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How To Use Ortalis In A Sentence

  • My strop has already been immortalised on this blog and it is unfair to bring it up again.
  • The town of Whitby was immortalised in Bram Stoker's famous Dracula story.
  • The superfan immediately headed to a tattoo parlour to immortalise the autograph. The Sun
  • Can she ever imagine being able to immortalise Missy in a work? Polly Morgan's wings of desire
  • The horse is immortalised by a life size bronze statue at Aintree, presented by Seagram.
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  • The deeds of the Anzacs in Gallipoli and France are immortalised in many records -- magnificently in John Masefield's "Gallipoli" -- an epic in its simplicity. Women and War Work
  • It has been immortalised in songs, films and tacky merchandise. Times, Sunday Times
  • As if the statue made of bronze standing in Wisconsin wasn't enough to immortalise the memory of Winkler's alias, Fonzie, now he's got an OBE, too. Our pick of the week: The story, the stat, the quote, the tweet
  • Loveable Ted Clydesdale, the gentle giant of a carthorse immortalised as the lead character in a fast-selling children's book, is to make a guest appearance at the Three Counties Show.
  • Zoe was a beautiful brown-and-white spaniel, with eyes that were almost human in their soft beseechingness, and Mrs. Broderick often lamented that she could not eulogise his doggish virtues as Mrs. Browning had immortalised her Flush. Doctor Luttrell's First Patient
  • His plot to deceive the Germans was immortalised in this film.
  • The drama of Karski's story has inspired the producer of The King's Speech, Iain Canning, to immortalise his role in another historic epic. Earliest eyewitness account of the Holocaust finally to be published in UK
  • The third, who was a floriculturist, aspired constantly among his bulbs to create a silver rose, that should immortalise the lady's name. A Chair on the Boulevard
  • Even funnier is that the original 50-pace typo spotteruknzguyhas pointed out that the error has beenimmortalised in the URL. Storking the typo-makers « Subs’ Standards
  • A regular at a Cleckheaton pub has been immortalised in oils and hung on the wall.
  • No cytopathic effect was observed with this first isolate, but unlike HTLV infected cultures, no transformed immortalised cell lines could emerge from the cultures, which always died after 3 – 4 weeks as do normal lymphocytes. Luc Montagnier - Autobiography
  • Assuming, for purposes of exposition, that van Inwagen has not refuted somatism, we face a choice between sortalism and somatism. Substance
  • Although her elder sister Nancy had immortalised their parents as upper-class bumpkins in the Oxfordshire countryside, their background was in fact exotic.
  • Cum causal regularly takes the Subjunctive; as, -- quae cum īta sint, _since this is so_; cum sīs mortālis, quae mortālia sunt, cūrā, _since you are mortal, care for what is mortal_.a. Note the phrase cum praesertim (praesertim cum), _especially since; _ as, -- New Latin Grammar
  • Aurochs were immortalised in prehistoric cave paintings and admired for their brute strength and "elephantine" size by Julius Caesar. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Palmerston, who expressed himself as "extremely flattered and highly gratified" by the references to himself, did not in terms reprehend the language used of the two Sovereigns, and added, in a phrase immortalised by Leech's cartoon, that The Letters of Queen Victoria, Vol 2 (of 3), 1844-1853 A Selection from her Majesty's correspondence between the years 1837 and 1861
  • The town of Whitby was immortalised in Bram Stoker's famous Dracula story.
  • That these conditions could produce such a work of generosity and empathy as The Rainbow is mysterious and miraculous; and indeed the mystery and the miracle of creation is what this novel sets out both to evoke and to immortalise at the core of ordinary life. Rereading: The Rainbow by DH Lawrence
  • The big grey animals with sickle-shaped dorsal fins and prominent beaks are bottlenose dolphins (immortalised by Flipper).
  • It was the timeless quality of a pretty West Country village that persuaded the poet TS Eliot to immortalise it in his Nobel award-winning Four Quartets. East Coker, TS Eliot's placid village, resists threat of housing invasion
  • Nec vero quod in quoque optimum fuit studio consecutus est tantum, sed plurimas vel potius omnes ex se ipso virtutes extulit immortalis ingenii beatissimâ ubertate. A Dialogue Concerning Oratory, Or The Causes Of Corrupt Eloquence The Works Of Cornelius Tacitus, Volume 8 (of 8); With An Essay On His Life And Genius, Notes, Supplements
  • It was immortalised by Xu Zhimo, a 20th-century poet with all the attributes required for lasting celebrity: talent, a rackety love life and a dramatic early death (plane crash at 34).
  • A commuting cat that was mourned around the world after being killed by a hit-and-run driver eight days ago is to be immortalised in print. Times, Sunday Times
  • Metaphysically, this compromise favours the somatist, but seems to give the sortalist everything he should want. Substance
  • La poésie immortalise tout ce qu'il y a de meilleur et de plus beau dans le monde. Poesie - French Word-A-Day
  • Even so, the thought of life from a thundercloud thrilled Percy Shelley, who was a keen electrical experimenter, and was immortalised by his wife Mary in her novel Frankenstein.
  • Popular interest in collecting silver was immortalised by Bertie Wooster's antics with cow creamers and porringers.
  • At the end of each Improperium is sung the "Trisagion", Sanctus Deus, Sanctus fortis, Sanctus Immortalis, miserere nobis, by one choir in Greek and by another in Latin. More Rare Images: Good Friday with Pius XI in the Sistine Chapel
  • Tantalus, ut famast, cassa formidine torpens; sed magis in uita diuum metus urget inanis mortalis casumque timent quem cuique ferat fors; nec Tityon uolucres ineunt Acherunte iacentem nec quod sub magno scrutentur pectore quicquam55 perpetuam aetatem possunt reperire profecto; quamlibet immani proiectu corporis exstet, qui non sola nouem dispessis iugera membris obtineat, sed qui terrai totius orbem, non tamen aeternum poterit perferre dolorem60 nec praebere cibum proprio de corpore semper; sed Tityos nobis non est in amore iacentem quem luctus lacerant: at quem exest anxius angor aut alia quauis scindunt cuppedine curae. The Powers of Hell
  • Almost 50 years after being immortalised by the poet Philip Larkin in a famous anthology, the muse who inspired him is to speak on his legacy.
  • So if anyone deserves being immortalised on celluloid, it is those 12 North Yorkshire women who posed in the buff behind flower arrangements and apple presses.
  • In Christo uero ne uoluntas quidem ulla creditur fuisse peccandi, cum praesertim si tale corpus hominis adsumpsit quale Adae ante peccatum fuit, non debuerit esse mortalis, quoniam Adam, si non peccasset, mortem nulla ratione sensisset. The Theological Tractates and The Consolation of Philosophy
  • Not many people can boast of having their own waxwork in a museum, but New Addington resident Nan Jenkins is just one person immortalised in the Lifetimes exhibition.
  • The boots have been immortalised on celluloid in her latest film, Strictly Sinatra, directed by Peter Capaldi.
  • Trammies have been immortalised in film, radio and print.
  • Perhaps the venerated defender will end up immortalised in bronze three times over. Times, Sunday Times
  • Circus tricks performed in exact time to Tchaikovsky's music are treat enough, but more mind-boggling still are the acrobatic extremes to which the ballet vocabulary is pushed, including the section now immortalised on YouTube in which Odette dances en pointe, while balanced on Siegfried's head. This week's new dance
  • In the past, Poland created its brand by mounting an armed insurrection against Russian rule, and then having romantic poets such as Adam Mickiewicz immortalise the martrydom of this "Christ among nations". Poland: a country getting to grips with being normal at last
  • And it's also the birthplace of Banjo Paterson - a balladeer with a romantic inclination when it came to immortalising the bush and its inhabitants.
  • Both artists entertained the crème de la crème of high society there, and both immortalised the house in their work. Times, Sunday Times
  • Scrooge has been immortalised in the English language as the epitome of miserliness and meanness of spirit.
  • Sand artist Patnaik pays tribute to 'King of Pop' Michael Jackson PURI - Noted sand artist Sudarshan Patnaik immortalised 'King of Pop' Michael Jackson in sand on the scenic beaches of Puri, Orissa. Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • The horse is immortalised by a life size bronze statue at Aintree, presented by Seagram.
  • It has been immortalised in songs, films and tacky merchandise. Times, Sunday Times
  • These days, he seems pretty uncool, frozen in the modern psyche as the fat Vegas entertainer, but it's the young, hungry, ecstatically inspired Elvis that deserves to be immortalised.
  • Mark didn't yell "If it's just me and your grandmother on the bongos, it's still the Fall" at the audience during the 1998 Brownies gig; as far as I know Mark didn't "immortalise" Nigel Kennedy in a song called "Fiend with a Violin", etc. The Fall online - latest Fall News
  • But both Bonaparte and his Minister in the affairs of the Church, Portalis, refused the introduction of what they called a tyranny on the conscience. Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon
  • They were preceded by a bus carrying a generator shining a huge klieg light on the procession, so that video-cameramen could immortalise the scene.
  • Before long his regimen had been adopted by soldiers training for action in the Boer War and immortalised in fiction by James Joyce's peregrinatory protagonist Leopold Bloom. Evening Standard - Home
  • The Few, as Churchill dubbed the Fighter Command aircrew, were not the free-spirited, knights of the air, officer types immortalised by the media.
  • The town of Whitby was immortalised in Bram Stoker's famous Dracula story.
  • Many have been immortalised on film, from the glitzy hustle of Las Vegas to the wintry baroque of Prague.
  • He returned home hoping to immortalise his experiences in poetry, and he worked briefly on DC Thomson's comics before the Edinburgh literary scene bested him ( "I had plenty to say but I didn't know how to say it"). Observer Ethical Awards: Gordon Roddick, Lifetime Achievement Award
  • Cum causal regularly takes the Subjunctive; as, -- quae cum īta sint, _since this is so_; cum sīs mortālis, quae mortālia sunt, cūrā, _since you are mortal, care for what is mortal_.a. Note the phrase cum praesertim (praesertim cum), _especially since; _ as, -- New Latin Grammar
  • When high levels of L-dopa were used to treat Parkinson's Disease type symptoms (immortalised in the film, ‘Awakenings’), the individuals concerned developed acute paranoid psychoses.

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