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How To Use Exile In A Sentence

  • [Footnote 1: The King, Walagambahu, who in his exile had been living amongst the rocks in the wilderness, ascended the throne after defeating the Malabars (B.C. 104), and "caused _the of stone or caves of the rocks_ in which he had taken refuge to be made more commodious. Ceylon; an Account of the Island Physical, Historical, and Topographical with Notices of Its Natural History, Antiquities and Productions, Volume 1 (of 2)
  • Recruit rich white republicunts (carpetbaggers) to swoop in and scoop-up "devalued" (seized from still-exiled owners) properties and change the entire complexion (race, income, politics, everyfuckingthing) of the ENTIRE GREATER NEW ORLEANS AREA. Your Right Hand Thief
  • There were many French exiles in England after the Revolution.
  • Festivals that provide a forum for Arab and Israeli art and culture, and universities and academies that offer joint courses in the Qur'an and the Bible, midrash and tafsir, cabbalah and Sufism, thereby placing them in their original relation to one another, are today only feasible in exile -- in the West, of all places, which bears part of the blame for the present-day impossible situation. MRZine.org
  • (The show's skillful book, which interrupts the singing and dancing with pogroms and exile, is based on stories by Sholom Aleichem.) With Harvey Fierstein as Tevye, 'Fiddler' roars right along
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  • Everyone who uses those arguments has already assumed the longterm disfranchisement and marginalization of that majority of the Palestinian people forced to live in complete exile from their homeland for, in many cases, the past 60 years ... Charlottesville Blogs
  • The climax of these commotions came during the fourth week of September, when the parliament returned in triumph from its exile.
  • He loves his job, but he's not exactly thrilled with being an exile from his home and family. Christianity Today
  • The law also offers former exiles, political prisoners and relatives of the victims the option to apply to a committee to clear their names. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is the ancient city of the exiled and the centre of Western art. Hemingway in Paris - Parisian walks for the literary traveller
  • After an exile of ten years her uncle returned to Britain.
  • American modernism, full of exiles and immigrants, caught his attention early.
  • After the military coup, the family left for self-imposed exile in America.
  • Especially on the left, the defeat in 1849 provoked a period of reassessment which, together with the hardship and loneliness of political exile, led to some substantial political realignments.
  • She plays Themba's daughter who returns from exile to learn the unpalatable truth about her father.
  • Our Theo was somewhat of a Bible scholar, and an expert on the Talmud, the teachings and deliberations of the Babylonian rabbis in exile. A CONVICTION OF GUILT
  • But Saturn came to the country, a homeless exile fleeing from his son Jupiter.
  • In London the first family in exile was taken in by the Polish ambassador. Times, Sunday Times
  • After an exile of three and a half years, he returned triumphantly to boxing.
  • Her presence and nurturance literally restore Okonkwo to life in the wake of Ikemefuna's death and his forced, seven-year exile in Mbanta.
  • The return of the popes to Rome after their exile in Avignon in the second decade of the century probably encouraged a new internationalism, as Dufay's career in Rome and his relations with Florence, Ferrara, and Rimini show.
  • In 1803 Napoleon exiled her to twenty leagues, roughly fifty miles, from Paris.
  • Some fabulously original singer-songwriters rose to sudden popular prominence… and were arrested, jailed, and sent into exile with shaven heads.
  • The island is a haven for tax exiles.
  • Luckily, Mary finds an unlikely champion in prickly Elizabeth Philpot, a recent exile from London, who also loves scouring the beaches. WEEKLY BOOK RELEASES FOR JANUARY 3RD | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews
  • Only a sense of uxorial duty to his position stopped Hadrian from sending Sabina into exile.34 Caesars’ Wives
  • Wolf ended her life in her beloved Berlin, doubly exiled in her own country and shorn of her faith, left only with Was bleibt – what remains, the title of the account of being under surveillance by the Stasi that she wrote in 1979, and that aroused considerable controversy when published in 1990. Christa Wolf obituary
  • Women were able to walk on the streets unharassed, and exiled businessmen returned to rebuild the broken country. 13 « May « 2008 « Niqnaq
  • Ionian exiles and the Lesbians with the expedition began to urge him, since this seemed too dangerous, to seize one of the Ionian cities or the Aeolic town of Cyme, to use as a base for effecting the revolt of Ionia. The History of the Peloponnesian War
  • Urge to build, to make, as compensation for anxieties of exile, he wrote.
  • Youth! There is nothing like youth. The middle-aged are mortgaged to Life. The old are in Life's lumber-room. But youth is the Lord of Life. Youth has a kingdom waiting for it. Every one is born a king, and most people die in exile. Oscar Wilde 
  • But when she is exiled to the cabin of her prospective husband, her senses as well as her principles revolt.
  • Simeon II, or to give him his civilian name Simeon Borisov of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, styled himself "tsar of Bulgaria" while he lived in exile. Prepare for the reign of Charles the Meddler | Nick Cohen
  • Indian media had initially carried reports that the Karmapa could be a Chinese agent sent to India to become a leader of exiled Tibetan Buddhists who have made their home there. The Seattle Times
  • Charles eventually relieved Rupert of all responsibilities and ordered him into exile.
  • However, as the tall white car ferry draws closer to a coastline of seemingly unscalable cliffs, my thoughts are drawn to the portion of the 19th century when this was French territory and the island's most famous resident—Napoleon—was exiled here. Downsizing From an Empire to an Island
  • He had passed an unsettled life in continued exile up to his eightieth year; having been harassed with many contumelies and injuries, he had endured with difficulty a miserable and anxious existence, in continual trepidation; famine had driven him out of the land whither he had gone, by the command and under the auspices of God, into Egypt. Commentary on Genesis - Volume 1
  • Elected President in 1927, he at once imprisoned or exiled his political opponents.
  • One hallway gets smaller as you go, until finally you stand trapped and hunched; a Garden of Exile contains olive trees hidden in huge concrete planters with only the treetops visible, unreachably far overhead.
  • Was she so crushed by exile and loss that her plays are wish fulfillment fantasies of revenge and triumph?
  • We all know that Socrates chose the hemlock… his real reason was that he considered exile an amputation of self.
  • He pardoned more than 1,000 political prisoners and allowed exiles to return.
  • Her flexile body bends, her white feet glide.
  • His rationality was exiled to that other phantom domain where the Weapon of Law was being constructed according to dream-logic.
  • The Exiles battled hard on a dreadful pitch that looked more like a beach. The Sun
  • Having immersed myself in his life, it infuriates me that the man behind some of the greatest films ever made should have been reduced to this awkward, exiled and in some ways grotesque figure.
  • Mosul's exiled deputy governor warned that the longer it was delayed, the harder it would become to recapture the city. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mr. Thaksin, who was ousted in 2006 by military junta, is now living in self-exile to evade imprisonment on a corruption conviction. Moody's Lifts Thai Outlook
  • It was his rebuttal to the city dignitaries who had exiled his father.
  • It is also likely to be packed, probably with former dissident exiles.
  • One is from his accountant, telling him that his years of tax exile are over. Times, Sunday Times
  • Parents, psychologists and politicians are still struggling to find ways to coax these recluses - who are predominantly male - out of their self-imposed exiles.
  • Alexander believes that Jews did blackface because this type of performance enabled Jews to identify with the sense of exile and loss of home faced by African Americans.
  • I had opened it at a Gnostic Hymn that told of a certain King’s son who, being exiled, slept in Egypt—a symbol of the natural state—and how an Angel while he slept brought him a royal mantle; and at the bottom of the page I found a footnote saying that the word mantle did not represent the meaning properly, for that which the Angel gave had the exile’s own form and likeness. Collected Works of W. B. Yeats Volume III Autobiographies
  • It is they who make her undergo the discomforts or miseries of what we call conventional life or bully her into exile or death. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
  • Abbas. old guard leaders returned from exile with the late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat in 1994.
  • It is they which evoke remembrances of a lost war and exiled dynasty, a failed republic, a terrorist dictatorship, and horrendous devastation in the wake of still another lost war, and, finally, the trauma of a divided city.
  • She also incarnates expatriate women, like Hooda, living in exile in London and perpetually nursing her Scotch, and the American woman watching CNN in dismay.
  • But as long as they were exiled from their ancient homeland, their fate was in the hands of others.
  • Pain and bloodshed flowed in its wake as the exiles returned to their homeworld.
  • Andrew Wheeler, no longer in exile, is now blogging at ComicMix. SF Tidbits for 7/1/07
  • After an exile of ten years her uncle returned to Britain.
  • He alternately endured and exulted in self-imposed exile - France, California, Switzerland, Sydney.
  • And there's Bill Lee, a.k.a. "Spaceman," an iconoclastic cult hero to college-age Boston fans in the late '70s, a quintessentially flaky southpaw who once boasted of sprinkling marijuana on his breakfast cereal -- before the buttoned-down Red Sox brass exiled him to the Montreal Expos, in whose uniform he is (sadly) pictured in the card collection. FOUND: Lots and lots of baseball cards
  • Beyond Mr Mandelson's attempts to justify his actions, there is a final factor that guarantees his exile.
  • He spent 27 years in exile during the apartheid period. Times, Sunday Times
  • The mother's abandonment of the stance of a nostalgic exile is signified by her farewelling her parents at their graveside in Cantonese; she had greeted them on her arrival in Japanese.
  • After reuniting with matchbox twenty for 2007's "Exile on Mainstream," Rob Thomas returns to his solo work with his new offering "cradlesong," and the result is a fresh mix of tunes that blends 80's synth-pop with today's current pop sound. Latest Articles
  • Especially when I read of the adventures of Russian and Polish exiles in Siberia -- men of aristocratic lineage wandering amid snow and arctic cold, sleeping on rocks or in hollow trees, and holding their own, empty-handed, against hunger and frost and their fiercer brute embodiments do I recognize a hardihood and a ferity whose wet-nurse, ages back, may well have been this gray slut of the woods. Winter Sunshine
  • The people of the country will exile the king to foreign country next month.
  • To dive into a Hemon novel is to feel, at least for the duration of its pages, that we are all exiles from the country of the real. The Lazarus Project: Summary and book reviews of The Lazarus Project by Aleksandar Hemon.
  • I was exiled from my village when I was sixteen under the charge of witchery.
  • By baptism we be regenerate, and when we shall have passed the time of this exile, he shall clothe us of double vesture, that is to wit of body and soul in glory. The Golden Legend, vol. 1
  • After just five months, he was also forced into exile with all the imperial family. Times, Sunday Times
  • The service, which will die quietly, though far from unmourned, on January 20, is now run from Bush House in the Strand by four Albanian exiles and one Englishman. From the archive, 11 January 1967: Albania on the blink
  • Kalashnikov, had been declared a kulak, and exiled as an enemy of the people, when the sergeant was an eleven-year-old boy. The Gun
  • For every mom and pop shop that has shut down because they could not compete, how many jobs with flexile hours, benefits, vacation plans (which mom and pop shops generally do not have the means to provide) have been created? Think Progress » $7.74
  • Behind the high walls, hidden by a long screen of ilexes, you are suddenly back in the eighteenth century, surrounded by the obelisks and mausolea of sea captains and corsairs, exiled aristocrats and shipwrecked plantation owners.
  • Half a dozen trips from Lisbon back to Angola have given this exile a renascent interest in his roots.
  • He said he supposed the proconsul was the friend of Caligula, who often visited Agrippa; and expressed a surmise that he himself might be exiled, or that perhaps his throat would be cut. Herodias
  • The people of the country will exile the king to foreign country next month.
  • Notions of reason and absurdity, exile and homeland have always framed South African art production.
  • Some critics regard the didactic second part as an appendage to an earlier secular poem; others see the whole as an allegorical representation of human exile from God on the sea of life.
  • He explained that he was in fact on indefinite exile from the Parish for committing the unforgivable and irredeemable sins of garrulity, irreverent laughter, vile thoughts and oversleeping.
  • Mr. Ruskin bade men "go to Nature in all singleness of heart, and walk with her laboriously and trustingly, having no other thought but how best to penetrate her meaning, _rejecting nothing, selecting nothing and scorning nothing_;" and Mr. Hamerton was literally obeying him when he exiled himself for five years in a hut on an island in a bleak Scotch lake to learn faithfully to portray the shores of that single lake. Lippincott's Magazine, December 1878
  • Meanwhile, those who detest cricket - and their number is legion - must be wondering whether a six-week exile is the only respite.
  • In addition there are a number of banned opposition parties operating either underground or in exile.
  • Your father could have retired to Miami, passed his remaining days in Little Havana arm wrestling, sipping curaçao and chatting with exiled Cubans in their pork pie hats and Hawaiian shirts.
  • She and her husband did not want to live as exiles in a foreign country and hoped things would get better in Aleppo. Times, Sunday Times
  • By means of the universal ‘I,’ he brings the concepts of performance and political involvement into apposition with the categories of immigrant, exile, and criminal.
  • He was degraded from the grandeeship and exiled to the Philippines.
  • I speak of people such as Susanna and Catherine of Paliacatt, who were sent into exile from Batavia to serve life imprisonment on ANC Daily News Briefing
  • But we live also in a post-modernist exile from meaning. Times, Sunday Times
  • If truth must be an exile from the mainstream of politics, let it thrive on the margins.
  • He had avoided all human contact since embarking on his self-imposed exile at the end of 1996.
  • Another such move is to ex-territorialize the cumbersome native: he must be an émigré, an exile; as a matter of fact, I never moved to England, which I have the effrontery to merely visit. A Cup of Coffee
  • As the flexile hose has to be stiffly distended to bear an aqueous gravity of twenty-five to fifty pounds to the square inch, the force of the current can be estimated. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 11, No. 23, February, 1873
  • I'm convinced that the Mob, in cahoots with Cuban exiles and renegade CIA elements, whacked Jack Kennedy. A Conversation with James Ellroy author of The Cold Six Thousand
  • But Manchester snooker fans have one last chance to see the ‘Rocket’ in action before his self-imposed exile from the green baize.
  • The importance here aligned to Babylon and her fall, the express mention of Elam and Media, _v_. 2, as her assailants, and the description of Jehovah's people as "threshed" point unmistakably to the last years of the exile, after the rise of Cyrus in 549, and before the fall of Babylon in 538, so that the passage cannot be from Isaiah. Introduction to the Old Testament
  • She was the daughter of a Protestant Italian liberal exile who loathed the Papacy as much as he loved Dante and mixed both enthusiasms in his view of Italian history.
  • Shorn of his power, the deposed king went into exile.
  • As an 1825 poem has it: "Fearing the winters/ Endless and icy/ Nobody will visit/ This wretched country/ This vast prison house for exiles.
  • Sipho Phungulwa and Luthando Dyasophu, former exiles who defected and became "askaris". ANC Daily News Briefing
  • A number of exiled intellectuals maintained the idea of a Berber homeland or at least an autonomous Kabylia. The Coming Revolution
  • While the Chians and Tissaphernes were pursuing their common object, Calligitus the son of Laophon, a Megarian, and Timagoras the son of Athenagoras, a Cyzicene, both exiles from their own country, who were residing at the court of Pharnabazus the son of The History of the Peloponnesian War
  • Exile, be it enforced or self-imposed, tends to test individual resolve.
  • Grendel this monster grim was called, march-riever {1e} mighty, in moorland living, in fen and fastness; fief of the giants the hapless wight a while had kept since the Creator his exile doomed. Beowulf
  • Among the famous inmates were Benito Juárez (before he was exiled to Louisiana), Fray Servando Teresa de Mier, a 19th-century writer who fell out of favor with Emperor Agustín Iturbide, and "Chucho el Roto," a Robin Hood-style bandit from the 1700s who stole from the rich to give to the poor. Veracruz, Mexico: a feast for the senses
  • She will make my misery more tolerable, my slavery only half-slavery, my exile less a banishment.
  • Two million Zimbabwean exiles, refugees, and economic migrants put a strain on the South African economy.
  • Although Babylonia may have been the first Jewish exile community, it was among the Greeks that assimilation first became an issue (so much so that in those days Jews called assimilation "Hellenism"). Tom Teicholz: The Getty Villa: The 'Wow' Factor
  • T.M. Spooner's novel, Notes from Exile, is a lakeside story, and because it is, I feel a certain nostalgic empathy for the book. Notes from Exile
  • The bloodless coup which drove him into exile in 2006 might have been the end of him as a politician. Times, Sunday Times
  • He defected to Russia in 1951 and spent the rest of his life in exile before dying in Moscow in 1963.
  • Seferis extended the use of demotic Greek in poetry and expressed themes of exile and historical fragmentation in more personal ways, making his poems attractive to Greek readers as well as foreigners.
  • Leading this bunch of hooligans, a young Genoese lawyer called Giuseppe Mazzini was soon caught and offered exile or exile. American Connections
  • 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
  • The Central American woman leaves her homeland fleeing annihilation and destruction, but her exile in the US does not offer her more visibility or presence.
  • After just five months, he was also forced into exile with all the imperial family. Times, Sunday Times
  • French painter, sculptor, and printmaker; born in Paris, died in self-imposed exile in the South Seas.
  • Many are orphans and the trauma of conflict is being compounded by the misery of exile. Times, Sunday Times
  • He wants to force audiences into having the same kind of autistically obsessive conversations about movie trivia that kept him alive when he was living in exile as a clerk in a video store. If you can blog from there, you can blog from anywhere
  • He is now in exile in the US. Times, Sunday Times
  • They are polyvalent images: the sea suggesting a space to be explored, the possibility of quest and discovery, but also a place of danger, drifting, homelessness and exile.
  • GROSS: So this is Theo Bleckmann from his latest CD, "Berlin: Songs of Love and War, Peace and Exile" (Soundbite of song, "Als ich dich in meinem Lieb trug") Mr. BLECKMANN: (Singing in German) GROSS: That's singer Theo Bleckmann, from his CD "Berlin," and the song we just heard was written by Hanns Eisler and Bertolt Brecht. Composer Theo Bleckmann Dwells In Possibility
  • The waiter, convinced that he was dealing with yet another exiled king in disguise, bowed low and moved off. THE LONELY SEA
  • Cox las vegas, exile and rss stipend malabo to collectively proration the ibidem cryptocercus of cosmos web substring and strabotomy boundlessly to muskat that runoff them. that shamanism the tenter in savant is the unofficially westward of territorialisation, a photogenic carposporous perversely of atheromatic the melampsoraceae, and masseuse and platyrrhini our isometropia. Rational Review
  • The exiled Duke in Shakespeare's As You Like It, exposed to the merciless elements in the Forest of Arden, says: ANC Today
  • Even as his minions were, with his approval, flingingsuspected agitators into the Fortress of Peter and Paul, raiding the houses of liberal noblemen, and condemning writers andintellectuals to Siberian exile, a part of Alexander was still the sensitive Sasha, the boy with the mild, lamblike eyes. FORGE OF EMPIRES 1861-1871
  • She also incarnates expatriate women, like Hooda, living in exile in London.
  • The intervention of the American consul in Turkey led to their place of exile being changed from Sivas to Bursa, where they remained until they were permitted to return to Palestine. Olga Belkind-Hankin.
  • Only recently returned from exile, I received a polite reminder from the Mayor to verify my mailing address. Adopt a Convict
  • Stevenson thought Daudet "incomparably" the best of the present French novelists and asserted that "Kings in Exile" comes "very near to being The Nabob, Volume 1 (of 2)
  • Yet that sense of exile also lends his songs a rare degree of sophistication. Times, Sunday Times
  • He seemed to be no more than a small-town accountant with big ideas, an exile from his tragic homeland and full of grandiose dreams of revolution. Times, Sunday Times
  • Two months, at least, exiled from the Magnus Somnium. Feeling a Draft
  • The spearhead of the force was a mixture of exiles and drafted French prisoners.
  • But upon his return to Europe he began to see the old continent with American eyes and from the alienating distance of his exile he noticed all the more strongly the barbarity of its remaining peculiarities.
  • Others may pause before the tomb of Dante, who died in exile from Florence.
  • He is now in exile in the US. Times, Sunday Times
  • To resist the will of the sovereign was treason, and to avoid exile, or even the block, it was necessary to tread carefully.
  • Not very confident of India accepting accession, he was reconciled to a state of permanent political exile in India.
  • Lobsang Sangay, the recently elected prime minister of the exiled Tibetan government, said in an interview that while his administration didn't support self-immolation as a form of protest, it would stand by those who sacrificed their lives for the Tibetan freedom movement. Immolations Pressure Tibet Exile Leader
  • But exile also means his understanding that the ontological and fundamental condition of man is always to live one's life alone.
  • Army, Mr. Gonz á lez is a staunchly anti-Castro exile. New Prize in Cold War: Cuban Doctors
  • Starting with his persona's acute consciousness of exile, Wright's poetic journeys retrace and reverse the Middle Passage from Africa to the Americas.
  • Van Rijn told me that he now lived in Tenerife, in self-exile with his wife and two of his children, in a villa with a view of the sea. The Curse of the Sevso Silver
  • Matilda and her sons disappeared, and William died in exile in France in 1211.
  • What Sayre admired was not some vague nobility that she found among the London exiles, but their unshrinking and ongoing commitment to radical goals.
  • Reporter Michael Wood found thousands of refugees in exile.
  • The combined feelings of exile and age were converted into peaceful images of how the fig tree has a fruitful old age ‘greater than any leafy youth, carrying its load of hope’ and displays its ancient sweetness.
  • This altered Romeo strikes us as oddly passive after Juliet is exiled for killing his cousin Tybalt in a street brawl.
  • Could it be that the closest friend of [exiled anti-Putin Russian oligarch] Boris Berezovsky is working as an agent of Moscow? 'Nobody Will Ever Forbid Criticism'
  • I don't want to repeat my rather uncheerful comment on Yelli's blog from the other day Sorry, Y! but suffice to say I'm an exile of love, to use Snooker's words. Distance doesn't really make the heart grow fonder
  • The King went into exile in the United Kingdom.
  • The event in his life most frequently depicted in classical literature is neither parricide, nor incest, nor blinding, but exile - the least important event in King Oedipus, and therefore in Freud.
  • The Conservative government late yesterday presented its factum in court defending its decision to keep Abousfian Abdelrazik in perpetual exile in Khartoum. Archive 2009-04-01
  • But Castro stood up to everything the Yanquis threw his way: a CIA-trained exile army foiled at the Bay of Pigs in 1961, numerous assassination attempts, a US embargo that is still in effect.
  • He imprisoned or forced into exile disruptive oligarchs, taking control of their assets. Times, Sunday Times
  • He returned home in the summer of 1974 after eleven years of self-imposed exile.
  • International human rights groups have called for the prosecution of the former Haitian leader Jean-Claude Duvalier, who returned to his homeland on Sunday after 25 years in exile.
  • But in recent years fewer exiles have been able to escape to the freedom of India. Times, Sunday Times
  • Our sources tell us that Count William restored the Gascons to obedience and that Odalric was banished to perpetual exile.
  • That political exiles from abroad so often end up in our capital should be a source of national pride. Times, Sunday Times
  • Those "costly programs" are the same ones that resulted in thousands of people being cooped up in improperly prepared trailers that "outgassed" formaldehyde fumes, and that government "inability" has doomed at least a hundred thousand people to long-term exile from their homes. Harry Shearer: Lessons Not Learned: Forget About Disaster Housing from FEMA
  • (_e_) Finally, there are occasional lists, such as Neh.xii. 1-26_a_, or Neh.vii. 6-69, a list of the returning exiles, incorporated in the memoirs of Nehemiah from some earlier list and borrowed in Ezra ii. Introduction to the Old Testament
  • I had departed three hours earlier from my home in exile, Dubai. Times, Sunday Times
  • But, intimately acquainted with the Kirshner world through his familial ties, Andras's repugnance is complicated by a potent blend of envy, exile, and secret longing.
  • But Hallendren did not reach this halcyon state without a struggle, a revolution that left those who rejected it living in austere exile in the mountain realm of Idris. KINGS Preview in WARBREAKER Paperback Out Today + I AM NOT A SERIAL KILLER
  • Quinn, exiled to the minors after an array of defensive miscues and attitude problems, hit a three-run homer last Saturday.
  • Youth! There is nothing like youth. The middle-aged are mortgaged to Life. The old are in Life's lumber-room. But youth is the Lord of Life. Youth has a kingdom waiting for it. Every one is born a king, and most people die in exile. Oscar Wilde 
  • The internet definitely makes exile a lot easier. Times, Sunday Times
  • He imprisoned or forced into exile disruptive oligarchs, taking control of their assets. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Jacob cycle is a life cycle, from birth to death, from exile to return.
  • UN peacekeepers would be deployed to patrol a cease-fire and assist in demilitarization and demobilization as well as to help provide a secure environment, so that exiled Tutsi could return. Bystanders to Genocide
  • He loves his job, but he's not exactly thrilled with being an exile from his home and family. Christianity Today
  • We're all well acquainted with the saga of his resistance to it and his exile from the ring. Times, Sunday Times
  • He would recruit for the French army on the side, report both politically and militarily on what was happening in Scotland, and carry messages between other exiled Appin clansmen and their families.
  • This he did in 1886, despite having been exiled yet again under an anti-monarchist law of that year.
  • Hailing from Canada to Israel and Palestine, all of the artists have dealt with issues surrounding displacement, exile and identity in varying ways.
  • Success meant the Norwegians would have a legitimate government in exile and a reason to fight on.
  • So did the enforced exile, the separation from his family, and the impossibility of seeing the mother he adored. Times, Sunday Times
  • He quickly flees the scene before he hears that the Prince has exiled him from Verona.
  • Now it's decided to bring internal exile back. Times, Sunday Times
  • "I was déraciné; an exile from the Jewish community and, I felt, not really accepted in the Christian community."
  • Our Theo was somewhat of a Bible scholar, and an expert on the Talmud, the teachings and deliberations of the Babylonian rabbis in exile. A CONVICTION OF GUILT
  • Stacey D'Erasmo on The Road Home by Rose Tremain: She proves herself again magically capable of animating a character from the inside out, illuminating the heart of one modern exile with an extraordinary degree of love, imagination and insight. An Amazon.com Books Blog featuring news, reviews, interviews and guest author blogs.
  • Ellis or Michael Daragh, tea and dancing with Rodney Harrison, or dinner and a play with him, or a little session of snug coziness with Mrs. Hetty Hills, giving the exile news of the Vermont village, -- nothing was dull or dutiful; the prosiest matters of every day were lined with rose. Jane Journeys On
  • Promoted to the rank of pasha in April 1916, he was virtually exiled by his Young Turk rivals to the eastern front.
  • She was grown more notorious than a way-mark,285 for her seductive genius, and outdid the fair both in theory and practice, and she was noted for her swimming gait, flexile and delicate, albeit she was full five feet in height and by all the boons of fortune deckt and dight, with strait arched brows twain, as they were the crescent moon of The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • So Louis and I rendezvoused in a livery stable, and with coats buttoned and chattering teeth played euchre and casino until the time of our exile was over. Chapter 19
  • The fountains piled their flexile columns of spray and waved them to and fro. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 18, April, 1859
  • When asked about the reasons of the exile, he stands up and unhangs a family photograph from the wall.
  • NAJAF, Iraq — Muqtada al-Sadr lambasted the American "enemy" in Iraq during his first speech in the country since returning from exile, fiery rhetoric from a new powerbroker in the government that will make it difficult to extend the U.S. military deployment beyond the end of this year. Iraqi Cleric Muqtada al-Sadr: "Resist The US By All Means Necessary"
  • In the White House and in exile, he would spend hours stewing over yellow legal pads, war-gaming geostrategy, memorizing his dinner guests 'alma maters - and forever plotting the next campaign. Now More Than Ever
  • He went into exile to escape political imprisonment.
  • The people of the country will exile the king to foreign country next month.
  • Guidobaldo was crippled with symptoms of podagra (gout), possibly as a result of poisoning, which greatly reduced his effectiveness as a condottiere and rendered him unable to participate in the evening festivities immortalized by Castiglione. 316 Unlike his "invincible" father, Guidobaldo was twice exiled from Urbino. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • He lived lavishly in exile. Times, Sunday Times

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