denied by any that knew him. A History of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the Only One in the United States of America, Styled Bethel Church
  • The two bankers and their esteemed guests shared a lavish four-course meal and fine wines at a table decked in a purple cloth. Times, Sunday Times
  • This, then, I pondered, was the end of it all, of life and strife and striving and love, the weary spirits of these long - gone ones to be invoked by fat old women and mangy sorcerers, the bones of them to be esteemed of collectors and betted on horse - races and ace-fulls or to be sold for cash and invested in sugar stocks. SHIN-BONES
  • The esteemed poet and ecological essayist has lived here with his family for 25 years.
  • Encased in iron or under glass, such relics were especially esteemed for their power to reverse the course of the body's eventual decay by effecting cures or allaying physical pain.
  • The esteemed poet and ecological essayist has lived here with his family for 25 years.
  • In the much esteemed book The International Art Markets: The Essential Guide for Collectors and Investors, compiled and edited by Goodwin and published in 2008 just before the global economic crisis, Goodwin noted that newly affluent art collectors saw in their own culture's art the iconography promotive of a new historical yet vital national identity and pride. G. Roger Denson: China Takes Top Spot in Art Auction Sales Away From the US & UK -- What It Means for Global Culture
  • _Ooravine_, and grow on the head of the green paraquet: Indeed, all red feathers are esteemed, but none equally with these; and they are such good judges as to know very well how to distinguish one sort from another. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14
  • They want to be esteemed, respected, admired. Times, Sunday Times
  • At that point, some might even label these esteemed legal scholars lunatics.
  • Now, one esteemed social critic, Jon Stewart, had something to say on the subject.
  • The esteemed company shows off its junior troupe of dancers in a programme that matches excerpts from the classics with new work by young choreographers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nay, there is a signal of our enemies 'destruction visible, and that a very great one also; and this is not a natural one, nor derived from the hand of foreigners neither, but it is this, that they have barbarously murdered our ambassadors, contrary to the common law of mankind; and they have destroyed so many, as if they esteemed them sacrifices for God, in relation to this war. Speech by Herod the Great to the Jews
  • In both traditions the white rooster, which crows at dawn to dispel the darkness of night, is highly esteemed.
  • Their lives are thrown into a spin by their esteemed relative's presence, but this tale ends quietly in a little wisp of smoke, an exquisite reminder of the evanescence of things.
  • He is now an esteemed pundit (largely because his preparation is so meticulous) and a successful businessman. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some that are so esteemed, indeed, never pretended unto any sobriety, but were mere effects of delirant [raving] imaginations; yet did even they also, one way or other, derive from an hatred unto the person of Christologia
  • My esteemed opponent and Islamic blogger Mr. Ghazi recently made comment about me (a bit disparaging, I'm afraid) at a pro-Jihad website called 'al-Fikrah' (aka AFN). Pedestrian Infidel
  • A tenured University Professor at Northeastern Illinois University, author, esteemed community leader, and forerunning advocate for Latino educational leaders, Gil-Garcia is a three time Fulbright scholar and an internationally acclaimed professional. Esther J. Cepeda: Chicago Latino List 2009: Ten Who Are Making a Big Difference For us All
  • Such craftsmen were considered more than mere artisans, and their products, especially set in seal rings, were highly esteemed.
  • He was esteemed as a dedicated and imaginative scholar.
  • The two bankers and their esteemed guests shared a lavish four-course meal and fine wines at a table decked in a purple cloth. Times, Sunday Times
  • The art of conversation is highly esteemed in France.
  • Othello is now a popular pianist called Aurelius Rex (Paul Harris) and Desdemona an esteemed singer named Delia Lane (Marti Stevens). Lessons Without Lectures
  • a highly esteemed scholar
  • We sincerely hope to enter a business relationship with your esteemed self. The Sun
  • The two bankers and their esteemed guests shared a lavish four-course meal and fine wines at a table decked in a purple cloth. Times, Sunday Times
  • Of course, the productions this year are sharing room with news about many transitions - the news of music director Alan Gilbert's departure and the appointment of his most excellent and esteemed replacement Edo de Waart, and now the news that general director Richard Gaddes, the companies 2nd general director in 50 years will retire as soon as his replacement is appointed. Swamp Thing
  • The deceased gentleman was well known and highly esteemed throughout the district, having at one time been a timber passer on the mills.
  • The professional critic or literary scholar who equates metaphor with poetry and poetry with truth is both disesteemed and opposed by the philosopher who, after deciding that metaphors are literally false, or cognitively insignificant, dismisses them as ‘mere’ instances of semantic confusion.
  • Well, Albert went East (wearing some of the disesteemed things he already possessed) to be outfitted for the summer shores of New Jersey. On the Stairs
  • He has no relatives and is highly esteemed by the cardinals. CHRISTINA QUEEN OF SWEDEN: The Restless Life of a European Eccentric
  • I think there be none in the whole Clan Quhele, save those which I myself gave to Gilchrist MacIan, whom God assoilzie, who esteemed them a choice propine. The Fair Maid of Perth
  • Old World spices like cumin and capers are highly esteemed and supermarkets sell aliño preparado, a ready-ground mixture of cumin, oregano, annatto, pepper, and paprika.
  • The Elaeagnus is called Sinjit: it produces a small red fruit, used in medicine as an astringent, it ripens in August, and sells at eight or nine seers the rupee; it is exported in small quantities; but the plant is not much esteemed. Journals of Travels in Assam, Burma, Bhootan, Afghanistan and the Neighbouring Countries
  • In our earnestness to romanticize the cowboy we've ironically disesteemed his true character.
  • They want to be esteemed, respected, admired. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has no relatives and is highly esteemed by the cardinals. CHRISTINA QUEEN OF SWEDEN: The Restless Life of a European Eccentric
  • I'm a week late with the rent, but my esteemed landlady said it was okay as long as I pay up next week, and give her a free guitar lesson.
  • Encased in iron or under glass, such relics were especially esteemed for their power to reverse the course of the body's eventual decay by effecting cures or allaying physical pain.
  • And now we turn it over to my esteemed colleague, who did a dynamite job last night anchoring in a very difficult situation.
  • She had admired and esteemed Mr. Faulkland prodigiously; her vexation was the greater, in finding her expectations disappointed; and could I have been so unjust to the pretensions of another, or so indelicate in regard to myself, as to have overlooked Mr. Faulkland's fault, I knew my mother would be inflexible. Memoirs of Miss Sidney Bidulph
  • The apple is esteemed as both an eater and cooker and is admired for its fine colouring, shape and size.
  • A study released today by the esteemed Holcombe Institute reveals that people who engage in genealogical research for at least 30 minutes a day live up to ten years longer than people who perform no daily research, but instead smoke three or more packs of cigarettes. Study: Genealogists Live Longer
  • The species of poverty, most esteemed by Religion, is _poverty of mind_. Good Sense
  • I have been fortunate to have the support and encouragement of several esteemed colleagues
  • Smallmouth buffalo are esteemed above all suckers from a culinary standpoint.
  • A sincere lover of religion, he was an abhorrer of all that he esteemed priestcraft; of all profanation, he held it to be the worst. Things By Their Right Names
  • The art of conversation is highly esteemed in France.
  • John was a highly regarded and esteemed member of the local community and his passing evoked much sadness and sorrow in the district.
  • Their usuries, which had hitherto been counted dishonest gain, were henceforth to be honorable, and they esteemed as patriots. Usury A Scriptural, Ethical and Economic View
  • our esteemed leader
  • She is as famous and prestigious as her father, and very esteemed with her warm and sympathetic personality.
  • He is now an esteemed pundit (largely because his preparation is so meticulous) and a successful businessman. Times, Sunday Times
  • Apparently, he called our esteemed governor and complained about your unprofessional conduct, your handling of the case, and your unfounded accusations. Best Kept Secrets
  • In one place he says, "The Phylosopher's Stone is a very dark disesteemed Stone, of a Gray colour, but therein lyeth the highest Tincture. Alchemy: Ancient and Modern
  • This little princess was named Mary, a name esteemed then, as now, as the most beautiful of all names. Second Book of Tales
  • He is now an esteemed pundit (largely because his preparation is so meticulous) and a successful businessman. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think there be none in the whole Clan Quhele, save those which I myself gave to Gilchrist MacIan, whom God assoilzie, who esteemed them a choice propine. The Fair Maid of Perth
  • Waverley -- my young and esteemed friend, Mr. Falconer of Balmawhapple, has craved of my age and experience, as of one not wholly unskilled in the dependencies and punctilios of the duello or monomachia, to be his interlocutor in expressing to you the regret with which he calls to remembrance certain passages of our symposion last night, which could not but be highly displeasing to you, as serving for the time under this present existing government. Waverley
  • Rollins described ‘the most esteemed’ quilts of her childhood as being made of ‘glossy, dark flannel, lined with yellow, with a slight wadding of carded wool.’
  • One of the key, and most hotly contested, elements distinguishing the Council from its disesteemed predecessor was to have been its composition. Suzanne Nossel: Avoiding Groundhog Day on the UN Human Rights Council
  • The Lady Om and I searched two seasons and found a single root of the wild mountain ginseng, which is esteemed so rare and precious a thing by the doctors that the Lady Om and I could have lived a year in comfort from the sale of our one root. Chapter 15
  • The black smoked apricots of Hupei were famous, and apricots in general were greatly esteemed as a food, being considered good for the heart.
  • Has there, in fact, ever been so great a player so universally unbeloved as the esteemed Mr. Bonds?
  • I know, a hundred honest men cuckolds, honestly and not unbeseemingly; a worthy man is pitied, not disesteemed for it. The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 15
  • This plant, the succory of former days, is greatly esteemed by the French, by whom it is known as barbe de capucin. The Art of Living in Australia
  • Gilbert Blane and Thomas Beddoes, highly esteemed authorities on scurvy in the 18th century, rightly doubted that there was any antiscorbutic virtue in malt.
  • I have been receiving your esteemed fortnightly.
  • To two scientists and esteemed friends, astrobiologist David Grinspoon and paleobotanist Kirk Johnson: thanks for not only the deep well of knowledge, but also for the refreshing wind of the Long View. The Whale Warriors
  • A jester at the court of his master, indulged and disesteemed, winning a clement master's praise. Ulysses
  • Thus, non-landed economic activities geared toward profit and growth through capital investment were disesteemed and thereby stifled.
  • True ivory is one of the few substances to have been highly esteemed for symbolic purposes wherever it could be obtained.
  • The leaves were more like those of the yucca than the aloe -- indeed, so like the yucca was the whole tree, that, from what I afterwards saw of yucca-trees in Mexico and South America, I am convinced that these are very near the same kind -- that is, they were of the same habit and family, though, as I also learned afterwards, esteemed different by botanists. Ran Away to Sea
  • This man bore a high reputation in his calling, and was, indeed, esteemed as a sort of Scottish Vidocq, who knew by headmark every filcher of a handkerchief between Caithness and the Border. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, No. 382, October 1847
  • Each short listed candidate will be interviewed and assessed by an esteemed panel of judges who will select the final 28 candidates.
  • Lodgepole logs have been an indigenous and beautiful housebuilding material in the west for years, and the log house is the esteemed vernacular architecture of Wyoming. Bird Cloud
  • Leo was in his mid-50s and was a popular and esteemed member of the community.
  • That work of Beda which is the best known and most esteemed is the Ecclesiastical History of the The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 07 (of 12)
  • We found many of the natives dressed in a thin French gauze, which they called byqui; this being a light airy dress, and well calculated to display the shape of their persons, is much esteemed by the ladies. Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa, 1795-7
  • While Andrew Melville has other claims on the lasting honour of his countrymen than the part he took in securing for Scotland the ecclesiastical system which has been the most powerful factor in her history, it may be held as certain that where this service which filled his life is disesteemed, his biography, if read at all, will be read with only a languid interest. Andrew Melville Famous Scots Series
  • Pacific oysters are not as esteemed as natives but turning down a plate of spanking fresh Pacifics is simply misplaced snobbery.
  • `We are both his lordship's valued and highly esteemed friends. THE RIVAL QUEENS: A COUNTESS ASHBY DE LA ZOUCHE MYSTERY
  • She stayed thus, motionless, her meditations adrift in the future; and that which she foreread left her not all sorry nor profoundly glad, for living seemed by this, though scarcely the merry and colorful business which she had esteemed it, yet immeasurably the more worth while. Chivalry
  • The Azzurri's esteemed defense is well-known for its ability to maintain slender leads. World Cup Soccer - Italy vs. South Korea
  • Most of the greatest minds in history belonged to those who were esteemed to be mentally unstable.
  • As a result of repeated encounters with the stigmatizing gaze of a culturally dominant other, the members of disesteemed groups internalize negative self-images and are prevented from developing a healthy cultural identity of their own.
  • Motherhood is a powerful metaphor because it is central to esteemed ideals of womanhood, particularly among Latinos.
  • Work in the low style generally reveals an ‘ambivalence about wealth’, but ‘pastoral was a place where it was particularly disesteemed’.
  • The Athenians refused a virtuous law, because the person was vicious who proposed it; and it is generally esteemed that there is a correspondency betwixt the principles and practices of those men who earnestly profess the promotion of those principles, so that they are mutual producers and advantagers one of another. The Doctrine of the Saints��� Perseverance Explained and Confirmed
  • Project Runway's most-esteemed "draper," Rami Kashou, was a guest speaker at the Phillips Collection last Thursday for their monthly "Phillips After 5″ event. Undefined
  • we dined in my esteemed friend's little room
  • Highly esteemed by his colleagues for his straight-forwardness, reliableness, punctuality, and conscientious fidelity in all his official duties, he exercised, here, his calling as teacher in a circle of hearers, at first relatively narrow, but which soon grew visibly larger, especially in the case of his lectures on Christian Ethics. Volume I.���History of Ethics.
  • Eventually he became E71eetwood Mac's esteemed coproducer and one of my dearest friends. ɘloЯ
  • It might have been esteemed by those who knew it, but such regard does not signify popularity.
  • Dear Maggie, I feel I owe you an apology for abandoning your esteemed Victorian values.
  • We sincerely hope to enter a business relationship with your esteemed self. The Sun
  • Feminist philosophical work in ethics, political theory and theory of knowledge has two central aims: to reveal the gender bias encoded in conventional philosophical work, and to reconstruct theories of morality, political justice, and knowledge so that they more adequately address the experience of women and other disesteemed social groups.
  • Many of you who have followed my esteemed career know that my wheelhouse is a diverse one, inclusive of my five principal "Ms": mustaches, monkeys, mullets, Mr. T, and midgets. BallHype - Top Sports News, Videos, and Blogs

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