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How To Use Ridged In A Sentence

  • On the moor, we crossed becks bridged by railway sleepers and bulging with pondweed and we met a couple of cyclists.
  • The gap should also be bridged between heads of departments and principals.
  • In addition to the unique single vascular system, these new specimens exhibit a distinct six ridged external shape, and an integumentary morphology shared by no other medullosan ovules.
  • John Wesley edited an abridged edition and used it widely to support his sermons.
  • Kevin Wilkinson's simple metal dinghy, propelled by a single scull from a rowlock at the stern, maintains one of the oldest crossings of the Mersey – now transferred to the canal because the nearby river itself is bridged. Britain's Best Views: the Mersey ferry, Liverpool
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  • She also subscribes to the talking book service run by the Royal National Institute of the Blind, where she can get complete, unabridged novels on audio tape.
  • It used to be that an unabridged dictionary and an encyclopedia would be kept accessible in middle-class homes, for settling questions of language or fact.
  • The abyss of ethnographic otherness has been momentarily bridged.
  • Again, the unabridged dictionary gives "sinewy" as its first definition of "nervous. The Human Brain
  • Critics of Belgian policy contend that the right to enter is abridged in a number of instances. Refugees in the Age of Total War
  • This is the last week of classes so I am ending with a bang, or rather a "splat" - the class concludes with a great egg toss (one student today managed to successfully catch a raw egg with her face, much to the enjoyment of her peers) and a brief letter (abridged below) I wrote to all my students, concerning what I have learned in China this past year: Chengdu TOT (Training Of Trainees)
  • During his long academic career he bridged the gap between pure scientific research and industrial production. Times, Sunday Times
  • The problem is not that he has abridged the Bible - the very creation of Scripture required the editorial judgment of its redactors - but that he has attenuated it.
  • My necessarily abridged synopsis of the play does a complicated and layered work little justice, so you'll have to just take my word that this is a masterful production that has it all.
  • Mortimer also discovered symptoms of lush-logic, for though he had an inclination to keep up the chaff, his dictionary appeared to be new modelled, and his lingo abridged by repeated clips at his mother tongue, by which he afforded considerable food for laughter. Real Life In London, Volumes I. and II. Or, The Rambles And Adventures Of Bob Tallyho, Esq., And His Cousin, The Hon. Tom Dashall, Through The Metropolis; Exhibiting A Living Picture Of Fashionable Characters, Manners, And Amusements In High And Low Life
  • The creature was about the size of a bushbok, was a dirty white in colour, and carried a pair of horns about two and a half feet in length, slightly curved, enormously thick at the base, strongly ridged for about half their length, and thence sweeping smoothly away to points as sharp apparently as those of bayonets. Through Veld and Forest An African Story
  • Of innumerable biographies of Luther the best from sympathetic Protestant pens are: Julius Köstlin, _Life of Luther, _ trans. and abridged from the German (1900); T.M. Lindsay, _Luther and the German Reformation_ (1900); A.C. M.Giffert, _M.rtin Luther, the A Political and Social History of Modern Europe V.1.
  • The widening gulf was bridged by borrowing. Times, Sunday Times
  • With this felicity of thinking, they easily bridged the physical and social sciences, from biology to psychology to sociology.
  • The manuscript so abridged, is submitted to you, with the earnest prayer, that if published, it may subserve the cause of truth and good citizenship. The Conflict of Truth
  • So, for Tim's peace of mind and history's record, here's the Diarist's excerpt in its unabridged entirety.
  • Wonderfully constructed narratives, such as the patriarchal stories of Genesis, are reduced and abridged as to make many of them incomprehensible.
  • The North Platte was bridged with a low, timber trestle built on cedar piling.
  • Every word of these texts is tagged, lemmatized, and hypertext-linked to the Liddell-Scott (an abridged version), Louw-Nida, Friberg, Thayer, or Barclay-Newman lexicons.
  • To make things worse, commercially available audio books are usually abridged and twice as expensive as the print version.
  • I've only read the abridged edition/version of her novel.
  • Ahead is a barren land of lochans and beautifully-ridged mountains rising steeply from an uninhabited wilderness.
  • The details matter less than the fact that these widely divergent views of the place of government in national life are unlikely to be bridged. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have the right to free speech, for example, and you can ask me to apologize for anything I say that offends you, and that request would have no bearing on whether my freedom of speech was being abridged.
  • Even when the permanent Victoria Theatre opened at Sydney in 1838, its operatic productions were at first brutally abridged, translated, and arranged with music more easily at hand.
  • I have to admit that my heart sank when we learnt that the Marionettentheater's version of Mozart's Magic Flute was complete, unabridged, entirely in German and would last 21/2 hours - but we needn't have worried.
  • The Ethernet setting should be set to "bridged" - and if the Belkin is in place, then hopefully you should be running in no time now (the Belkin looks quite alright for the purpose from what I briefly skimmed in specs) TWiki.Codev
  • These astonishingly well-preserved bones belong to an entirely new species of human ancestor who lived nearly two million years ago - and may have bridged the gap between ocean acidification, which is dubbed the 'evil twin of global warming', caused by a rise in human emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), threatens the world's oceans. WN.com - Articles related to '10 most wanted' plants inspected for clues to climate change
  • _janua foris, _ that is, a Januan door, and the phrase might in time be abridged into _janua, _ the noun _foris_ being understood but not expressed. The Golden Bough
  • The first formula that bridged the gap was embodied in the Nairobi Declaration of April 1993.
  • Use ridged flex aluminum or ridged four-inch elbows and straight vent pipe to vent your dryer.
  • The valley was originally bridged by the Romans.
  • It was abridged from the original work.
  • There are all kinds of antennas used in EMC test such as biconical antennas, log periodic antenna, helical antenna, ridged horn antenna and etc.
  • The gap between HTML and PDF has been bridged by an advanced PDF to HTML converter in recent data visualization software.
  • You can also try reading the whole unabridged book here, but I bet you don't make it even a quarter of the way to the end of the first chapter.
  • The stained concrete was ribbed, ridged and textured to a rather extreme extent.
  • As a rule of thumb, most unabridged books will require at least eight cassettes at minimum, with very long ones like Peter the Great taking up to forty or more.
  • That wretched apology of a creature stripped from me my dirt-encrusted shirt that I had worn since my entrance to solitary, and exposed my poor wasted body, the skin ridged like brown parchment over the ribs and sore-infested from the many bouts with the jacket The examination was shamelessly perfunctory. Chapter 10
  • Teams need to show that they've bridged the gap from four years ago. Times, Sunday Times
  • The natives of Aru, on the other hand, are, Papuans, with black or sooty brown skims, woolly or frizzly hair, thick-ridged prominent noses, and rather slender limbs. The Malay Archipelago
  • Differences on key issues could not be bridged.
  • Unlike the Pappenheim version, the 1913 printing had a fine introduction, notes and index, albeit abridged and reworked under the editorship of Alfred Feilchenfeld.
  • Four plastic cassettes I assumed were the unabridged Eileen. LEGAL TENDER
  • Almost as with a blush, her long, brown eyes were illumined, as she bridged the years to her lover near half a century dead and dust. ON THE MAKALOA MAT
  • He states, ‘Initially green, the husks turn black as they mature, then break open to release the hard, ridged nut within.’
  • I tend not to be a fan of abridged work, unless the abridgment was done by the author.
  • In addition to the full edition, there exist abridged and medium editions of the scheme.
  • The Gutter Helmet is a thin piece of ridged aluminum that fits completely over the gutter.
  • The widening gulf was bridged by borrowing. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Scherzo capriccioso, abridged in this recording in order to fit on two 78 rpm sides, was recorded with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1930.
  • Kevin Wilkinson's simple metal dinghy, propelled by a single scull from a rowlock at the stern, maintains one of the oldest crossings of the Mersey – now transferred to the canal because the nearby river itself is bridged. Britain's Best Views: the Mersey ferry, Liverpool
  • The gap was bridged, and that was the genesis of my love of acting.
  • The reteller of these stories needs in addition to plead guilty of having abridged the tales with a free hand. Chivalry
  • That's right: The minds behind "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)," "The Complete History of America (Abridged)" and other loopily condensed works have now concocted "Completely Hollywood (Abridged)," a movie-theme spoof that, one evening this week, sent a Kennedy Center audience into regular peals of near-hysterical laughter. Celia Wren reviews 'Completely Hollywood (Abridged)' at Kennedy Center
  • Over time, that insignificant value becomes significant," said Connors, who rattled through an abridged list of Khannouchi's ailments—patellofemoral syndrome, ankle impingement, bone spurs and something called hallux rigidus, which is degenerative arthritis in the big toe. The Achy Return of a Running Icon
  • Somehow the gap between what can be afforded and the price of houses must be bridged.
  • The message in the newspaper is unabridged.
  • Among the gladdest tidings of the season: the re-appearance of two classics by E.B. White, recorded unabridged, decades ago. The New Oral Tradition
  • This reprint is the original, unabridged text.
  • I haTe abeady abridged die fourteen causes of disinherison in tfaatnovel, hm diey are alsobrieflf comprized in the foUowi«g TevMS. The Institutes of Justinian
  • I have been an observer of this unbridged chasm for two decades, flying across the open space to each community, trying to entice a dialogue between them. Pius Kamau: Campaign Brought Communities Together
  • An abridged algorithm of 2 D hidden Markov chain model and its parameter estimation method are made.
  • 1.14.13.25 Methane monooxygenase iron clusters [16,22]; contains hydroxo-bridged binuclear iron clusters [22]; protein C, reductase component: contains 1 [Fe2-S2] [4,13,23]; Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • Although this war record of a Free French pilot in the RAF was first published in 1951, this is the first complete and unabridged edition and is based on M. Clostermann's wartime diary.
  • Among these were a commentary and a “questionary” on Aristotle's Physics; the latter, appearing in its first complete edition in 1551, was a much simplified and abridged version of the type of physics text that was used at Paris in the first decades of the sixteenth cen - tury. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • That wretched apology of a creature stripped from me my dirt - encrusted shirt that I had worn since my entrance to solitary, and exposed my poor wasted body, the skin ridged like brown parchment over the ribs and sore-infested from the many bouts with the jacket. Chapter 10
  • I strolled down the ridged half-concrete trackway through the trees, winding in curves that obscured the way ahead. THE GWEN JOHN SCULPTURE
  • Lightly oil and season the steak with salt and black pepper then cook on a hot grill or ridged grill pan.
  • The land was quiet and pleasant, with teasels, cowslips, bluebells, and dark soil ridged for spuds or glowing with oil seed rape.
  • But the word humongous was coined during my lifetime, and Random House Unabridged gives the times of first usage as 1965-70. The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • It was abridged from to original work.
  • The laws which excuse, on any occasions, the ignorance of their subjects, confess their own imperfections: the civil jurisprudence, as it was abridged by Justinian, still continued a mysterious science, and a profitable trade, and the innate perplexity of the study was involved in tenfold darkness by the private industry of the practitioners. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • The gibbon's actions were guided by an internal representation, which "bridged" his behavior between before and after the distraction. Inside the Executive Brain
  • MM: Oh, I would beg to differ, at least in terms of what would be more useful in terms of analyzing unbridged divides for quite a while not to mention the seriously effective tactics of those--on both sides of the divide! Desperate advice for McCain.
  • There, Hal Glicksman, a pioneering curator of Light and Space art, and Helene Winer, later the director of Artists Space and Metro Pictures in New York, curated landmark exhibitions by young local artists who bridged the gap between Conceptual art and postminimalism, and presaged the development of postmodernism in the later 1970s. Bill Bush: Set Your Clocks To Pacific Standard Time: This Artweek.LA (August 22-September 4, 2011)
  • The abridged edition is widely used in smaller general libraries, specifically school libraries and small public libraries.
  • Surprisingly, evidence of stone and willow fish weirs, which bridged estuaries and bays as far afield as western Europe and northern American, can still be found.
  • The tongue has many small projections making the surface very markedly ridged.
  • This is an abridged version of her new novel "The Queen and I".
  • Looks like lots of the stuff they have is abridged from the longer articles in the print versions (like this Bob Moog piece) but still, they're certainly worth a look. Sunday Afternoon Stuff
  • It was abridged from the original work.
  • Writtle College has also signposted the three-quarter mile circular trail route, built stiles and bridged a large ditch.
  • In the street, wheel tracks ridged the frozen mud.
  • They were also the evolutionary years that bridged the gap between the rigid formality of the Edwardian styles and the ultimate changes that led to the knee-length dresses of 1926.
  • John Wesley edited an abridged edition and used it widely to support his sermons.
  • Perhaps the best-known argument for this view is found the unabridged edition of an otherwise excellent book, The Sovereignty of God, by A. W. Pink.
  • The original six hour series had been abridged into two hours and you could feel that the pacing was rushed (something that was somehow avoided in the 1955 remake).
  • The river has been bridged over.
  • It set us thinking about how that distance could be bridged. Times, Sunday Times
  • He prayed the wildly bucking truck body and window frame wouldn't emasculate him as he bridged the space between the two. T2®: THE FUTURE WAR
  • During his long academic career he bridged the gap between pure scientific research and industrial production. Times, Sunday Times
  • Two mammoth horns curved out from the head stretching up along the sides of a colossal diadem of brilliant brass encircling the bony ridged cranium of the beast.
  • Can this deep division, composed as it is of moral, political, strategic, tactical and opportunistic elements, be bridged?
  • Unfortunately he did not live long enough to marvel with me at the word "floccinaucinihilipilification" (29 letters), which I discovered by chance in my unabridged dictionary last year. The Union - All Categories
  • If you want to hear what that sort of accent sounds like, you can listen to the HarperCollins complete and unabridged version of Coraline on audio.
  • A wooden plank bridged the stream.
  • The line of descent from the first organism to the manifold life around us is astonishingly beautiful, orderly, lawful and harmonious, the more so if there are no gaps that must be bridged by ad hoc divine interventions. Stromata Blog
  • See my poor dexter, abridged to one thumb, one finger, and a stump, -- by the blow of my adversary's weapon, however, and not by any carnificial knife. The Fortunes of Nigel
  • Such freedoms can be abridged only if the state shows it has a compelling need to do so.
  • Some, in the true spirit of the poor Publican, were kneeling at a considerable distance, just within view of the cross, to which they hardly lifted their eyes; others, whose penance was originally lighter, or its term abridged by frequent visits to this place, had approached the cross more nearly, and with greater signs of satisfaction. Itinerary of Provence and the Rhone Made During the Year 1819
  • The anterior part of these plates is ridged and is used to chop food; the posterior part is expanded and flat and used for crushing.
  • Seven of the thirteen case studies are included in the abridged version.
  • Gaiman is a fantastic reader and I recommend you rush right out and get the unabridged audiobook of Coraline.
  • _The reteller of these stories needs in addition to plead guilty of having abridged the tales with a free hand. Chivalry
  • The invention provides an organic luminescent material, i. e. a terphenyl bridged-bis-benzimidazole quaternary ammonium compound, a preparation method and application thereof.
  • In addition to the full edition, there exist abridged and medium editions of the scheme.
  • She glimpsed a spurred fin on its back and a ridged tail before it vanished into the hole dug by its claws.
  • Heat a heavy-based frying pan or ridged griddle until very hot.
  • He ridged his corn
  • Although private funding has bridged much of this gap, declining ticket sales of 35 % have intensified financial pressures.
  • Instead of the supposed fluffy cotton, we now discover the white substance to be of firm though somewhat sticky consistency, its surface, moreover, beautifully ridged from base to summit in parallel rounded flutings, which meet and interfold like a braid along the summit. My Studio Neighbors
  • Most of the original treatises have perished; two thousand of these, containing three million unpunctuated and unspaced lines, were abridged to one hundred and fifty thousand lines or sentences. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • Similar teeth with a conspicuously ridged enamel surface are also known for Acrochordus, and for the colubroid genus Enhydris.
  • If this be true, *wink, wink, nudge, nudge* then I most certainly expect the unabridged UK audio version to follow read by John Cleese. OMW in the UK « Whatever
  • Sometimes a single slender thread, impearled with dewdrops, bridged the distance from one tendril to another, again a bit of cobweb was spread over a dead leaf, to catch a hint of iridescence from the sun or moon; and now and then a shimmering length of ghostly fabric was set in place at dusk, to hold the starry lights that came to shine upon the broken tapestry with the peace of benediction. Master of the Vineyard
  • They are recognized by dark, ridged, pitted, usually conic-shaped caps, the margin fused to the stipe, or somewhat overlapping, and a whitish to cream-buff, furfuraceous stipe with folds at the base.
  • So I think we have an obligation to make sure that her rights are not in any way abridged.
  • We skied over the sea ice, bridged the leads and clambered over the sastrugi, and my arrogance and incompetence lost me a finger-end to frostbite.
  • The builders of Tusayan appear to have been afraid to add the necessary weight of mud mortar to produce this finished effect, the hoods usually showing a vertically ridged or crenated surface, caused by the sticks of the framework showing through the thin mud coat. A Study of Pueblo Architecture: Tusayan and Cibola Eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1886-1887, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1891, pages 3-228
  • Reaching out she touched the ridged, pocked-marked surface of a loose board. O' Bending Light
  • An unabridged dictionary defines ‘mentum’ as a chin-like projection on some orchids or part of the median plate of an insect.
  • In metallic clusters, the metal atoms are either directly bonded through metal-metal interactions or are bridged by appropriate ligands.
  • Nonetheless it's listed in many unabridged dictionaries.
  • That is NOT a dirigible, that is a balloon - dirigibles are ridged, like zeppelins. This Just In: (One) Less is (One) More
  • True achromatism cannot be obtained with ordinary flint and crown-glass; and although in lenses of "Jena glass," outstanding colour is reduced to about one-sixth its usual amount, their term of service is fatally abridged by rapid deterioration. A Popular History of Astronomy During the Nineteenth Century Fourth Edition
  • The book is an abridged account of his experiences in India before Independence.
  • The abridged edition is widely used in smaller general libraries, specifically school libraries and small public libraries.
  • There is a single persistent bract subtending each pedicel and the seeds are crescent shaped and ridged along the margins but not undulate or furfuraceous.
  • It set us thinking about how that distance could be bridged. Times, Sunday Times
  • To finish this post I will leave you with an excerpt and a nonsense poem from his introduction to Burgess Unabridged, which is available online in scanned and text versions: April « 2009 « Sentence first
  • There are none of the shortcuts of the forties and fifties, though one sees the font of what survives, in abridged form in many later projects of that period. St. Robert's, Shorewood, Wisconsin
  • Growing to a height of some thirty metres, the bark is distinctively ridged and furrowed and has characteristic large burrs or bosses.
  • When I was a kid, I used to enjoy doing something very much like this by following cross-references in the unabridged dictionary at the library.
  • He prayed the wildly bucking truck body and window frame wouldn't emasculate him as he bridged the space between the two. T2®: THE FUTURE WAR
  • The stunning yellow kitchen with its five ovens, flat and ridged hotplates, Aga, huge granite work surface and bewildering equipment is alien territory.
  • The monkey bridge is constructed using two sheer legs and bridged with a hawser and handrails secured using pickets.
  • The valley was originally bridged by the Romans.
  • I don't think most of these books are available in abridged audio books format. What Obama's reading on the Vineyard
  • This article is an abridged version of his Inaugural Lecture, given at the University on 2 March.
  • It's so hard to tell though: I read an abridged version at seven, was enrapt by the television series at eight, read the full version at sixteen, reread it at twenty one.
  • Either a flat or ridged bottom can be used on a gas burner.
  • And he'd have plenty of time in this dead-and-alive hole to study his law books during the long winter evenings when he was without a female companion to run her gentle fingers down the ridged slope of his sexy broken nose. Frost at Christmas
  • The wide-spreading ebony horns thrown back among the morning-glories, the mouth open from the last sigh, the glassy eyes staring straight at the beautiful blue sky above, where a ghostly moon still lingered, the velvet neck ridged with veins and muscles, the body already buried in black ooze. Balcony Stories
  • Britney has bridged the gap between knowing teenage waif and sex bomb.
  • A plank of wood bridged the stream.
  • Vodlepussy waxed nonsensically nostalgic for fallen Tyson: "Not only a great competitor, but also somebody that kind of bridged the gap. Survivor: Heroes vs Villains: Robbed!
  • Garganelli pasta is like penne but the tube is ridged so it holds more sauce.
  • The right to seek redress of wrongs in court is precious and should not be restricted or abridged, based on myths.
  • He had ridged black hair and a rather forbidding, saturnine manner, but his smile was warm. THE WHITE DOVE
  • Have you read the unabridged edition of that book?
  • It was abridged from the original work.
  • With respect to the etymology of the word cannibal, it seems to me entirely cleared up by the discovery of the journal kept by Columbus during his first voyage of discovery, and of which Bartholomew de las Casas has left us an abridged copy. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • Nozine's face has become deeply ridged since the quake, the bones standing up like the Andes. Beverly Bell: Surviving in Haiti
  • These religions were capable of transcending the intense, parochial localism of ancient and classical times, and creating wide communities that bridged many languages and cultures.
  • Amy looked at the bare chest with its ribs ridged painfully under the burnt skin. THE WHITE DOVE
  • These mounds are of three types: platform, burial, and ridged.
  • But for the rest, and that's close on half the top 20, ambition now revolves around grasping the coat-tails of the boom-boom bandwagon and hanging on for dear life as it rattles along a road ridged around a ravine.
  • I've only read the abridged edition/version of her novel.
  • An interesting book, Sybil, but Disraeli was not much of a novelist; it reads like spirited and somewhat artless version of Brontë's Shirley, or an abridged and more explicitly class-based Wives and Daughters.
  • A rough guide: modern unabridged dictionaries are usually the size of quartos; most textbooks are octavos; popular paperbacks are often duodecimos.
  • You'll find it in Karrada - whether it's a gold bracelet or fuzzy slippers or the complete, unabridged collection of the late Al-Hakeem's religious lectures on CD.
  • Investment in all three is essential if the productivity gap dragging on British growth is to be bridged. Times, Sunday Times
  • The gap was bridged, and that was the genesis of my love of acting.
  • Rachmaninov, who put up with truncations to most of his works, absolutely refused to shorten the concerto and played it complete and unabridged in a state of tangible tension.
  • In the very thickest strata of our freestone, and at considerable depths, well-diggers often find large scallops or pectines, having both shells deeply striated, and ridged and furrowed alternately. The Natural History of Selborne, Vol. 1
  • It's definitely not abridged in any way, shape or form.
  • Looking closely at the fins you'll see that Hush's attention to detail is admirable, with each fin ridged for ultimate heat exchange.
  • Later, electrically powered calculators and analog computers bridged the gap to the first primitive digital computers.
  • During his long academic career he bridged the gap between pure scientific research and industrial production. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hist.] 83 This interesting story, which Zosimus has abridged, is related by Eunapius, (in Excerpt. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • The list ran the gamut from Aristotle to Zen, from The Catcher in the Rye to The Cat in the Hat, from epic novels to unabridged dictionaries.
  • The book also comes in concise and pocket editions, which are shorter but newer; i.e., they are not just abridged editions. In praise of a reference book: MWDEU
  • This great divide can not be bridged by turning the clock back.
  • If Polanski's Twist can be faulted for anything, it's perhaps in presenting a version of the novel that feels ever so slightly abridged.
  • This story must be abridged.
  • Stephen Wilson's impressive tome that weighs in at 1024 pages invokes immediate parallels to other information sources in book form, such as the Yellow Pages or any unabridged dictionary.
  • ‘I think he was one of the last people who bridged the gap between the old guys and the new guys’.
  • Croatia is actually located in Central Europe, but it has bridged the Eastern and Western worlds throughout its history.
  • Here's the abridged version of the defensive breakdowns that occured in the second half, according to Bennett: miscommunication, transition miscues, not blocking out, giving up straight-line drives to the basket, letting an opponent post up too easily. Wake Forest 76, Virginia 71: Three up, three down
  • A door thus guarded might be known as a janua foris, that is, a Januan door, and the phrase might in time be abridged into janua, the noun foris being understood but not expressed. Chapter 16. Dianus and Diana
  • At times it must be bridged on an ad hoc basis, as when the party occulted its advocacy of gun control laws. Stromata Blog:
  • Yet a school nickname bridged five years so rapidly that the man who had just been reviling Fate smiled at the picturesque officer of the Guards in the old, tolerant way, the way in which the hero of the eleven or fifteen permits his worshipers to applaud. The Wheel O' Fortune
  • Subcordate inequivalve ventricose; elongated and only slightly oblique; beaks very prominent and distant; ribs about twenty-five, crenulated, or transversely ridged; hinge area wide and marked by divergent striae or channels. Report of the North-Carolina Geological Survey. Agriculture of the Eastern Counties: Together with Descriptions of the Fossils of the Marl Beds
  • Just to get everyone up to speed on the history of the now famous case, here is the abridged version of their tale: In 1958, Virginia residents Mildred Jeter and Richard Loving yes, that was his real name fanned the fire by getting married in the District of Columbia and then returned to live ever after in their home state. Buzzine » Love and Legislation
  • Franklin alleges prison guards abridged his “right to be supplied” with T-shirts. Funny stuff
  • ‘These,’ she said, pulling out an old pair of narrow black boots with curiously ridged soles.
  • The loud hubbub of conversation, -- nearly all in German, -- the shouts of the waiters, the noise of their footfalls upon the stone floor, the sound of mugs being placed upon tables and of Max draining his "stein" of beer, bridged the hiatus between the ending of Max's narrative and the beginning of my own: Tales from Bohemia
  • The evidence clearly shows that the city's police powers are not abridged in any manner and that the agreement is expressly subject to the remedies available to the city under the Omaha Municipal Code.
  • Same goes for professional works by Muslim authors and publishers, in books I've seen such as Caesarean Moon Births by Hamza Yusuf or the newest print of Towards Understanding the Qur'ān, the abridged version of Tahfim al-Qur'ān by Sayyid Abul A'lā Mawdūdi (how do you like THAT for romanization!) MuslimMatters.org
  • He has the full-length book, various abridged versions of the book, the video, the CD, the CD-ROM and the DVD.
  • The name is based on their four-sided, ridged appearance in tangential cross section.
  • It's an abridged edition of the original one.
  • Revisit the sound that lifted our spirits and bridged the gap between bubblegum pop and adult-oriented rock.
  • We had to deal with a couple of fallen trees, one footbridge that was going to need repeair soon, one unbridged stream, and several significant mud holes, but all these obsticles were handily surmounted and Alexander thoroughly enjoyed the process. Good News

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