Manes

[ US /ˈmeɪnz/ ]
NOUN
  1. a Persian prophet who founded Manichaeism (216-276)
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How To Use Manes In A Sentence

  • The Benedictine abbey is long gone but the eleventh-century church remains, and is one of the finest survivors of the Romanesque in France.
  • The greatest lexicographer of the 19th and early 20th century, James A.H. Murray, began his Romanes Lecture in 1900 on The Evolution of English Lexicography — one of the key texts in English lexicography — with a little story: Analyzing Becky Sharp’s Trash
  • Huxley's interest in these great problems appears and reappears throughout his published writings, but his views are most clearly and systematically exposed in his "Romanes" lecture on "Evolution and Thomas Henry Huxley; A Sketch Of His Life And Work
  • They're the cruddy ones no one wants, not the spectacular, awesome ones with fairy wings and gypsy stallions with big manes," she says. Virtual Products, Real Profits
  • Add the romanesco, squashing some of the bigger florets. Times, Sunday Times
  • Romanesco is of the cauliflower family, but is totally green - a cross between cauliflower and broccoli. Times, Sunday Times
  • The horses hurtled past, manes streaming behind them.
  • If Mr. Burroughs cannot answer to his own satisfaction, he may call Dr. Romanes a nature-faker and dismiss the incident from his mind. The Other Animals
  • Trim flat the base of each romanesco. Times, Sunday Times
  • Honoring Spanish custom, stallions are never gelded, long manes and tails are never clipped on the stallions, and the mares' tails are clipped in a fashion that tells age and status.
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