How To Use Solace In A Sentence

  • _Agesilaus_ hauing a great sort of little children, was one day disposed to solace himself among them in a gallery where they plaied, and tooke a little hobby horse of wood and bestrid it to keepe them in play, one of his friends seemed to mislike his lightnes, o good friend quoth The Arte of English Poesie
  • If this bald truth makes any one of us feel uncomfortable, we can take some solace in knowing we are not the only species to exploit the lie.
  • Nevertheless, the novel is there, with its boundless substance, and the reader finds a certain solace in the heightened awareness which he acquires from the inevitable element of tragedy inherent in all life. Nobel Prize in Literature 1937 - Presentation Speech
  • You take solace in your daily routines and find them comforting. The Sun
  • In the wake of her latest heartbreak, Jennifer Aniston has again sought solace in her long-term confidant and former Friends costar Courteney Cox. WN.com - Articles related to  Djokovic on fire ahead of Finals
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  • And when you feel happy you are less likely to turn to food for comfort or solace. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is easy to see -- and indeed to admire -- why Africans, snatched from their homeland, enchained in slavery and forced to become Christians, would take their newly imposed religion and turn it into a source of solace and strength. Clay Farris Naff: White Or Black, The Church Has Failed African Americans
  • In the seventh edition (1720) I find to my great solace and comfort the entry, dog, 'a well-known creature, 'a somewhat meagre definition, improved into 'a quadruped well-known' by Nathaniel Bailey, whose dictionary, first published in octavo (1721), ran through a very large number of editions and became the standard authority until superseded by Johnson. On Dictionaries
  • Aunt Alicia found solace in the little Sara, as bubbly and zestful as her nephew had been.
  • It is real, sometimes a balm and sometimes an irritant, a cause of solace but something that can also rouse you to anger or despair. Times, Sunday Times
  • Usually rendered as Good Samaritans, doctors in paintings typically hover near sickbeds or deathbeds, dispensing solace and advice.
  • His gentle presence was often a source of comfort and solace in itself.
  • He does so in order to provide solace to his brethren, but also to argue for the importance of fidelity to the Church.
  • The doors of the sanctuary will open for one month to families seeking solace.
  • And let's not forget the sappy sequences of false sentiments and saccharine solace.
  • I took solace in drink, of which there was a plentiful supply.
  • We clergy are often the only ones around outside comfortable working hours to help folk or bring solace into troubled lives. Times, Sunday Times
  • But time differences mean they are often unavailable to provide solace. Times, Sunday Times
  • They sought solace in religion from the harshness of their everyday lives.
  • And so i adventitial to the neuroanatomical of orizaba a solace with me ungratefully i go so that i can skidpan a needless of the fun. Rational Review
  • Who hasn't taken solace in some form of greediness, self-assertion, or just plain carelessness?
  • Shaykh said to him, ‘O Janshah, take the keys of the castle and solace thyself with exploring all its apartments and viewing whatever be therein, but as regards such a room, beware and again beware of opening its door; and if thou gainsay me and open it and enter there, through nevermore shalt thou know fair fortune.’ The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Little Chelsea seeks solace in her imaginary friend called Jodie.
  • Would it give them any solace? Times, Sunday Times
  • He wanted to stay near so she could reach out for him when she most needed his comfort and solace.
  • Some find solace in campaigning and others want nothing to do with it.
  • But people become very attached to objects and derive solace from them. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some superstitious fools suppose that they which die of the garget are ridden with the nightmare, and therefore they hang up stones which naturally have holes in them, and must be found unlooked for; as if such a stone were an apt cockshot for the devil to run through and solace himself withal, while the cattle go scot-free and are not molested by him! Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series)
  • From that I unknowingly derive some sort of warm solace.
  • They were also welcomed into homes and hearts, finding solace and friendship in the most unlikely places.
  • They had hoped for scientific certitudes and now they are being told that science cannot give them this solace.
  • Her husband died last year and she finds solace for her grief in her gardens and work with plants.
  • The church is always linked with humility and a place where people seek solace.
  • Finding no solace at home, he is taunted, bullied and beaten by a pugilistic stepfather and eventually sent by his sympathetic, but passive, mother to a private boarding school to study his sixth form.
  • This was a moving, poignant ceremony, which gave solace to the parents and families.
  • Mary has been the source of solace and consolation in times of anxiety.
  • It's a time of true solace and emotional replenishment.
  • For drivers taking to the road on Monday morning it may come as some solace that they do not yet have to pay for their dubious pleasure. Times, Sunday Times
  • The bond was strengthened because individuals persecuted by the authorities could seek succor and solace from the Church.
  • After the death of her son, Val found solace in the church.
  • Solamen miseris socios habuisse doloris -- To have companions in woe is a solace to those who suffer. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • Whit turned to look at Solace, who was glowing with an unearthly light.
  • And specially shalt thou bid Atra unto me; for meseems she is so wise already that I may learn her more wisdom, and put that into her heart which may solace her and make her to cease from fretting her own heart, and from grief and longing overmuch. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • It gives some solace to the bereaved. Times, Sunday Times
  • Another crew, assigned to white-lead the drawbar, sloshes about the pit, solaced by some Stygian philosophy of their own.
  • Eftir the messis wer done with maist solempnitie and reverence, comperit afore him mony young and insolent baronis of Scotland, richt desirus to haif sum plesur and solace, be chace of hundis in the said forest. Chronicles of the Canongate
  • We clergy are often the only ones around outside comfortable working hours to help folk or bring solace into troubled lives. Times, Sunday Times
  • His acting career took a nosedive and he turned to drink for solace.
  • The sick man found solace in music.
  • Much like President Bill Clinton took solace from the Democratic defeat in the 1994 midterms, so does Obama embark this week on a lengthy trip to Asia, where he will be able to put aside temporarily the political setback at home for a turn on the global stage, where he remains widely admired. Around the world, concern over the global impact of U.S. elections
  • But they took some solace from the hot grog that was served on the 21st to commemorate their first year at sea.
  • Others have taken solace from the slow but painstaking progress towards rebuilding the ground zero site. Times, Sunday Times
  • The abbot, neither overawed by the strength nor by the quantity of the potion, took it off with what he himself would have called a feeling of solace and pleasance, and his voice became much more composed; he signified himself as comforted extraordinarily by the medicine, and willing to proceed to answer any questions which could be put to him by his gallant young friend. Castle Dangerous
  • My wife experienced the dark side of the suburban dream as a child and ran away to San Francisco, finding solace in the early punk community.
  • Yet fleeing domestic drudgery doesn't always provide solace. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Does he find solace in religion? Times, Sunday Times
  • Hopefully, the $60 billion war funding bill that the Senate "easily passed" yesterday will serve as some some solace from their unimaginable abashment, and they somehow find the strength to show their face at their Memorial Day picnics. Democrats Simply Cannot Find the Time to Pass Unemployment Benefit Extension, Because, You Know | Indecision Forever | Political Humor, 2010 Election, and Satire Blog | Comedy Central
  • Some superstitious fools suppose that they which die of the garget are ridden with the nightmare, and therefore they hang up stones which naturally have holes in them, and must be found unlooked for; as if such a stone were an apt cockshot for the devil to run through and solace himself withal, while the cattle go scotfree and are not molested by him! Of the Air and Soil and Commodities of This Island. Chapter X. [1577, Book I., Chapter 13; 1587, Book I., Chapter 18
  • No, as such she has seen I could resist her; nor yet the light trifler of a spring or two, neglected when no longer a novelty; no, no! — it is a companion for ever, it is a solace for every care, it is a bosom friend through every period of life that I seek in Miss Beverley! Cecilia
  • The soft fur solaced me little, and I distractedly wished the bear could soothe the aching sensation in my heart.
  • Does he find solace in religion? Times, Sunday Times
  • This knowledge brings solace, because the organization is familiar with the inevitable consequences and believes it can effectively deal with them.
  • I take great solace in the pride and confidence he exhibited during production rehearsals on Wednesday night. Times, Sunday Times
  • The reality is, as the Sunday Times points out, that not only is being sacked from a Labour Government all but impossible, if it does happen there is immediate solace available to all, regardless of competence, probity or any thing else you might care to name. Stop The Gravy Train, I Want To Get On!
  • But people become very attached to objects and derive solace from them. Times, Sunday Times
  • The church is always linked with humility and a place where people seek solace.
  • They are friends and have given me good solace in times of need. THE WOLF AND THE DOVE
  • It gives some solace to the bereaved. Times, Sunday Times
  • In general, the agreeable fumes of the "Aina" were created by one's own inhalations; but Donjalolo deeming the solace too dearly purchased by any exertion of the royal lungs, regaled himself through those of his attendants, whose lips were as moss-rose buds after a shower. Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2)
  • Her advice was often comfort and solace in itself and her ways were the ways of goodness and serenity.
  • He depicted a version of his scarred but curiously often blissful family life: nine siblings (three of whom died in infancy), a drained and loving mother, and a tortured, violent-tempered father who died when Davies was 6; his burgeoning homosexuality and struggle with his Catholic faith; the solace and rapture that the cinema bestowed on him. Intimate History
  • After some years of dolorous wandering in this palace of despair, -- for ` hope of rest to solace there is none, nor e'en of milder pang, 'save the poisonous anodyne of drink, -- most of those insnared to-night will perish, some of them in horrible torture. Plain facts for old and young : embracing the natural history and hygiene of organic life.
  • The patient finding himself abulic, and perhaps too critical minded to accept the mundane supports in his vicinity, seeks a solace in that which to him seems powerful because incomprehensible, that is to say in something supernatural. The Journal of Abnormal Psychology
  • We offer sympathy and solace and encouragement and recipes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now she took the water, and rowed strongly with her lovely limbs till she came to the eyot, and there she went aland, and visited every place which had been kind to her; and kissed the trees and flowers that had solaced her, and once more drew the birds and rabbits to sport with her; till suddenly it came into her head that the time was wearing overfast. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • Some solace from the fact it came down to a lottery and this time their ticket did not come up. The Sun
  • Not incidentally, it can bring solace to relatives of those who die before time but whose organs help others to live. Times, Sunday Times
  • In later life when he had attained to wealth and prosperity the violin and the harmonium were a constant source of solace during long winter evenings in Greenwich and Peckham. A Book of Remarkable Criminals
  • They sought solace in religion from the harshness of their everyday lives.
  • Moses; and he wrote not merely amid the cares and duties of a great public office, with other labors which might be called Herculean, but even amid pains of disease and the infirmities of age, -- when rest, to most people, is the greatest boon and solace of their lives. Beacon Lights of History
  • Of course, the directors at least have the solace of knowing that the faddy internet grousing isn't affecting their box office. "This is my dream. I make the path."
  • Alan's uncommunicativeness extended below the level of speech, and his mother, reduced to the helplessness of dead-reckoning, had not even the solace of adapting her sympathy to his needs. The Quicksand
  • My Iranian mate Omid seeks solace in bowls of ash-e anar , a delicious sounding pomegranate soup, while his granddad was a firm believer in the restorative properties of boiled, salted turnips. The Guardian World News
  • Not incidentally, it can bring solace to relatives of those who die before time but whose organs help others to live. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is the Holy Spirit--'rest for the weary, refreshment for the pining, solace in the midst of woe'--who imparts to the soul an imperturbable poise and a serene calm, the character of recollectedness, the soaring lightness of a full inner freedom. Finding Peace
  • Television programs with unsophisticated or homespun themes that comfort or provide solace.
  • Who hasn't taken solace in some form of greediness, self-assertion, or just plain carelessness?
  • Others found solace in deep religious faith, or redefined life in terms of the absurd.
  • One man there was of them who was fashioned of the minstrel craft by nature, and who forgathered with me specially, till we became friends, and he was a solace to me, with his tales and his songs of The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • He traveled to Chartres, and found solace amid its roses and apses. FORGE OF EMPIRES 1861-1871
  • The first was accomplished expeditely in the little tobacconist's shop under the arcade, where the purchase of a box of Minghetti cigars promised later solace. The Place of Honeymoons
  • I can easily carry it anywhere for literary solace. 2 "Austerlitz" by W.G. Sebald. BOOKS: Louise Erdrich
  • In fact, if you hardgainers can take any solace in your struggle to bulk up your entire physique, at least your calves aren't a conspicuous weak point like they are for mesomorphs strutting around on ‘peg legs.’
  • He reminded me of a loving grandpa to whom a grandchild could run to for solace and comfort.
  • This is just a figment of the imagination of weak minds that conjure up images to provide solace when they cannot handle reality, she continued.
  • Sports surferess Stephen Colbert Bobsleds at Lake Placid [video] ojkim, "" bellbind MADDEN NFL 10 by EA SPORTS: 1817 gtblogscott Georgia Tech vs. Georgia breakdown solacetech Dallas Cowboys upset about repeated officiating errors solacetech Dallas Cowboys vs. Philadelphia Eagles Ticket Give-Away! Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • How can you measure comfort and solace? Times, Sunday Times
  • Here they can graze on common ground seeking solace at different crossroads in their emotional journeys. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was crowned with a flowerless wreath of greenthorn and juniper, meaning solace in adversity, offering protection. Wildfire
  • So they were united and abode in all solace of life and its delight till death parted them; and so glory be to Him who delivereth His servant when he restoreth to Him, and disappointeth not his hope in The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • We can provide solace and preserve dignity and human potential through the very end of life.
  • The place where people are supposed to find solace from the perils of the outside world should not be presumed to provide a respite from interpersonal violence. Everyday Violence
  • Doesn't this renewal offer a glimmer of solace in a dark world? Times, Sunday Times
  • But through it all, McInnis might just take solace in the fact that some of the most powerful politicians on the planet have been called copycats -- and fared pretty well post-scandal. The Nation
  • Mila's solace was then disrupted when she heard a group of people from the crowd scream her name.
  • Although outsiders view the pairing as sordid and unsavoury, the couple cling together, finding solace in this unlikely romance.
  • It gave great solace to those of us caring for sick servicemen and servicewomen that the Red Cross would help unite our patients and their family members during their time of need.
  • For drivers taking to the road on Monday morning it may come as some solace that they do not yet have to pay for their dubious pleasure. Times, Sunday Times
  • We offer sympathy and solace and encouragement and recipes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mother is slowly introjected, first in a part-object fashion—the breast, the bottle, the voice, the face, and the comfort and solace provided become linked permanently with her. Clinical Work with Adolescents
  • But everywhere he looked for solace, he found people talking in whispers about the things that discomfited him. EVERVILLE
  • Others have taken solace from the slow but painstaking progress towards rebuilding the ground zero site. Times, Sunday Times
  • How can you measure comfort and solace? Times, Sunday Times
  • On a small island of the southern Atlantic, is shut up a remarkable prisoner, wearing himself out there in a feeble mixture of peevishness and jealousy, solaced by no great thoughts and no heroic spirit; a kind of dotard before the time, killing and consuming himself by the intense littleness into which he has shrunk. Sermons for the New Life.
  • Making a sharp exit, Urquhart found solace in modelling and an unlikely role as pin-up for girls' teen mag My Guy.
  • It is real, sometimes a balm and sometimes an irritant, a cause of solace but something that can also rouse you to anger or despair. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then they ceased not abiding in solace and pleasance and good cheer and abounding prosperity, eating and drinking with mirth and merriment, till there came to them the The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • The length and breadth of the country benefits from the services of the home care nurses who work tirelessly, to bring solace to those caught up in the trauma.
  • Here they can graze on common ground seeking solace at different crossroads in their emotional journeys. Times, Sunday Times
  • For two years in the midst of my distress over the poverty which, thus suddenly driven into my consciousness, had become to me the "Weltschmerz," there was mingled a sense of futility, of misdirected energy, the belief that the pursuit of cultivation would not in the end bring either solace or relief. Twenty Years at Hull-House, With Autobiographical Notes
  • Viewers suffering from Strictly withdrawal will find solace and comfort here. Times, Sunday Times
  • Classic stories tell of men who fight wars and abandon kingdoms to find solace in their young love.
  • The night before Kirsteen died, she wrote a poem called The Paths of Life, and that offered me some solace amid the sadness.
  • I take great solace in the pride and confidence he exhibited during production rehearsals on Wednesday night. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now she took the water, and rowed strongly with her lovely limbs till she came to the eyot, and there she went aland, and visited every place which had been kind to her; and kissed the trees and flowers that had solaced her, and once more drew the birds and rabbits to sport with her; till suddenly it came into her head that the time was wearing overfast. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • It brought him solace, sanity and a sense of purpose. Times, Sunday Times
  • We offer sympathy and solace and encouragement and recipes. Times, Sunday Times
  • The third are gratiosi, favorites; such as exceed not this scantling, to be solace to the sovereign, and harmless to the people. The Essays
  • The white background establishes a sense of grounding solace, and the blue pane up top is straight out of an aerogramme via Royal Mail. Out with the aughts and in with the zippy 'teens!
  • Doesn't this renewal offer a glimmer of solace in a dark world? Times, Sunday Times
  • It was not only pretty and interesting in itself with its substantial grey stone outbuildings, and pigeonry and rick-yard, but Mr and Mrs Andrew Solace lived there, and they were, the children thought, such very agreeable people. Black, White and Gray A Story of Three Homes
  • And when you feel happy you are less likely to turn to food for comfort or solace. Times, Sunday Times
  • THE RAT TRAP: In need of creative solace for various writing ventures that are still in long-term incubation, I headed alone to the Finborough Theatre in Chelsea to witness some actors putting themselves through the mill at the outer limits of the creative world. Archive 2006-12-01
  • Living in a hard land, they work hard, and play hard and take solace in simple pleasures.
  • But Ray J fans take solace: I'm guessing we'll see plenty more of the title bachelor following the show's reunion special, when we'll likely witness the inevitable break-up between Ray J and his boozy chosen one. Entertainment Weekly's PopWatch
  • They could both find temporary solace, but they'd feel awkward and distant afterwards.
  • Wikipedia:Bond seeks revenge for the death of Vesper Lynddoesn't this movie and its title ask, what will Mr. Bond do for his quantum of solace? Just...look up the words...
  • They are friends and have given me good solace in times of need. THE WOLF AND THE DOVE
  • Would it give them any solace? Times, Sunday Times
  • He sought solace in the whisky bottle.
  • Jane admits ‘to her instruction I owed the best part of my acquirements; her friendship and society and been my continual solace; she had stood me in the stead of mother, governess, and latterly, companion’.
  • As his love walked away into the night, the kilted supporter took solace in drink and song, as members of the Tartan Army do.
  • Optimists might find solace in the argument that nuclear primacy is irrelevant. Superiority Complex
  • In a random world, the linearity of games is a wonderful solace.
  • Not incidentally, it can bring solace to relatives of those who die before time but whose organs help others to live. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘Thank you, Solace,’ said Whitiel, ‘May Domin bless you!’
  • The work was tough, the sun fierce and the bosses fiercer still, but Father Tapim and his fettling gangs had the strength of song and the solace of company along every sleeper and spike. Eastern Torres Strait Islander Songs
  • I found solace in writing when my father died three years ago.
  • How can you measure comfort and solace? Times, Sunday Times
  • There she seeks solace in a fantasy world of swans. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some solace from the fact it came down to a lottery and this time their ticket did not come up. The Sun
  • Take solace in the fact that all four series of the hilarious sitcom are on the net. The Sun
  • I will be seeking solace in the long scarf, basking in its warmth like a lover's embrace.
  • They are not old enough to understand all they see or do, so by the end their only recourse, and again it's intuitive rather than analytical, is to ride out to the McPheron brothers where they had been well-treated once before and sensed that there was some solace there. Kent Haruf discusses Plainsong
  • My only solace is the fact that most kids rebel against their teachers and do the opposite.
  • The news brought no solace to the grieving relations.
  • At a moment when Smith fears she is ruined, she seeks solace and comfort from a clergyman.
  • Beer: it's a national pastime, a vice, a Saturday night solace, a problem to be twelve-stepped over and now, it's a newsgroup.
  • All adversity finds ease in complaining (as [3421] Isidore holds), and 'tis a solace to relate it, [3422] Ἀγαθὴ δε ἐταίρου. Friends 'confabulations are comfortable at all times, as fire in winter, shade in summer, quale sopor fessis in gramine, meat and drink to him that is hungry or athirst; Anatomy of Melancholy
  • And solace your slight lapse 'gainst 'bonos mores,' Don Juan
  • Geraldine remembers being completely shattered by the experience and finding solace only in books.
  • The detainee can make a formal complaint after release, but this offers little solace to the aggrieved individual.
  • It is not surprising that in his later works, Huysmans should replace the lonely des Esseintes with the convert Durtal, who finds solace in the Mother Church and the Virgin Mary, source of all nurturance and forgiveness.
  • Meanwhile, she is seeking solace in a new TV series called Monk - about a hypochondriac detective.
  • Ending a patient's life by injection, with the added solace that it will be quick and painless, is much easier than this constant physical and emotional care. Whose Right to Die?
  • And in the twilight of their youth, this bleakest enlightening is, for a pair lovelorn and wretched, their single and final solace.
  • With 24 novels, various novellas, articles, short stories, non fiction books and countless credits under his belt, it might be strange to find such a celebrated author finding solace in the North West of Ireland.
  • The thought was that people with low self-esteem turn to drinking or drugs for solace.
  • She escaped to the solace of the dark bedchamber, easily finding the window bench seat without a candle.
  • Doubtless her soul was brimming over with shamelessness, since she swerved so far from shamefastness, as without a blush to seek solace for her wrong in her daughter's infamy. The Danish History, Books I-IX
  • It is one of those fables that the disinherited folk have at all times invented to solace themselves for their disinherison. Old French Romances
  • Their churches promise prosperity and success, not solace and comfort. Times, Sunday Times
  • Here they can graze on common ground seeking solace at different crossroads in their emotional journeys. Times, Sunday Times
  • If a person solaces himself for being fat by eating more, he's going to eat more to solace himself for the extra weight.
  • Yet fleeing domestic drudgery doesn't always provide solace. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Always on duty when crews returned from missions, he would offer solace and a welcome tot of rum.
  • Miffed and thirsty, some filed out to find solace in pricey cybercafes, while others decided to plump for the free buffet chicken wings.
  • Unable to travel, he found some solace in reading about other people's journeys abroad.
  • You take solace in your daily routines and find them comforting. The Sun
  • He is fiercely retentive, desperately eager to hang on to anything that gives even the promise of some sort of solace.
  • She found solace for her grief by teaching herself to sew using an embroidery kit.
  • How can you measure comfort and solace? Times, Sunday Times
  • Unable to travel, he found some solace in reading about other people's journeys abroad.
  • The bush upon which it grows is a salsolaceous bramble [Note 72: Nitraria Australis], and is found in large quantities on the saline flats, bordering some parts of the Murrumbidgee and Murray rivers; and along the low parts of the southern coast, immediately behind the ridges bounding the sea shore. An account of the manners and customs of the Aborigines and the state of their relations with Europeans, by Edward John Eyre
  • He was, naturally enough, exceedingly put out, and vexed; and unhappily betook himself to a neighbouring tavern for 'spirituous' solacement -- a very rare thing, let me add, for him to do. Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 459 Volume 18, New Series, October 16, 1852
  • Always putting foremost the welfare of others, she was, for many years, a Handmaid in Knock where she helped bring comfort, solace and support to those in need.
  • The prisoners find their only solace in prayer.
  • If riders end up severing their digits in a panic stop, take solace in knowing that it's probably in a cyclocross race and not on a city street - right hand pull wire runs the front brake, cx style. Right of Way: Watching Where You're Going
  • Eventually, more and more ideas accreted, and more and more solace, meaning, community, and perhaps even experiences of the sacred became attached to them. Jay Michaelson: A Better Way to Believe in God
  • I am a Catholic, and albeit in my adulthood I've come to realize that my religion is not as all-embracing, compassionate, and christian as we sermonize from the pulpit, I can identify with the solace gained from quiet moments of prayer in an empty church. Ted Kennedy called a man of quiet faith
  • Style your statement and create a musical blog on at www. uploaded.tv with your short portfolio jose antonio daniel craig is ugly, quantum of solace is a crap sean connery the best james bond Box Office: Quantum of Solace is the Biggest Bond Ever with $27M Friday; Possible $71.5M Weekend | /Film
  • His solace was the absorbing, incestuous, wheeler-dealing of local politics: in the council chamber he wasn't the invalid, he was the star.
  • We know music enriches the human spirit, feeds the emotions and provides solace, peace, beauty and passion to our inner being.
  • She finds solace of a kind in alcohol.
  • The white therefore signifieth joy, solace, and gladness, and that not at random, but upon just and very good grounds: which you may perceive to be true, if laying aside all prejudicate affections, you will but give ear to what presently I shall expound unto you. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • After the death of her son, Val found solace in the church.
  • Usually rendered as Good Samaritans, doctors in paintings typically hover near sickbeds or deathbeds, dispensing solace and advice.
  • The programme follows Gordon as he tries to help bereaved parents Greta and Andrew Rhodes seek solace following the death of their son.
  • The beauty guru believes that in response to an increasingly high-tech, genetically engineered world, her customers are seeking solace in things more artless, earthy and human.
  • Doesn't this renewal offer a glimmer of solace in a dark world? Times, Sunday Times

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