How To Use Purvey In A Sentence

  • So what interest has a purveyor of haute couture and 10,000 handbags have in a sportswear company? Times, Sunday Times
  • Though never quite managing to hit commercial paydirt, Glasgow-born singer/songwriter John Martyn has carved out an acclaimed career by purveying an idiosyncratic mix of rock, folk and jazz.
  • Now it's a purveyor of food of some local renown. Times, Sunday Times
  • Apparently, today's purveyors of pagan religions have sidestepped this question by changing the labels.
  • Fuller became a thorn in the government's side on many other issues, particularly the great questions of royal finance, purveyance and impositions.
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  • As a result of this selection being chosen, testing for a liberal media bias, whether one views it as an assertion or an assumption was not within the purveyance of this study.
  • Reading about the fuggy alcoholic blurs always so lucidly expressed of experiences with the literary and intellectual luminaries of his day, one might wonder whether Hitchens is the dreamer or the dreamed, the purveyor of an intellectual fantasy or the product of other peoples' ideas. Ashley Rindsberg: On Hitchens
  • Then came the '70s with West African juju and high life music whose main purveyors were the Osibisa, Manu Dibango and late Fela Anikulapo Kuti.
  • William Cecil thought it would be a good idea to replace purveyance entirely with composition and gradually this began to be the case.
  • For instance, the use of purveyance began to attract criticism in the last fifteen years of the reign.
  • CNN is seeking to establish itself as a non-ideological purveyor of pure news, while Fox News Channel has adopted a broadcast style that clearly hews to the right.
  • For it is so that to morrow I purpose to ryde in to Flaundyrs to purveye me off horse and herneys and percase I shall see the essege at Nwse er I come ageyn. Charles the Bold Last Duke of Burgundy, 1433-1477
  • These are some of the questions on our minds as we turn to purveyors of razor-sharp political punditry.
  • Today is the the day we present our interview with Paul Blake, a developer from ToyVault -- the maniacal purveyors of the blasphemously adorable Plush Cthulhu line. The LNN interviews Paul Blake from ToyVault : The Lovecraft News Network
  • While conflict is bound to happen, especially in a larger family, middle kids make great purveyors of peace.
  • With his beautiful and sophisticated music, Diallo is a purveyor of West African heritage, but also makes use of the latest advances in technology to appeal equally to the head, the heart and the feet.
  • Fine purveyors of vibrating massage chairs and miniature plastic pinball tables, the liquidation is being handled by Gordon Brothers Retail Partners. Sharper Image Liquidating All Stores - The Consumerist
  • The purveyance of alcohol requires a little bit more red tape … and more responsibility than most people think," says Matthews. 'Naysayers' prove strong for Michael Matthews, wine bar
  • They are also purveyors of a number of pious myths about American politics.
  • Its purveyors are only giving the people what they naturally want. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Thanks to market forces, the creation and purveyance of humor have become decentralized and deregulated. Scott Brown on Stand-Up Comedy, Lingua Franca of the Wired World
  • Clear Channel, KFI, and John and Ken have been in the wrong to purvey, condone, and sell hate speech in the past and are in the wrong now as they blunder this opportunity to make amends to several key Los Angeles communities. Jorge-Mario Cabrera: John and Ken: The Best Apology Is a Farewell Message
  • DJ Dominic purveys a unique brand of music.
  • About ten or so years ago the pair of them garnered immortality among guitar toting purveyors of extreme music.
  • Into this walks Frederic Montague, a jeweller and purveyor of precious stones who is invited to stay.
  • A judge and landlord, he throve on amateur metaphysics and early anthropology, purveying monkey theories almost a century ahead of Darwin.
  • Six of Edmonton's most scrumptious purveyors of comestibles along with a dessert and scotch supplier will donate some of their best wares to the event.
  • A large part of his limited production is a celebration, in her many guises, of the industrious bourgeois mother: as mentor, minister, governess, purveyor, nurse, needlewoman and handmaid to her children.
  • It was, back then, the best thrift store in the world, the purveyor of top-flight vintage goods donated by wealthy and well-clothed suburbanites from the upscale towns that surround Paterson. Pamela Redmond Satran: Wonder Why There Are No Good Clothes in Thrift Stores Anymore?
  • It also purveyed the well-thumbed Roman myths: that everyone in the ancient world was a backstabbing, double-dealing, amoral schemer, and that none of them could muster the self-control of a priapic ferret or the wisdom of a brick.
  • DJ Dominic purveys a unique brand of music.
  • We left that hell hole behind us chomping down on the strange alien food purveyed at the exit.
  • Into this walks Frederic Montague, a jeweller and purveyor of precious stones who is invited to stay.
  • This company has purveyed clothing to the armed forces for generations.
  • This company has purveyed clothing to the armed forces for generations.
  • It essentially deals with information collection and purveyance.
  • Doublespeak, purveyed through television news and cinema, invades the mind of every citizen.
  • And the Kaiser was unwise to sneer that his uncle Edward VII went yachting with Thomas Lipton, the purveyor of bacon and tea to the urban consumer.
  • Thus I think that the broader cultural appropriation of things that used to be solely the purvey of Science Fiction is a good thing, and huge media conventions like San Diego Comicon are a good thing. MIND MELD: What Can Worldcon and Comic-Con Learn From Each Other?
  • The reorganization made it possible to put the fuel supply in order within a short period, to streamline its delivery, and to establish day-to-day supervision of fuel production and fuel purveyance to large strategic formations.
  • With traditional shop-keeping, this Elgin institution has been a purveyor of fine wines, cheeses, meats, Mediterranean goodies, unusual breads and other epicurean delights for nearly a century.
  • In this effort, advertising companies have notoriously used women as objects to purvey their products.
  • However, in the discourse of food and social level purveyed by this image, a more specific message is communicated by that eroticism.
  • Hunched within its floodlit new-build, English cricket is now surfing the finest margins, dependent on the grande bouffe of the Saturday spree merchant, and not so much in bed with the purveyors of walk-up hospitality as sweatily intertwined on the main stairs. Sozzled - how English cricket got lost in drink | Barney Ronay
  • Then there are those purveyors of the very worst kind of early 1970's drippiness.
  • Ed Kemmick, that putrid purveyor of pussyfooted prognostication, waxes nostalgic for the days when newspaper vituperation was in style. The Iconoclast
  • 'Industrial food titan and noted purveyor of swell toxins for most of humanity, ConAgra has introduced a new iPhone app, aimed at re-introducing the joy that is Parkay margarine -- AKA whipped monoglycerides and soy lecithin and artificial flavoring and sundry nasty gumminess you should never really put into your body -- to the easily duped masses who love them some retro TV commercial wackiness at the expense of, you know, actual health. Mark Morford: New iPhone app for fans of whipped monoglyceride!
  • The period of experiments in economic and anti-clerical legislation was also marked by other important new laws, such as the ordinance of the staple of 1354, providing that wool, leather, and other commodities were only to be sold at certain _staple_ towns, a measure soon to be modified by the law of 1362, which settled the staple at Calais; the ordinance of 1357 for the government of Ireland, to which later reference will be made; the statute making English the language of the law courts in 1362, and a drastic act against purveyance in 1365. The History of England From the Accession of Henry III. to the Death of Edward III. (1216-1377)
  • I interviewed John about the upcoming "GATE 2," which is an event that cultivates, promotes and advances collaborations between transformational content creators and purveyors, and it is open for all those interested in being part of the expansion of the transformational genre that is currently happening around the world. Stacey Nemour: Join Eckhart Tolle, Jim Carrey and John Raatz in Raising Consciousness Through Entertainment, Media and the Arts
  • Moreover, as we were saying before, he grows worse from having power: he becomes and is of necessity more jealous, more faithless, more unjust, more friendless, more impious, than he was at first; he is the purveyor and cherisher of every sort of vice, and the consequence is that he is supremely miserable, and that he makes everybody else as miserable as himself. The Republic by Plato ; translated by Benjamin Jowett
  • He purveys the usual Labour beliefs in comprehensive education.
  • From the team behind Meatopia and Pig Island, this first-ever two day boozevent's kicking off the summer by bringing top-notch brewers together with purveyors of some of the city's best food, lining their stations along a stretch of Gov Island known as Colonel's Row for its 19thC Officer's Quarters, a perfect setting for you to get historically housed. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Their turpitude purveys to their malice; and they unplumb the dead for bullets to assassinate the living. Selections from _Letter to Noble Lord_
  • But they should be required to answer basic questions before being included in that rare category: purveyor of truth.
  • The ignorance purveyed by these programs puts young people at risk of HIV infection and premature death.
  • In the early history of television, program producers could afford an eristic assumption that they were message purveyors to a receiver-only audience.
  • They then become a center of excellence purveying their expertise to the public at large.
  • For my money, I prefer last year's gorgeous La Danse from Frederick Wiseman, in which the 80-year old purveyor of rigorous documentaries comes out of the closet as a balletomane of rapturous proportion. Debra Levine: Aronofsky's BLACK SWAN: Raw Deal for Odile
  • But what good is bawdy when its purveyors, from low to high, seem unfailingly recruited for their unsightliness, and act like overwrought underachievers or maundering bystanders?
  • The legislator’s place is thus usurped by the sophist, the false reasoner, in deliberative assemblies; that of the judge by the rhetorician or pleader; the medical adviser is supplanted by the purveyor of luxuries, and the gymnastic teacher by the adorner of the person. Antony
  • We were staring disaster in the face, squawked the purveyors of doom.
  • It was an accessory to Enron, a purveyor of tainted stock "research" to telecom and dot-com investors, a minter of disingenuous off-balance-sheet vehicles to hold massive bets on mortgage derivatives. Long Live the Financial Supermarket
  • How dreary it is always to be cast as the smotherer of desire, the hard-faced purveyor of the word "no". Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Despite his aversion to literary pretension, Parks has translated the Italian writer, who is more surely a purveyor of bosh than Rushdie ever will be.
  • Those of them who master its lessons will be inoculated against all manner of ideological nonsense purveyed by their leftist professors.
  • Over the decades, Cash carved out his position as the premier purveyor of bluesy country music around, and his craggy visage is a picture of cool even today.
  • Rinse 3 ounces sashimi-grade ahi tuna (yellowfin or bigeye; for bacteria safety, buy it from a good seafood purveyor); pat dry.
  • Could it have been those allegiances that in some way led her to purvey such calumnies?
  • The purveyor of fine art, who also makes an honest buck with cartoons and wacky drawings, is hot on humour.
  • They have two restaurants that purvey dumplings and chicken noodle soup.
  • Rinse 3 ounces sashimi-grade ahi tuna (yellowfin or bigeye; for bacteria safety, buy it from a good seafood purveyor); pat dry.
  • It is the home of a drinking establishment known as the Old Devil Inn, purveyors of strong ales, stronger spirits and artery-clogging pub food.
  • Coupons and special ‘cheap times’ are just the beginning of customer promotions in the modern world of sex purveyance.
  • Thus there is two-fold resistance to the dominant patterns of interpretation which have been purveyed by the mainstream churches.
  • By writing a specialiser, the purveyors of such tools allow third parties to develop their own compilers and so this is more useful than just writing a dedicated compiler. Planet Haskell
  • Unless MPs and other leaders are pro-active, there will be very little room for prophets of doom who may wish to take advantage of some weaknesses and use these as fertile ground to purvey lies and discontent.
  • Bibliophile Stalker interviews Ellen Datlow, Editor of (among many, many other things) the upcoming anthology The Del Rey Book of Science Fiction and Fantasy: "It's not that the genres have weaknesses or strengths but that the purveyors of genres write well or badly and use the genres ambitiously or in hackneyed ways. March 2008
  • Interestingly, most adware companies slough off criticism onto their affiliates when caught purveying their unwanted goods.
  • Just because you remember Ann Taylor as the ultimate purveyor of frump, doesn't mean she still is. Style Section L.A.: Ready, Set, Shop: L.A.'s 5 Newest Fashion and Beauty Spots
  • His study of representative contemporary types in Irishmen all purveyed an inclusive notion of Irish nationhood.
  • Credit cards are convenient, but few individuals have setups where they can handle the plastic, that being the purvey of businesses who deal in volume.
  • It purveys locally produced foods, wines, olive oils, cheeses and breads.
  • I have a desk calendar from Despair.com, a purveyor of darkly funny "demotivator" posters such as the one pictured below my unwittingly timely choice for February, as it turns out. Articles
  • What will it mean for purveyors of streetwear? Globe and Mail
  • But the real purveyors of violence are deeply wedded to the very conditions that give rise to these forms of struggle.
  • What that spyware is trying to do is collect that information and the people who are purveying it trying to sell it.
  • Capitalism first and people fifth, is the rallying cry of those purveyor of virtues and godlessness, the insurance industry. New $2 million health care ad campaign unveiled
  • The world-famous purveyor of fine teas is celebrating its tricentenary this year.
  • It is not an accident that the protagonists of cultural nationalism are also purveyors of globalisation that throws open the floodgates of cultural neo-colonialism.
  • With that came a squire and said: Madam, ye must purvey you tomorn for a champion, for else your sister will have this castle and also your lands, except ye can find a knight that will fight tomorn in your quarrel against Pridam le Noire. Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series)
  • Lies about Obama's faith, and insinuations that he means this country harm, are apparently not the sole purveyance of "low information" voters at high-anxiety Red zone rallies. David Kirby: Powell: GOP Leaders Spreading Muslim Rumors
  • Last but not least will be the 300 purveyors of what the catalogue describes as ‘horticultural sundries’ - everything from garden tools to gazebos.
  • One can only urge purveyors of such nonsense to stop embarrassing themselves.
  • In the event, we purvey a broader definition of sf than what is traditionally published in the sf magazines, but that has some history going back to even before Gernsback and the invention of sf as a separate genre. An Interview with John Kessel
  • Most familiar are those adapted from the culinary sphere, to refer to dishes initially purveyed by Chinese immigrants, mainly from Canton, and hence from Cantonese: chop suey, bok choy, dim sum, wonton. The English Is Coming!
  • Motorway service stations joined railways as a particular target of his ire for the "pigswill" routinely purveyed. Egon Ronay
  • Because with their maddening obstructionism and the accurate framing of their party as the purveyors of "No!" they are hereupon revealed in their priggish guise to be retrograde and obsolete, trying desperately to incite culture war in a culture that no longer requires their participation and painting the Obama administration's efforts at economic stabilization (along with every other Democratic policy proposal) as an example of diabolical sorcery. Steven Weber: The Pilgrim's Regress
  • Having begun its corrupt debauchment of conurbations worldwide by sleazing up New York (kind of a gimme), this rampant rendezvous of ravishment has moved on to purvey its own sordid brand of pastel-smudged skullduggery in the artistic communities of more than two dozen cities. Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art Show, NYC « Skid Roche
  • Sottera Inc., an Arizona e-cigarette distributor that joined the suit as a plaintiff, and some other e-cigarette purveyors say their products are simply recreational alternatives to cigarettes and should not be subject to the onerous pre-approval process required of quit-smoking aids. E-Cigarette Industry Wins Federal Court Victory
  • Most familiar are those adapted from the culinary sphere, to refer to dishes initially purveyed by Chinese immigrants, mainly from Canton, and hence from Cantonese: chop suey, bok choy, dim sum, wonton. The English Is Coming!
  • The mass media are discredited as purveyors of the true.
  • For instance, the use of purveyance began to attract criticism in the last fifteen years of the reign.
  • Nothing in our commonly purveyed literacy mythology suggests this is the State with the largest number of literates in India.
  • Instead he labeled those who raised the questions as purveyors of "blood libel accusations," i.e., to be saying something equivalent in its dastardliness to reviving the medieval canard that Jews used the blood of Christians to bake their matzoth at Passover. Dissent & Israel: An Exchange
  • The next evening, two hampers, containing, as our purveyor assured us, "very prime 'uns," arrived at my rooms "from Mr S----, the wine merchant;" and, by daylight on the following morning, were judiciously distributed throughout all the come-at-able premises within the college walls. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 54, No. 338, December 1843
  • Jones made his fortune as a hip-swinging, winkingly louche purveyor of lounge pop in its purest, giddiest forms. Album review: Tom Jones, "Praise & Blame"
  • He may be a purveyor of old-fashioned spectacle, but his iconography is modern. Times, Sunday Times
  • So what interest has a purveyor of haute couture and 10,000 handbags have in a sportswear company? Times, Sunday Times
  • He is a purveyor of falsehoods when it suits his partisan purposes.
  • Delinquency was theorized by some as a rejection and inversion of the middle-class values purveyed by the school and, by others, as a celebration of working-class values.
  • For instance, the use of purveyance began to attract criticism in the last fifteen years of the reign.
  • Part shrine, part purveyor of durable, practical and sensible outdoor gear, MEC has what you need - and they'll tell you exactly what that is and why.
  • These were highlights of the evening for policy purveyance and good old-fashioned rabble rousing. Brad Parker: DNC Act One Failure: The One-Size-Fits-All Messaging
  • More than 20 million web pages purvey pornography to suit every taste, ‘adult’ chat rooms abound and virtual peepshows are proliferating at a staggering rate.
  • Occasionally, it seems to be their recording technique which purveys a great deal of the album's intimacy rather than the content.
  • If some music is uncategorizable, the music of saxophonist and composer Roy Nathanson inspires deep thinkers to exhaust their thesauri dreaming up all kinds of categories: postmodern, eclectic, psychedelic jazz, avant-garde, punk jazz, gonzo jazz all right, I made up that one; he also played with the Lounge Lizards, purveyors of "fake jazz. Refining Classic Sounds
  • He sets out to disprove the notion purveyed by Republican sympathizers that the media is biased to the left.
  • He said, no longer should they be voiceless, since they too were purveyors of wisdom.
  • Ask your average muso and they will say that these boys from Seattle were the Godfathers of Grunge, purveyors of bile-built emotionally charged music of such rare quality that they became instant legends and timeless wonders.
  • He was replaced by a boozy singer-guitarist who announced in heavily accented French that he was a purveyor of Irish love ballads, then blithely launched into Leonard Cohen's Sisters of Mercy.
  • These papers are not neutral purveyors of information.
  • Caleb's rasping chords sound like he's just smoked 50 fags but he remains tuneful and purveys strong emotion whether exhilaration, tenderness or pain.
  • The point is that adolescent fury needs an outlet and such colourful purveyors of antisocial behaviour provide a relatively safe channel for it.
  • Many quarries, including those at Portland, were solely suppliers and purveyors of the stone.
  • It was pretty simple during flush times, "when people were fat and happy," to purvey indifferent goods with fancy labels, said Robert Burke, a luxury retail consultant.
  • They have two restaurants that purvey dumplings and chicken noodle soup.
  • Jackson's lawyers and prosecutors endorsed Melville's secrecy rulings, using their few public filings to lambast the media as purveyors of salacious stories aimed at a voyeuristic audience.
  • Now, we in the humanities are concerned primarily with the monitoring of the dominant cultural tradition, its preservation and its purveyance, right?
  • On occasion, Soviet students openly disputed with lecturers purveying official truths, and this was quite shocking for traditionalists.
  • The high street's most brilliant purveyor of understated cool does fabulous scanties. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since buffalo is not carried by most supermarket meat departments, it normally requires special ordering at a game purveyor.
  • Britt gave to this blunderheaded news purveyor the tail end of the malevolent stare that he had been bestowing on the Prophet's back. When Egypt Went Broke
  • European hoteliers, retailers, and purveyors of luxury goods are rolling out the red carpet.
  • Unusually among modernist artists, this supposed purveyor of nihilism was a militant of the left rather than the right.
  • The cellarer was the purveyor of all food-stuffs and drink for the use of the community. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
  • All are meant to purvey the same message of ubiquitousness, a sinister blend of reassurance and menace.
  • The purveyor of luxury goods has decided to replace some old rags with shiny new stock for spring. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thus we're lovers not haters so to be clear we're talking about Hollywood broadly and metaphorically, and really mean the purveyors of the stuff that popular culture is made of from Madison Avenue, 6th Avenue, and Main Street too. Seth Matlins: The Self Esteem Act: It's Time to Confront the Bully That Is Our Beauty Culture
  • It purveys a sense of yearning.
  • They purveyed the lie that Connolly was entirely opposed to the use of armed struggle.
  • Hunched within its floodlit new-build, English cricket is now surfing the finest margins, dependent on the grande bouffe of the Saturday spree merchant, and not so much in bed with the purveyors of walk-up hospitality as sweatily intertwined on the main stairs. Sozzled - how English cricket got lost in drink | Barney Ronay
  • Our culture is filled with liars and cheats, those great purveyors of falsity in the government, the media, the shops, and our homes.
  • Teaching purpose : To comprehensively understand the role function and consciousness composition of a news purveyor.
  • So now, six years in, what should these shysters, lawyers, and purveyors of vacuous mediocrity do next?
  • In February 1342 he and William were instructed to sell all victuals purveyed by them.
  • I'll stick to last year's gorgeous La Danse from Frederick Wiseman, in which the 80-year old purveyor of rigorous documentaries comes out of the closet as a balletomane of rapturous proportion. Debra Levine: Aronofsky's BLACK SWAN: Raw Deal for Odile
  • He regarded Webster's dictionary as a purveyor of corrupting neologisms like "feedback," a word he disliked. The Man Who Taught Us to See
  • He notes that this global purveyor of caffeinated sugar water once tried to pitch its drink to Cubans with a skywriting ad.
  • In effect, Maher and others who purvey falsely dangerous information get a free pass. Wrong!… and Socially Irresponsible « L.E. Modesitt, Jr. – The Official Website
  • There is an element of righteous anger, especially when a purveyor of a wholesome family image is the guilty party.
  • This company has purveyed clothing to the armed forces for generations.
  • By the 1980s he was being claimed by the academic establishment as a theoretically engaged purveyor of proto-postmodernist playfulness. The Times Literary Supplement
  • “For it is so that to morrow I purpose to ryde in to Flaundyrs to purveye me off horse and herneys and percase I shall see the essege at Nwse er I come ageyn.” Charles the Bold
  • But with a deli on every other block purveying all sorts of ethnic breads, l never baked a single loaf.
  • Church is not about being the best purveyor of religious "goods and services. Christianity Today
  • Wordsworth was complaining about modernity, not the media; the difference in how information is purveyed today is by degrees.
  • Systematic insincerity on the part of the ostensible purveyors of information and leaders of opinion may be deplored by persons who stickle for truth and pin their hopes of social salvation on the spread of accurate information. Boing Boing
  • This is the same for missions, not simply in the reception of it, but also in the purveyance of it. George Elerick: Love Is Violent
  • The conservative talk jocks have been purveying this canard to explain their monopoly of the spectrum.
  • Publishers, as with other purveyors of ideas, like their categories, their genres.
  • Austin: purview the range or limit of authority, competence, responsibility, concern, or intention purvey to supply (as provisions) usually as a matter of business creepy Coyote Blog » Blog Archive » Eeek!
  • The first and perhaps most difficult to define was the academy's role as purveyor of moral virtue.
  • For much of his long lifetime, he was also one of the 20th century's most successful entertainers, a purveyor of supersmooth easy-listening music that was distinguishable from Muzak only because he played it with perfect taste. Both Good and Popular
  • But this stuff is being purveyed by the Religious Affairs Department of the Saudi Armed Forces.
  • The media continue to purvey subtle (and not so subtle) messages that entrench stereotypical gender conceptions.
  • But with a deli on every other block purveying all sorts of ethnic breads, l never baked a single loaf.
  • The old man could be painted as a creature of the past, a purveyor of old prejudices with a "sulfurous" reputation, says Marine. What a Tea Party Looks Like in Europe
  • Not exactly anyone's choice for purveyors of subtlety and wit.
  • I'm somewhat confused -- you seem to be saying that speaking out on behalf of the oppressed doesn't justify hate speech, yet you won't "vilify" Dworkin is it "vilification" to describe her as the hate-speech purveyor she was? because she spoke out for the oppressed. Andrea Dworkin has died.
  • Although I agree with Alan Kaufman that for longer works the paper-based book remains a perfectly adequate purveyor of text -- I don't own a Kindle and still can see no reason why I should, given my habits as a reader -- and that Google Books, so far at least, is more annoying than useful, his lament over the demise of "book culture" nevertheless seems excessively dolesome. Writing and Publishing
  • As a writer who is constantly described as a purveyor of mordant wit and dark humour in subjects such as death and alcoholism, you could say that stand-up was the natural stepping stone in communicating her thoughts.
  • Verily did his disciples come, and the supporting acts, and the media, and the t-shirt sellers, and the purveyors of greasy food.
  • Common ownership can result in the same selectively chosen information and the same opinions being purveyed by different media outlets.
  • And yet you say that both pedophiles and terrorists are the "bogeymen used by the government" and yet it was you that brought up the question of the scanners being "purvey". Manchester Evening News - RSS Feed
  • It seems like every time a fashion magazine starts up, a new denim line gets touted purveyor of the latest ‘it’ jeans.
  • In the vile companions who purvey to his baser appetites he finds no charm. Fomá Gordyéeff
  • This is a concept new to the auto industry but old hat to purveyors of soap, suds and soup.
  • As you would expect, good bad or indifferent, (and they can be all three), pushed for time the punter is likely to patronise the reliable purveyor of consistent quality. Idle Dream No. 94
  • To all you turtlenecked purveyors of aural brainteasers: Music needs not only a mind, but a heart.
  • But CNNMoney. com dug into Selogie's Illinois-sourced lion meat, and stumbled on what they called, "the mysterious world of back-alley exotic meat purveyance. Lion Burger Served For World Cup: Purveyor Has Done Time For Tiger & Leopard Meat
  • The dead man was one of many black Africans purveying goods outside normal shop hours and without work permits.
  • The purveyor of luxury goods has decided to replace some old rags with shiny new stock for spring. Times, Sunday Times
  • Of course I don't think that the purveyors of ID really think this way, it's just a deceitful and hypocritical marketing strategy.
  • At the other end of the city a sex shop proprietor had to fight tooth and nail to obtain a licence to sell his wares, while just around the corner a shop purveying the same stock does not need a licence because he sells candles as well.
  • In the case of Vietnam, the anchor began as a reliable mouthpiece for the optimistic scenarios purveyed by the Johnson administration.
  • This company has purveyed clothing to the armed forces for generations.
  • They applaud every utterance by the War Mongerers, the Fear Purveyors, and all the other assorted dregs from the bottom of the American political barrel. Think Progress » September 2004: Gingrich Blasts Critics of Iraq War Who ‘Complain We’re Not Winning Fast Enough’
  • The government, purveying seriousness, can now be affronted with silliness.
  • That's why in our annual holiday season search for incredible edibles, we decided to focus on American purveyors of foods that make us feel good.
  • Today's ethical living is merely about the self. ‘My conscience is clear’ is a phrase that trips off the tongue of the purveyors of the eco good life.
  • If you are a purveyor of bad science, be afraid.
  • Life, civic life included, is not as simple as the purveying of fashionable ideas suggests.
  • Those that understand that we are at war with terroristic purveyors of medieval viciousness know that we cannot reason with our adversaries.
  • They might even assent to the idea that more and more women want marriage and children, not the bogus liberation that the sexual revolution purveyed.
  • Remember that your objective is to purvey the message to the viewer or reader with a minimum amount of noise.
  • Between ourselves, honest reader, it is no very strong potation which the present purveyor offers to you. The Kickleburys on the Rhine
  • But, for the purveyors of aphoristic truisms, perhaps confusing. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since my career as a journalist is over, perhaps I ought to consider going into the purveyance of personal pleasure. A Girl's Legs Stirring The Air
  • Let those who purvey such stories perish without receiving what they want: attention and relevance. Hi, Larry Marchant! [UPDATED] | RedState
  • The run on unpretentious style and seasoned finishes has been a boon for the purveyors of shelter chic.

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