How To Use Nicolson In A Sentence

  • As Nicolson argues, "face" is a simple, plain English monosyllable, but it also has a resonant double meaning. The King James Bible reconsidered | David Edgar
  • Nicolson was always adamant in his belief that his films did not encourage drug-taking.
  • They should, too, have been down to ten men with five minutes to go when Stuart Elliott, after a bit of a stramash with Iain Nicolson, climbed to his feet only to blatantly push over his opponent.
  • Nicolson will now be seeking to get his golf handicap down.
  • It is the co-creation of diplomat and author Sir Harold Nicolson and his aristocratic wife, Vita Sackville-West.
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  • These works are not compatible with the bulk of the corpus of Caravaggesque half-lengths that the English art historian Benedict Nicolson had associated first with an unnamed ‘Candlelight Master’ and then with Bigot.
  • The programme will feature the intrepid Adam Nicolson on one leg of an epic voyage of discovery that took him six months to complete and that gives viewers a wholly different view of the world.
  • So when, earlier this year, the publishers Weidenfeld & Nicolson asked me to write a new preface to Christian's book, I was eager to read it.
  • Nicolson was always adamant in his belief that his films did not encourage drug-taking.
  • The corrector is a modification of the Crank - Nicolson equation.
  • Nicolson, a successful writer but somewhat inexperienced sailor, teams up with an old salt and buddy George Fairhurst, who continually bails them out of near calamities - foul currents, fierce tides, raging winds and equipment failures.
  • Keith Richards's Life Weidenfeld & Nicolson is a rumbustious but surprisingly well-remembered memoir of the rock'n'roll life. Readers recommend their favourite books of 2010
  • At the Riding-house in Nicolson Street was a kind of straggly group, with red-coats interspersed. Thomas Carlyle
  • At the farm sales, it was impossible not to rescue machines with names like the Nicolson swathe-turner and such things as enormous hay rakes originally designed to be drawn by horses, wooden bullock carts, or the kind of miniature tipping trailer known as a tumbril, one of the most useful things any farm could possess. Wildwood
  • British diplomatist Sir Harold Nicolson (like him, an eighteenth century man living a seventeenth century life in the midst of the twentieth century) sought him out on his valedictory trip to the United States in 1963.
  • The firm of Helen M Nicolson is run by Eddie Nicolson, following the retiral of Helen from the practice earlier this year.
  • Conversely, some of Oudolf's perennials are chic enough for Sissinghurst, the cultish Kentish garden made by Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson — especially a wine-dark variety of scabiosa, or pincushion flower, that bloomed on the High Line during this spring's inaugural festivities. Up in the Park
  • One may well think the whole idea of war guilt foolish, and the clause in the Versailles Treaty attributing such guilt to Germany "caddish," as Harold Nicolson called it. Churchill and His Myths

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