How To Use Vocation In A Sentence

  • Of course, Whitty himself ain’t exactly a peach; he loves him some torture, and buries knives in bellies with minimal provocation; when it comes to witch-hunting, he’s of the “burn her alive now, ask questions … well, don’t really bother asking questions, it’s just so damn fun to burn people, let’s do it some more!” school. Cry of the Banshee « Skid Roche
  • The judge was making the point that the Pledge, in its current incarnation, is only about 50 – 60 years old and that the language “under God” was inserted at a particular time in response to concerns of that time and that the Pledge is not some sacrosanct invocation from the founders. The Volokh Conspiracy » Judge Reinhardt’s Dig on Sarah Palin
  • Two victims die in the first scene, an effective evocation of place, character and a whole range of powerful emotions. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although he had not howled once, his snarling and growling, combined with his thirst, had hoarsened his throat and dried the mucous membranes of his mouth so that he was incapable, except under the sheerest provocation, of further sound. CHAPTER XVI
  • Core skills are those which are basic to all vocational and academic achievement.
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  • The tradesmen like lohar, tarkhan (carpenter), nai (barber) and darzi (tailor) traditionally working in the villages since centuries - mostly paid in the form of grain at the end of each rabi and kharif seasons - are no more pursuing their vocations. Light Within
  • As the judge reminded the jury, in interview Bodrul denied that he was acting in self - defence and he said that he was not acting under provocation.
  • By analyzing current teaching status of bench work specialty in middle vocational schools, this paper presents the thoughts and methods to reform the teaching pattern of bench work specialty.
  • It is a dazzling display of luminous atoms, a kind of pantheistic evocation. The French Impressionists (1860-1900)
  • The term implies something less than the ideal outcome of a war: reservation, equivocation, ambiguity, limitation—substitutes for victory. Between War and Peace
  • So Frances Hodgson Rondel must, one way and another, have got quite an earful about Professor Shandy's strange avocation. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • They look for people with a vocation for teaching. The Sun
  • After the drivers were introduced by a traveling emcee called ‘The Motor Mouth,’ an invocation and the national anthem, cars left at one-minute intervals to cheers from the crowd.
  • Hejazi gave a speech, which boomed from the speakers over the convocation mall, leaving cookie nibblers stunned.
  • It criticized the company for long working hours, a "militaristic" work culture and mass employment of low-wage vocational college students. Reports Allege Continued Abuse at Chinese Electronics Firm
  • These should include the Lord's Prayer, a confession and absolution, a short reading from the Gospels with a request to our Lord for his help, and an invocation of the Holy Spirit.
  • Yet she has set her heart in turning her passion for art and craft into a full-time vocation.
  • Regarding politics and the art of government as, equally with arms, their natural vocations, they have never given the Nation a statesman, and their greatest politicians achieved eminence by advocating ideas which only attracted attention by their balefulness. Andersonville
  • The degrees which Oxford and Cambridge conferred in Grammar did not involve residence or entitle the recipients to a vote in Convocation; but the conferment was accompanied by ceremonies which were almost parodies of the solemn proceedings of graduation or inception in a recognised Faculty, a birch taking the place of a book as a symbol of the power and authority entrusted to the graduand. Life in the Medieval University
  • Jan has a vocation for teaching.
  • It is also clear that the most desirable way forward would actively involve the University Convocation.
  • The equivocation of its affirmation - if affirmation it be - is first among the defects that ought to disqualify this proposal.
  • The ministry exists to help upbuild members in their faith so that they can evangelise, instruct others and fulfil their vocation of prayer.
  • Certain people were responsible for stopping conflicts, and there were ways to deal with provocations and ways to make peace.
  • A polite tongue provided a shield of tactful silence and banal pleasantries that staved off needless provocation and harm.
  • Works like these are the focal point of a community's spiritual life, prayers, and invocations for ancestral intervention.
  • Minor building alterations brought forth mighty dagga plants; cannas migrated without provocation into any gap left by the lantana and inkberry.
  • Often these prophets saw themselves as reformers, who had a vocation to transform the religious vision of their time.
  • To some extent "workaholism" is a term others use to describe people who prefer to describe themselves as having a vocation. The limbic system stands up for its rights
  • In the East, they also delegated the chrismation and invocation of the HS, but in the West, the bishops reserved these things to themselves. Stand Firm
  • The same year she created her first piece, which was an evocation of a Gothic Virgin.
  • After the invocational four-poem opening of 'Let's Just Say,' the book moves to 'Some of These Daze,' Bernstein's prose dispatches in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, and on to the acerbic intimacies of 'World on Fire,' which critiques clichés like 'what are we fighting for?' The Chicago Blog: Press Release: Bernstein, Girly Man
  • The Standing Committee of Convocation may debate and submit a representative view on any issue which affects the University, and its aims are essentially to support and promote the interests of the University in the widest possible sense.
  • From Megiddo in 1485 BC to Kosovo in ad 1999, this argument runs, the only thing all wars have had in common has been to increase governments' powers of convocation and coercion.
  • The trainers have a programme to teach them vocational skills.
  • And invocation of religious belief did not necessarily provide a defence to what was otherwise a valid claim. Times, Sunday Times
  • refrain from using Christ's name or title or any other denominational appeal" during invocations and instead use "nonsectarian" names for God. The Washington Times stories: Latest Headlines
  • It could well be that he has a real vocation.
  • For a fan of music, like Ian obviously is, this job is the proverbial kid-in-a-sweet-shop vocational choice.
  • And unlike the elegies the sonnets are predominantly poems of invocation, apostrophe and direct address, he writes.
  • So I would say most of it ultimately is our advocation.
  • When I first learned of that correlation in college, I at once associated the idea of theophany with that of vocation and that of baptism with both. Theophany and vocation
  • Young’s evocation of reggae is not located in language or even a evoking of the discourse of reggae. Translation: Better Than Never Kissing At All : Kwame Dawes : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation
  • Of course these jokes are not just jokes; they are a joker's definition of a writer's vocation.
  • He used to suddenly get excited, for you could tell that he was excited, and rhapsodize at the slightest provocation about baseball - all he needed was the slimmest excuse, and sometimes none.
  • Their methods of cover-up and provocation indicate a consciousness of guilt and a fear of exposure.
  • In a similar way, the ritual invocation of "what about the Russians? Red Hunting in the Promised Land: Anticommunism and the Making of America
  • Nowadays the vocational education of our country grows rapidly, however there is a relative delay in the construction of the curriculum.
  • As soon as someone tells us how invocations of the supernatural will help us solve a problem, they will be embraced immediately.
  • I've worked with a lot of good folks over my career, and I appreciate the opportunity afforded to me in this 'avocation' to have worked alongside each of them. High Plains Journal: Ag News
  • I think we've neglected vocational education in the most tragic way.
  • Chris Travers says: fatfox: His point (2) is that the advocation of genocide is, in any case, an example of what free speech means. The Volokh Conspiracy » Could Students Be Suspended for “Beat the Jew” Game
  • Instead of a damning critique he offers redemption through the invocation of a moral imperative.
  • The other essential part of the marriage service is the invocation of divine blessing.
  • Vicki Black writes of the hard but grace-filled task of rediscovering and extending her vocation to the diaconate beyond the altar and beyond her work in religious publishing to embrace the care of her small children at home.
  • History has much to contribute to vocational education in both its narrower and broader definitions.
  • If we could offer a tip it would be to never say tally-ho, whatever the provocation.
  • Holding the bible to be “the Word of God, without error” given all the advocation of rape and genocide within it is professionally compromising, to say the least. Kit Freak « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • In Brown's late paintings and in the work Gillespie has been making in recent years, symbols are used less for confession and purgation than for spiritual instigation and invocation.
  • Arch. suorum suffraganeorum sibi subditorum universorum, prælatorum pariter et cleri procuratorum, convocationem isto anno apud Londonias semel et secundo, propter gravamina et oppressiones, de die in diem per summum pontificem et D. Notes and Queries, Number 183, April 30, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc
  • The new Act allows for the creation of vocational schools.
  • There is a troubling darkness in its soul, which the righteous rhetoric and cynical evocation of God seem only to enhance.
  • As they wait for assistance to have the man taken into custody, they studiously ignored taunts and provocations and remained astonishingly polite throughout.
  • The course has a vocational emphasis.
  • With such diverse output as her world music album Where Rivers Meet an evocation of her Bengali connections, with clarinettist brother Idris and the thrilling jazz virtuosity of her trio's recent live recording, pianist Zoe Rahman covers plenty of contemporary bases. This week's new live music
  • I have evited striking you in your ain house under muckle provocation, because I am ignorant how the laws here may pronounce respecting burglary and hamesucken, and such matters; and, besides, I would not willingly hurt ye, man, e'en on the causeway, that is free to us baith, because I mind your kindness of lang syne, and partly consider ye as a poor deceived creature. The Fortunes of Nigel
  • The most admired vocations are manual workers such as cook or driver.
  • Something curious to the unaccustomed eye, these curling, clutching, digitated members raised above their usual range and common avocations, suddenly endowed with speech, and holding forth there in the silent upper air for the whole human economy. The Convert
  • The first concerns individuals engaged in occupations or avocations in which chasing the spotlight and thriving on the adulation of others are not only appropriate and adaptive but a sine qua non for success.
  • Well, I have to be around campus this weekend to participate in the honors convocation, so I get to wear my pretty little skirt, hood, and scholarly looking square cap for three whole hours on Saturday!
  • I thus associate the compact world of the admirable hill-top, the world of a predominant golden-brown, with a general invocation of sensibility and fancy, and think of myself as going forth into the lingering light of summer evenings all attuned to intensity of the idea of compositional beauty, or in other words, freely speaking, to the question of colour, to intensity of picture. Italian Hours
  • One of the soldiers responsible for this act of blatant provocation explained the rationale.
  • Thrse is tormented by the pull of multiple vocations: warrior, priest, apostle, doctor, martyr. RIDDLE ME THIS
  • Filmmakers, in the image of Rossellini and Fassbinder, should remain faithful to that vocation, because without it, they will disappear along with their art.
  • That is the keynote of the Crébillon novel: it is the handbook, with illustrative examples, of the business, employment, or vocation of flirting, in the most extensive and intensive meanings of that term comprehensible to the eighteenth century. A History of the French Novel, Vol. 1 From the Beginning to 1800
  • A signature-revocation effort by opponents made a dent in the final tally but was not enough to keep the initiative off the ballot.
  • The chancellor's official duty is to confer degrees upon graduands at convocation.
  • Children were sent to college and frequently went on to pursue professional vocations, such as law, education, or medicine.
  • Lesser butlers will abandon their professional being for the private one at the least provocation.
  • It may be obtained through trade journals, business associations, academic institutions and vocational groups.
  • For the prevention of at least some war, what matters is non-provocation and reassurance by means of defensiveness.
  • At times, he has looked burdened and golf has seemed more like a job than a vocation. Times, Sunday Times
  • And, sheer provocation:Does this Benetton poster encourage joyriding?
  • The basic function of industrial injury insurance includes industrial injury prevention, industrial injury compensation and vocational rehabilitation.
  • I would not like to hurt your feelings by calling your avocation a trade! Crown and Anchor Under the Pen'ant
  • My invocation of the idolatrized frontiersman had the desired effect. Nevermore
  • In 2003, the military, even under government control, staged a series of provocations that undermined the peace talks.
  • ‘Purge the evil,’ some chanted in Chinese, a common Falun Gong invocation.
  • As for enlisting the resourceful Wilma production for being "more evocative of the real-life Housman's seething emotions than the text itself," Mr. Mendelsohn unluckily picks an evocation which is prescribed in the stage directions. 'The Invention of Love': An Exchange
  • Job details: assess customers for literacy, vocational aptitude … seek partnership opportunities; develop a pool of literacy tutors to assist in instruction and tutoring as … Daily Literacy Jobs – 69th Edition « Jobs « Literacy News
  • Instead, record numbers are doing less rigorous vocational courses. The Sun
  • But she has now found her vocation with Wiltshire Ambulance Service.
  • Let the sky rain potatoes; let it thunder to the tune of 'Greensleeves'; hail kissing-comfits and snow eringoes; let there come a tempest of provocation, I will shelter me here. The Merry Wives of Windsor
  • The magic of his evocation of the feminine apart, his portrayal of the dependent daughter and sister, the rejected lover, and the madwoman, is magnificent.
  • The CIM has deplored the incident as an uncalled for provocation by the miscreants.
  • One would expect the relentless cacophony of vulgarities and the unrelenting evocation of disturbing mental images first to shock, then to have a numbing effect on the audience.
  • Including the term ‘rhetoric,’ we rhetoricians argued, would help to both demystify the term and avoid giving the impression that the option was a sort of vocational track.
  • 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
  • If it puts you in a nostalgic mood, you should immediately obtain Frederick Turner's "Renegade"—an entertaining and skillful evocation of the time when Miller's memoir of bottom-feeding American expats in Paris was known as the dirtiest book in the world. In Praise Of the Gross
  • People are expected to control themselves even in the face of provocation.
  • The judge also left provocation to the jury, though the defence did not request this.
  • During the first two years, students acquire a knowledge of both general and vocationally related registers of the languages.
  • The President's Office confirmed the award winner would be honored during the university's spring awards convocation, lending additional legitimacy to the award.
  • vex," therefore, is the heightening of grieving by a provocation unto anger and indignation: which sense is suited to the place and matter treated of, though the word signify no more but to "grieve;" and so it is rendered by lupeo, Gen. xlv. Pneumatologia
  • Malamud declares his vocation on the problem of identity further in his Immigrant-Survivor's fictions, and advocates Jewish writers to record their nation's history by words.
  • It consists of a goodly proportion of those college educated people whose skills and vocations proliferate in a ‘post-industrial society’ … We are talking about scientists, teachers and educational administrators, journalists and others in the communication industries, psychologists, social workers, those lawyers and doctors who make their career in the expanding public sector, city planners and the staffs of the larger foundations and upper levels of the government bureaucracy, and so on …. Matthew Yglesias » Cato’s David Boaz Joins George Will in Peddling Bogus “Global Cooling” Stories
  • Each is a period evocation, a study of a bygone performance style, full of peculiar details of very precise flamboyance.
  • No respondent dissented from the vocational view, but teachers rarely voiced it.
  • The brutal and inhuman methods of these organizations bespeak not liberation, but provocation.
  • Rather the reverse: art remains his vocation, but he reinvents it, horribly.
  • He founded a vocational school for undereducated children.
  • ALMOST 400 students at a city vocational school could be locked out for a day just weeks ahead of their State exams due to a dispute over the management there.
  • The evocation of a mythic landscape recalls elements of a child's tree house and the bower in Milton's Paradise Lost.
  • I remember my disbelief when the cell phone on the belt of the man next to me rang during a Yule invocation.
  • Jess really excels himself here, in his evocation/evisceration of two videos we've also skewered at k-punk, though much less eloquently.
  • Police described it as a minor physical assault on a juvenile, apparently after some provocation.
  • The proceedings of the convocation of Canterbury were conducted in English quite often by the 1370s, and Henry IV spoke to Parliament in English in 1399 and had his words carefully recorded.
  • For those without a vocational qualification, a role in property management may be a good option. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, of these four modes of misleading others by the tongue, when there is a _justa causa_ (supposing there can be such) -- a material lie, that is an untruth which is not a lie, an equivocation, an evasion, and silence, -- First, I have no difficulty whatever in recognizing as allowable the method of _silence_. Apologia pro Vita Sua
  • Niagara's recurring invocation of the sound of water, the susurration and crashing of the falls, brings Rhys consciously, at first inexplicably, to mind.
  • Please note that the summaries and minutes of meetings of Convocation published above exclude information which the University has declared will not be routinely published under the Freedom of Information Act 2000.
  • `You must recall our unscientific vocations, sir; events are not always as self-explanatory to us as they are perhaps to you. ANTI-ICE
  • Thanksgiving and public prayer, the invocation of the name of God at the occasion of any major official gathering, are, in the practical behavior of the nation, a token of this very same spirit and inspiration.
  • Otis, who bore lifelong grudges over provocations infinitely smaller than this, was realistic enough to know when he was had.
  • Testaments were vitiated in several ways: nullum, void from the beginning, where there was a defect in the institution of the heir or incapacity in the testator; injustum, not legally executed and hence void; ruptum, by revocation or by the agnation of a posthumous child, either natural or civil; irruptum, where the testator had lost the civil status necessary for testation; destitutum, where the heir defaulted because dead or unwilling, or upon failure of the condition; recissum, as the consequence of a legal attack upon an undutiful will. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • Convocation preferred the blight of the coward Science to the cultivation of all that was beautiful, distinguished, humane, and brave; and they reaped as they had sown, they kept the dog smotherer and lost the radiant spirit and uplifting eloquence of the inspired seer. Great Testimony against scientific cruelty
  • The publication of the Document on the vocation to the presbyteral ministry which you are preparing will certainly be a great help to your pastoral action. Archive 2008-02-01
  • He denies murder on the grounds of provocation.
  • The Khans celebrate Ganeshotsav every year, but this time, the live telecast of the family performing 'aarti' (invocation) of Lord Ganesh has irked some community leaders. NAACHGAANA
  • Trades union leadership in those days was less a career than a vocation. The Search for Justice - a history of Britain and the British people Volume III
  • Contributing editor Angela Dodson reports on how black books are part of many expos, conventions, and other large convocations.
  • For parameter passing and stored procedure invocation you have to make a final adjustment.
  • He found his vocation in ornithology.
  • The majority of the Jewish men in Amran work in trade and vocational jobs such as cobblers or silversmiths. Yemeni Jews need to be rescued....
  • “Why, well,” said the youth, “if the abbot is a man of respectability becoming his vocation, and not one of those swaggering churchmen, who stretch out the sword, and bear themselves like rank soldiers in these troublous times.” Castle Dangerous
  • They would talk about it as if it was a calling or a vocation rather than a cold-blooded act, and that was tough. The Sun
  • Now, you've studied particularly the writings, the love letters of people who actually write as an avocation.
  • You read them and you see a man so cautiously calculating not to put a foot wrong that he envelops himself in a fog of caveats and equivocations.
  • The previous discussion outlines two basic rules invocation styles (synchronous request-response style and asynchronous event-handling style) and distinguishes stateless versus stateful processing.
  • The judge was making the point that the Pledge, in its current incarnation, is only about 50 – 60 years old and that the language “under God” was inserted at a particular time in response to concerns of that time and that the Pledge is not some sacrosanct invocation from the founders. The Volokh Conspiracy » Judge Reinhardt’s Dig on Sarah Palin
  • You will also receive advanced vocational training and undergo unique experiences that are unrivaled in the civilian world.
  • Drawn by a total revulsion of ideas from the chain of thinking that had led him to composition, he relinquished his annotations in resentment of this dismission, when he might have pursued them uninterruptedly without neglect of other avocations. Camilla
  • I thus conclude with three literary evocations of sequoias, which make different but related points.
  • When Carlyle, in the strength of his reaction against morbid introspective Byronism, cried aloud to all men in their several vocation, '_Produce, produce; be it but the infinitesimallest product, produce_,' he meant to include production as an element inside the art of living, and an indispensable part and parcel of it. Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 3 of 3) Essay 5: On Pattison's Memoirs
  • Handwoven baskets, ornamental wooden spoons, lengths of cloth (wrapped around me, head to foot), the admonition that I must not forget to write to them with news of my parents and bava Johnthis combination of gifts and counsel pointedly expressed the full meaning of xitsundzuxo as memento, reminder, and advice, 2 a simultaneously material and oral invocation of memory. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • I am sure that to them the invocation of Beelzebub is a prelibation of carnality. Là-bas
  • The rest of this article explains how these technologies interact so you can make sense of the underlying path, from service call to an invocation of a business method in an implementation.
  • Historically, public service was the honourable vocation of the nobility and gentry, whose younger sons went into the army, the Church or the law.
  • The technical or vocational education on offer for those students whose first aptitude is not academic remains poor. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not bad for an incidental photographer who took up photography mostly as a necessity rather than an avocation!
  • The poem is an evocation of lost love.
  • Its recommendations include language training and centres of vocational excellence.
  • I wish to discuss with people together genteelly and wish to offer reference for the higher vocational technology colleges' ideological and political education of our country in this way.
  • Simulation, evocation, contextualism: call it what you will, but this thing that we designers are so good at seems to serve a basic human need.
  • I go to a vocational school.
  • You missed your vocation-you should have been an actor.
  • Niagara's recurring invocation of the sound of water, the susurration and crashing of the falls, brings Rhys consciously, at first inexplicably, to mind.
  • Besides the heart and the weakness of your opponent, you have still another chance, in ruffling his temper; which, in the course of a long conversation, you will have a fair opportunity of trying; and if – for philosophers will sometimes grow warm in the defence of truth – if he should grow absolutely angry, you will in the same proportion grow calm, and wonder at his rage, though you well know it has been created by your own provocation. Letters for Literary Ladies: To Which is Added, An Essay on the Noble Science of Self-Justification
  • But an unnamed friend of the teenager said the youngster was joking and talking with a soldier guarding the barracks when the soldier opened fire without provocation.
  • He sought to encourage the vocation of younger people. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although WSIF never gained wide adoption by itself, it is used by many BPEL engines, for example WPC from IBM and BPEL Manager from Oracle, as an API for service invocations.
  • Most students expect teaching to be essentially vocational training.
  • It stretches in concrete waves over the horizon and Kaliningrad is its greatest monumental evocation.
  • The evocation of a deep emotional response was important to your decision-making.
  • Despite more than two decades on the buses, Julie is a keen advocate for her chosen vocation.
  • The secret of success is making your vocation your vacation. Mark Twain 
  • Diplomas in certain subjects, as health, education, geography, and political economy, are granted by Convocation after a certain period of study and an examinational test. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • There are some lovely examples of peculiar collective nouns in the English language, like an exultation of larks, a pride of lions, a cete of badgers and a convocation of eagles. A Cacophony of Candidates In Town Tomorrow
  • Earlier, he dealt with vernacular quotations, including decorative evocations of the cults of American gangsterism and Elvis Presley, and kitsch phenomena such as biker heraldry.
  • As well as a variety of service activities, Pavia also included dwellings to accommodate the representatives of the various bishoprics and monasteries during convocations of the kingdom's assemblies and synods.
  • The College of Agriculture presented annual awards to faculty and staff at its spring semester convocation Jan.13.
  • The city has pursued fines or licence revocations for thousands of drivers.
  • His reactions are relevant only because they seem to fit his career-long pattern of equivocation and calculation trying whenever possible to have it both ways.
  • Some of these ISPs have tried to cancel contracts with spammers, but revocation can be costly.
  • In some cases defendants run the two qualified defences of provocation and diminished responsibility in tandem.
  • They have at times had to withstand considerable provocation from intransigent bigots on the extreme wing of unionism.
  • Harline begins and ends his book [Sunday: A History of the First Day from Babylonia to the Super Bowl] with Super Bowl Sunday, an event that in its rituals, prayer breakfasts, helmeted heads bowed during the invocation, represents the sacralization of the secular. Mjh's blog — 2007 — June
  • Council president Maluleke Mooketsi says Zuma does not deserve the doctorate because of what he calls her undemocratic policy decision on vocational training for doctors. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Now _calling_ does not mean 'avocation' or 'employment,' as I perhaps need scarcely explain, but the divine fact of our having been summoned by Him to be His. Expositions of Holy Scripture Second Corinthians, Galatians, and Philippians Chapters I to End. Colossians, Thessalonians, and First Timothy.
  • Meanwhile, Lanxiang was a little - known vocational school prior to last week's reports.
  • When two men become involved in a brawl and start trading blows and punches and kicks and so forth, how does the law of provocation relate to that circumstance?
  • The date for the convocation of the people's congress has been announced.
  • The deputies did not forget that what had forced the convocation of the future National Assembly was the scale of the State's debts.
  • It is at any rate more candid than the notoriously slimy postwar equivocations of Albert Speer.
  • In the weeks ahead there will also be invocations to the deity.
  • I imagine that most people who go into the Police Service have a strong sense of vocation.
  • The community vocational rehabilitation of mental disorder is main stream in psychiatric medicine in twentieth century.
  • Now, in five years, there have been no provocations save one, a naval skirmish in 2002.
  • Booth was a revivalist intent on his Christian vocation.
  • Food and interior design have always been avocations of mine.
  • With official equivocation over animal experiments, it isn't surprising that plans for a world-class primate research lab at Cambridge have been axed.
  • Education in those circumstances will be strictly vocational, limited to basic mathematics and language skills. Peril and Promise: A Commentary on America
  • A more vernacular version of such a conjuration can be found in his account of the casting of the Perseus, wherein the statue comes to life on the artist's invocation of Christ's name.
  • Then check out trumpeter Frank London's Invocations, which tackles that most intense of Jewish music traditions, cantorial singing, through London's horn.
  • Our whole vocation is to transcend the baser instincts of the animal world and be stewards and not spoilers of creation.
  • `You climbed up there in the dark of night with a cold chisel and carved a petroglyph, to make a mockery of his avocation. HOMELAND AND OTHER STORIES
  • The modern Chams find no difficulty worshipping the Hindu Trinity,the linga, the bull of Siva, a pythoness, Allah-- who is believed to have been an eleventh century Cham king-- plus Mohammed and a number of uncomprehended words taken from the Muslim invocations and regarded as the names of deities, each with its special function. Archive 2005-07-01
  • He was a printer by trade and naturalist by avocation.
  • At one stage in the early 17th century, by about 1615 when there's a convocation, there are six or seven bishoprics held by Scots bishops in Ireland in the Church of Ireland, in the established church.
  • This newsgroup is a place for members of the Secular Order of Discalced Carmelites to read and share information and ideas about the vocation to Carmel and our service in the Church.

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