How To Use White heat In A Sentence

  • Then the chance purchase of a sprig of white heather changes her luck. Times, Sunday Times
  • They reach the top in the white heat of competition that burns across the planet. Times, Sunday Times
  • Everything he did was at white heat and lightning speed.
  • If that white heat was too much, we had a chance to cool off around the corner, where we found an artic array of calla lilies suspended from ice boxes and nerine lilies popping up from mounds of artificial snow. Blogtimore, Hon
  • The optimism of the 60s had dissolved: there was no more talk of a classless society or a Britain forged in the white heat of a technological revolution. State of Emergency: The Way We Were: Britain, 1970-1974 by Dominic Sandbrook
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  • Even a small amount of magnesium ribbon burns in a flame a white heat.
  • Everything he did was at white heat and lightning speed.
  • The fierce flames of his mad desire to destroy suddenly rose to white heat.
  • His iron temperament was at white heat, and, as he afterwards said, he "cared no more for yon dirty chap wi 'the big nose, nor if he were a ratten 3 in a hayloft! Daddy Darwin's Dovecot: A Country Tale
  • Everything he did was at white heat and lightning speed.
  • Our captain and commander both wore white heather in their caps. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was the withdrawal of a tiny crucible from the white heat of the furnace, and the sliding back of the door, and then the crucible was a dazzling light fleck that danced through the blackness toward one of the workbenches. "Power" by Harl Vincent, part 1
  • For Celtic's French defender has shown a propensity for injudicious decision-making when finding himself in the white heat of colossal continental confrontations.
  • Sometimes we were led off on long walks over the hills by eager adults who pointed out to us the bog violets and flashes of white heather among the purple.
  • She gave him the spray of white heather. CHARMED LIFE
  • Then the chance purchase of a sprig of white heather changes her luck. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even a small amount of magnesium ribbon burns in a flame with a satisfying white heat.
  • Historian Anderson, of course, knows of countless cases of harassment of census workers, even dating as far back as 1890, when The New York Times reported about a citizen tired of being "catechized" by a census taker, who "grew more angry … until in a white heat he pitched into the servitor of the Government and threw him bodily out of the house, applying abusive epithets to him and insulting him in a manner that was anything but befitting the dignity of the position of the enumerator. Anti-Census Sentiment
  • His iron temperament was at white heat, and, as he afterwards said, he "cared no more for yon dirty chap wi 'the big nose, nor if he were a _ratten_ [6] in a hay-loft! Jackanapes, Daddy Darwin's Dovecot and Other Stories
  • A dark, intense, semi-smiling stare, as if the sprig of white heather was not charity but compulsory.
  • [*] Though the judge's portrait, reprinted in White Heat, suggests the very antithesis of Byronic romance, it was very likely Lord in whose arms Emily Dickinson was reputedly once seen "reclining" in the Homestead parlor by her scandalized neighbor/sister-in-law Susan Dickinson. The Woman in White
  • Our captain and commander both wore white heather in their caps. Times, Sunday Times
  • She gave him the spray of white heather. CHARMED LIFE
  • For all its white heat, in other words, the sur-reality of Friday Night left me alone in the earthbound darkness, coolly and contractively contemplating the state of my own connubial bond.
  • It is a wonderful land of funny flowers, and birds, and hills of pure white heather. Times, Sunday Times
  • They reach the top in the white heat of competition that burns across the planet. Times, Sunday Times
  • Everything he did was at white heat and lightning speed.
  • They reach the top in the white heat of competition that burns across the planet. Times, Sunday Times
  • The old man, intoxicated with superhuman enjoyment, and believing himself happy, had just received a cold shower-bath on his passion at the moment when it had risen to the intensest white heat. Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
  • At the end of a long week of sexism and counter-sexism, the white heat of the Richard Keys and Andy Gray farrago seemed to fade as quickly as it blew up. Andy Gray and Richard Keys convicted on sound evidence | Barney Ronay
  • Our captain and commander both wore white heather in their caps. Times, Sunday Times
  • He got the white heat of corruption thanks to a Yorkshire architect who was later convicted for his part in a scandal of backstairs planning and bribes.
  • It is a wonderful land of funny flowers, and birds, and hills of pure white heather. Times, Sunday Times
  • The music's lyricism, irony, sarcasm, and bittersweet triumph find the composer writing at white heat.
  • Some of the pieces are pressed into shape under these drops when cold, -- this being the case with the triggers, which were found to use up the dies too rapidly when they were swaged while heated; but, as a general rule, the swaging is done while the piece is at a red or white heat. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 72, October, 1863
  • His predecessor rarely set foot in the White Heather Club, but he is a clubbable kind of chap.
  • The opening allegro was written in a white heat of inspiration, during a holiday in the mountains near Graz; he seems to have run out of manuscript paper, for the last 50 bars are scribbled out on dinner napkins.

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