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Marian

[ US /ˈmɛɹiən/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to or venerating the Virgin Mary

How To Use Marian In A Sentence

  • It should already be clear that it was Mariana, rather than Suarez, who might be called the forebear of John Locke's theory of popular consent and the continuing superiority of the people to the government. LewRockwell.com
  • Kate Winslet, cast before she played Marianne, wears no makeup and her hair is scraped back into an unbecoming bun.
  • Marianne was lying propped up on the bed with Jessica beside her. THE EXECUTION
  • Schiff's forms depend (like Marianne Moore's) on interlocking enjambments, on syllabics, and on baroque grammar, or else (unlike Moore's) on dense repetitions derived from Provençal forms.
  • Kicking down the side-rest as he jumped clear, he spun round in time to see Mariana slide down the bank.
  • You could be very secluded, I promise - Marian would guard you like a tigress from unwanted callers. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • Two more telephone calls, both from motorway service station call boxes, cut short Marianne's rumination. OUT OF THE ASHES
  • But even harder to make are decisions about adoption when Marian knows that she is severing families in a permanent way.
  • SOCRATES: That was my reason for asking how we ought to speak when an arithmetician sets about numbering, or a grammarian about reading? Theaetetus
  • Hart Crane in a brief life ended by suicide, aimed higher - in some ways - than Marianne Moore.
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