How To Use Oiled In A Sentence

  • He called the foiled butt "Really juicy and nearly perfect. Physicist Cracks BBQ Mystery
  • Elizabeth had doted on her, spoiled her, given her everything a little girl can want.
  • We've been having a great deal of difficulty educating our fliers that when wearing their flight suits, their sleeves must be roiled down to the wrist at all times.
  • I do not of course mean, Heaven forbid! that people should try to converse seriously; that results in the worst kind of dreariness, in feeling, as Stevenson said, that one has the brain of a sheep and the eyes of a boiled codfish. From a College Window
  • At around 11 am that day a pensioner foiled another attempted scam by a man and woman in Central Avenue, Gravesend.
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  • The adults' menu may feature grilled shrimp, charbroiled chicken, sautéed vegetables, and salads galore.
  • A catapult fired point-blank, and flames broke over the roiled water, but it was pointless.
  • The seas roiled , tossing the ships in the harbor about like toys in a rain barrel.
  • Aren't you a spoiled child, without the childness and the spoiling, to go and write in that plaintive, solemn way about 'help of some connexions of Jane's in Glasgow,' as if you were a desolate orphan Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle
  • Creamy onion sauce slathered over lightly boiled eggs.
  • In September, return visitors to an Edinburgh guesthouse said it was time to ‘rethink the three-star rating’, complaining that the linens were ‘soiled’ and the carpet was littered with ‘crumbs and dustballs’.
  • So far, so good, so much more credible—and spoiled only slightly by the blandishment that those that fail should present plans for recapitalization "as swiftly as possible. Is This the End of the Beginning for the Euro Crisis?
  • Nutty sweetbreads, bitter greens, gently brash shallots, and velvety chanterelles suffuse farfalle in well-oiled repertory.
  • My hair was matted and wild -- my limbs soiled with salt ooze; while at sea, I had thrown off those of my garments that encumbered me, and the rain drenched the thin summer-clothing I had retained -- my feet were bare, and the stunted reeds and broken shells made them bleed -- the while, I hurried to and fro, now looking earnestly on some distant rock which, islanded in the sands, bore for a moment a deceptive appearance -- now with flashing eyes reproaching the murderous ocean for its unutterable cruelty. III.9
  • We live in a world soiled by the grossness and wickedness and filth of sin.
  • The smoothly boiled porridge, with its accompaniment of thick yellow cream; the new-laid eggs; the grilled trout, fresh from the stream; the freshly baked "baps" and "scones," the crisp rolls of oatcake; and last, but not least, the delectable, home-made marmalade, which is as much a part of the meal as the coffee itself. Big Game A Story for Girls
  • Isn't there something revolting about catering to the imagined needs of a tiny group of spoiled ladies, a Marie Antoinette–ish situation that reached its apotheosis when John Galliano showed his infamous clochard collection—the word means bum or hobo in French, and the tattered gowns, hand-stenciled to look filthy, trailed pots, pans, and other refuse—at the 1997 Dior haute couture show? Art in the Parks 3: Nan Kempner's Clothing
  • However, there is a potential for increased tourism because of the natural beauty and varied topography and because the country is unspoiled and inexpensive.
  • The meat is divided evenly and boiled in a stew.
  • Tightly woven wool, wool melton, felted or boiled wool, leather and suede along with faux leather and suede all can be clipped, snipped, slashed or punched without fraying.
  • His actions have spoiled the accommodationist agenda, and marred the image of the revolution.
  • This done with expedition, like men skilful in such mischief, as they took their cockboat to go aboard their own ship, it was overwhelmed in the sea, and certain of these men there drowned; the rest were preserved even by those silly souls whom they had before spoiled, who saved and delivered them aboard the _Swallow_. Sir Humphrey Gilbert's Voyage to Newfoundland
  • I was accused of being stiff, spoiled, pompous, upper crusted, bitter, angry, negative, imbecilic, and even crazy.
  • Do you want a boiled egg for breakfast?
  • For the Schlachtfest, Stralsunders gathered in hundreds, the women in their dirndls and men in old-fashioned suits, gobbling pig knuckle, leberwurst, knockwurst, dozens of waxy, greasy boiled potatoes, and of course, blutwurst. Blood Lite II: Overbite
  • The best way of getting pulses down my gullet is with dhal, in which split peas are completely melted, boiled with curry powder, garlic, chili, and then topped off with cumin seeds and garlic fried to a crisp which both add that magical aroma. Pinto beans, three ways | Homesick Texan
  • And the idea of the wind chimes, oiled, wrapped and protected in rolls of aromatic hessian sacking, lying up in the dark of the garage loft against some future need, is pleasing enough.
  • In a sweeping half-moon behind me, the rugged, unspoiled Inishowen Peninsula rolls out across this little known spear of North West Ireland.
  • Just then Edward handed Doctor Instow a goodly rasher of broiled ham, upon which was a perfectly poached egg; and directly after the man came round behind Jack, and quietly placed before him, with a whisper of warning that the plate was very hot, another rasher of ham, and at the first sight of it the lad began to shrink, but at the second glance, consequent upon a brave desire not to show his repugnance, he saw that it was a different kind of rasher to the doctor's, and that there was no egg. Jack at Sea All Work and no Play made him a Dull Boy
  • Unfortunately for both, their careers took a nosedive after they both became embroiled in controversy.
  • Workers had toiled to move dirt to fill in the deeper puddles and the match was able to proceed with two days of fast shooting in excellent weather.
  • The invaders despoiled the country of all its treasures.
  • In an age of central heating and renovation Greystones presumably featured as a rare unspoiled habitat.
  • Another good option is the Santa Lucia, a beautifully restored 18 th-century palazzo which is spoiled only by the management's choice of chintzy decor and over-fussy floral curtains in the guest rooms.
  • And yet ever so simple, just hard-boiled eggs soaked overnight in beet juice. Archive 2005-03-01
  • Some time in the fifteenth century, clockmakers started to use tightly coiled blades of metal - springs - to power their timepieces, instead of gravity.
  • Frankly, she held her nose and said it stank like the henhouse when a mongoose has spoiled the eggs. HOMELAND AND OTHER STORIES
  • Gosh, it's over a year since I read The Moving Toyshop; here Gervase Fen is embroiled in a mystery of murder and espionage in a West Country cathedral town in about 1940. January Books 27) Holy Disorders, by Edmund Crispin
  • King Edwards, for example are a dry floury potato that will disintegrate around the edges when boiled, so makes excellent mash, roast and chips.
  • With their well-oiled hype machines, big-budget video games easily dominate the pop-culture-buzz economy.
  • The porringer was a very important article of table use, for pap, and soft foods such as we should term cereals, and for boiled pudding. Arts and Crafts in the Middle Ages A Description of Mediaeval Workmanship in Several of the Departments of Applied Art, Together with Some Account of Special Artisans in the Early Renaissance
  • The salmon they carried from Berwick was boiled, pickled in brine and delivered in barrels known as kitts.
  • Choose grilled, baked or broiled foods instead of fried.
  • Instead of the turkey, a boiled or roasted chicken (with the brown meat a little underdone) or a brace of stewed or roasted pheasants can be used.
  • He was standing in the doorway, wearing a frown and a soiled T-shirt, his large belly protruding over his pants, held up by a pair of suspenders.
  • When the shovelers come by, they shovel the bread, rats and spoiled meat into the sausage vats.
  • Back in the age of discovery, wine shipments often spoiled at sea and originally wines were fortified to stop them from going bad on voyage. The Sun
  • Dip one side of the ball in the sesame oil and place oiled side on top of oiled side of another ball.
  • Chromosomes are visible only during cell division, when the DNA is supercoiled and condensed to facilitate distribution into daughter cells.
  • There is a man, approximately my age, attractive in a scruffy, academic sort of way brown corduroy jacket, one of those narrow, stripey, many-coloured scarves that men are wearing this season coiled around his neck, tufty brown hair, sitting across the aisle to my right on a strapontin. Power, corruption and lies
  • Santa's national secretariat is embroiled in several disputes with other Santa hospitals throughout the country.
  • Poor Sundry Buyers continually pressed his abdomen as he toiled around the deck-capstans; and never was Nancy's face quite so forlorn as when he obeyed the Maltese Cockney's command and went up to loose the mizzen-skysail. CHAPTER L
  • The hallway smelt of boiled cabbage and old rag mats.
  • It would be fun to eat soft-boiled eggs using the set shown in Plate XVI, which was found in the original fitted box.
  • Friars Cowle, which was so snottie and greazie, that good store of kitchin stuffe might have beene boiled out of it; as also a foule slovenly Trusse or halfe doublet, all baudied with bowsing, fat greazie lubberly sweating, and other drudgeries in the Convent The Decameron
  • She boiled up a large pan of water.
  • Wouldn't any spoiled young brat fresh from university give his life for a chance like that? Bomber
  • I'd anticipated him working inside a Back-To-The-Future kind of laboratory with bubbling beakers, coiled yellow electrical wire, and a suffocating sense of disarray.
  • In mammals, the lagena is coiled and is referred to as the cochlea.
  • Curd is boiled, cooled and whisked buffalo milk poured into earthenware pots and left to set.
  • That change rivals anything that we've seen in the last three years of the smartphone market," said Paul Carton, ChangeWave's director of research, adding that the sudden surge in consumer interest in Android had "roiled" the market. PC World
  • The teenager won't put her soiled clothing in the laundry basket as requested; they don't get washed.
  • He skipped past two tackles to race into the area, but was foiled crucially at the last moment by Paddy Martin, the big Kilglass No.4.
  • The coconut is grated, strained and boiled to extract its oil.
  • I managed to get "Spook" on bookcrossing, so I can now put some other book on my Christmas wish list - I just got my new copy of "Pages" so I'm going to be spoiled for suggestions! Spook/Ghost Hunters (copy)
  • So he boiled an egg. Once he deduced it to be ready, he removed it, cracked it open and carefully placed it on his recently purchased egg cup.
  • Which means a hard-boiled grade-A is an ideal muscle-repair food after a butt-busting workout.
  • His dark limbs gleamed like oiled gold beneath the faded bermudas and T-shirt.
  • I practically drove right onto the beachfront, an unspoiled, unpeopled coastline that seemed to stretch to infinity. Smithsonian Mag
  • Friday's demonstration had a joyful and entrepreneurial air, with face-painters emblazoning the Egyptian flag on takers young and old, carts with fresh popcorn, and women offering hard-boiled eggs and koshary, the national dish of lentils, rice and pasta topped with a spicy tomato sauce. A month after revolt, Egyptians march to protect their victory as neighbors demand freedom, too
  • I've been on eight fabulous cruises and love to be spoiled and pampered on my vacations.
  • An he had been cannibally given, he might have broiled and eaten him too. The Tragedy of Coriolanus
  • Its turrets and towers, its windows and its walls, its capacious kitchens, and its fine halls and banqueting rooms -- unspoiled by the hands of the "restorer" -- have gained for it the almost unchallenged position of being the finest baronial residence which still exists. Heiress of Haddon
  • I find it unsettling that Stalin used to toss breadballs at his wife during dinner, that he spoiled his children and that he loved growing mimosas.
  • Since a criminal investigation is involved here she must be most careful to ensure that she is truthful at all times about what has happened and that she does not become embroiled in cobbling up an untrue explanation of events which might later become the subject of evidence under Oath in the Crown Court. Archive 2008-11-30
  • For one thing, it's not knit in bainin, the oiled Irish yarn that is scarcer than hen's teeth to find. The Knitting Curmudgeon
  • The awareness of the distinction salted / unsalted would have been strong in the Middle Ages because meat was regularly parboiled to tenderize it before roasting or frying.
  • From her eyes poured two black rivers, down her face, across her red lips and onto her thin soiled shirt. Une pantoufle - French Word-A-Day
  • They broiled turkey over a charcoal flame.
  • But the Republican governors recoiled from the prospect of reopening the welfare bill for anything.
  • Since she supported none of the candidates, she spoiled her ballot paper.
  • Therefore, the more expensive modern latex ulama balls are made by the traditional technique of using boiled rubber sap mixed with other ingredients required for vulcanization. History of Sport Resulting in Sudden Death Near Puerto Vallarta
  • Yunupingu, who is reportedly embroiled in a dispute with family members over the dispersal of mining royalties and grants, gave no details about the mine proposal or how it would be financed.
  • The workers toiled all through the night.
  • Now, in this land the path of the transgressor is strewn with barbed wire, and so my mistress got entangled in some loose strands that had uncoiled from the fence. Janey Canuck in the West
  • These soiled robes have been cleansed to spotlessness. The Sins of Brother Curtis
  • However, the alleged attack was foiled by the alert police force of the district.
  • Our creative sector is like a coiled spring just waiting to be set free. Times, Sunday Times
  • She never, not once, ate anything but lightly cooked calves ' liver, and lightly boiled whiting. ON CATS
  • In Tucson, Arizona, Barbara dries them on her roof, spreading the tomatoes on oiled screens under cheesecloth tents to foil the birds.
  • Thoroughly disinfect and deodorize the soiled area.
  • The snake coiled round the tree.
  • Doctors, surgeons, nurse anesthetists, nurses and medical technicians work like a well-oiled machine, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
  • The United Nations was reluctant to get its forces embroiled in civil war.
  • Water was boiled in kettles, saucepans and other containers on the top of the stove, and baking done in the oven.
  • Do you want a boiled egg for breakfast?
  • Though he is faster to commit to Lola, he is selfish and spoiled.
  • The finished dumplings can be boiled in a saucepan of water for about 40 minutes or can be added to casseroles, soups or stews for the equivalent time before the end of the cooking period.
  • But I found my efforts repeatedly foiled by the expectations of the students themselves.
  • For her sake I hope they were relatively unsoiled - the owner may not have necessarily thrown them out of appreciation.
  • Ahead, lay a sleepy Nubian town, and beyond lay an angry cataract; the water boiled and frothed through the gorge and over hidden rocks.
  • The male reproductive system contains four pairs of accessory glands, the most prominent of which are the tightly coiled spiral accessory glands.
  • Ads urged readers to become skilled, well-paid workers; hard-boiled heroes knocked heads with clients and agency owners over their workplace autonomy.
  • Even if the salad is dressed with strips of duck, bits of bacon lardons, goat cheese or sliced hard-boiled eggs, stay the course.
  • So he may appreciate the paradox of his lightning ascent in his second calling – not to mention the mutterings of those press-box colleagues who have toiled diligently for years without recognition from their trade's association and remember the days when they called him Captain Grumpy, a soubriquet he did his best to live up to. US hard courts will reveal if Andy Murray's lapses are part of a cycle | Kevin Mitchell
  • There were several newly baked wheaten loaves, and some hen's eggs, broken open and boiled in broth.
  • The chairman of the football club embroiled in cricket's match-fixing scandal has apparently taken his own life. Times, Sunday Times
  • Given the turbulent and often violent nature of the times, the reasons a writer might choose to reflect them through the medium of hard-boiled detective fiction might seem self-evident.
  • The play is set in a country embroiled in an ongoing war, where one woman dares to stand out against popular opinion.
  • Markham suggests colewort - a sort of cabbage - boiled in ale, the ale to be drunk at every meal.
  • He boiled beetroot to sell and made and flogged ginger beer. Times, Sunday Times
  • With the flavours intensifying as the food simultaneously steams and roasts, and no juices lost or boiled away, the end result is bags of flavour (sorry).
  • It announced on July 15 that an attempted coup had been foiled the previous night.
  • My blood boiled and burned like acid fire within me but I forced my will to ignore it.
  • Clean out any soiled bedding when you see it and add fresh material to keep the bottom of the nest box well padded.
  • Up close they are really interesting and even pretty but most eyes find them to be just slimy gunge that needs to be gotten rid off…And, of course, there are the moss lovers that create their growth with spoiled milk/yogurt. More Moss Magic « Fairegarden
  • Viro heard a slither, and a hiss, and looked above; from the rafters, a furred snake hung, its tail coiled upon a rotten wooded sign, the whitish paint flecked and gone.
  • Hard-boiled Dreams of the World, winner of the cerebral, intellectually appealing, mentally engrossing and reasonably highbrowed Thinking Blogger Award! Thinking Blogger Awards
  • Stir the softened, slow-cooked onions into the egg mixture and then pour the whole caboodle into an oiled non-stick circular 9 " cake tin.
  • She wondered how long it had been since Andrew McClintock had toiled his way to the top-floor of a ` walk-up ". THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • While cooking, season the fish fillets and place them well apart on a lightly oiled baking sheet. The Sun
  • The salesman tried to palm us off with some shop-soiled sheets.
  • The sapodilla is usually eaten raw, though in the W. Indies it may be boiled down to make a syrup.
  • Marvelling at all the glass, all the metal and glass of modern London, the boiled chrome and hi tech mirror walls. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
  • But I refer you to a learned author, who hath long since assoiled this difficulty, and taught us to distinguish between a Jew en tō phanerō and a Jew en tō kruptō, of Israel according to “the flesh” and according to “the promise.” The Doctrine of the Saints��� Perseverance Explained and Confirmed
  • The attraction of these materials lies in their rich detail about the lives of men and women embroiled in marital litigation.
  • Rats near sites where waste was dumped have died and lie next to soiled containers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Serve with boiled new potatoes and maybe some peas to add to the chicken just before serving. Times, Sunday Times
  • Swap white boiled rice for wholegrain to increase your fibre intake. The Sun
  • The broiled rouget (with daikon radish and crunchy yellow lentils) had a similarly monkish, almost dried-out quality.
  • This is the great green ideological conundrum, boiled down. Times, Sunday Times
  • And even if he does, by then we'll have foiled his plans.
  • Molasses Molasses, which is called treacle in the United Kingdom, is generally defined as the syrup left over in cane sugar processing after the readily crystallizable sucrose has been removed from the boiled juice. On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
  • A hanger and clothespin don't just come in handy for doing laundry, they can also be used to straighten out coiled cords, even ones that may appear permanently kinked.
  • A practical nurse brought old red wine, a silver tray of smoked salmon, crumbled hard-boiled egg, capers and lemon.
  • Instead, it boiled down to here's my stump speech, he's wrong, so vote for me.
  • In truth this Caucasian wine, although rather sour, accompanied by the boiled fowl, known as pilau -- has rather a pleasant taste about it. The Adventures of a Special Correspondent
  • The Strangers’ House is a fair and spacious house, built of brick, of somewhat a bluer colour than our brick; and with handsome windows, some of glass; some of a kind of cambric oiled. The New Atlantis: Paras 1-29
  • A writer in the "Mercury" says: "The root of the buttonwood or crane willow, a shrub which is conspicuous in our swamps in the spring, when boiled with honey and cumfrey, makes a pleasant syrup, which is the most effective remedy known to me in diseases of the lungs. Resources of the Southern Fields and Forests, Medical, Economical, and Agricultural. Being also a Medical Botany of the Confederate States; with Practical Information on the Useful Properties of the Trees, Plants, and Shrubs
  • She really didn't know much about real life, she was like a spoiled princess.
  • Water was boiled in kettles, saucepans and other containers on the top of the stove, and baking done in the oven.
  • Together with his wife, Danielle, he spoiled us with rib-sticking main courses such as cassoulet or rabbit pappardelle they'll cater for vegetarians or special diets if you let them know in advance, and irresistible desserts like melting chocolate pudding or affogato with homemade ice-cream. Couples ski holiday in the French Alps
  • The village witch doctor coated Mr. Holm's burns with a blue-black paste of boiled snake, tree bark and herbs. Looking Back On the Spy Life
  • There's hardly a bit of a pig you can't eat, from the head boiled up in a stewy soup to the trotters with their savoury jelly and morsels of meat.
  • It was silvery white, of unsoiled reed flaxen silk.
  • Woronov's prose occupies bizarre territory, somewhere between twisted lyricism and hard-boiled pulp fiction.
  • The relief I felt was indescribable, and I hope to get thus entoiled no more. A Brief Memoir with Portions of the Diary, Letters, and Other Remains, of Eliza Southall, Late of Birmingham, England
  • We wished to avoid the constant and real threat of bedbugs, fleas, and other insect pests which we had brought home in our bags, topclothing, and soiled linens.
  • In general order of accuracy, these methods include a piezoelectric accelerometer, a coiled spring mechanism, and a hairspring mechanism. The Small Change Diet
  • I could smell the liquor on his breath, and I recoiled, disgusted.
  • Clouds boiled in the sky overhead, blocking out the sun and heralding a storm.
  • A very popular summer dish is the refreshing saltibarsciai, a cold soup of sour cream and buttermilk or sour milk, with sliced beets, cucumbers, green onions, boiled eggs, and parsley.
  • If you give your baby juice, dilute it well with cooled, boiled water.
  • She spoiled her son all his life, and always believed that her family was better than Lindo's because they were richer.
  • The burse, which is simply a cover used to keep the corporal from being soiled, and which for that reason was known in Old English as a "corporas-case", is somewhat older. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
  • And from the reckless way they were tacklin 'big platters of expensive food, such as broiled live lobster and planked steaks, I judged they'd been mustered out more or less recent. Torchy and Vee
  • It's going to be called The Drift, its another hard-boiled fiction.
  • Friday, March 27, 2009 at 06: 41 PM how odd to read this particular bit of news as i enjoy one of the only still-functioning electrical devices in my home (the computer), the others suffering from a mysterious anti-surge, in which switches produce only intermittent and then very weak current. nothing is 'crame' but the fridge has no cold, the water-heater no heat, the lamps flicker like candles guttering out their last wisp of light, etc. the electrician will be coming tomorrow; meanwhile one is very conscious of being (but not wishing to be) very spoiled and electrodependent ...... Cramer - French Word-A-Day
  • Most of these worked as domestics and laborers in urban areas, although some toiled on rural farms and haciendas.
  • One is not even made wet by the rain nor cold by the frost; while death, instead of stalking about grewsome and accidental, becomes a prearranged pageant, moving along a well-oiled groove to the family vault, where the hinges are kept from rusting and the dust from the air is swept continually away. THE UNEXPECTED
  • Preparation: Broiled, saut é ed, baked in parchment paper (en papillote). The New School
  • This binding affinity to supercoiled DNA is approximately two orders-of-magnitude larger than on relaxed DNA.
  • Yes she does, right down to making sure he changes his soiled underwear and keeping his basement lair well stocked with mountain dew and cheetos. Think Progress » Mother of man arrested for threatening Pelosi blames ‘really radical’ Fox News.
  • And he emerged from his prison the same spoiled, pettish rich kid, having tantrums, dumping his non-glossy crippled wife, etc., etc. A Word On McCain's Heroism And His Speech Tonight
  • He lives a miserable life, tormented by his aunt and uncle and his spoiled cousin.
  • You can count the number of unopened/uncast ballots at the end of the night, compare them to the number of cast/spoiled ballots, and know that you finished with the same number you started with. Tim Hugo's Future Chaos
  • However, historian Will Durant correctly observed: ‘Europe and America are the spoiled child and grandchild of Asia and have never quite realized the wealth of their pre-classical inheritance.’
  • Given that the DA will see his chances for re-election dwindle if he/she is perceived to be soft on a multiple felony slam-dunk conviction case against a spoiled, arrogant, crime-committing, room-temperature-IQ behemoth, I suspect the moron in question (e.g., the football player), after considerable wheeling and dealing by his zealous defense attorney -- who is just doing his job, will likely receive felony deferred adjudication from the appropriate court. No Prison for Plaxico?
  • Some lean meat morsels you may want to munch include skinless cuts of roasted, baked or broiled poultry and seafood.
  • It was the more provoking, as Bunce himself could write his name legibly, and one of those three doubting souls had for years boasted of like power, and possessed, indeed, a Bible, in which he was proud to show his name written by himself some thirty years ago -- "Job Skulpit;" but it was thought that Job Skulpit, having forgotten his scholarship, on that account recoiled from the petition, and that the other doubters would follow as he led them. The Warden
  • Fries and slaw, plus decadent garlic butter sauce, also accompany the more than a dozen charbroiled items.
  • What a contrast that would be from the spoiled, overpaid and selfish athletes who normally grace the covers of sports magazines.
  • Patients, who [plantiffs 'attorneys] contend did not receive showers on a regular basis, walked around with catheters leaking and dragging on the ground, had wounds left untreated and were forced to sit in soiled bed sheets for hours or, in some cases, even days. Lisa Derrick: More Than Marijuana: Humboldt County DA Wins Big for Seniors
  • So it was that the scholar began his researches at the abbey, continuously aware of the three novices who toiled at the drive-mill and the fourth novice who invited glare-blindness atop the ladder to keep the lamp burning and adjusted-a situation which caused the Poet to versify mercilessly concerning the demon Embarrassment and the outrages he perpetrated in the name of penitence or appeasement. A Canticle for Leibowitz
  • He frequently spoiled his splendid point-work with the burin, and his reputation as an aquafortist depends, therefore, more on what he did than on how he did it. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
  • For most people, the appeal of pro wrestling is a mystery or is written off as something for kids, rural folks not smart enough to realize wrestling is fake, and guys dealing with the fact that they enjoy watching oiled up musclemen in tights grabbing each other. Jonathan Kim: Why I Still Love Pro Wrestling and Will Miss "Macho Man" Randy Savage
  • Howbeit not yet was it ordained for the heroes to set foot on Achaea, until they had toiled even in the furthest bounds of Libya. The Argonautica
  • They also liked cracked, parboiled, and roasted grains very similar to modern-day bulgur and freekeh. Day of Honey
  • Topoisomerase III is a type I topoisomerase, acting on DNA that is negatively supercoiled and/or contains single-strand regions.
  • The little brats will only mash it into your lovely oiled floorboards and goatskin rugs.
  • It is processed by a series of soakings, which remove the bitter taste, after which it can be boiled to make an edible jelly or dried and ground to a flour for bread-making.
  • Revulsion at the thought, fear of the act; his mind recoiled from it, seeking sanctuary, finding it at once. LOHENGRIN
  • He recoiled in horror at the sight of the corpse.
  • Purified water is first used to cool the boiled wort (the beer after boiling but before fermenting), becoming heated in the process.
  • The walls and ceiling were of oiled and panelled redwood. THE STORY OF JEES UCK
  • A blend of lightly spiced basmati rice and chunks of hard-boiled eggs, egg pilaf is a nutritious one-dish meal. Archive 2007-01-01
  • There were a few large jars of boiled sweets in the window, chocolate limes and Everton mints.
  • It had been kept oiled and polished, but it was a single-shot, wildly inaccurate at long range, with a kick like a mule's. LORD OF THE SILENT
  • This, washed and then boiled, yielded aluminium sulphate, which, when ammonia was added, became alum.
  • She patted at her hair and found it moiled all about her head. Cold Mountain
  • Ignace found in his letter box a soiled folded paper containing Kessler's twenty - five dollars.
  • Her blond hair was being whipped by the wind and behind her black clouds boiled and lightning flashed, or so it seemed to George and the woman.
  • He may be charming but he is willful, thoroughly spoiled and a washout in politics.
  • And I was so spoiled that I had a very, let's say, ‘heavenly’ idea of the world.
  • Englishmen than euer before; so as doubting that hee should neuer by gentlenesse win their good willes, he now determined by a harder measure to meete with them; insomuch that he banished a great number, other some also (not a few) he spoiled of their goods, those especiallie of whom he was in hope to gaine any great portion of substance. Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (2 of 6) England (1 of 12) William the Conqueror
  • The vegetables, a collection of boiled potatoes, carrots, broccoli, courgette and tomato, were well cooked.
  • Two grand staircases frame the 50m long ramp, sumptuously sculpted with coiled dragons, marking the imperial emblem.
  • Anyhow, in two and half years of blogging, I've been flamed and broiled and skewered and roasted a number of times.
  • Healthful choices include a small handful of dried fruit and nuts, whole - grain crackers with a slice of cheese or a hard-boiled egg, or yogurt topped with a tablespoon of granola.
  • I thought it was really terrific how he had boiled so much nonsense away and kept a particular track through the midst of all this confusion and hoopla and blah-blah.

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