How To Use Evoked In A Sentence

  • He was back in jail last night after his probation licence was revoked. The Sun
  • Dio Cassius can scarcely be mistaken when he says that Tyre and Sidon were "enslaved" -- i.e. deprived of freedom -- by Augustus, [14477] who must certainly have revoked the privilege originally granted by Pompey. History of Phoenicia
  • Although Mr. Smith didn't fully solo until this last tune, throughout the set his polyrhythmic drumming evoked a movie with four subplots going at once, all of which, I'd be willing to wager, are better than the latest Harry Potter movie, even in 3D. The Sound Way Down in the Underground
  • The fragrance evoked an aroma of fruits and flowers so ripe, they are starting to decay, reminding us of Thanatos, which is forever inseparable from Eros. Archive 2007-07-01
  • The Bush doctrine is being evoked as a template for conflict resolution worldwide.
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  • At nerve terminals, stimulus-evoked calcium entry triggers transmitter release through rapid, regulated exocytosis of readily releasable synaptic vesicles.
  • The Tullio phenomenon represents vestibular symptoms and/or eye movements evoked by a sound stimulus.
  • He was back in jail last night after his probation licence was revoked. The Sun
  • The planned rise in employers' national insurance contributions has been partly revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The respondents accept that the authority of an agent may be revoked by express notice given by the principal to the agent.
  • WHY their right to residency or asylum is not revoked the moment they are convicted. The Sun
  • The human landscape so lovingly evoked by Leigh Fermor, Lawrence Durrell and others is now a wistful memory.
  • The group said it had collected 3,000 signatures on a petition calling for the hunter's licence to be revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • This evoked from Augustine the sad observation that there are crooks in every profession.
  • A longing for home, and the memories evoked by the past, were no longer seen as detrimental to mental wellbeing. Times, Sunday Times
  • Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania or cluster headache attacks are never evoked by tactile stimuli.
  • Under the plans, novice riders will have to sit a theory test and their licence will be revoked if they collect six penalty points. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is being held on suspicion of traveling with an invalid passport, but Bosnitch said Fischer was never notified by the U.S. government that his passport was revoked.
  • Her comment evoked protests from the shocked listeners.
  • A will is revoked by the subsequent marriage of the testator.
  • this remark evoked sadness
  • Being alone in the office with her boss evoked the scene with the father and the sense of enigmatic, inexplicable menace. Times, Sunday Times
  • The license is also revoked if the licensee makes a patent claim against another licensee over the code covered by the license.
  • I received death threats, there were protests and there were calls for my citizenship to be revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Sincan High Criminal Court has revoked the "nonsuit" decision of the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor's Office on the criminal complaint about the phones of Ömer Faruk Eminağaoğlu being tapped. Hurriyet Dailynews
  • His visa was revoked following a public campaign against him. The Sun
  • The pictures had been chosen because they evoked emotion. Times, Sunday Times
  • A person's membership may be revoked for cause, other than nonpayment of dues, by a two-thirds vote by ballot of the Board of Directors.
  • Less easily quantified will be the emotions evoked by the memory of Persian Punch, who won 20 races in his career, the last of them on the Heath exactly a year ago.
  • The sense of time lapse is disconcerting, seemingly reliant on the drama evoked by the size of the projected images rather than the impact of the work itself.
  • His abilities as an advocate evoked general admiration, though he did not succeed in baffling the prosecution.
  • The book has evoked responses from people living with brain damage and members of the medical profession as well as those who've read it as a family story.
  • Crucially, he was not put on the no-fly list and his visa was not revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The photos - which have fuelled rumours that she was given special treatment - could lead to her residency status being revoked. The Sun
  • Settling in his chair, Richard inwardly frowned and struggled to shake off the premonition Seamus's opening paragraph had evoked. SCANDAL'S BRIDE
  • It evoked a huge and apparently permanent armament industry, now wholly dependent... on government contracts.
  • Heterogeneous elements, taken from all the religions of the Orient, were combined in the uranography of the ancients, and in the power ascribed to the phantoms that it evoked, vibrates in the indistinct echo of ancient devotions that are often completely unknown to us. [ The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism
  • And even he, once or twice, coming down from a five-minute levitation, had evoked a soft grunt from the stage floor. C B GREENFIELD - A LITTLE MADNESS
  • The steppe was a vast plain that shone with ponds and corkscrew rivers and evoked a wistful sadness. Wolves Eat Dogs
  • The doctors said that if any response was evoked it was among a few middle aged and elderly patients who were already highly motivated to modify their drinking behaviour.
  • Dr. Abou El Fadl looked, by the way, nothing like the image evoked by "Egyptian dissident," being kind of hunched over, diffident, mumbly, and short. Kenneth Hite's Journal
  • Objective To determine the correlation between the changes of visual evoked potential(VEP)and the concentration of blood methanol in patients suffered from acute methylismus.
  • Empathy and unapologetic emotion are her trademarks, evoked by a big voice that can rumble with lust or scream with self-hatred.
  • At that moment, the cudgelling, multiplied by a hundred hands, became zealous, blows with the flat of the sword were mingled with it, it was a perfect storm of whips and clubs; the convicts bent before it, a hideous obedience was evoked by the torture, and all held their peace, darting glances like chained wolves. Les Miserables
  • All of God's creation, animate and inanimate, reflected God's generosity toward his creatures and evoked an outpouring of praise and thanks.
  • Turning to painting in 1907, Feininger began to experiment with formal qualities, namely perspective, while infusing his genre scenes with the same intangible whimsicality evoked in his commercial work dating back to the turn of the century. Alexander Adler: Lyonel Feininger: At The Edge of The World
  • Other live chariot races have been staged over the years but none has evoked the same sense of danger and excitement. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her bending body evoked wordless memories of love and life, her supple arms gave meaning to nameless emotions, and her springing legs bore testament to perfection.
  • The group said it had collected 3,000 signatures on a petition calling for the hunter's licence to be revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rules banning divorced people from remarrying in church were revoked yesterday by the Church of England.
  • These prophets relied upon the presence of a certain motivity, from which a definite response could be evoked by an appeal which they were peculiarly able to make; but though "they prophesied until the time of the offering of the evening oblation," there was none that regarded. The Approach to Philosophy
  • Clinical services available within the Division include orthoptics, aphakic contact lenses, electroretinography, visual evoked potential, ultrasonography, non-invasive functional visual testing, and complete ocular photography. Ophthalmology Fellowship
  • The problem is that a revoked visa does not take effect until after the person leaves the United States.
  • Invitations to meditate, his vast colour-soaked canvases are memorable for the sensations evoked in the viewer rather than for their imagery.
  • Her face, though sad, still evoked a feeling of serenity.
  • His death evoked widespread regret and shock amongst his many friends and acquaintances.
  • They say appreciation of this instrument is an acquired taste, but I can feel it and I know it is the same feeling that calliopes evoked in me long before I had even heard of uillean pipes. OpEdNews - Diary: Something in a Name
  • That evoked a sunburst of shame inside my anger, but I went on regardless: `Holden, there is nothing English about lying down to die. ANTI-ICE
  • There is another parallel with Angela's Ashes, but one that shows how much better this book is: the deaths of no fewer than three Fuller children, and the unappeasable pain of these losses, are evoked with a shattering lack of melodrama.
  • The artificial conflict between formalist art with its hermetic integrity and content art with its higher purpose of social change seems to be evoked.
  • The independent counsel's unprecedented challenge to the presidency evoked the most feeble and cowardly response from these quarters.
  • The sovereign is the agent for the purpose of directing the united strength for the common benefit; but the sovereign is an agent of unlimited discretion, and with authority that cannot be revoked. Leviathan or Post-War Trends in Government and Business
  • The esplanade in front of Edinburgh Castle is legally owned by Nova Scotia, dating from a deal concluded by Charles I and never revoked.
  • Probably no other topic has evoked as much passion in discussions among military logisticians as the establishment of a single logistics branch or corps.
  • Their videos evoked a glamorous existence, globetrotting around tropical locations; they were sharply dressed; they went out with supermodels; their lead singer had nearly drowned in a yacht race.
  • With his passport revoked, he faced an exile from the ring whose cost was certain to be physical as well as financial. Times, Sunday Times
  • Access is at all times probationary and can be denied, revoked or reviewed at any time for any reason.
  • The speckle noise is the inherent noise pattern evoked by the mechanism of ultrasound imaging. It brings great difficulties to the feature extraction, recognition and analysis.
  • It cannot be revoked, we are all mortal, and these all commanding gods and princes die like men: [3898] — involvit humile pariter et celsum caput, aquatque summis infima. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • In that interlunar twilight there reigned a solemn sense of wonder evoked here eternally, one felt, from the ancient time, with the rustling of stirred foliage and the voice of those far waters for its music. Apologia Diffidentis
  • He is still a priest although his right to officiate at Church sacraments was revoked by the Bishop of San Bernardino in 1994.
  • In 2000 it was reported the Boy Scouts national office revoked the title afforded to Bill Clinton after thousands of complaints. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • With its stepped projections and striations of garbage and wood, this baroque construction evoked a geological formation of layered rock and sediment.
  • If it is corrected before the player who revoked plays to the next trick, the opponent who played after the revoke may retract one's card and substitute another.
  • Fortunately, through the unique grace of this program, we have been educated in the truest sense of that word, which shares a common root with the word "educe" - that is, we have had our writerly selves evoked from within. Robert Peake
  • Fashion historians said the dress, which had an ivory satin bodice narrowed at the waist and padded at the hips, clearly evoked Mr. McQueen who frequently drew on the Victorian tradition of corsetry. Gown Is a Boost for Fashion House
  • It means that those with less than two years' experience will be banned for a first-time offence because they have their licence revoked after six points. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Division of Ophthalmology offers special testing not routinely available for children elsewhere, including vision testing for preverbal children, orthoptic evaluation and treatment, adult and pediatric visual field testing, electroretinography (awake or with sedation), visual evoked responses and ultrasonography. Ophthalmology (Eye)
  • He was happy that his marathon performance had evoked a very positive response from the audience.
  • It evoked feelings of nostalgia, embarrassment and wonder at how I was thinking then.
  • WASHINGTON/CARACAS - The United States has revoked the visa of the Venezuelan ambassador to Washington in apparent retaliation for Venezuela's rejection of the U.S. envoy to Caracas, a diplomat said on Wednesday. Msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines
  • Moreover, though every intellectual act is accompanied by sensory motion, and especially by some sense representation (phantasma) evoked in the imagination, nevertheless sensation and sensuous representation (phantasma, image) differ essentially from the idea produced in and by the intellect, which is an immaterial, supersensuous and superorganic power or faculty. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
  • To qualify, you must have an unrevoked CPA license, although you do not need to have an active CPA license.
  • American officials yesterday said they had revoked his passport. The Sun
  • The incident was nasty and last month that licence was revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • If they win, bank accounts would be unfrozen and travel bans revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • Presumably you would have to be hauled before the beak and convicted of something before your licence was revoked.
  • It's certainly not a compound, and I can't imagine what two meanings might be evoked by this word in order to produce the intended effect.
  • The use of the word ‘pepper’ came into existence when it was observed that chili evoked a similar response to that of black pepper.
  • The film's visual art is immersive: I'm not sure that any other Los Angeles movie has better evoked the city's humidity.
  • They might have held some pertinence had the mood of the town been more powerfully evoked.
  • The newly published review on the book has evoked much controversy.
  • It shall be unlawful for any person to labor at the plumbing trade in the capacity of a plumbing journeyman within the city without first having had issued to him a valid and unrevoked journeyman plumber’ s license by the Oklahoma Construction Industries Board.
  • They pleaded not guilty and revoked their confessions.
  • Cases it has dealt with vary from revoked credit cards to missed mortgage payments, according to a company spokesman.
  • The result evoked an angry response from demonstrators outside.
  • He had his driving license revoked.
  • The newly published review on the book has evoked much controversy.
  • The gilt rosettes that once studded its coffered dome evoked the firmament.
  • Yet they evoked awe and wonder and many were canonized. Fools Rush In - A Call to Christian Clowning
  • Congregation of the Sacraments (7 March, 1910), the power to dispense kings or royal princes from impediments, diriment or impedient, is henceforth reserved in a special manner to the Holy See, and all faculties granted heretofore in such cases to certain ordinaries are revoked. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • The company noted that its principal Gatsuurt hardrock mining license wasn ' t listed among those licenses to be revoked. Mongolia Reviews Mine Licenses
  • The exemption of Catholic seminarians and clergy from military conscription was revoked.
  • Differentiation between the echinococcal cyst and hepatocellular carcinoma on CT images evoked diagnostic difficulty before operation.
  • I received death threats, there were protests and there were calls for my citizenship to be revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • To young people accustomed to weekend trips to the places depicted, the fear evoked by such scenes is alien. Times, Sunday Times
  • That means another three points for a motoring offence would see his licence revoked. The Sun
  • Two series of paintings, Swifts in Flight and the Speeding Automobile, suggest the Futurist preoccupation with velocity, but here, movement is evoked through patterns of lines rather than broken contours.
  • What he lacks is the charisma of an Olivier, whose epochal Coriolanus is dazzlingly evoked in two pages of Kenneth Tynan's Curtains.
  • Convoys of World War II vehicles and former soldiers trekking across the famous beaches evoked memories of the crucial push that eventually toppled the Third Reich.
  • The former England skipper evoked memories of less happy days with the national side when he blazed an injury time spot-kick over the bar and at the same time passed up on the opportunity to end his career on 100 goals.
  • His visa was revoked following a public campaign against him. The Sun
  • The feelings evoked; the longings unleashed; the yearnings induced; the awe inspired.
  • Noguchi's interests extended to ceramics, and he created works that deliberately evoked ancient haniwa ( "circle of clay") sculpture, which he encountered in Japan. Archaeology as Modern Art?
  • Who cared for tradition in these days, when spirits could be evoked from black bottles, and black bottles could be evoked from the complaisant white men for a few hours 'sweat or a mangy fur? THE SICKNESS OF LONE CHIEF
  • The stern regime evoked mixed emotions from past pupils. Times, Sunday Times
  • The evil Sheriff of Nottingham was played excellently and evoked plenty of hisses and boos - as very good baddie should!
  • Her speech evoked a hostile response.
  • Robinson's triumphs in the face of bigotry evoked a sense of pride among black people and forced the rest of America to consider anew the doctrine of white supremacy.
  • Crucially, he was not put on the no-fly list and his visa was not revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The effect of regs 83 and 84 of the General Regulations is that, whether a certificate is revoked or discharged, does not affect the ability of the assisted person's solicitor and counsel to look to the Board for payment of their fees.
  • Mr. Le Page Renouf (32) likens it to the "eidolon" of the Greeks, the "genius" of the Romans; and Dr. Wiedemann has lately written an interesting paper to show that it was not the person, but what he calls "the personality" or "individuality" of the deceased – meaning thereby that which distinguished him in life from other men; in other words, the mental impression which was evoked when his name was mentioned. Pharaohs, Fellahs and Explorers
  • US visa revoked in light of investigation. Times, Sunday Times
  • Any license granted may be revoked as hereinafter provided.
  • The word evoked connotations of an elite society in which Khalil was an esteemed member. Stealing Candy
  • Covered only from waist down by white sheets, they evoked a cross between Greek statues and hospital patients.
  • In a prospective study of 59 patients undergoing cardiac surgery, the amplitude and area of diaphragmatic evoked potentials were more sensitive than latency in detecting phrenic nerve paresis.
  • Not long afterwards, news seeped out that his licence had been revoked and his car impounded. Times, Sunday Times
  • Exchanging stories and memories of the lost servicemen have evoked complex feelings, they said.
  • She saw feet sinking into the thick pile of the new rugs whose abstract patterns evoked the work of contemporary artists.
  • He recognized the claims both of social convention and of personal inclination, and no man better evoked the power of passion to overwhelm the scruples of even the most highly principled person.
  • Objective To study the relation between the visual evoked potential ( VEP ) and subjective vision.
  • What's to say there's not a homeless soul on a cold Dublin street who occasionally glances at a digital photo - using the memories evoked by the image to hold onto reality for yet another day.
  • The SNr stimulation (SNr) was triggered by an orthodromic spike evoked by cortical stimulation (Cx) either with a delay of 30 ms (no collision) or with a delay of 3 ms leading to collision of both spikes. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • They say there's no evidence that native reserves were revoked to achieve such a purpose, and no evidence of suppressing or curtailing Aboriginal customs and rites.
  • Bottom, with a hyperpolarizing bias current to prevent PIC activation, the same stimulation only evoked a polysynaptic EPSP (lower plot). Naturejobs - All Jobs
  • Under conductor Will Crutchfield, the orchestra and chorus brought richness and bel canto lyricism to the score, from the galloping motifs of the overture to the antiphonal horn playing that evoked the echoes of the Swiss mountains, the lively, fugal mustering of the cantons in Act II, and the victorious tremolos of the finale. Pared 'Flute' Is a Muted Production
  • Delhi: The union budget for the next fiscal has pegged an outlay of Rs. 31,036 crore (Rs. 310.36 billion/$6.7 billion) for News Service: The state-wide bundh called by Sri Rama Sene to protest against the assault on its chief Pramod Mutalik evoked a poor response and a few stray WN.com - Articles related to Virgin Galactic Brings Space Tourism Even Closer
  • The giant saguaro cactus is evoked by five tall figures.
  • Should Larry King's Marriage License Be Revoked?
  • The emphasis was on the game of dice, which evoked political intrigues beyond the barriers of time and place.
  • Your rights as a user can be revoked any time Redmond deems you an unworthy user through "deactivation" they don't even have to send Moose and Vito to give you kidney punches, they are resident on your platform. Blah, Blah! Technology
  • The overstriving of the child suffering the ulcerative colitis is a life-saving maneuver, evoked by fantasied danger of abandonment to destructive forces.
  • This must represent the child's presumed will and may be revoked at any time without detriment to the child.
  • Their spine-decalcifying caterwauls - a sequence of whuffings, snarlings and growlings - have evoked satanic visions since the first European settlers arrived on the island of Tasmania more than a century ago. International Herald Tribune - World News, Analysis, and Global Opinions
  • Since they evoked feelings of gratification and satisfaction, uncertainty abounds as to whether they should be erased it into oblivion.
  • Conceived as delimiting a verbal habitus or ethos, verse instigates a traverse whose unruliness is grooved deep into the genesis of phrasing — and of its evoked and self-razed alternatives — rather than merely awaiting some transgressive gesture on the reader's part. Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
  • The supreme headship of the church was revoked by Parliament in December 1554 and acknowledgement made of the authority of the pope, who had sent Pole ‘to call us home again into the right way from whence we have all this long while wandered’.
  • They campaigned mightily to get the old visitors permit scheme revoked and the replacement scheme activated.
  • The earthquake at Koyna, with a magnitude of 6.9 on the Richter scale, contradicted this belief and evoked interest on the part of geologists, geodesists, dam experts, and engineers.
  • The lazy, hazy days of summer were evoked by some tracks, while others simply burst with rhythmic vigour. The Sun
  • In addition, the high propensity of lead to oligomerize syt II offers a possible molecular explanation for how lead interferes with calcium-evoked neurotransmitter release.
  • Tetanic stimulation of the afferent fiber evoked after - inhibition of the A δ DRR for various lengths of time.
  • Each woman relived the horror of her experiences, each account evoked questions: is war necessary?
  • The lazy, hazy days of summer were evoked by some tracks, while others simply burst with rhythmic vigour. The Sun
  • The Sincan High Criminal Court has revoked the "nonsuit" decision of the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor's Office on the matter. Hurriyet Dailynews
  • Some have likened the book to a ‘French War and Peace’ and others have evoked Anne Frank's diary but critics are united in acclaiming it as one of the most important novels about the occupation.
  • The latters skewed Delta Blues harmolodics are evoked in ‘Somewhere in the East’, where a spot of retuning gives the guitar a sour, oud like sound (even though the melody hints at ‘Strangers in the Night’).
  • The incident was nasty and last month that licence was revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • Objective To determine the correlation between the changes of visual evoked potential(VEP)and the concentration of blood methanol in patients suffered from acute methylismus.
  • As he points out in the catalogue, the elemental feelings about life and death evoked in these paintings of solitary stags convey a mood of religious awe.
  • Seizures could be nonepileptic if evoked in the normal brain by treatments, such as electric shock or chemical convulsants, or epileptic when occurring without evident provocation.
  • Despite the elder Bush’s passive construction, the phrase evoked the Alamo legend, in which William Barret Travis, besieged by a Mexican army, used his sword to draw a line in the ground or sand, saying, “Those prepared to die for freedom’s cause, come across to me.” No Uncertain Terms
  • Detection of the deviant elicits additional evoked potentials.
  • The stage shook as it resounded with the rhythmic patterns at such speed that evoked gasps from the wonderstruck audience.
  • Abnormalities in electroencephalograph theta and delta activity, visual evoked potentials, and brainstem evoked potentials have been reported in children exposed to molds.
  • There are no sentential complements, though pronouns and some noun phrases can be used to refer to explicit or evoked propositions.
  • White-water canoeing has never been so thrillingly - or so squelchily - evoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The photos - which have fuelled rumours that she was given special treatment - could lead to her residency status being revoked. The Sun
  • While HDCP's digital rights management (DRM) is "revocable" -- it allows copyright owners to generate a fresh set of encryption keys for new releases, after which law-abiding owners of Blu-ray players have to wait for firmware updates to watch those titles -- the master key by its nature can't be revoked without making every existing release unplayable on hardware that complied with the old key. Blu-ray's HDCP security possibly cracked. So what?
  • While the setting evoked an escapist fantasy, the conversation dwelt obsessively on the harsh, inescapable realities of the moment.
  • He magically evoked the Alpine mystery of the score's opening bars.
  • Also on Thursday, three junior diplomats at Iraqi Embassy in Bangkok left Thailand after being told on Tuesday that their diplomatic privileges and immunities were being revoked.
  • His license was revoked for selling alcohol to minors.
  • EPA Especially the ivory satin bodice, which was narrowed at the waist and padded at the hips, evoked the late Mr. McQueen who frequently drew on the Victorian tradition of corsetry, Ms. Rohwedder writes. The Dress
  • Neu desint epulis rosæ"; particularly as the shade we deal with can be evoked only by peculiar incantations, -- only the heralding of certain precise claims will this monarch listen to as the just _inferiæ_, the fitting sacrifice or hecatomb of our homage. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 71, September, 1863
  • This is despite the fact that about three-quarters of the population want to see that privilege revoked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The ongoing debate over gay marriage has evoked myriad opinions from numerous points of reference.
  • The government revoked her husband's license to operate migrant labor crews.
  • Several Digger women, including Judy Goldhaft, Ewing, and Gail "Geba" Greenberg, continued to develop the ancient technique of tie-dyeing as an art form that, like the swirling colors of the light shows at rock concerts, evoked the visual hallucinations of the LSD experience. 34 Manhood in the Age of Aquarius: Masculinity in Two Countercultural Communities, 1965–83
  • Charcoal portraits came next, and the entire family hung in a row, looking as wild and crocky as if just evoked from a coalbin. Little Women
  • Of course, there was the flood of hormones which evoked embarrassed silence (and mute curses) from him; but more importantly, he knew nothing about her.
  • In the psychical world that quality which we call spirituality may be associated with and evoked by Theism, or the belief in a Divine The Essentials of Spirituality
  • Rogue corporations that wilfully break the law will have their charters revoked, their assets sold and the money funnelled into superfunds for their victims.
  • Self-awareness of roles and of the feelings evoked in interpersonal encounters is increasingly critical for the nimble entrepreneur.
  • These songs have set the trend for melody and have evoked the nostalgia, which was fading into oblivion.
  • Yet they evoked awe and wonder and many were canonized. Fools Rush In - A Call to Christian Clowning
  • Not long afterwards, news seeped out that his licence had been revoked and his car impounded. Times, Sunday Times
  • This incident evoked uncommon anger in Spinoza, who was an admirer of de Witt and the republican ideals for which he stood. Spinoza's Political Philosophy
  • Granted, his character is pathetic, although his hulky good looks and gentleness might have evoked a certain charm.
  • Executive Order No. 2164 of April 7, 19515, designating certain persons for the purpose of issuing provisional certificates of registry to vessels described in paragraph 1 hereof, is hereby revoked. EXECUTIVE ORDER 10351
  • She saw feet sinking into the thick pile of the new rugs whose abstract patterns evoked the work of contemporary artists.
  • Say what you will about Joey Reynolds: he may be a cornball, but he sure knows how not to have his station's licence revoked
  • Results: Fresh water does inhibIt'stone formation rat kidney evoked by 1 , 2 - ethanediol and ammonium chloride.
  • The Kansas cyclone that whisks Dorothy into a dreamworld is evoked through vorticist projections the work of Jon Driscoll that betoken chaos in the cosmos. The Wizard of Oz - review
  • The drama of that event is so perfectly evoked you can feel the fear in the room and hear bones crunch as the executioner's axe strikes home.
  • Indeed, as expectations can kill the magic stone dead, such occasions are often evoked by going somewhere completely new.
  • I felt that the Zimmer frame parked alongside the court evoked a touch of sympathy.
  • He affirmed that he had performed a magical ceremony, termed tine egan, by which he evoked a fiend, from whom he extorted a confession that Conachar, now called Eachin, or Hector, MacIan, was the only man in the approaching combat between the two hostile clans who should come off without blood or blemish. The Fair Maid of Perth
  • It is unlawful for any vendor to sell or offer for sale any goods or merchandise from any vehicle pursuant to this section unless such person shall possess an unexpired and unrevoked vendor's permit.

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