How To Use Tinge In A Sentence

  • Someone who really wanted to stop unsanctioned immigration would begin here, by busting the small contractors who employ these workers on a contingent basis.
  • Chain car collisions on the Interstate, hysteria-tinged second by second updates from the weatherman on the local TV stations, a stunned, awestricken look from the locals that almost made one think that this was surely the first time they had ever seen this precipitation thing occurring. Election Central Sunday Roundup
  • The question was tinged with a touch of sarcasm that made her embarrassed flush renew its bright shade and caused her to clench her fists.
  • These successes, if that is what they are, are tinged with a jealousy that legal writers elsewhere have a more publicly acknowledged involvement in moulding the law's development.
  • Selig said relocation of the team is subject to certain contingencies, including a formal vote (three-quarters needed) of ownership at the next owners meetings Nov. 17-18 in Chicago. USATODAY.com - Selig confirms Expos' move
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  • Baker, while on a visit to Göttingen, was inspired by Klein to study algebraic function theory.
  • In the midst of a losing streak, a contingent of backup players complained about playing time.
  • Huge crowds are expected to file past the coffin, which will be guarded by a contingent of Gentlemen at Arms and Yeoman of the Guard.
  • Just as his concessions were being broadcast, loyal contingents rolled into Saigon.
  • The set-off clause precludes the withdrawals of amounts standing to the customer's credit as long as this liability is contingent.
  • The stinger of the Japanese giant hornet is about a quarter-inch long and can inject venom containing a strong enzyme, which can dissolve human tissue.
  • The postmodern perspective, on the other hand, views the movement of historical time to be radically contingent and unpredictable.
  • The national anthem at last week's home opener at Fenway Park — performed by a Boston Pops contingent — included the now de rigueur obbligato of a military jet flyover. Flams and drags
  • The physical realm is the realm of contingent, temporal, concrete and fuzzy particulars.
  • Atlantic and the Pacific oceans, has been accompanied by results of a most interesting and impressive nature, and has created new conditions, not in the routes of commerce only, but in political geography, which powerfully affect our relations toward and necessarily increase our interests in any transisthmian route which may be opened and employed for the ends of peace and traffic, or, in other contingencies, for uses inimical to both. State of the Union Address (1790-2001)
  • The contingency approach isolates situational variables that affect managerial actions and organizational performance.
  • It is almost hard not to feel a tinge of sympathy for Sturridge. Times, Sunday Times
  • In turn, articulating cultural practices of the subjects so constituted mark contingent collective ‘histories’ with variable new meanings.
  • And classical reminiscences have, even with him, a dull musty tinge which recalls the antiquarian in his Cambridge college-rooms rather than the visitor to Florence and Rome. Proserpine and Midas
  • She had astonishing green eyes that had a slight tinge of blue.
  • The U.S. Marines operate the air-traffic control tower, and a small contingent of U.S. Army troops run the power-production facility.
  • Copper produces a reddish tinge, which is by no means unpleasant compared with the dazzling whiteness of the nickel deposit. Scientific American Supplement, No. 586, March 26, 1887
  • The era Gill refers to as ‘colonial’ has both a more extended temporal continuity and a more contingent nature.
  • Delicious berried aromas have an herbal tinge that follows through on a medium-bodied palate with juicy flavors and smooth tannins.
  • The cock's breast is tinged with chestnut.
  • But his first match in temporary charge of the team will be tinged with regret. The Sun
  • In other words, this is a story not about institutional sclerosis, but about the necessarily contingent process of institutional change.
  • Hence, God is a logically contingent being and so could have not-existed.
  • What it's like: self-satisfaction made into music - a trip-hop-tinged reinvention that could soundtrack an advert for a horrible men's fragrance. Times, Sunday Times
  • He claimed his goal was "tinged with a bit of disappointment" and rued the fact that United had only partly exploited their opportunity. Manchester United worried by Wayne Rooney injury after draw at Bolton
  • Bruttia Sicanium circumspicit ora Pelorum? quid primum mediumue canam, quo fine quiescam? auratasne trabis an Mauros undique postis35 an picturata lucentia marmora uena mirer, an emissas per cuncta cubilia nymphas? huc oculis, huc mente trahor. uenerabile dicam lucorum senium? te, quae uada fluminis infra cernis, an ad siluas quae respicis, aula, tacentis, 40 qua tibi tuta quies offensaque turbine nullo nox silet et pigros inuitant murmura somnos? an quae graminea suscepta crepidine fumant balnea et impositum riuis algentibus ignem? quaque uaporiferis iunctus fornacibus amnis45 ridet anhelantis uicino flumine nymphas? uidi artis ueterumque manus uariisque metalla uiua modis. labor est auri memorare figuras aut ebur aut dignas digitis contingere gemmas; quicquid et argento primum uel in aere minori50 lusit et enormis manus est experta colossos. dum uagor aspectu uisusque per omnia duco, calcabam necopinus opes. nam splendor ab alto defluus et nitidum referentes aera testae monstrauere solum; uarias ubi picta per artis55 gaudet humus superatque nouis asarota figuris: expauere gradus. A Villa at Tibur
  • Teams from over 60 nations will converge on Paris this week, including the highly-rated South African, Canadian, American and Australian contingents.
  • Mr. Ettinger's ideas, which he popularized in a 1963 book, "The Prospect of Immortality," spawned what some refer to as the cryonics movement, though by most accounts it is a small endeavor: a scattering of enterprises around the country with dues-paying customers totaling a few thousand, a few hundred of whom have actually been deep-frozen. NYT > Home Page
  • Thankfully it was at this point the elevator tinged and the doors hissed open.
  • The Italian, widely considered the other top candidate for the job, also has a natural contingency among neighboring countries whose needs could go unfavored by a central bank in German hands. Weber
  • “Walí‘ahd” which may mean heir-presumptive (whose heirship is contingent) or heir-apparent. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • The commander of the multinational division, incorporating our military contingent, is empowered to ensure tactical interaction with the brigade.
  • European Powers is exhausted on Poland, and that neither pity nor shame will induce them to break a thankless neutrality, here; but in the face of all barely probable contingencies, I doubt no more of the ultimate result, than I doubt of the ultimate performance of the justice of God. Border and Bastille
  • He opened his mouth - which was curved up with a slightly crooked grin - to speak, but thankfully the elevator tinged and the doors hissed open.
  • They downplay, or justify, the proliferation of white supremacist - tinged paramilitary groups, police violence, and racial profiling.
  • And while hitting the top 10 has created a blizzard of credibility-tinged hype around the group, they just can't live up to their radical image.
  • Preparation includes making backups of all software (including operating systems) and making a contingency plan.
  • The long conservative debate with liberals and secularists gave the movement more than a tinge of rationalism and empiricism.
  • California herb with white conic or bell - shaped flowers usually green - tinged.
  • Furthermore, future international progress towards peace seemed likely to remain contingent on the strength and durability of the Uprising.
  • Fiedler Contingency Theory's predictive function to leadership effectiveness needs to be further studied.
  • In fact, practical discourse depends on contingent subject matter for its very existence. The Politics of Redress - crime, punishment and penal abolition
  • A person does not support his government because he is loyal but because the government has arranged special contingencies.
  • The contingency is 415 million, and there is another 400 million contingency tolling, please look at page two of the estimate, the tunnel boring estimated cost is $350 million dollars. Open Letter to the Council: Take the Same Damn Risk You’re Asking Us To Take « PubliCola
  • Ok, so I did something which to me is hilarious, but at the same time I have a slight tinge of guilt for doing it, because its misleading.
  • A ryot cultivating alluvial lands, and having no seed, can hardly ever repay his advances; but it does not follow that he has been a loser, for he, perhaps, could not value his time, labor, and rent altogether at half the amount; and as long as this system is kept within moderate bounds, it answers much better than private cultivation to the manufacturer, and has many contingent advantages to the cultivator. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • My purpose is to show that poverty and misfortune make no invidious distinctions of “race, color, or previous condition,” but that wealth unduly centralized oppresses all alike; therefore, that the labor elements of the whole United States should sympathize with the same elements in the South, and in some favorable contingency effect some unity of organization and action, which shall subserve the common interest of the common class. Black and White
  • His flashes of light-hearted humour were commonly tinged with an awesome critical irony.
  • It was a victory for them that must have been tinged with great regret as to what might have been. Times, Sunday Times
  • For sustainability and depth, we maintained the next-up company on a two-hour launch string, while keeping the third company down for future contingencies.
  • Or rather, a medium-sized pile of long white tentacles tinged with pale green. Times, Sunday Times
  • His voice is not tinged by irony or scurrility; it reveals instead a mixture of insolence and bewilderment. The Times Literary Supplement
  • On election day, the regime brought contingents of troops into the city to vote for its candidates.
  • I really enjoy the poetry found in a word, in it's sound, spelling and history of meaning no matter what language ... thank you Denise for your beautiful images this morning and also to Kristin's accent tingeing her "rrrs" suggesting foreign lands and other stories ... Terroir - French Word-A-Day
  • The trick is to establish just enough consistency an immediate analysis task – attempts to build a consistent map of human knowledge are doomed because human knowledge itself is messy, contingent, and often self-contradictory. Crowd-Sourced Carbon Calculators (inspired by David Mackay) | Serendipity
  • There is practical certainty as to payment, and that contingency does not affect the existence of the liability.
  • Logically then, Stauffenberg's moral leitmotiv should be traced back to this spirituality which, for Holderlin, was pietistically tinged. Signandsight.com
  • Brooker, a stout and flabby man, with pouches under biliously tinged eyes, bowed and broke into a violent perspiration, not wholly due to the shiny black frock-coat suit of broadcloth donned for the occasion. The Dop Doctor
  • Under proposed amendments to the Civil Contingencies Bill, the police will be able to evacuate danger areas should a ‘catastrophic incident’ occur.
  • The one remaining route that has the potential to allow these claims to be run is that of the contingency fee system. Times, Sunday Times
  • She will always have a blueish tinge and she gets a little bit breathless.
  • Of course, being the first story arc after the One More Day silliness, this arc is going to have to live up to some stringent standards, like whether this story's quality was contingent upon it being a single Spider-Man (which is questionable, as the best aspects of this comic were the old-fashioned superhero stuff and the return of the supporting cast - neither of which hinged on Peter being married) and forcing the new potential love interest to be compared instantly to Mary Jane, which is a tough comparison for a new character, although Carlie Cooper hold up pretty well, I think (she even has an alliterative name!) as the nerdy, yet attractive, police scientist roommate/best friend of Harry Osborn's new girlfriend. The Amazing Spider-Man #546-548 Review | Comics Should Be Good! @ Comic Book Resources
  • An overdose of sun, sea, sand and chlorine can give lighter hair a green tinge.
  • Stingers can shoot down aircraft, including civilian jetliners, flying at low altitudes.
  • The cadet contingent also provided a guard at the Cenotaph for Tuesday's remembrance service and the catafalque party demonstrated a memorable and solemn performance.
  • The thistles, knapweeds and willowherbs are truer purple, but the bluish nettle-leaved bellflowers and field scabious are also tinged with that mysterious shadow which has more to do with night than golden day. Country diary: Wenlock Edge
  • There are rainforest walks, 4WD excursions, bird safaris and a pool - crucial, as stinger jellyfish mean you can't swim in the sea for half the year.
  • Lifting up the sleeve of my kimono, I pointed at the white bandages still wrapped around my arm, which still had faint tinges of pink to it.
  • Known also as the sea wasp and the marine stinger, box jellyfish have killed about 65 people in the past century.
  • In any case, it fully confirms it as concerns one essential point, what I have called the contingent nature of society and the attendant pathos.
  • Yes, there are a number of uncertainties — Will contingent obligations (like guaranty claims, or liabilities on asserted but as yet unliquidated lawsuit claims) become due? The Volokh Conspiracy » Greek Bailout and Liquidity Risk
  • They jump effortlessly from new wave-tinged rockers to Queen-like bombast to stunning Beatlesque ballads to jazzy art-pop, without losing their touch with hooks that lodge themselves in your cranium and refuse to let go. Tony Sachs: One More Once: A Listen Back At The Records That Made 2010 More Bearable
  • In my view he would be derelict in his duty if he didn't have a contingency plan.
  • Although her leaving was not untinged by disappointment, we felt we had failed her in some way.
  • From no point of view could the West look so lovely as from that lattice with the garland of jessamine round it, whose white stars and green leaves seemed now but grey pencil outlines - graceful in form, but colourless in tint - against the gold incarnadined of a summer evening - against the fire-tinged blue of an August sky, at eight o'clock p.m. Shirley, by Charlotte Bronte
  • Of course, rituals can be contrived both to reduce contingency [so-called confirmatory rites] and to create it [rites of resistance]; the connections here are multiple and complex. Against Exceptionalism: A New Approach to Games
  • In effect, growth is contingent on improved incomes for the mass of the low-income population.
  • She was a tall, big-boned woman whose straight blond hair was faded, and tinged with gray.
  • But the movement is also tinged with a dark side.
  • He then taught there as a docent, visiting Göttingen in 1901.
  • Prepare operations people and company spokespeople for contingencies, and review the purchase of recall insurance or related products.
  • He later identifies that pathological disposition as a form of obsessional neurosis tinged with narcissistic tendencies.
  • Republicans, strong in the Jeffersonian faith, brought themselves to the support of the Tenneseean with difficulty; but eventually both northern and southern wings of the Crawford contingent alined themselves against the Administration. The Reign of Andrew Jackson
  • If, for instance, a sum of money is payable on a contingency, there is no debt owing or accruing.
  • The sapwood, frequently 3 to 4 inches thick, is white with a reddish tinge.
  • They also recommended the issuance of a policy letter instructing award-fee officials to commit funds as contingent liabilities when evaluation periods begin.
  • The flowers are 2 in. long, bell-shaped; the petals shining lemon-yellow, with a tinge of brown on the outside, whilst the sepals are like a number of fish-scales, overlapping each other down the outside of the campanulate tube. Cactus Culture for Amateurs Being Descriptions of the Various Cactuses Grown in This Country, With Full and Practical Instructions for Their Successful Cultivation
  • They resembled flies and their stingers were still very powerful, according to him.
  • The invertebrates are choking fishing nets and poisoning the catch with their toxic stingers, fishers say.
  • The main initial difficulty was to secure from the Emperor the acceptance of Pottinger's demands that the imperial commissioners must have plenipotentiary powers, and that they must negotiate in person.
  • Three in 0 Gauge - Stinger/Tsumani (1) MCR 200 amp H/O Alternator (2) Power Acoustik PCX 5 farad Capacitors Are you a big huge fan of ear blowing, eye popping, car alarm triggering, windsheild breaking bass? WN.com - Articles related to Jackie Chan wants kung fu as Olympic sport
  • They say that the coast of Arabia is naturally very red, and as there are many great storms in this country, which raise great clouds of dust towards the skies, which are driven by the wind into the sea, and the dust being _red_ tinges the water of that colour, whence it got the name of the Red Sea. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 06 Arranged in Systematic Order: Forming a Complete History of the Origin and Progress of Navigation, Discovery, and Commerce, by Sea and Land, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time
  • We feel a tinge of guilt that we expiate in this season of giving. William Grassie: Christmas From The Outside In: A Meditation
  • her greying hair was tinged blond
  • He made an art that was a net to catch contingency.
  • The gray layer of stratus has returned, contingent with the cook-fires of the enemy.
  • Episode three revolves around a prank that goes horribly wrong and appears to have brought tragedy - tinged with jubilation - in its wake. Times, Sunday Times
  • A large contingent of police was deployed at the terminal and the players were whisked away to a waiting car at a back door. Times, Sunday Times
  • Reports from pleasure anglers suggest that the fish are still feeding and with recent rains adding a tinge of much needed colour to the otherwise clear water prospects look good.
  • It recommended that the prohibition on contingency fees and other forms of incentive should be re-examined.
  • The tale is innocently romantic without a tinge of irony.
  • Eight supporting staff - a contingent commander, adjutant, cook, quartermaster, and coach for each discipline - completed the team, and where possible these members also competed as shooters.
  • I argue that it was mainly by insisting upon the ontological implications of this concept of possibility that he came to form a concept of contingency that he considered sufficiently strong to counter Spinozist necessitarianism.
  • Freud's Jewish family fled Berlin for London in 1933, when he was just eleven (his father, an architect, was Sigmund Freud's son), yet his adolescent drawings retain a German tinge, feeling their way between the chilly stares of Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) or of the Magic Realists (Alexander Kanoldt, for instance) and the more recent, doom-laden stridencies of neoromanticism and noir. The Way to All Flesh
  • Voters rejected measures to ban most lawsuits resulting from car accidents, limit shareholder lawsuits and slash lawyers' contingency fees.
  • In fact, practical discourse depends on contingent subject matter for its very existence. The Politics of Redress - crime, punishment and penal abolition
  • During seminars at Göttingen on the magnetic resonance techniques of Rabi and of Kastler, it had occurred to me that because of the analogy between an atom and a radio dipole antenna, (a), alignment of the atom should show up in its optical absorption cross section, and (b), electron impact should produce aligned excited atoms. Hans G. Dehmelt - Autobiography
  • It did not forbid the disinherison of direct descendants, inasmuch as it did not legislate against a contingency which no Roman lawgiver of that era could have contemplated. Ancient Law Its Connection to the History of Early Society
  • Songs of profound depth were tinged with an irrepressible air of mischief. Times, Sunday Times
  • This paper, by analyzing the meaning, scope of application and the insurer's right of subrogation under seller's contingency insurance, tries to expound this special kind of marine cargo insurance.
  • Rules have distinct advantages as behavioral guides, but they can promote rigid responding that is insensitive to changed contingencies.
  • The roughly oval-shaped leaves are sub-divided into smaller leaflets, tinged bronze when young and turning green with age. The Sun
  • Brandon's been a friend of mine for a really long time, but Eric Stephenson is the one who masterfully orchestrated the deal to co-publish King City with TokyoPop and Image Comics," Keatinge said. More from TokyoPop + Image on King City’s return | Robot 6 @ Comic Book Resources – Covering Comic Book News and Entertainment
  • The White House is thought to favour a far smaller contingent. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's like you're trying to go about your life, and make dinner...but the roof is off of your house, and the walls are falling down." would thank her daughter -- she called six-year-old Matilda's "bravery and exuberance is the example that I take with me in my work and in my life" -- is a major development, though one that, presumably, did not come without a tinge of sadness. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • On this morning she was softly and shyly radiant. Her eyes were dreamily bright, her cheeks genuine 15)peachblow, her expression a happy one, 16)tinged with reminiscence.
  • Only 52 per cent actually test their contingency plans with any frequency.
  • This contingency planning is something that women often do well. Everything You Need to Know for Success in Business
  • I have a tinge of regret that I didn't accept her offer.
  • Nothing is easier than to give Christian asceticism a Socialist tinge.
  • Eastern Asia Minor, that is Cappadocia, Pontus and Armenia, he left alone, and its contingents would still be arrayed on the Persian side in both the great battles to come. The Ancient East
  • His dark hair was just tinged with grey.
  • If biology is ruled by contingency rather than necessity then why do we find duplicated designs?
  • For any attempt to resolve the issue by pronouncing the work of critique to be wholly isomorphous with the contingent material experiences that gave rise to it or, alternatively, as sublating (aufheben) aesthetic experience into pure abstractions invariably forecloses on the ethical implications of critical practice. Pfau, Coda & Works Cited'
  • It differs in its lighter brown colour, not becoming darker or purpled on the breast; in the extension of the yellow colour all over the upper part of the back and on the wing coverts; in the lighter yellow of the side plumes, which have only a tinge of orange, and at the tips are nearly pure white; and in the comparative shortness of the tail cirrhi. The Malay Archipelago
  • At times her story is invigoratingly liberating, at others it's tinged with sadness.
  • Investment incentives are contingent on execution by specified proposal expiry date, and may be withdrawn at any time prior to acceptance.
  • The work artfully juxtaposes two complex, quasi-symphonic percussion instruments piano and gamelan ensemble, East and West each making fluent-sounding attempts at adopting the accent of the other, with the piano's unusual tuning giving a quirky tinge to its tones, a slight acridity to would-be octaves. Music review: Post-Classical Ensemble recognizes the work of Lou Harrison
  • Brettingen, who hit .478 with 44 RBI and a .739 slugging percentage in 2002, is picking up right where he left off, hitting .438 in the young season.
  • He carried out a large survey of stellar magnitudes while at the Göttingen Observatory, publishing Aktinometrie (the first part in 1910, the second in 1912).
  • It is a measure of the president's continued pulling power that the Europeans, who have seemingly grudged every extra pair of boots the NATO secretary general has persuaded them to dispatch up until now, are to stump up around 7,000 additional troops for the war in Afghanistan alongside the 30,000 more committed by a president who has now more than doubled the U.S. contingent there. How is Obama being viewed in Europe?
  • One shape, flying in the center, was larger than the rest, so large that it seemed the green tinge in the sky was a re - flection of the sunlight on the dragon's scales. Dragons of a Fallen Sun
  • Was his extravagant creative production an apotropaic ritual that ultimately failed in its aim, or did the procession of his creature, so ferocious, but with a tinge of pathos to it, prove somehow overwhelming for him?
  • Everything is tinged with disappointment. Times, Sunday Times
  • In all, 14 shuttlers will be included in the country's 39-member Olympic contingent.
  • A sheepish flush tinged my cheeks and Diego mumbled something in rapid Spanish about the sister he never had.
  • Even the notions we perceive as a priori true may be contingent upon our perceptual framework.
  • Contingencies such as unrecoverable medical or dental expenses, hospital expenses and loss of wages are also provided for.
  • In its contingency planning, such a force would anticipate issues of coordination with other countries and determine how its activities would be directed on the ground.
  • Once "vocality" is reimagined from the waver and give of textual inscription, it is always at base equi-vocation, a case of present contingency — evincing, without vouching for, the existence of a potential otherness in one and the same wording. Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
  • The actuarial report does not take into account any general or specific contingencies, nor does it provide for a calculation of the loss of employment or pension benefits.
  • Ripe, floral peachy aromas with distant soft buttery scents offers up lemon tinged almond flavours that roll on to a lingering mineral edge on the finish.
  • Although I feel a slight tinge of anxiety and apprehension in the air that surrounds you, it's greatly masked by the strength of your confidence.
  • Broncos MLB Al, the team's leading tackler and lone veteran linebacker healthy, was having an Pro Bowl-caliber season before suffering a neck stinger on Sunday.
  • The French contingent certainly made their presence known at this year's conference.
  • It need not be the optimal strategy in any future; it will, however, yield satisfactory outcomes in both easy-to-envision futures and hard-to-anticipate contingencies.
  • It is almost hard not to feel a tinge of sympathy for Sturridge. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘The rating agencies don't give you any equity credit for convertibles, so we see the contingency feature bringing that disparity into line through the accounting rules,’ says Malcolm.
  • He said that generous provision had been made within the existing costs that would enable the council to deal with any possible contingencies.
  • Lateral or terminal on shoots of the preceding season; sterile flowers oblong-cylindrical, 1/4 inch in length; anthers yellow, red-tinged: fertile flowers on the upper side of the twig, erect, cylindrical; cover-scales broad, much larger than the purple ovuliferous scales, terminating in a long, recurved tip. Handbook of the Trees of New England
  • Neurapraxia of the brachial plexus or cervical nerve roots, often called a stinger or burner, causes pain and paresthesia in a single upper extremity, usually radiating from the neck into the shoulder, arm, or hand.
  • Alexander had thousands of Macedonian and allied soldiers surrounding Thebes including, as Arrian emphasizes, contingents from Plataea, Orchomenus, and Thespiae—three nearby cities that had suffered severely at the hands of the Theban army in the past. Alexander the Great
  • A second type of contractual-debt subordination is a contingency debt arrangement.
  • They are historically contingent, existing only in their specific forms at specific times and places, with biology and society interfused. The Special Forces Rebels
  • But the contingent vegetarian still has to face some inconvenient facts. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Evoking images of viridescent dragon scales, the pointed, blue-green leaves create a compact, deer-proof assemblage that's infused with reddish purple tinges.
  • He could not help but feel the slightest tinge of frustration.
  • Too often, sales would close a major deal with a customer contingent on a feature that engineering had dropped from the release a month before.
  •   I looked at the books on the shelves, which I still shared with my father: my music books, of which I was still very fond, among them Twenty Royal Phantasies for Three Viols;  my books on painting, one of which, a translation of Lomazzo's delightful A tracte containing the Artes of curious Paintinge, had shepherded my own earliest assays at drawing; and my parents 'volumes of works by the most noble Sir Philip Sidney. The Stream and The Torrent
  • Military planners in the US are already drawing up contingency plans, focusing on suspected underground facilities.
  • Because you still make your own dresses and teach dancing," replied the pupil, with a quick sigh at the thought of some smart bursch in the Prussian contingent. Barlasch of the Guard
  • Rhodolite, a red variety that usually has a tinge of purple in it, is a mixture of almandine and pyrope.
  • All that formic acid coming from those thousands of stingers probably produces quite a sensation.
  • The parchment directs him to a volcano in Iceland and tells him: Descende, audax viator… et terrestre centrum attinges Descend, bold traveler… and you will attain the center of the Earth. First Contact
  • The pool of truckers had split into two contingents-one that supported full unionization and another that simply wished to form an association.
  • Weber's later years at Göttingen were devoted to work in electrodynamics and the electrical structure of matter.
  • Vennligst merk at ønsket dato for opphentingen kan variere. Archive 2009-07-01
  • Margin Rule 5-28 imposes various requirements in relation to margined contingent liability transactions.
  • But the more rapidly an organism learns, the more vulnerable it is to adventitious contingencies.
  • Suddenly, more sounds of sneezes reached my ears as Angela and Sara pounded into my room, both their noses tinged slightly pink and twitching, rabbit-like.
  • But it has also meant that I'm now seeing and hearing that word - a word tinged with hate and violence - more than I have in years. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • But of course there is no contingency in novels, only writing and plot, and the point of this twist of events, I think, has less to do with punishment of any kind, of the self or of others, than with what the narrator calls the "monothematic" nature of pain and humiliation. Ian McEwan's 'Solar': The Fat Man's Vengeance (New York Review)
  • Lee closed his mouth, his cheeks tinged a light shade of crimson.
  • This bait took "capitally," as Van used to say, and not only were two hundred shanties built, but the praise of the "ginerous contractors" was in every mouth; and "Hurrah for Lofin, Van Stingey, & Co.," became a regular toast among the men, as they went to spend a shilling in the company's grocery store. The Cross and the Shamrock Or, How To Defend The Faith. An Irish-American Catholic Tale Of Real Life, Descriptive Of The Temptations, Sufferings, Trials, And Triumphs Of The Children Of St. Patrick In The Great Republic Of Washington. A Book For The Enter
  • The strong British contingent suffered mixed fortunes.
  • The outstanding leave entitlement is absolutely crippling that organisation, and because of this nonsense its contingent liability has just gone through the roof.
  • I republishing (republishing) a tinge textbook yesterday evening.
  • He wears a black velour tracksuit with white piping and white high-top sneakers, and his dark, auburn-tinged hair is cut short on the sides and longer and somewhat spiky on top.
  • This, combined with some soft-core porn, sent what was left of the family contingent screaming back to the suburbs.
  • Voters rejected measures to ban most lawsuits resulting from car accidents, limit shareholder lawsuits and slash lawyers' contingency fees.
  • Those same frozen fries gain similar respectability sopping up the cognac-tinged pan juices of rock 'n' roll beef, a staple of local Vietnamese menus that grew on me here.
  • Heavy contingent of police and paramilitary forces rushed to the spot.
  • We figured someone had tried to produce an extra virgin olive oil version, as it had an unpleasant green tinge; it also lacked a generous glug of milk, or, better still, buttermilk, to give it a creamy edge.
  • Prevendo essa contingência, o governo do país vizinho do Canadá, conhecido pelos seus padrões de consumo insustentáveis e elevados níveis de poluição, começa a afirmar que o Canadá não tem qualquer jurisdição sobre a passagem do norte embora esta passagem fique por entre ilhas canadianas e o continente. Leituras
  • Typically, spines and stingers are radiopaque, so radiography or ultrasonography may be used to locate any remaining pieces.
  • Californians also turned down Proposition 202, a proposal to limit lawyers' contingency fees and encourage early settlement of lawsuits.
  • Gossip said she neglected Michael, and local attitudes became tinged with an unexpressed sympathy when he was around. THE GREENSTONE GRAIL: THE SANGREAL TRILOGY ONE
  • A Theory of Everything must have a unique finite model if the problem of contingency, and the potential existence of a multiverse is to be eliminated. Archive 2009-06-01
  • For dessert, they picked at little beignets spiked with amaretto (okay), wheels of vanilla-yogurt semifreddo (good), and honey-tinged mascarpone tarts capped with twirls of candied orange peel (very good).
  • Solitary species such as cicada killers, carpenter bees, digger wasps and mud daubers use their stingers to subdue the insects and spiders upon which they prey.
  • Of particular interest, a nominal roll of all participants (including non-Australian contingents), will be included as an appendix.
  • I was mulling this when God spoke to me again, this time in a voice every bit as clear but now tinged with a hint of asperity: "Just go do what I'm sending you to do. Eliot Daley: My Memo To Atheists: Why I Choose God
  • They come from the alternative left originally, a sector which at its extremes is tinged with violence.
  • The crater appears to be composed of a hard grey clinkstone, much fissured; but lower down the mountain, the rock is softer, and has a bluish tinge. The Hawaiian Archipelago
  • The deputation saluted, returned to the fallen-out contingent, which gravely unpiled its arms and marched back to its lines, amid a little desultory cheering from some few by-standers who realised what was taking place. On the Heels of De Wet

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