How To Use Permanently In A Sentence

  • Push the panel into the glued surface and use a level to make certain it is plumb before you tack it into position and glue it down permanently.
  • Some might say the club have taken refuge in recent years in the rosy glow of their triumph of 1967 so they might be as well moving permanently to the Portuguese capital.
  • Taking up so much of the roof area, it has to stay sealed with the glass permanently in place to maintain the car's body rigidity.
  • [12] The original reference to experience from which the meaning of the term astronavigation should be derived is not essentially "space-travel," but forms of transoceanic navigation which take into account the effects specific to changes in specific astronomical experiences, from fixed to variable, which are relevant to transoceanic navigation within what had appeared, initially, as a permanently fixed set of changes within the ordering of the planets or specifically stellar phenomena. LaRouche's Latest
  • Purposefully moraceous make money work from home, but the lintwhite unholiness was that the wildness sokoro was buried me surpassingly was a permanently in the pintado flyer skillet. Rational Review
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  • If the craft had kept the same attitude permanently, then that side facing the Sun would have baked.
  • It lives subtidally (from the high water mark, which is rarely inundated, to shoreline areas that are permanently submerged), or occasionally intertidally (the area that is exposed to the air at low tide and underwater at high tide). CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • Not surprisingly, Metung attracted a number of distinguished early holiday-makers, some of whom settled there permanently, including the explorer and mineralogist Dr. Alfred Howitt; His Honour Judge John Burnett Box; and John King, the second son of Rear Admiral Philip Parker King. Archive 2009-01-01
  • Going into a somewhat different trajectory, specifically to continue a line of speculation from a previous post on an African bridge house: can someone be fundamentally altered — like the corn they're cultivating to produce cancer cures — while living quasi-permanently in flourescent-lit dampness and hermetic seclusion, detached from the vagaries of weather, time and natural pollination, amidst pure geology? Cave Pharming
  • They're stupendously boring goody-goodies who are permanently belting out power ballads. The Sun
  • It is already known that in some bowel cancers the K-Ras gene is faulty, leaving the switch permanently 'on'. patients who have a normally functioning K-Ras 'switch' might in some circumstances** benefit from new cancer drugs called cetuximab and panitumumab. THE MEDICAL NEWS
  • Life on patrol means months permanently beneath the surface of the sea to avoid detection. Times, Sunday Times
  • Black crested gulls swirled along the atmosphere; the air was permanently imbued with the scent of salt and fish, fresh or otherwise.
  • The impact, Loucks believes, may permanently reduce the biological diversity of this extraordinary ecosystem.
  • In addition, incoming calls must be permanently routed by them once the switch has been completed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sympathectomy has failed to secure a place in ophthalmic surgery, sclerotomy has not been found adequate, and cyclodialysis is not sufficiently simple of execution or permanently beneficial in its results to give it prominence. Glaucoma A Symposium Presented at a Meeting of the Chicago Ophthalmological Society, November 17, 1913
  • That image from VK's dhaba is permanently etched in my memory: P Keeping the Embers Burning
  • His hair is unkempt and his clothes scruffy; his eyes are red and he seems permanently on the point of tears. Times, Sunday Times
  • The visual cortex was permanently damaged. Times, Sunday Times
  • If Black retires the Bishop from his unsafe position, White permanently prevents Black from castling, which is bound to be fatal in view of the open K file -- e.g. 11. ... Chess Strategy
  • Appeals Panels still have powers to reverse decisions of schools to exclude pupils permanently.
  • I will use these decuries as the jury base, though no decury will be permanently seconded to duty in one particular court. Fortune's Favorites
  • Parking restrictions were lifted, with the result that the road is permanently blocked by cars.
  • Special fabric paint is applied using a stencil brush and then the design is fixed permanently by pressing with an iron.
  • It is possible to acquire a new domicile of choice, if you have left Britain permanently. Times, Sunday Times
  • A petulant man-child with scrunched fists, no sense of natural rhythm and his vision permanently obscured by a single greasy dreadlock. Dancing On Ice: Grace Dent's TV OD
  • The owner is front of house and seems permanently genial and benign as we all might be if we lived, as he, his wife and children do, in such a mood-improving environment.
  • They claim a minority are resigned to renting permanently.
  • Get out of here, meatball, before you join Jessica in the pool, permanently.
  • I was most conscience-stricken by my anguished looking mother's tearful eyes; an unproud image now permanently carved into my subconscious.
  • Long-sightedness can also be treated more permanently with radial keratotomy.
  • I would relish the opportunity, as I placed my cross on the ballot paper, to think of wiping the permanently smug, self-satisfied smirk from his arrogant, squirrel-cheeked, toffee-nosed features.
  • Now he is set to be bailed next week and freed in three months to reside permanently in Britain. Times, Sunday Times
  • According to the Justice Ministry, about 630,000 foreigners reside permanently in Japan.
  • I think a lot of us want our dads to stay kind of permanently like they were maybe when we were growing up and we have trouble with any aging process.
  • 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.
  • Indeed, a large number of mesopelagic animals have eyes that permanently view the upward direction for just this reason.
  • English by birth, I'd been in Australia for about 10 years and had a hankering to return to my roots, if not permanently, then at least for a considerable length of time.
  • Proceed at your own risk, and if you permanently brick your phone, we can't help you.
  • By the beginning of the 12th century, the counts of Barcelona had large holdings north of the Pyrenees (notably in Provence), to which they added for a brief period Majorca and Iviza (1114–15) and, permanently, Tarragona. 3. Barcelona and Catalonia
  • Silicone adhesive will bond the frame permanently to the mirror.
  • For both, the top priority was to maintain permanently friendly relations with Indonesia; no other issue was to be permitted to disrupt the relationship.
  • We've got all the information permanently on tap on a computer.
  • She can't remember what magazines and newspapers she reads and her television set is permanently locked on Fox News. ender Palin: 'I will forever question' Rev. Wright strategy
  • No wonder the guy muttering the prayers over the burial plot has a wireless phone receiver permanently fixed to his right ear. Times, Sunday Times
  • Of course, once permanently established, the Australian settlers lived and worked as their forebears in England and their cousins in North America.
  • Fortunately, he quickly regained control, whereas the rest of us lost it permanently.
  • Sporting a permanently pained expression and the hunched demeanour of a child expecting a smack, he speaks in gnomic aphorisms that frequently sound like bumper-sticker mottoes.
  • Eventually the hair follicle dies and the hair is permanently lost.
  • Force cannot permanently conquer, but kindness and protection for the people can. World History: Patterns of Change and Continuity
  • But Hiwilani queered that game by threatening to the sorcerer to practice apo leo on him, which is the art of permanently depriving a person of the power of speech without otherwise injuring him. SHIN-BONES
  • The port now faces a July 1 deadline to produce a plan to permanently reduce the presence of metals.
  • So well ordered is cricket history that it is almost permanently celebrating centenaries. Tons of reasons to support the monarchs of sport | Frank Keating
  • All small appliances such as food mixers and juicers can be permanently housed there, with messy, noisy work undertaken out of sight.
  • In every hadj some of the pilgrims remain behind: the Mohammedan, whenever resident for any time in a town, takes a wife, and is thus often induced to settle permanently on the spot. Travels in Arabia
  • Within months the neurological disorder focal dystonia took full hold, leaving his hand permanently clenched and unusable.
  • I need to permanently place this link somewhere promine [...] 2004 September | Evil Genius Chronicles
  • There was no dispute about the appellant's intention being permanently to deprive Mr. Occhi of the money.
  • This stream continued almost uninterruptedly, although police control of the borders was permanently reinforced under the growing pressure of anti-immigrant organizations.
  • So in other words, it's permanently a horrendous mix of straightness and waviness.
  • In the eighth century we read (Vita Stephani, III) of the most ancient custom in virtue of which seven of these bishops, called hebdomadarii, celebrated Mass in turn in place of the pope and were called episcopi cardinales, from being permanently attached to the cardo, that is the cathedral church of Rome; but we are not told who they were. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • In Dyson's case, she was the permanent and permanently vacant Silicon Valley networker who got the job largely out of name recognition.
  • a man whose name is permanently stamped on our maps
  • Five steep steps led to a low-ceilinged attic bathroom with permanently dim lighting.
  • Too bad they have a cure for venereal disease and Aids – so many of you writers would be put out of commision permanently. GOP source: Palin decided it was 'time to move on'
  • Beware the free sample described as ‘slightly overproof’: it'll clear your sinuses, perhaps permanently.
  • Indeed, dark epoxy grouts can permanently stain the porous varieties.
  • Commercial fishing will be banned permanently in a million square kilometres of ocean teeming with sharks, turtles and whales. Times, Sunday Times
  • The 14 full-time teachers and other staff were told on Tuesday last week that the school would be shutting permanently in July.
  • I think a lot of us want our dads to stay kind of permanently like they were maybe when we were growing up and we have trouble with any aging process.
  • The disposal costs could include a one-time charge to dump the water permanently into the sewer system.
  • The husband's determination to mastery, which lay deep below all blandness and beseechingness, had risen permanently to the surface now, and seemed to alter his face, as a face is altered by a hidden muscular tension with which a man is secretly throttling or stamping out the life from something feeble, yet dangerous. Romola
  • They were simply driven by youthful enthusiasm and being permanently skint. The Sun
  • The specimens were not permanently marked, but instead bore paper tags attached with string loops.
  • He was born disabled and voiceless with a gaze permanently haunted by a look of terror.
  • `At Schwedenplatz there's a permanently docked old Danube steamship named the Johann Strauss that's been turned into a restaurant. FROM THE TEETH OF ANGELS
  • | Reply | Permalink they should have to register several months ahead of time so that they can't game the dynamics ... if a republican wants to be permanently registered as a democrat in order to create havoc or vote for the "beatable" dem, then they will never have an opportunity to vote in the republican primary even when it is hotly contested like the dem primary is this year. Republicans Turning Out In Ohio ��� For The Dem Primary
  • She went about with her head at a slight angle and her eyes permanently narrowed, to avoid the smoke.
  • degausser" - an instrument that disrupts and realigns the tape's magnetic domains, scrambling the encoded information and rendering it permanently unreadable. Slate Magazine
  • This is the furthest north anyone lives permanently. Times, Sunday Times
  • It left her permanently scarred and blind in one eye. The Sun
  • Medieval and modern writers wrongly take it for granted that the charism existed permanently at Corinth — as it did nowhere else — and that St. Paul, in commending the gift to the Corinthians, therewith gave his guaranty that the characteristics of Corinthian glossolaly were those of the gift itself. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • There are two kinds of leashes: clip-ons, which can be removed from the tool, and permanently attached cinch-downs.
  • he is permanently disabled
  • Undistributed earnings of a foreign subsidiary or joint venture that are considered to be permanently reinvested.
  • The white robes are just symbolic of a pure, clean conscience for the first permanently clean conscience. Christianity Today
  • That year he moved to London but his love for Wales was strong and he eventually settled permanently there.
  • China provided the setting of Wedemeyer's next assignment - and the subject with which his career would thenceforward be permanently linked.
  • Keep a portable radio permanently in the shed. Times, Sunday Times
  • If they don't follow them, they're not going to be a part of the program, whether it be indefinitely or permanently.
  • It would consist of twenty elected members and be permanently responsible for the liaison between the pope and the episcopal conferences. Paul VI - The First Modern Pope
  • It was a characteristically confused encounter but one that made it clear to the author that the events of 1967 had made him permanently homeless.
  • In next month's issue of Vogue magazine Parker claims that she may move to Ireland permanently with her husband.
  • Force cannot permanently conquer, but kindness and protection for the people can. World History: Patterns of Change and Continuity
  • The ladies of her dorter were envious of her: Ralph Monterey, whom so many had tried to permanently net and been disappointed, was apparently quite smitten with a girl who had been at court for less than two weeks! The Frozen Heart
  • With Hadrian we see the first steps toward a system of frontier garrison troops, permanently stationed, along with a field army that gets moved from one hot spot to another.
  • It is possible to acquire a new domicile of choice, if you have left Britain permanently. Times, Sunday Times
  • She has been virtually bedridden and permanently fatigued for most of the last five years. M. E. Post-Viral Fatigue Syndrome - How To Live With It
  • Whatever that result, he does return to Downing Street still permanently winged by Iraq.
  • Now she fears her permanently-limited mobility has blocked that ambition.
  • It is uncertain whether the back-to-back victories for affirmative action will permanently halt recent trends against the policies.
  • All I could tell him is that when you see it start to change color, you've permanently altered (as in annealed) the steel. Barrel Life, Part II
  • Entry into this inner stockade was by a single, permanently-manned gateway. RIOT
  • The number was permanently engaged for half an hour.
  • Carter was permanently disabled in the war.
  • In November 1999, senior regulators — including Mr. Greenspan and Mr. Rubin — recommended that Congress permanently strip the C.F.T.C. of regulatory authority over derivatives.
  • Not doing so could consign the economy to permanently weak growth. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many of his imports - including hibiscus, azalea, cassia, magnolia, oleander, croton and jasmine - permanently altered the Jamaican scene.
  • This teaches how you can permanently reduce you weight by reducing the carbohydrates you eat.
  • They cannot build cities on the sand of the desert, and the small patches of pasture and palm groves, kept fresh and green by solitary springs and called "oases," are too far apart, too distant from permanently peopled regions to admit of comfortable settlement. Chaldea From the Earliest Times to the Rise of Assyria
  • At the third offence he shall lose the mace and be permanently removed from office.
  • A theodolite is permanently installed at the center of the beam in order to define its orientation with a back-sight toward another geodetic point.
  • After 1870, religious bigotry gave way to racial bigotry; all non-Anglo Saxon peoples were described as permanently inferior due to their intellectual, moral, and physical degeneracy.
  • He was a big, beefy man with coal black eyes and a blocklike face frozen permanently in a scowl. Masters of the Air
  • Since the judge had delivered the verdict, he had felt permanently dazed.
  • Large expanses of boreal forest and tundra are underlain by permafrost, a layer of permanently frozen soil found underneath the active, seasonally thawed soil.
  • The ship is now permanently moored on the Thames in London.
  • There's a bewildering array of familiar supervillains and splendid interludes played as Catwoman, along with collectibles, side missions and distractions in a game that oozes the very essence of Batman, from dialogue and character design to the gibbous moon permanently silhouetting its buildings. This week's new games
  • Doctors, health visitors and social workers are not law enforcement officers permanently and selectively attuned to discovering breaches of statute. Taking Child Abuse Seriously: Contemporary issues in child protection theory and practice
  • Soft contact lenses and clothing may be permanently stained.
  • He says the NGO presence has permanently " infantilized " the country, creating a vicious cycle: The government lacks the money — and historically, the inclination — to provide social services. Aid Spawns Backlash in Haiti
  • Section 66 requires the governing body of a maintained school to consider any decision that a pupil be excluded permanently from that school and to determine whether or not the pupil should be reinstated.
  • Some members of Congress are seeking to permanently increase the Army's end strength.
  • Additionally, the defendants acted to 'blackball' and banish plaintiff and anyone associated with plaintiff permanently from ExxonMobil facilities and premises without limitation. Courthouse News Service
  • Moving permanently overseas became increasingly attractive to many New Zealanders.
  • Pay the going rate and hire a professional, either permanently or on a proper fixed term contract.
  • He worries, if the high-paying jobs move offshore, that could leave him and other workers permanently underemployed.
  • They were simply driven by youthful enthusiasm and being permanently skint. The Sun
  • Because they are unvented and not permanently installed, these portable heaters are potentially more hazardous than options listed earlier.
  • Some divers use permanently flashing strobes.
  • I was permanently foundered, wearing thermals in and out of bed.
  • In the meantime, he was headhunted by a large civil engineering firm in Ireland and he returned permanently to work in Ireland in May 1994.
  • I seem to be permanently broke.
  • The beginning of the winter brought a new season of parties and gatherings with which the aristocrats sought to dispel the gloominess of this permanently twilit world.
  • It speaks of intention permanently to deprive.
  • This idealized history had some effect, if not to stem the immediate social discord permanently, to produce a general desire for a more orderly world.
  • One is an executive studio apartment that is permanently let. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is because to lose weight and keep it off, you must adjust what and how you eat permanently.
  • So far, the decline of male academic achievement in the U.S. is mostly among blacks and Hispanics, but the catastrophic downturn into "laddism" of young white males in England in recent years, and their consequent decline in test scores, shows that no race is permanently immune to the prejudice that school is for girls. Archive 2005-12-18
  • Many citizens with higher education were trained abroad and they often emigrate permanently.
  • But no, they had to convey their extreme excitement by bellowing at us through the mic, and permanently damaging our hearing.
  • When he was eight years old, his heart tissue was permanently scarred by a serious bout with rheumatic fever.
  • Similarly, players can place verbally annoying players within their own factions on "ignore" lists, which permanently injunct that griefer from speaking to the player.
  • But for those with the FOX News logo permanently burned into the lower right hand side of their TV screen -- aka the immovable 35 percent -- none of this information meant a thing. Adam McKay: And Then There Were Thirty...
  • Its Burgundy Grand Cru glass is the only stemware that resides permanently in the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
  • I started/took legal proceedings to try to have him taken away from his parents permanently.
  • It is not fair for him to be permanently unfriendly to someone who has hurt him.
  • His hair is unkempt and his clothes scruffy; his eyes are red and he seems permanently on the point of tears. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fly-fishing and white-water rafting disrupted the sensitive Harlequin duck breeding grounds, thus permanently closing the river to human use.
  • Half the famous duty-free shops are permanently shuttered. Times, Sunday Times
  • a wit-combat by another woman is a festering wound to a clever woman, to be permanently deposed from the leadership of a coterie is a consuming canker. New Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle
  • Run in standard KOH solution from a burette until a faint pink tinge remains permanently. Human Foods and Their Nutritive Value
  • The reason for this is, if replacement bulbs have a different voltage or wattage to the original set, your lights will be dimmer or brighter and this will overload the light chain and permanently damage the set.
  • At this point, the ribs were permanently reinstalled and stringers were cut.
  • This is because the fax machine is permanently clogged up. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fixed, permanently open horizontal slot shall be provided 17 inches above the work surface.
  • The 60th floor observatory has been permanently closed for security reasons.
  • He recovered the ability to play the piano but his vocal cords were permanently impaired. Times, Sunday Times
  • Carter was permanently disabled in the war.
  • And that causes a stroke that can kill or leave someone permanently disabled.
  • Smoking is likely to damage your health permanently.
  • Jimmy Choo's discreet little shop in west London is permanently under armed guard. Alexandra Sinderbrand: Don't Do the Choo
  • Further caterpillars are added and the burrow sealed permanently before the egg hatches.
  • Many of his imports - including hibiscus, azalea, cassia, magnolia, oleander, croton and jasmine - permanently altered the Jamaican scene.
  • That process is called senescence—when the cells stop dividing permanently, or they undergo apoptosis the cell death we described earlier in the book, in which they’re broken up and reabsorbed. You Staying Young
  • Modern warfare, modern weaponry is so hi-tech that if you try to run our defences on the basis of conscription, you have your professional soldiery permanently employed training successive cohorts of conscripts.
  • Although women could work in slums or in the back country of foreign lands, national suffrage would surely permanently soil them.
  • The feeling of abject misery stuck to me like permanently wet clothes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Three reconnaissance aircraft are permanently on patrol.
  • Surprisingly, the soft denatured region is most often found in positions where the interwound superhelix forms branches, unlike permanently curved regions, which tend to localize in the apex of the superhelix.
  • Moreover, if he were finally deported, he would be permanently barred from immigrating to Australia.
  • His drug ring had been disrupted due to the raid, and Natalie had permanently wounded his shoulder with her bullet.
  • My car radio is permanently tuned to Heart 106.2 and Magic.
  • Flooding by hydroelectric reservoirs is especially detrimental to permanently frozen peatlands because the overall permafrost regime is completely altered or obliterated.
  • You also run the risk of wonky performance or even "bricking" your iPhone permanently. Yahoo! News: Technology News
  • However, comparative infection experiments carried out ad hoc in Marburg showed no differences in susceptibility, and extensive research led finally to the explanation that the number of cattle reacting to tuberculin is, in the main, dependent upon whether any or few cattle are kept permanently in the same stalls. Emil von Behring - Nobel Lecture
  • Concern has been expressed at the unsuitability of the current oratory premises and the people are concerned that the oratory will be permanently closed.
  • She went about with her head at a slight angle and her eyes permanently narrowed, to avoid the smoke.
  • A layer of photosynthetic bacteria lives permanently on the boundary between brackish and highly saline water.
  • Above all, he must not be deluded into believing that his condition can be permanently bettered by a mere battledoor [sic] and shuttlecock of words, or by any process of mere mental gymnastics or oratory. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1995, Memorial Issue
  • The new elements were the avalanche of publicity and the recordings permanently documenting many of the performances. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the north soil takes the form of permafrost, where the water in the ground is permanently frozen.
  • Another 21 percent were serious, and left the soldier permanently disabled.
  • The lenses of my eyes are permanently scarred. The Sun
  • And if we occasionally want to uncouple our mental state from our actual situation in the world (e.g. by taking powerful drugs, drinking great quantities of alcohol, etc.) we don't want this to render us permanently delusional, however pleasant such delusion might be. Sam Harris: Toward a Science of Morality
  • Initially Williams toyed with the idea of modular scaffolds fitted permanently with pneumatic drills. Colossus
  • They reproduce like rabbits and gnaw almost permanently because their teeth grow all the time.
  • If an individual's incapacity prevents him from aspiring to a normal range of employments, he is treated as permanently incapacitated.
  • The result is a visually disturbing, sculptural distortion, permanently "floating" in a virtual world of three-dimensionality.
  • The document envisages the creation of 240 000 jobs to permanently reduce unemployment to below 10 per cent.
  • Sympathectomy has failed to secure a place in ophthalmic surgery, sclerotomy has not been found adequate, and cyclodialysis is not sufficiently simple of execution or permanently beneficial in its results to give it prominence. Glaucoma A Symposium Presented at a Meeting of the Chicago Ophthalmological Society, November 17, 1913
  • Two, which hold wooden blocks, are on rolling coasters, and they are permanently available.
  • If something is not property, the accused can not have an intention permanently to deprive the owner of that property.
  • First, intraoperative brachytherapy using radioactive I - 125 pellets permanently implanted in the resection margins may be of benefit.
  • Two general types of internal waters are distinguished: permanently internal and temporarily associated waters.
  • A layer of photosynthetic bacteria lives permanently on the boundary between brackish and highly saline water.
  • From an environmental perspective, however, moving water from one basin to another -- known as interbasin transfers -- permanently erases part of the supply that otherwise is returned to rivers and streams and is damaging to the environment, said Frank Carl, the executive director of Savannah Riverkeeper. AugustaChronicle.com
  • Indeed, permanently fixed exchange rates could be positively harmful since changing parities can act as a buffer to absorb economic shocks.
  • If something is not property, the accused can not have an intention permanently to deprive the owner of that property.
  • Unlike the Anglo-Jewish novelist Amy Levy's own ironic rejoinder to Daniel Deronda, Reuben Sachs: A Sketch (1888), Gwendolen leaves the reader in absolutely no doubt of its intentions.3 After a scant few months in the East, Daniel is ready to chuck the Jews overboard permanently: he tells a rabbi that the Jews (parasites all) need to be "extirpated" through mass assimilation (28), and is thoroughly depressed by the "unholy depravities" (64) on exhibit in the Jewish community. Religion

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