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How To Use Perforce In A Sentence

  • Chovos Halevovos in Shaar Hateshuva points out that the one advantage that a Baal Teshuva always holds over a "natural" tsaddik is that the Baal Teshuvah must perforce be humble and submissive. Avakesh
  • Besides the lives of myriads of British men, conquering on a hundred fields, from Plassey to Meanee, and bathing them cruore nostro: think of the women, and the tribute which they perforce must pay to those victorious achievements. The Newcomes
  • The man who dwells for long periods face to face with the bitter truths of life learns so to distrust a fleeting moment of joy, gives habitually so cold a reception to the tardy messenger of delight, that, when the bright guest outdares his churlishness and perforce tarries with him, there ensues a passionate revulsion unknown to hearts which open readily to every fluttering illusive bliss. The Unclassed
  • So the friend, a buyer for one of the Chicago wholesale perforce , the necessity of stopping.
  • In an open _shamianah_, [4] eight or ten men divided their attention between a table at the back of the tent and the four ladies of the station, who perforce converted military events into those friendly gatherings which are the mainstay of Anglo-Indian life. Captain Desmond, V.C.
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  • The "nighty" was, perforce, absent, much to the sorrow of Ann; but the witchery of the glorious voice entered again into the woman's soul, and, indeed, sent the entire congregation home in an awed silence that was the height of admiring homage. The Tangled Threads
  • `My colleague and I are from the police," he said perforce, speaking slowly and distinctly. DEATH SPEAKS SOFTLY
  • Now an elder statesman, ambition frustrated but perforce sated, he is positioned to tell a riveting story.Sentence dictionary
  • Perforce, he was compelled to thaw it out in the usual way; that is, taking off his kamik and placing his freezing foot under my bearskin shirt, the heat of my body thawing out the frozen member. A Negro Explorer at the North Pole
  • The reason for this might have been found in the fact that acquired characteristics do not receive the stamp of heredity in one generation — his father was a self-made man, and had taught himself rigidly to conventionalise; and it might have been found in the fact that his mother had impressed upon his youthful mind the code of polite procedure in a way which made it appear an unpleasant duty — a mask, highly distasteful, but which must perforce be donned under certain conditions. THE UNMASKING OF A CAD
  • Such a work of synthesis, he asserts, ‘must perforce construct its own rules of engagement.’
  • For the first time a civil servant, perforce, began to affect what happened.
  • A by-blow of MPs having both their mortgages and their food bills paid for by the Taxpayer – in the case of John Prescott having the nightly technicolour yawn subsidised as well – is that they perforce become immune from the reality of the remorseless rise in food prices and interest rates that afflict not just the poor but most hard-working people in the UK. A Home-Made McStalin Pickle
  • Some praises proceed merely of flattery; and if he be an ordinary flatterer, he will have certain common attributes, which may serve every man; if he be a cunning flatterer, he will follow the arch-flatterer, which is a man’s self; and wherein a man thinketh best of himself, therein the flatterer will uphold him most: but if he be an impudent flatterer, look wherein a man is conscious to himself that he is most defective, and is most out of countenance in himself, that will the flatterer entitle him to perforce, spreta conscientia [in disdain of conscience]. LIII. Of Praise
  • Now an elder statesman, ambition frustrated but perforce sated, he is positioned to tell a riveting story.
  • But just as W.B. Yeats had trouble separating the dancer from the dance, so too is it impossible to separate the more graceful moments from the ugly, at times horrifying, context in which they must perforce arise.
  • Yet the fact that a few Nazis admired classical architects doesn't mean that classical architects are, perforce, the harbingers of totalitarianism.
  • They had perforce to abandon the attempt on the summit.
  • Lurid black and white must perforce give way to reputable gray.
  • They had perforce to abandon the attempt on the summit.
  • Their nostrils, one should understand, must be tightly clipped to avoid accidental drowning and since they surface only briefly they must perforce gulp air.
  • In listening to these works with their clumsy blocks of tone, their eternal sunless complaining, their lack of humor where they would be humorous, their lack of passion where they would be profound, their sardonic and monotonous bourdon, one is perforce reminded of the photograph of Reger which his publishers place on the cover of their catalogue of his works, the photograph that shows something that is like a swollen, myopic beetle with thick lips and sullen expression crouching on an organ-bench. Musical Portraits Interpretations of Twenty Modern Composers
  • This was no easy lift like the one from Luna to Mars; in choosing to take a 'cometary' or fast orbit to the Hallelujah the Stones had perforce to accept an expensive change-of-motion of twelve and a half miles per second for the departure maneuver. The Rolling Stones
  • Motorists are becoming increasingly anarchical, but this could be simply a means to an end as anyone wishing to drive through Keighley these days must perforce adopt an aggressive attitude.
  • To-morrow, by the end of the day, we shall come to a mountain of black stone, called loadstone, for thither the currents bear us perforce. The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Volume I
  • With many generations to come, the name of César de St. Auban must perforce be familiar as that of one of the greatest roysterers and most courtly libertines of the early days of Louis XIV., as well as that of a rabid anti-cardinalist and frondeur, and one of the earliest of that new cabal of nobility known as the petits-maîtres, whose leader the Prince de Condé was destined to become a few years later. The Suitors of Yvonne: being a portion of the memoirs of the Sieur Gaston de Luynes
  • When a puzzle is not explainable through sound, rational argument then perforce we need to look at the less rational domain.
  • Any modern understanding of the history of the region must perforce rely on the oral traditions.
  • To reach the doors giving onto the gardens they had, perforce, to travel the length of the room. ON A WICKED DAWN
  • She perforce sat in the chair opposite him, clasping her hands in her lap. THE GOSPEL MAKERS
  • The dog would perforce yelp in reaction, and thereby provide the captain a time cue.
  • The change from land to water, from narrow and stony streets to the wide, free outlook and uplook of a great river, the varied life of a crowded ferry-boat and of a busy harbor, the magnetic sympathies of a multitude let loose from toil and perforce at a stand-still for the time, -- all this insures a transition of mind as well as transfer of body. Lippincott's Magazine, November 1885
  • The war in 1939 perforce ushered in an era of more grime and drabness.
  • But many inventors have trouble with verbal acuity, and many politicians gifted with a silver tongue need to be schooled in the concepts they are perforce required to address.
  • So she had, perforce, to submit to his taking off her dressing-gown, and the glowing ardour and admiration in his dark eyes when she stood before him clad only in her filmy, sleeveless "nightie" brought the hot colour flooding back to her fair face again. Bandit Love
  • As it hath been clearly shown that God hath not a body, we must perforce explain all those passages whereof the literal sense agreeth not with the demonstration, for sure it is that they can be so explained. Theologico-Political Treatise
  • The role of spectator is no longer possible, -- we are all now perforce agents of history, which, rightly envisaged, is the process of the emergence of new forms and values of living. The Only Way to Save Civilization
  • They had perforce to abandon the attempt on the summit.
  • This scent breathed in, Rebecca is brought back, perforce, to a memory. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE

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