How To Use Nourish In A Sentence

  • Because you're right, there is a great deal of sort of barely covered, sort of littling to nourish kind of (INAUDIBLE) kind of nationalism. CNN Transcript Nov 9, 2007
  • He took nourishment from press conferences, where he was notably generous, but not bountiful enough to promise a match.
  • After a cut on the face or an exudation into the lungs, the loose tissues and multiple vessels allow the proliferating cells to obtain rich nourishment; absorption can take place readily, and the part regains its normal condition entirely, while a bruise at the heel or at the withers finds a dense, inextensible tissue where the multiplying elements and exuded fluids choke up all communication, and the parts die Special Report on Diseases of the Horse
  • The link between a specific shoot and a specific root is not clear, but each has a part to play in the overall growth and nourishment of the plant.
  • The family is shaping excellent personality life textbook, is to stimulate the spirit of power source, is the emotional rain nourishes the soul.
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  • This was further compounded by the fact that Victorian children moved up to twenty corves per day, whilst being sick, malnourished and demoralised in many cases.
  • Its nourishing shea butter formula also gives conditioning shine to lackluster locks.
  • This is a wonderfully nourishing cake to take on a winter tramp or to a working bee.
  • Now a common-place person would have been satisfied with the recommendation of the medical man, who looks but to the one thing needful, which is a sufficient and wholesome supply of nourishment for the child; but Mr Easy was a philosopher, and had latterly taken to craniology, and he descanted very learnedly with the Doctor upon the effect of his only son obtaining his nutriment from an unknown source. Mr. Midshipman Easy
  • My father had always said that there are four things a child needs plenty of love, nourishing food, fegular sleep, and lots of soap and water---and after those, what he needs most is some intelligent neglect. 
  • Children need plenty of good fresh food to nourish them.
  • Recollect always that ambrosia, as food of gods, is the continual restorer of strength; that all food is ambrosial when it nourishes, and that the night is called "ambrosial" because it restores strength to the soul through its peace, as, in the The Crown of Wild Olive also Munera Pulveris; Pre-Raphaelitism; Aratra Pentelici; The Ethics of the Dust; Fiction, Fair and Foul; The Elements of Drawing
  • I'm proud of my baby body, knowing that it gave my son a comfy vessel in which to gestate and has been the source of all his nourishment since birth.
  • Since you, the parent is the baby's primary source of physical and emotional nourishment, your well being can contribute to the presence or absence of colic.
  • She was undernourished, an observation that prompted yet another unasked question.
  • The second function of music therapy is relaxation because the music can tranquilize the mind by nourishing the heart.
  • Grants are made for warm clothing, heating bills, beds and bedding, nourishing foods, convalescent holidays, etc.
  • This is a dry but nourishing oil derived from hazelnut and corn oils. Times, Sunday Times
  • The family is shaping excellent personality life textbook, is to stimulate the spirit of power source, is the emotional rain nourishes the soul.
  • My father had always said that there are four things a child needs plenty of love, nourishing food, fegular sleep, and lots of soap and water---and after those, what he needs most is some intelligent neglect. 
  • The role of the Sertoli cells is to nourish the developing and maturing germinal cells which are eventually released into the lumen of the tubule as spermatozoa.
  • The 160 technicians put in eight-hour shifts and the employees - from the plant director down - eat hearty, nourishing meals from the same, heavily subsidized menu.
  • No wonder old Jocelyn had called her "wilding" -- she was indeed a "wilding" or weed, -- growing up unwanted in the garden of the world, destined to be pulled out of the soil where she had nourished and thrown contemptuously aside. Innocent : her fancy and his fact
  • Loggers have removed hundreds of tiny trees and left the litter in rough piles to nourish the soil and provide wildlife habitat.
  • It assists tens of thousands of refugees from the Central African Republic and runs special feeding programs for school children and for thousands of malnourished children and pregnant and lactating women. UN Suspends Food Aid Deliveries to Chad Through Libya
  • If this congestion is not cleared up quickly, the blood will clot and arteries that bring the tissues their necessary nourishment will become plugged and the tissues will die.
  • Scrounging time for faith nourishment can press a doubter into drivenness—so that in our wild attempts to make the most of every minute of our time, we may lose eternity. If I Really Believe, Why Do I Have These Doubts?
  • Art was hailed as an inner, ethical necessity, primary nourishment for the soul.
  • The citizens, clearly, are the distributors of bodily nourishment, circulating their life-giving vigor even to the heart and foreclosing the possibility of that organ exercising arbitrary rule over the body.
  • Studies performed in undernourished patients without respiratory disease have suggested that malnutrition may impair skeletal muscle contractility.
  • A Falkland Islands fur seal perches on a rock outcrop off New Island, where seafood-rich waters nourish a wildlife population diverse in nature and often astonishing in number.
  • Also, he knew he needed bodily nourishment to bring up his declining health.
  • Like the person who gets fat because they eat unnourishing foods and so is always hungry and so is always eating, she drowned in words that could not teach her to swim. The Women’s Room
  • We may value the activity of eating to the degree that it provides nourishment.
  • Her mother was a distant figure, and throughout her childhood Jane nourished a desperate love for her that she felt was unrequited.
  • The soil provides nourishment for plant roots.
  • I suspect that if the cops started hassling all the well-nourished bald guys with chin whiskers, I might soon find this tiresome.
  • And already this belief helps nourish a central strand of the postmodern condition: a powerful inability to take things seriously. Christianity Today
  • Perhaps he had never had any talent for it; perhaps it had withered away, unnourished. THE GOLDEN FOOL: BOOK TWO OF THE TAWNY MAN
  • The Esquimaux prefer it raw in these parts of the world (although some travellers assert that in more southern latitudes they prefer cooked meat), and with good reason, for it is much more nourishing than cooked flesh; and learned, scientific men, who have wintered in the Arctic regions, have distinctly stated that in those cold countries they found raw meat to be better for them than cooked meat, and they assure us that they at last came to _prefer_ it! The World of Ice
  • Not nourishing enough for my parched skin! The Sun
  • It is said that from that day forth, he was solely nourished by the Holy Eucharist.
  • She was thin and undernourished, her pallid skin the colour of the rare arctic mushrooms in Professor Saito's plant laboratory. RUSHING TO PARADISE
  • The lady was blue, and in great pain from cramp, and the poor unweaned infant was roaring for the nourishment which had failed. A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains
  • Not only did the goat provide the family with more nourishing food but the surplus milk was sold to make a small income, which allowed the children to attend school.
  • Females are ovoviviparous, retaining yolked embryos without nourishing them.
  • Every bee larva has the potential to become a queen if properly nourished by its hivemates or an apiarist.
  • My father had always said that there are four things a child needs plenty of love, nourishing food, fegular sleep, and lots of soap and water---and after those, what he needs most is some intelligent neglect. 
  • These infant teeth are used to scrape fatty secretions and other nourishing substances from the female's reproductive organs.
  • Unripe coconuts provided nourishing liquid for journeys when no fresh water was available.
  • As the filling, nourishing soup of the Soviet Union, borsch was not just a miracle drug for anyone struggling to survive Russia; it transcended regional borders and boundaries of class. Peace Meals
  • In all likelihood, the number of hungry is less than a one billion, depending on your definition of hunger, which is not to be confused with malnutrition you can be malnourished and not hungry since hunger is technically a measure of caloric intake. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • I would urge every fruit lover to plant grapevines and to use every available bunch for this nourishing, refreshing, and healthful drink.
  • Scott Keatley—who along with his wife, Gina, a James Beard scholar and Food Network "Extreme Chef" contestant, founded Nourishing NYC, a nonprofit that feeds those in need and maintains one of the garden's more bounteous beds—admitted that he doesn't always run around in a carrot costume; he has someone else do it for him. A Sunny Plot to Feel Good
  • The grey, flinty slopes covered in the serried ranks of vineyards, gave way to the high pastures, the Alpine meadows, which nourished the famed cattle of Switzerland.
  • When the spleen is weak, the body will not be able to use the nourishment available in food.
  • Royal patronage in China certainly had an aesthetic edge, so essential to the nourishment of art, even if generated by peculiar foibles.
  • My father had always said that there are four things a child needs plenty of love, nourishing food, fegular sleep, and lots of soap and water---and after those, what he needs most is some intelligent neglect. 
  • Then it comes to life and continues nourishing itself on this food and on devout meditation until it has attained full vigour, which is the essential point, for I attach no importance to the rest. The Interior Castle or The Mansions
  • God is only a word bandied about by the pseudo-intellectual, an illusion nourished by the ignorant, a luxury cultivated by the rich and the famous and an excuse used by the shirker.
  • Seawalls, groins, and other manmade structures (including beach nourishment projects) can potentially reduce short-term, immediate erosion risk.
  • Indeed, even the general survey of the results of nuclear blackmail efforts against non-nuclear states by nuclear states provides meagre nourishment to the claim about their value as coercive political instruments.
  • Almost half of all Indian children under five are malnourished.
  • The influence which can be exercised on these tissues is exercised through the blood which nourishes all of them alike, and which has the wonderful capacity of carrying to each of them their necessary building and rebuilding, or regenerating materials, -- _provided, of course, that these are, as they should be, present in the blood_. Valere Aude Dare to Be Healthy, Or, The Light of Physical Regeneration
  • Its functions are viscidity, nourishment, the binding of joints, the solidarity of the body, and the maintenance of sexual vigour.
  • These superstitions were nourished by ecclesiastical institutions, for which the poet had meager respect.
  • The radical or innate, is daily supplied by nourishment, which some call cambium, and make those secondary humours of ros and gluten to maintain it: or acquisite, to maintain these four first primary humours, coming and proceeding from the first concoction in the liver, by which means chylus is excluded. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Fish may be images of deeply unconscious processes - something nourishing arising from deep within.
  • They can provide nourishment, too. Times, Sunday Times
  • With more than 190,000 children already malnourished, and many more at risk, the circumstances are increasingly desperate.
  • Nourished by my indolence, it grew into a mammoth, impregnable oak of jealousy, bearing the most poisonous fruit. LOVE YOU MADLY
  • A day cannot live in infamy without the nourishment of rage.
  • For an individual who wishes to nourish his or her own body, ingesting superfoods is an excellent way to supplement.
  • The best nourishment for your writing is the following blend.
  • This vitamin loss is a reason why those expensive ready-made and overcooked convenience foods are not as nourishing.
  • While you’re at it, ask the misfit, the prisoner, or even the naughty child to explain why Judas—already identified as the betrayer of Christ—was also given the bread and wine, the body and blood, the nourishment and the promise? Beginner’s Grace
  • See the bean plantlet, big, sturdy, fellow, is still clinging to its seed leaves or cotyledons, its baby nourishment. The Library of Work and Play: Gardening and Farming.
  • Having three good nourishing meals a day will generate a sense of well-being and stability.
  • But the procedure kept being postponed and he suffered for 96 hours with no food and just a saline drip for nourishment. The Sun
  • However, nourished by dew, the eastern Jidda 'is relatively well vegetated with a very open acacia woodland of small Acacia tortilis and Prosopis cineraria trees with shrubby A. ehrenbergiana growing in shallow sandy depressions, rock fissures and in drainage swales on the gravel plains. Arabian Oryx Sanctuary, Oman
  • Why do people have to be this lonely? What's the point of it all? Millions of people in this world, all of them yearning, looking to others to satisfy them, yet isolating themselves. Why? Was the earth put here just to nourish human loneliness? Haruki Murakami 
  • Under Chade's strict directions, I ate a nourishing meal of bland and healthful food every noon. THE GOLDEN FOOL: BOOK TWO OF THE TAWNY MAN
  • The humiliating injury is called obstetric fistula, a tear in the tissue between the vagina and adjoining organs, caused by prolonged labor in small, undernourished women-and now almost unknown outside the poorest countries of Africa and Asia. NCBlogs
  • The obsession with svelte figures flies in the face of past beliefs that regarded those who were thin as being unhealthy and malnourished.
  • My father had always said that there are four things a child needs plenty of love, nourishing food, fegular sleep, and lots of soap and water---and after those, what he needs most is some intelligent neglect. 
  • Most of the commercially valuable wild species derive their nourishment from the rootlets of living trees in a mutually beneficial relationship called mycorrhiza.
  • Look at American Ginseng; it nourishes the yin and benefits the qi.
  • He gave me an amuse-gueule, a mini gazpacho, while I was in the kitchen, and a little orange jelly which was delicious, but those were Hunca Munca titbits, not serious nourishment.
  • As a fodder crop, sainfoin was so nourishing to cattle it was called "holy hay" – "sain" meaning sound or healthy and "foin" meaning hay. Country diary: Wenlock Edge
  • She stresses the importance of protein in diets to stop cravings and satisfy the body's need for nourishment.
  • Faced with this depressing reality, a resentment is born and carefully nourished against the unknowing spouse for his failure to make frequent declarations of his appreciation and regard.
  • While some were executed, others, malnourished and starving, were forced to carry out labour beyond their physical capabilities.
  • They paralyse snails with a lethal injection which liquidises their insides and then they suck out the nourishment.
  • As well as satisfying that primal desire to avenge a wrong, it will have nourished their self-belief. The Sun
  • The retreat gives me a kind of spiritual nourishment.
  • Barclay was severely malnourished when discovered amid the squalor
  • Like almost all children in the camp, Teresa is obviously malnourished.
  • They also nourished hopes of using the thousand or so of their servicemen who had joined the British evacuation from Greece to Egypt as the nucleus of an army to be raised among Yugoslav emigrants in the Americas.
  • 1. It's curious that, while women battle obesity like never before, the ideal becomes the cachexic undernourished nearly sexless female. "I found myself saying 'these girls don't look all that thin...'"
  • And it is indeed true that the mechanism which supported the 'Estado de India' nourished a very unique place, one which internalised the life-affirming concept behind a word redolent of the very essence of Behind the News: Voices from Goa's Press
  • A forest not only protects the soil, inter-alia, it also nourishes it and thus both remain alive.
  • Word of God, instead of allowing it to penetrate more and more the inner spiritual nature: he therefore counsels them to purify themselves from all that is evil, all excrescences of the inward life which passion nourishes, and in meekness to suffer the word implanted in their hearts to take deeper and deeper root therein. The Scriptural Expositions of Dr. Augustus Neander: II. The Epistle of James, Practically Explained.
  • Wilton, in particular, is a scream as gentle-voiced Mum, who delays the group's flight while she makes nourishing sandwiches for everyone.
  • Fear disarranges circulation of the blood and the nourishment of muscle and nerve. Civics and Health
  • The makers of meat extracts and other foods, either from their own ignorance of modern research or their wish to take advantage of the lack of knowledge and prejudice of the public, call proteid matter alone nourishment. The Chemistry of Food and Nutrition
  • It was there that he saw how extensively elephant dung was used as agricultural fertilizer to nourish the otherwise barren land.
  • The family is shaping excellent personality life textbook, is to stimulate the spirit of power source, is the emotional rain nourishes the soul.
  • Food should nourish you and exercise make you feel strong. Times, Sunday Times
  • her nourishment of the orphans saved many lives
  • Herbal tonics have the ability to nourish the nervous system and enhance resilience; they are excellent when one is tense, anxious or depressed, tired and run down.
  • Furthermore, Scottish Calvinism was not an elite activity, it grew roots in the community quickly, and it nourished an egalitarian spirit that was at odds with what was, in every other respect, a deeply hierarchic society.
  • Love them, though, that she could! — and she hugged Peterle to her great bosom, which — NICHT WAHR, MEINE LIEBEN? — they would have judged able to nourish the dozen of which she dreamed; whereas, if they could credit it, for her treasure, her well-beloved little cock-chafer, it had yielded not so much as a mouthful. Two Tales of Old Strasbourg
  • In hospitals, malnourished patients can be put on a programme in which they receive different food, distinguished by being served on red trays. Times, Sunday Times
  • It felt nourishing and moisturising and leaves skin looking dewy. The Sun
  • The diet of a malnourished person may be high in starchy foods but is invariably low in protein and essential minerals and vitamins. Geography Basic Facts
  • [I] t is a long stretch to compare a half-starved bird that kills all her nestlings to a well-nourished woman who just delivered a baby and gets depressed two days later. An Evolutionary Model of Depression, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • While affluent regions and social classes struggle with surplus production and surplus consumption, close to one fifth of the global population lives in constant under-nourishment.
  • As a passionate admirer of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky he had in any case long nourished an admiration for Russia.
  • A recent malnutrition survey of South Kivu found more malnourished adults than children.
  • Verily we nourish a Sybel prophesier, which by the view of a candle doth divine of Celestiall things, and of the Sunne it selfe. The Golden Asse
  • For the school to flourish and thrive, just like a plant it needs to be placed in fertile and well-prepared soil, be strongly rooted and well-nourished and cared for.
  • But this mostly does not matter unless we 'nourish' their growth. Kathy Freston: A Cure For Cancer? Eating A Plant-Based Diet
  • Television pictures showed the children, some as young as two, to be malnourished, neglected and living motionlessly in dirty cribs.
  • The spores are derived from the endothecium, but no distinction of a sterile columella and an archesporium is established in this, a variable number of its cells becoming spore-mother-cells while the rest serve to nourish the spores. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 "Brescia" to "Bulgaria"
  • Plants get nourishment from the soil.
  • She explained these as exercise, nourishment and intellectual stimulation.
  • We're blowing all this money to build houses and ruin habitat with so-called beach renourishment and jetties, groins and seawalls.
  • He would sit in the centre of the grass, gaping and gawping, while the parent birds rushed back and forth to find nourishing grubs and suitable insects to stuff down his throat.
  • As well as being emotionally undernourished, the children also did not have adequate facilities.
  • And if you are feeling peckish, they have an excellent nourishing lunch menu with soup, and really fresh sandwiches.
  • They have commonly pottage for dinner, composed of cale or cole, leeks, barley or big, and butter; and this is reinforced with bread and cheese, made of skimmed-milk — At night they sup on sowens or flummery of oat-meal — In a scarcity of oats, they use the meal of barley and pease, which is both nourishing and palatable. The Expedition of Humphry Clinker
  • Owing to the marked individuality which man exhibits in the selection of his food, and to the intimate relationship subsisting between food and the organism it nourishes, it is impossible to arrange the alimental substances in the strict order of their nutritive values. The Stock-Feeder's Manual the chemistry of food in relation to the breeding and feeding of live stock
  • The vegetative power, whose functions are nourishment, growth and reproduction, is related to appetite, and is called the appetitive soul. A History of Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy
  • The family is shaping excellent personality life textbook, is to stimulate the spirit of power source, is the emotional rain nourishes the soul.
  • All the prisoners are overworked and undernourished.
  • Eat light yet nourishing foods such as mung bean soup for a few days to allow your digestion to adjust.
  • Families should be reasonably, decently nourished.
  • True silence is the rest of the mind; it is to the spirit what sleep is to the body, nourishment and refreshment. William Penn 
  • You are left to admire the ingredients without finding much nourishment in the meal itself. Times, Sunday Times
  • Before the floods, an estimated one-million people in Benin were already dealing with insecure food supplies, and more than one third of children under five were chronically malnourished. Agencies Appeal for Aid to Help Benin's Flood Victims
  • While people and pundits of other states got either one classical form or nothing to pamper and nourish, Keralites are blessed with a few.
  • One morning we came upon an abandoned undernourished puppy on the porch.
  • She was not a typical middle-class girl in expensive clothes who idolized masculine negritude, but an ill-nourished, disturbed young woman who would have gone "for anyone sexy who offered her a cult, even if he'd been as white as milk. The Lessons of the Master
  • Though I gained no particular motherly nourishment from my years at the University of Michigan, I for one am pleased that Hugh Hewitt is not among our distinguished undergraduate alumni. The Volokh Conspiracy » Self-hating Wolverine
  • Use it to tame dry hair or apply sparingly when wet for intense nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • You need not take a home-study course in animal nutrition to feed your pug a balanced, nourishing diet.
  • Concentrate on formulas that are moisturizing, nourishing and rehydrating.
  • He had that pinched look which suggests poverty and lack of nourishment.
  • Most recently, the company jumped into the smoothies market, rolling out Yoplait Nouriche, a single-serve non-fat yogurt smoothie, boasting ‘all the nourishment of a meal.’
  • If you go for a long time without nourishing your body with food, when you do eat you may eat a lot simply because your body is crying out to end the starvation mode that it's in.
  • We must never stop dreaming. Dreams provide nourishment for the soul, just as a meal does for the body. Paulo Coelho 
  • We need imaginative and inventive dietitians to nourish dietetic practice, to move it forward.
  • This lathery and luxurious 8 oz. bottle of shower gel is sure to help cleanse and nourish your skin.
  • Only once did I hear a soldier make a disparaging remark (young and stupid, he referred to the undernourished locals as "the skinnies").
  • A foetus is conceived, gestated and nourished only by its mother - the father is locked out.
  • Some micro-organisms began to manufacture their own nourishment and at the same time provide a food-chain base for all other emerging creatures.
  • He existed strictly on image, an anorectic figure nourished by moonbeams of attention, famous for saying that he loved his worshippers when the truth was he merely sucked the life out of them. Information, Culture, Policy, Education:
  • Spirulina, a marine plant that detoxifies and nourishes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Efficacy: Helichrysum essence is available for nourishing skin. Gently massaging may soften the skin epidermis cutin and instantly renew the skin vitality and luster.
  • A reality not of paper, but one that lives within us and determines each instant of our countless daily deaths, and that nourishes a source of insatiable creativity, full of sorrow and beauty, of which this roving and nostalgic Colombian is but one cipher more, singled out by fortune. Gabriel García Márquez - Nobel Lecture
  • an equally gallant little wife and mother uncomplainingly keeping up the production of tasty and nourishing meals
  • It was the look of them, partly: the skanky paper, the low-mirth smudginess of their production; but also the dismalness of the schoolyard world they portrayed: discipline versus cheekiness, small victories, practical jokes, jeering, every teacher undernourished, every kid drawn as though he had rickets. Kalooki Nights
  • Big clumps can become starved at the centre and it is worth dividing them in autumn so that the individual bulbs can find more nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • Do you remember those charity infomercials with smiling white adults holding the hands of pathetically malnourished dark-skinned children?
  • Great for nourishing thinning locks that have been damaged by too much sun or bleaching. The Sun
  • For these birds, a soda fountain is a literal description of their source of nourishment -- and they derive their colour from their food. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • We finally make it to the park, loaves of stale bread spilling out of the plastic bags ready to nourish the ducks.
  • In echidnas, the egg is carried in a pouch on the female's belly until the young hatches, at which point the barely-developed young must find a mammary gland and latch onto it for nourishment.
  • They were so undernourished that they easily became ill from consumption, fevers, pestilence, and a variety of other disorders.
  • For day-to-day existence, one needs something far more nourishing and profound. Times, Sunday Times
  • The ground was ploughed, and the seed sank beneath it from the sower's hand in spring; the earth was soft and sapful to a sufficient depth, and the roots of the springing corn found ample room to range in; the soil was clean, and its fatness, not shared by usurping weeds, went all to the nourishment of the sown seed: therefore in the balmy air and under the beaming sun it is ripe to-day, and ready to fill the reaper's bosom. The Parables of Our Lord
  • Now a commonplace person would have been satisfied with the recommendation of the medical man, who looks but to the one thing needful, which is a sufficient and wholesome supply of nourishment for the child; but Mr Easy was a philosopher, and had latterly taken to craniology, and he descanted very learnedly with the doctor upon the effect of his only son obtaining his nutriment from an unknown source. Mr. Midshipman Easy
  • It flushes the lymph system, nourishes and oxygenates the vascular system, cleanses the intestines, and is healing and soothing to all mucous membranes.
  • Tired, malnourished people are prone to infection.
  • And he could not help but contrast it with the weak pipings and shrill quaverings of factory girls, ill-nourished and untrained, and with the raucous shriekings from gin-cracked throats of the women of the seaport towns. Chapter 8
  • As long as we get the nourishment necessary to survive we live, when we don't, we die.
  • The pallor is the pallor of hardship, often of the lack of the right kind of nourishment, but the stillness is not the result of inward personal calm and peace. A Circuit Rider's Wife
  • All this was very nourishing, not to say stimulating, to the starved soul of a proletary. The Price
  • As a child, I was drawn to them and felt nourished by their ampleness and their warm reds, golds, rich greens, and browns.
  • They cease to receive nourishment, stop releasing toxins, die prematurely & spill micronuclei fragments into a sort of tunor bank account. Life as a Japanese employee
  • The food she eats nourishes both her and the baby.
  • The family is shaping excellent personality life textbook, is to stimulate the spirit of power source, is the emotional rain nourishes the soul.
  • You will have nourished at your table the declassed -- a product which costs dear and is worthless. The Simple Life
  • kwashiorkor" describes the malnourishment of a child weaned too early because his or her mother became pregnant again too quickly. Chapter 19
  • Now that the body has been tended, it's time to nourish the soul.
  • Plants draw nourishment from the soil.
  • Past form suggests a warmed-up fricassee of masculinist interventions and tellings-off for "political correctness", though it could prove to be more nuanced and nourishing. London's missing dimension – serenity | Dave Hill
  • The family is shaping excellent personality life textbook, is to stimulate the spirit of power source, is the emotional rain nourishes the soul.
  • In hot and dry summer days, people should avoid greasy and hot food and take more light and cool food to nourish the body's vital essence.
  • At age 26 months he was referred to the department of gastroenterology, and by then was severely malnourished, hypokalaemic, and acidotic.
  • Billions of people are "just women," and most of them are very good, very decent people, but could any of them have been the exceptional vessel meant to carry, nourish, enflesh and deliver to the world its Creator and Savior? The Anchoress
  • In the nourishing-winter-stew category, my favorite dish was a mass of oxtail sandwiched among layers of ravioli skins, with two pieces of seared monkfish on top.
  • While frolicking tourists sunbathe on beaches and dine in swanky resorts, while a few thousand elite Moroccans are living high on the hog, millions of malnourished, destitute, and sallow Moroccans in remote rural areas scratch the dirt for survival and take shelter in dwellings so sparsely furnished and poorly built that they look like caves. Global Voices in English » Blogging About Poverty And Development In The Arab World
  • His journal comments on the comparatively depressed state of the countryside, the untilled fields, ill nourished stock, abysmal roads and poor isolated villages.
  • Can plants obtain adequate nourishment from such poor soil?
  • The image reinforces the notion of them as twin spoilsmen, nourishing themselves on government largesse.
  • My father had always said that there are four things a child needs plenty of love, nourishing food, fegular sleep, and lots of soap and water---and after those, what he needs most is some intelligent neglect. 
  • Primarily, Ophiuchus is the energy of Healing and Global Healing, an energy that supports and nourishes and heals.
  • Part raconteuse, part avant-garde musician, and part social commentator, she provides nourishment to a diverse audience with equal measures of irony and tenderness.
  • Leaving my flat, tuna-nourished, I looked over both shoulders as I took the five minute walk.

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