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How To Use Inaccessible In A Sentence

  • He is as incomprehensible as he is inaccessible.
  • Whilst trying to make the melodies inaccessible, these cheeky tykes from Ozzy's old home city have only gone and made them all the more appealing.
  • It was acquired by Rotherham Council from the Wentworth Estate in the early 1980s but has been inaccessible to the public for the past 30 years.
  • In much recent art, the object itself is secondary to the dialogue which surrounds it, which makes it inaccessible to those who don't follow theoretical discussions and oddly irrelevant for itself.
  • Such indirect human rights violation under a new regime of international law will also have its impact on the education sector, making higher education inaccessible to the poor.
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  • There is a danger - as some young American web reviewers have pointed out - that, by following the book so closely, the film will make itself inaccessible to those who haven't read it.
  • We're getting food like corn beef milk and flour and dividing into packages and taking into inaccessible places.
  • Sword play, or fencing, was once the sport of aristocrats, inaccessible to the masses, mainly because they could not afford a sword.
  • The North West Air Ambulance was then scrambled to the area which is inaccessible to vehicles.
  • Some couples choose locations that are aerobically challenging or simply inaccessible to elderly or physically challenged guests -- including women in high heels. Judith Johnson: 10 Secrets to Creating the Perfect Wedding Ceremony
  • As colonial rule established itself and regions hitherto inaccessible became safe enough for plant collectors to travel in, many new bulb species found their way back to the nurseryman and then the gardener.
  • Grant licked his lips at the thought of all those inaccessible, nubile women across the river.
  • As the goats, taking refuge in the more inaccessible parts of the country, could with difficulty be killed, the crews subsisted on the flesh of the young seals, which they called veal, and on that of the sea-lions, which was denominated beef. Notable Voyagers From Columbus to Nordenskiold
  • Only the more remote and inaccessible regions have remained relatively ungoverned since the establishment of weak administration there in the 1960s.
  • Most of the ground floor was inaccessible to the public, and was otherwise occupied by a small café and three temporary exhibition rooms. Times, Sunday Times
  • Why is opera so inaccessible to so many people?
  • Things always seem fairer when we look back at them, and it is out of that inaccessible tower of the past that Longing leans and beckons. James Russell Lowell 
  • Other areas are inaccessible except over private land.
  • Virtually all these works remain inaccessible to those without the knowledge of local languages. Christianity Today
  • Many thousands of acres now lie underwater or are so wet that they will be inaccessible for many months.
  • Tissue biopsies can be inaccessible in lung cancer patients. Times, Sunday Times
  • The hall is inaccessible to wheelchair users.
  • It does not only password protect your data but also let you choose security levels for your data, so that you can choose making your files inaccessible, invisible, delete-proof or write-protected. Softpedia - Windows - All
  • Beholders prefer inaccessible locations that earthbound foes can reach only with difficulty.
  • The helicopters, which also have been used to deliver humanitarian aid to some inaccessible areas, were chosen partly because of their low rotor downwash.
  • They are polite to the ‘English’ but inaccessible and unapproachable; they don't take photographs and frown on others photographing them.
  • Ninety-five per cent of its magnificent collection will remain inaccessible to the public.
  • I need a 4x4 because we live at the end of an unmade road, which is otherwise inaccessible in winter. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was alive, but everlastingly inaccessible, and Alberg found this baffling and frustrating. SLEEP WHILE I SING
  • The instruments provided for the journey consisted of two barometers, two thermometers, two compasses, a sextant, two chronometers, an artificial horizon, and an altazimuth, to throw out the height of distant and inaccessible objects. Five Weeks in a Balloon
  • Land and Information New Zealand estimates that 30% of the coastline is already inaccessible because it is bordered by privately owned land.
  • The south range, with a prospect over the sea, was probably the principal residence, though now inaccessible to archaeology.
  • They live in a remote area, inaccessible except by car.
  • Larger than Fort Knox, which is mostly inaccessible these days, the vault holds 90 billion dollars' worth of gold bouillon. Twenty-Five Things You Didn't Know...
  • ` ` Seeing that the tasimeter is affected by a wider range of etheric undulations than the eye can take cognizance of, and is withal far more acutely sensitive, the probabilities are that it will open up hitherto inaccessible regions of space, and possibly extend the range of aerial knowledge as far beyond the limit obtained by the telescope as that is beyond the narrow reach of unaided vision. '' Edison, His Life and Inventions, vol. 1
  • Ninety-five per cent of its magnificent collection will remain inaccessible to the public.
  • For the next two weeks, the fully autonomous robot, which bears an uncanny resemblance to a Volkswagen Beetle, will plumb the previously inaccessible microbial mysteries of the sinkhole -- or "cenote" -- El Zacat√≥n. NASA Watch: Keith Cowing: May 2007 Archives
  • But, its enter tolerance a bit small, furnace head thermic load is very inaccessible high level requirement.
  • Oregon's lighthouses were all but inaccessible when they were built in the 19th century, near shoals and sandbars, treacherous offshore rocks and reefs.
  • Oregon's lighthouses were all but inaccessible when they were built in the 19th century, near shoals and sandbars, treacherous offshore rocks and reefs.
  • We also check for poisonous plants such as hogweed which is very dangerous and has to be roped off and to make sure paths are not inaccessible or dangerous and steep banks can be dealt with.
  • The charity said most areas were inaccessible to aid organisations and there was evidence of a humanitarian crisis in Umm Qasr in the south and Kirkuk in the north.
  • For a number of centuries after the decline of the Roman Empire, the coast was menaced by Saracen pirates, and the local population took refuge in the inaccessible mountain hinterland.
  • The more inaccessible our post-secondary education becomes, the more inequitable society will become.
  • Both Jensen and McFadyen stated fears that fees will rise, making post-secondary education inaccessible to many prospective students.
  • Most parts of the interior are inaccessible due to the continuing fighting, making it difficult for aid agencies to reach war-weary residents in these areas.
  • Oxford has a reputation for being inaccessible, but people don't realise how much it is doing to try to change that. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was absolutely no reason why it had to be built in such an inaccessible place as Wembley. The Sun
  • Wee are in the wrong, to thinke her incommodities serve her as a provocation and seasoning to her sweetness, as in nature one contrarie is vivified by another contrarie: and to say, when we come to vertue, that like successes and difficulties overwhelme it, and yeeld it austere and inaccessible. That to Philosophise Is to Learne How to Die.
  • But when the filter is in the attic or somewhere else that is fairly inaccessible, this becomes an odious chore that is often left undone.
  • The library's diversity is expected to result in antibodies against previously inaccessible target molecules and unique epitope coverage. Reuters: Press Release
  • Symbols correlate human spiritual concerns with those otherwise inaccessible realities.
  • Much of our discourse is inaccessible because of elitist language and our focus on print-based media.
  • 'Durga' is an inaccessible region such as a forest or wilderness which cannot be passed through except with great pain and danger. The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 Books 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12
  • The stars awaken a certain reverence, because though always present, they are inaccessible; but all natural objects make a kindred impression, when the mind is open to their influence. SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 6373
  • They are thus capable of monitoring previously inaccessible information and doing so over a much larger geographical space. Sociology
  • Inaccessible Island, now I come to think of it; but I've never been thaar myself. Fritz and Eric The Brother Crusoes
  • The lamaseries in Central Asia are, like the cathedrals in Europe, the most imposing monuments of religious life; but while the spires and domes of the latter tower above the teeming city and look down upon all the refinements and activities of civilization, these rude sanctuaries of Buddhism are frequently situated in the most secluded and sometimes even in the most inaccessible spots on the rugged Tibetan plateau. With the Tibetans in Tent and Temple: Narrative of Four Years' Residence on the Tibetan Borders, and of a Journey into the Far Interior
  • He probably accepts that the ultimate accolade for the county cricketer will now remain inaccessible.
  • The repressor also recognizes sequence-dependent distortion or flexibility of the operator phosphate backbone, conferring specificity even for inaccessible base pairs.
  • A long flight of stairs made the center inaccessible to disabled visitors.
  • Its size means it can drop anchor in small coves and fishing villages inaccessible to larger vessels. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fork them out before they can run into other plants and become inaccessible. Times, Sunday Times
  • Philosophers have long held that a person's percepts are necessarily private and inaccessible to anyone else.
  • The ships are custom-built to reach otherwise inaccessible ports and the cabins are packed with maritime character. Times, Sunday Times
  • QUOTATION: The more congenial page of some tenth-rate poeticule worn out with failure after failure and now squat in his hole like the tailless fox, he is curled up to snarl and whimper beneath the inaccessible vine of song. Quotations
  • And the pigeons dying on rooftops, in inaccessible corners, in the tops of palm trees, the bottoms of fountains or deep inside the mysteries of evergreens, who takes them up and gives them burial? The Unexamined Saturday « Unknowing
  • The sensation of feeling and hearing the force of water striking rocks in inaccessible corners is an experience that can be lived on the kayak and raft, descending Michoacán's rivers. Guide to alternative tourism in Michoacán
  • This zygodactylous feet also enable the Blue-crowned Hanging Parrot to hang upside down to reach otherwise inaccessible fruits or flowers.
  • The builders of Night Watch had contrived to place the diesel engine in the most inaccessible part of the bilge. CORMORANT
  • Dirt can collect in inaccessible places.
  • We rely heavily on donations and it's really important because the sports opportunities around Barnes are financially inaccessible to most of our members.
  • But academic research is often perceived to be inaccessible and remote from real issues. Times, Sunday Times
  • The far side is overgrown and quite inaccessible.
  • Niccolò, therefore, caused this castle to be built, which he strengthened with massive walls and towers commanding the whole city, and rendered inaccessible by surrounding it with a deep and wide canal from the river Reno.], and modern civilization has not crossed the castle moat, to undignify its exterior with any visible touch of the present. Italian Journeys
  • Sometimes, wiring is okay, but we can't physically get to the lights because the streets are just dirt and sand and are inaccessible during construction. Susan Buchanan: Streets Unlit After Dusk In Parts of New Orleans
  • But no one was hurt on the beach below because a high tide meant it was inaccessible. The Sun
  • He homes in on exactly where the drugs are hidden, seeming to know the workings of their minds in hiding the drugs in the most inaccessible of places.
  • The unlocking of the almost inaccessible cave also yielded iron weapons, storage jars, oil lamps, a juglet, a silver earring and a glass bottle. ROR Sitemap for http://www.raidersnewsnetwork.com
  • Tissue biopsies can be inaccessible in lung cancer patients. Times, Sunday Times
  • It sickens me to think that anyone would even consider downgrading it and making many acute services almost inaccessible to many.
  • But no one was hurt on the beach below because a high tide meant it was inaccessible. The Sun
  • The inaccessible lesions were included in the final analysis as the aim was to evaluate this procedure according to the intention to treat.
  • Presented in a classy display case, it is carved from finest green plastic and features three probing fingers to reach the most inaccessible of nooks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Because of its sheer size, much of the forest remains inaccessible to walkers on foot, despite the waymarked trails.
  • Bacterial redox reactions with minerals are already being exploited in mining low grade or inaccessible ores.
  • At least, it was inaccessible to other people. American Manhood: Transformations in Masculinity from the Revolution to the Modern Era
  • Relatively inaccessible, the mountainous country is landlocked, and is surrounded by countries whose interests, at times, have conflicted with those of Afghanistan.
  • The language is abstruse and esoteric, almost incomprehensible, the ‘discourse’ inaccessible except to the initiates.
  • Unlike many of his early critics, they have seldom considered them inaccessible or difficult. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although a mystery may be insoluble, it is not senseless; and while its inexpressibility makes it inaccessible to communicable knowledge, it can still be spoken of in a suggestive way (Marcel 1964, xxv). Gabriel (-Honoré) Marcel
  • They seem to fear it; they consistently belittle and mock performance poets, perhaps because much of the poetry written for the page has become quite inaccessible to the ear if not the eye.
  • Due to rising rates that accompany privatization, electricity has become similarly inaccessible for thousands of families.
  • Mountain artillery consisted of light guns and howitzers capable of being dismantled and carried piecemeal on mules, or even by men, into positions inaccessible to ordinary artillery.
  • However, the bays and taxiways were unsealed and unsuitable for the operation of aircraft; in the wet season they would be completely inaccessible.
  • But passivity is not merely the dark haze that devours personality, it is also the last resort open to human beings as they defy an oppressive order by rendering themselves inaccessible to its intentions. The Nobel Prize in Literature 2003 - Press Release
  • The human brain was thought to be inaccessible to experimental investigation.
  • I am not a dystopian who thinks that making some efforts to make tools for slaughtering large numbers of people inaccessible to maniacs will transform America into Amerika.
  • Parts of the forest are still dense and inaccessible.
  • We continue to sign collective agreements that are generally written in complex and inaccessible language.
  • The first three miles of the river course are located in Wakulla Springs State Park and inaccessible to the public with the exception of a guided riverboat tour near the headspring.
  • A long flight of stairs made the center inaccessible to disabled visitors.
  • He'd heard about the Nuba and he wanted to find them, but they were very inaccessible.
  • Beyond the intelligence obtained, Cadwalader wrote, perhaps the greatest accomplishment of Coldfeet ‘was to prove the practicality of paradrop and aerotriever recovery to conduct investigations in otherwise inaccessible areas.’
  • An unusually low tide for the second year in a row means large parts of the Italian city are inaccessible. The Sun
  • Spiraling tuition fees make tertiary education - the great doorway to opportunity - increasingly inaccessible to those on the bottom of the heap.
  • Each region, no matter how inaccessible, possesses its own "biography" of streams, pre-Christian earth mounds, coach stations and lay-bys. Map of a Nation by Rachel Hewitt – review
  • Realizing it was impossible to scout the inaccessible stretches and unknown features downriver, he made the difficult but prudent decision to end the expedition.
  • The newfound hilt may have been left behind because it was unwanted, or it may have been inaccessible, according to Moore's colleague Wendy Welsh, a conservator on the project.
  • Intense cold has ensured that the planes have been preserved in good condition but has also made them almost inaccessible. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most of the ground floor was inaccessible to the public, and was otherwise occupied by a small café and three temporary exhibition rooms. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rastrick's notebook has previously been inaccessible to all but a tiny number of researchers, but it will now be available to be viewed by the public.
  • The inaccessible lesions were included in the final analysis as the aim was to evaluate this procedure according to the intention to treat.
  • With fully fenestrated facades facing each other across virtually inaccessible passageways it seems that each house was conceived in complete isolation.
  • ‘I would not say the market is inaccessible to the working class, but there is a general lack of education on how it works,’ he said.
  • Spiraling tuition fees make tertiary education - the great doorway to opportunity - increasingly inaccessible to those on the bottom of the heap.
  • Medieval castles were also designed to be as inaccessible as possible, so look for angles that reveal the inhospitable surroundings and the drama of their location.
  • Here again his disappointment and chagrin were renewed: his uncle had been carried off to Amiens the morning of his arrival, and the house rendered inaccessible, by the usual affixture of seals, and an attendant pair of myrmidons to guard them from infraction. A Residence in France During the Years 1792, 1793, 1794 and 1795, Complete Described in a Series of Letters from an English Lady: with General and Incidental Remarks on the French Character and Manners
  • The bourdalou, after all, was a thing, not a place, used when the place in question -- the "loo" -- was inaccessible; used, indeed, in lieu of same. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIV No 2
  • Presented in a classy display case, it is carved from finest green plastic and features three probing fingers to reach the most inaccessible of nooks. Times, Sunday Times
  • They make it possible to venture into parts of the island that would otherwise be practically inaccessible. The Sun
  • The analysis of as such as a pure connective, liberated both from its antecedent and from its target of predication, may also apply to many of the examples where the antecedent and the modified noun phase are unexpectedly inaccessible.
  • Much of the information for these reviews is in the grey literature of road safety organisations in high income countries and is inaccessible to the transport ministries of other countries.
  • However, the park is currently undergoing restoration and much of it, including the Victorian Boating Lake, is inaccessible to visitors.
  • Or is it a triple CD packed full of interminable electronic bleeps and whooshes, both inaccessible and incomprehensible?
  • This formerly inaccessible place can now be reached by road and rail.
  • Parts of the forest are still dense and inaccessible.
  • When you open up previously inaccessible areas by turning a lever or depressing a block, the camera unlocks its view from the character.
  • Presented in a classy display case, it is carved from finest green plastic and features three probing fingers to reach the most inaccessible of nooks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many get very frustrated after a while when they realise that, after years of study and sacrifice to ensure that they could get a good job in the field that they like, they find that the field is inaccessible to them.
  • The fourth and fifth zones, the regions of the retama and the gramina, occupy heights equal to the most inaccessible summits of the Pyrenees. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • Many sites will remain inaccessible. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was alive, but everlastingly inaccessible, and Alberg found this baffling and frustrating. SLEEP WHILE I SING
  • The far side is overgrown and quite inaccessible.
  • With the assistance of such guides, nothing could remain impervious or inaccessible; resistance was fatal; flight was impracticable; and the patient submission of helpless innocence seldom found mercy from the Barbarian conqueror. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • His music challenges the view that modern jazz is inaccessible.
  • Positioned about 100 miles west-north-west off mainland Scotland, St Kilda is a group of seven islands, which are often inaccessible to divers due to unforgiving weather.
  • Much of the countryside is scattered with mines, and vast areas are inaccessible due to impassable roads.
  • James prefers to take his coffee on the steps outside the canteen, weather permitting - not because the canteen is inaccessible to wheelchair users, but because the view is better out on the steps.
  • To those with ideas that the area is deprived and inaccessible, these might seem lofty ambitions. Times, Sunday Times
  • To many people, caves are just dark and foreboding places, and even researchers can find caves relatively inaccessible and difficult to study.
  • Theories abound as to why the city was built in such an inaccessible place or why it was mysteriously abandoned. Times, Sunday Times
  • The inaccessible lesions were included in the final analysis as the aim was to evaluate this procedure according to the intention to treat.
  • They also enable you to tap into otherwise pretty inaccessible international markets.
  • A brook, called Bannockburn, running to the eastward, between rocky and precipitous banks, effectually covered the Scottish right wing, which rested upon it, and was totally inaccessible. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 14, No. 406, December 26, 1829
  • Snowshoers use specialized footgear that allows them to spread their weight over a larger area, which keeps them from sinking into deep snow and makes it possible to hike into snowy areas that would otherwise be inaccessible. Missing Snowshoer Found Alive On Mount Rainier
  • Water sources remain contaminated, basic services are inaccessible, and homes are severely damaged or destroyed. Red Cross: 1 Million Pakistani Flood Victims Unable to Return Home
  • As a result data (tides, water depths and weather) to help pilots navigate through the harbour and by shipping companies became inaccessible.
  • It was hypothesized that this unaccounted mass was embedded in the hydrophobic interior of the lipid membrane, inaccessible to the negative stain.
  • Many of these communities are unplanned, which make them generally inaccessible, but they are close enough to the commercial centres to provide cover for kidnappers and extortionists.
  • In addition to being too long and too inclusive, the language of the draft constitution is vague and inaccessible.
  • The area is inaccessible to the public. Times, Sunday Times
  • The move to an inaccessible location will make it more difficult for loved ones to keep in touch with inmates.
  • Intense cold has ensured that the planes have been preserved in good condition but has also made them almost inaccessible. Times, Sunday Times
  • His lefty politics had a bristling integrity, yet weren't so extreme as to be inaccessible or unrealistic.
  • The site holds several Gondwanan relict species as well, surviving in restricted microsites, such as the Wollemi pine Wollemia nobilis only discovered in 1994 in an almost inaccessible gorge, the shrub Acrophyllum australe and the podocarp Microstrobus fitzgeraldii, restricted to wet rocks near waterfalls and only recorded in the Jamieson Valley. Greater Blue Mountains Area, Australia
  • While diving, the menu is inaccessible and all functions are automatic.
  • Part of the problem has been its terrain, with huge mountains and impassable jungles making places that are quite near to each other almost inaccessible. The Times Literary Supplement
  • This arena, inaccessible to the public for 145 years, now hosts a miscellany of events, from cancan dancers to choirs and theatre festivals. 10 of the best arts venues in south London
  • They use tools to sweep paths and even to draw pictures in the dirt and scratch themselves in inaccessible places, and they communicate subsonically at frequencies so low that humans cannot detect them without sophisticated equipment. Ingrid Newkirk: The Saddest Show on Earth
  • Walking provided access to picturesque vistas otherwise inaccessible. The Friendship: Wordsworth and Coleridge
  • The top of Mount Everest is the most inaccessible place in the world.
  • The letter is typical of the rich archive of treasures now stored behind the scenes at the NRM and, as a result, largely inaccessible to most visitors.
  • In Proust's madeleine scene, the convergence of the madeleine and the tea releases a flood of memory and transports Marcel back to the feelings of his childhood that had been inaccessible to him prior to the taste of the tea.
  • Heavy snow made the mountain village inaccessible to traffic.
  • Thanks in part to the Internet, the world is awash in data, the great majority of which is unformatted and housed in disparate, often inaccessible locations.
  • the inaccessible Durga
  • Though the Liars' cuts are supremely inaccessible, moody pieces, their chaotic, indecipherable babel plays against Oneida's monolithic tower.
  • Where contraception is inaccessible or of poor quality, many women will seek to terminate unintended pregnancies, despite restrictive laws and lack of adequate abortion services.
  • 7887The more congenial page of some tenth-rate poeticule worn out with failure after failure and now squat in his hole like the tailless fox, he is curled up to snarl and whimper beneath the inaccessible vine of song. Quotations
  • Jancus Lain, or the Wicked: their hatred is the proof of their esteem; the kingdom which he guarded was inaccessible to their arms; and they felt him most daring and formidable, when they fondly believed the captain and his country irrecoverably lost. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • An agreement was reached in 1960 allowing restricted public access, but the collection retained its almost legendary aura as a virtually inaccessible treasure trove.
  • It just felt like a special, remote, inaccessible part of the world. Times, Sunday Times
  • Had they been seen earlier they might have been helped, but for years the area had been inaccessible. Times, Sunday Times
  • The mouth of the river proved inaccessible.
  • The whole continent, except for some semi-inaccessible places in the alps, northern Scotland or Scandinavia, has been groomed and tended by the hand of man.
  • Intense cold has ensured that the planes have been preserved in good condition but has also made them almost inaccessible. Times, Sunday Times
  • Maybe instead produce an interminable, twanging, overlong, repetitive, inaccessible and frankly irredeemable apology for a solo album.
  • Even in a region famous for inaccessible high country stations, it's a fastness.
  • The man, believed to be white and in his 30s, was lying by the track in a deep cutting which was almost inaccessible to the emergency services.
  • She retreated by a gate which, leading to the road, was overhung by some wild rocky scenery, in which appeared a sort of artificial aperture, but it was rendered almost inaccessible from the unrestrained woodbine which covered it, and appeared formerly to have been a sort of arbour. The Curate and His Daughter, a Cornish Tale
  • In the forenoon we skirted the Island, getting 30 and 40 fathoms of water north and west of Inaccessible Island.
  • A concrete wall meant to keep the pool safe for children and inaccessible from the street also gave Bestor a chance to put the Ennis The Ennis House's New Neighbor
  • The account book is a complex manuscript, requiring considerable deciphering, researching and annotating - and regrets that it had previously been inaccessible are now dispelled by this excellent publication.
  • The bikes will allow police to cycle down narrow footpaths and alleyways that are inaccessible to police cars and vans.
  • an exceedingly insular man; so deeply private as to seem inaccessible to the scrutiny of a novelist
  • It is within sight of the main platform of the train station but inaccessible except by car or a long trudge down suburban streets.
  • There are ethical dilemmas about whether it is right to amass personal collections of material inaccessible to more detailed research, or to sell such collections on the open market.
  • Nectar is the most common reward amongst epidendroid orchids since their pollen occurs in discrete masses within pollinia and is generally inaccessible to foraging insects.
  • As I walked down at this place I was walled on both sides by those inaccessible high rocky barren hills wch hangs over ones head in some places and appears very terrible, and from them springs many Little Currents of water from the sides and Clefts, wch trickle down to some Lower part where it runs swiftly over the stones and shelves in the way, wch makes a pleasant Rush and murmuring noise, and Like a snowball is Encreased by Each spring trickling down on either side of those hills, and so descends into the bottoms wch are a moorish ground in wch in many places the waters stand, and so forme some of those Lakes as it did here. Through England on a Side Saddle in the Time of William and Mary
  • Automotive products such as gasoline, oil and antifreeze should be stored in areas that are inaccessible to your pets.
  • The machine can operate in rough and stony ground inaccessible to conventional cutters.
  • Cyrus Harding, therefore, resolved to proceed without any further delay to the fabrication of a strong rope ladder, which, once raised, would render Granite House completely inaccessible.
  • Thirdly, the Web demonstrated how a powerful technology like the Internet could remain inaccessible to non-technical communities until suitable user interfaces were devised.
  • They live in a remote area, inaccessible except by car.
  • This was otherwise a rotten location, an inaccessible brownfield site heavily contaminated by what had been the largest gasworks in Europe.
  • The human brain was thought to be inaccessible to experimental investigation.
  • If a family triangle is unhealed, we may recreate it, once or many times, hoping on some deep and inaccessible level that we will find a way to heal or resolve it.
  • It was a demonstrable tenderness - she had somehow managed to touch some part of me that was inaccessible to all others, even myself. GYPSY MASALA
  • Because many places along the border were inaccessible to jeeps, troopers frequently had to dismount and walk or crawl to appropriate vantage points.

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