How To Use Stirred up In A Sentence
-
And how scarifyingly he would laugh at me, if he knew what comic relics of old prudish reflexes are stirred up by the contact with his mere human livingness.
The Brimming Cup
-
The unreclaimed United Nuclear waste pile stirred up bad feeling every day.
Yellow Dirt
-
But maybe the residual effect of the lockout stirred up some emotions.
-
Pronouncing the words distinctly, the voice came from her breast in a deep stream, and each word reeked with boiling blood, stirred up by outrage, poisoned by offence and mightily demanding vengeance.
The Man Who Was Afraid
-
The warmth and good feelings stirred up by godfather planet Jupiter will be good for your home life.
The Sun
-
That helped explain why the river was so murky and why all the crossings were feculent quagmires of cow dung and mud, stirred up by scores of hooves and further churned by trucks, whose tracks laced the riverbanks for miles above and below me.
-
His letter to the newspaper about racialism in schools has stirred up a real hornet's nest.
-
Indeed, contrary to the hopes raised by some of Obama's admirers in the anti-war movement -- or the fears stirred up in his neoconservative bashers -- Obama was not a closet peacenik, an isolationist, a "third worldist" or an "Arabist;" and his positions on Arab-Israeli issues reflected a view shared by most of his predecessors in office.
Leon T. Hadar: Obama's Mideast Policy: An Unpromising Drive Towards a Cost-Effective Pax Americana
-
Boortz stirred up fears that the virus was some sort of "bioterrorist" plot, asking, 'What better way to sneak a virus into this country than to give it to Mexicans?'
Field negro
-
Blue canvas shoes stirred up small puffs of soil, their toes threadbare and worn from the years of kicking the earth.
Possum Woman
-
His letter to the papers stirred up a real hornet's nest.
-
They are built that high because the runoff comes down the street in overflowing rapids stirred up by the cobblestone roadways.
San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas
-
The refugees' fate stirred up compassion around the world
-
If you've ever used a loofah in the shower, you've stirred up some stem cells.
-
There were sidelights too, upon the thoughts and emotions that might have stirred up Shylock to act as he did towards those whom he felt had forced him to suffer ostracism and humiliation.
-
As in other debates over contentious issues, the question is to what extent over-the-top rhetoric reflects popular sentiment and to what extent popular sentiment is stirred up by rhetoric.
-
Back up above-ground, trek across the surreal terrain that resembles a moon crater and examine the different types of Hawaiian lava: pahoehoe, which has a smooth and ropey surface, and a'a, which resembles stirred up brownies.
-
Saudi Arabia has extreme amounts of money to funnel into a corporation such as fox and get the tards stirred up or quited down ..
Think Progress » Right-wing Saudi dynasty endorses right-wing Fox News dynasty.
-
The white water that can be stirred up with a little wind often produces the conditions from which we can catch good tailor and jewfish.
-
In the parish lanes, sunlit banks of red campion, white stitchwort, bluebells and ferns are dusty from earth eroded by burrowing rabbits and stirred up by traffic.
Country Diary: St Dominic, Tamar Valley
-
The battlefield was silent. The only sounds were the whisper of wind through dry grass and the muted clank of weapons as soldiers stirred upon the walls.
-
This work stirred up another ground for controversy about the allowable solutions.
-
Since global warming received its Hollywood makeover, such talk has stirred up controversy in scientific circles.
-
The comment stirred up memories of Barb's sister who died of skin cancer two years ago.
-
His remarks about the lack of good women tennis players stirred up a hornet's nest.
-
It had been a long day, and the FBI meetings in Perryton had stirred up unwelcome memories.
-
That such a policy may have stirred up the enmity which resulted in last week's atrocious acts of violence should not be dismissed out of hand.
-
The appetite, being stirred up by the imaginative, effectually moves man to that which is proper and agreeable to his nature, just as when there is made a propension. and inclination in the principal and reasonable part.
Essays and Miscellanies
-
That helped explain why the river was so murky and why all the crossings were feculent quagmires of cow dung and mud, stirred up by scores of hooves and further churned by ATVs, whose tracks laced the riverbanks for miles above and below me.
-
talk of invading Iraq stirred up a political hornets' nest
-
The testimony which stirred up the bile of the holy fathers could not but be given, unless you had been willing basely to tergiversate and to expose yourself to their taunts.
The Rise of the Hugenots, Vol. 1 (of 2)
-
Thus, within the masque text, blackness is equated with beauty, love, and wisdom, but the prejudice stirred up by some ‘poor brainsick men’ has convinced the Daughters of Niger that whiteness is the precondition for beauty.
-
The news of the announcement from the Press Academy that it will honour five doyens of the profession has stirred up old memories.
-
His letter to the newspaper about racialism in schools has stirred up a real hornet's nest.
-
His turnabout from respectable citizen to thief had stirred up only mild amazement in him.
OUTCAST
-
The white water that can be stirred up with a little wind often produces the conditions from which we can catch good tailor and jewfish.
-
His photo stirred up bitter memories.
-
Earlier this year he stirred up Coronation Street, playing a cameo role as a bungling drayman who made a play for barmaid Shelley Unwin.
-
The new production targets have stirred up a hornet's nest .
-
If the independent and democratic Afghanistan allowed Baloch (the Baloch who are living on their own land within afghan federacy) to enjoy all democratic and human Rights within its federation, then on the other side of the border in Pakistani controlled Balochistan, the desire of Baloch people for independent Balochistan would stirred up, which is already intriguingly fascinating.
The News is NowPublic.com - NowPublic.com: The News is Now Public
-
Tom Cruise, a prominent Scientologist, is attempting to film (and act in) a movie about a failed attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler, but the German authorities have stirred up some trouble for him.
Mixed News
-
The staging of rock events at Old Trafford has stirred up controversy in the past, much of it stemming from the Oasis concert held there last year.
-
But in this same answer, that great saint recounts another admirable example of a great zeal, proceeding from a very good soul, which was however spoilt and vitiated by the excess of anger which it had stirred up.
-
She is what I call distressingly good; one doesn't want to be treated like a wild beast in a menagerie, and to be every now and then stirred up with a long stick.
Sowing and Reaping
-
When Charles got the manager's job, it stirred up a real hornet's nest, because everyone was angry about his fast promotion.
-
The operation stirred up sharp opposition in these semi-autonomous areas, which traditionally have been out-of-bounds to the Pakistani security forces.
-
At the back is a bank of fine silt that is invariably stirred up by the first few divers who venture inside, so try to be first there if you can!
-
This is partly because the work's previous presentation in a Broadway house under the auspices of Cameron Mackintosh, known for blockbuster musicals, stirred up a somewhat antagonistic debate: Is this theater or, h eaven forfend, a ballet?
Fair Feathered Friends
-
I well remember in my early days we used the feather duster-all that happened was that the movable dust was stirred up, only to settle over a wider area-so the feather duster is no longer used.
What Shall We Fight it With?
-
His photo stirred up bitter memories.
-
The helicopter stirred up clouds of dust.
-
And he really stirred up the opposition crowd the day he ran into an open goal, placed the ball on the ground and back-heeled it through for a goal!
-
The helicopter stirred up clouds of dust.
-
That stirred up a strong reaction from Republicans who objected to what they called intimidation, after which one of the prosecutors who was quoted denied any intent to bring official charges.
Sadly, Mostly True
-
The Society of Friends were the principal agitators in that movement, and the blessings and prayers of the poor liberated slaves ascended the altars of heaven on that great occasion; can they forget the kindlier feelings of their nature that was stirred up within them on that occasion, can they ever, think you, forget the glorious day which made their fellow creatures free; can they forget the first of August of that eventful year?
Biography of Mahommah G. Baquaqua, a Native of Zoogoo, in the Interior of Africa. (A Convert to Christianity,) With a Description of That Part of the World; Including the Manners and Customs of the Inhabitants, Their Religious Notions, Form of Government,
-
Anyway, I wasn't terribly sold on the alleged political riskiness of this movie but it did do boffo business in France and here, due in large part to the controversy stirred up by its foes..
-
His criticisms of the president stirred up a hornet's nest.
-
When the first ship entered, it stirred up dust into a swirl.
-
The photographs stirred up some painful memories.
-
For Sally it all came down to that one simple fact, unsullied by whatever muddy waters my rhetoric stirred up.
BETTER THAN THIS
-
The memories stirred up by these compositions are very purposeful, if only half-formed.
-
A stormier future stirred up by climate change will add to the mess.
Times, Sunday Times
-
A hot dry wind stirred up small whirlwinds of dust and sand, forcing her to squint.
-
I thought that friction would figure in to it somewhere, given that soap only lathers when stirred up by whatever means.
-
Even on 160 acres the fish ended up moving to within a few yards of the margins, driven onto the lee shore by the strong wind that stirred up the bottom into a rich soup of natural food.
-
As for Spain, she was hard pressed; French and American emissaries had stirred up strife in her colonies; and affairs were most "ticklish" in San Domingo.
William Pitt and the Great War
-
Former prime minister Ivan Kostov has stirred up further controversy on the Brady bond swop with a letter urging his successor Simeon Saxe-Coburg to call off the deal.
-
Both have maintained they have been hard-done by and both have stirred up a public furore over whether they are the victims of the justice system.
-
Of course the 'nester' or 'punkin roller,' as we contemptuously called the small farmer, began sifting in here and there in spite of our guns, but he was only a mosquito bite in comparison with the trouble which our cow-punchers stirred up.
Cavanaugh: Forest Ranger A Romance of the Mountain West
-
When Charles got the manager's job, it stirred up a real hornet's nest, because everyone was angry about his fast promotion.
-
Jehovah turns the hearts of kings and peoples as the rivers of water, and He stirred up these hostile nations when His people were in need of chastisement; He could wield their power as the axe which assails a tree is wielded by the woodman; He could call the mightiest conqueror to serve His secret purposes, as a man calls a dog to his foot. [
The Preacher and His Models The Yale Lectures on Preaching 1891
-
Plans to build a road through the gap have stirred up strong feelings on both sides of the long-running debate.
-
The uptake of some vaccinations fell as the media stirred up fears of possible side effects.
-
Because of the controversy that has been stirred up over clinical ecology, it has become increasingly difficult to get them to pay for these visits.
An Alternative Approach to Allergies
-
A road sweeper appeared, lights flashing, bleeper bleeping; its brushes stirred up the layer of dust into a cloud all around it.
Venom
-
Even the wording of the wedding invitation has stirred up interfamilial virulence.
-
Because the depth is always just slightly over your head you never get into areas where someone has stirred up a bunch of silt from the bottom.
Las Estacas - Riverside Aquatic Park In Morelos
-
The custumals of Ipswich and Yarmouth provided for fines, temporary suspension from, or even deprivation of, office in the case of sergeants who failed to perform their duties or who stirred up malice between members of the community.
-
His letter to the papers stirred up a real hornet's nest.
-
Yet despite his heroism, Freeman also stirred up storms of controversy.
-
We see the politics of divisiveness being stirred up in our society.
-
“When I mentioned Mr. Snow’s name belowdecks it stirred up quite a fuss,” she said.
The Berrybender Narratives
-
Both have maintained they have been hard-done by and both have stirred up a public furore over whether they are the victims of the justice system.
-
It needed to be left in peace and quiet, not be stirred up to listen to what, in her increasing ire, the nurse termed mummery and flummery.
The Brentons
-
But that very beauty, far from filling him with joy, stirred up memories of the Paradise he had lost.
-
I fear that Dubya will get his testosterone stirred up again and make some kind of oafish, I'm a tough-ass from Crawford remark, like his moronic "Bring it On" dalliance with idiocy.
Is Bush China Competent?
-
How many knew or worried about their dead relatives' organs until they were stirred up by showboating politicians, chancing lawyers, and medical crusaders?
-
But the reporter's calls obviously stirred up the somnolent possums within Labor and alerted government people to a delicious political opportunity waiting to be had.
-
“In the course of explaining the opinion of the divine Hippocrates and Galen,” he wrote in a letter, “I happened to delineate the veins on a chart, thinking that thus I might be able easily to demonstrate what Hippocrates understood by the expression και ιειυ, for you know how much dissension and controversy on venesection was stirred up, even among the learned.”
The Emperor of All Maladies
-
The brand's "Christmas Field Guide" Quarterly catalog stirred up trouble in 2003 with 45 images of teens engaging in sexual behavior.
-
This, he explained, kept farming from being developed peacefully, and it was amidst what he called a veritable civil war stirred up from abroad that so many errors were committed.
SANTA CRUZ RALLY
-
Iron particles and soluble iron had been carried there along a layer of denser water roughly 100 to 150 meters deep (the pycnocline), and the iron had been stirred up by storms that made it available to near-surface plankton in the dead of winter.
RealClimate