How To Use Wisely In A Sentence

  • Her experience as Ms. Rain reinforced the need to choose parts wisely. Women of 'Precious' undertake transformational roles
  • However, shopping wisely - with an eye on bargain buys - should soften the blow to your bank balance.
  • Our poler dipped his hand down into the water at one point where a waterfall tumbled into the canal and picked up some as if to drink it, but wisely decided to just let the sparkling stuff sprinkle through his fingers and splash back into the canal. Xochimilco - Up A Lazy River In Mexico City
  • But there's a huge advantage in being a private company, as long as we use that wisely and don't become flabby or soft in the way we approach the business.
  • Most of the time, he wisely kept a light touch with turquoise beading, trimming fresh white tweed coats and dresses with the stuff - and even won with a swingy beaded skirt worn with a delicate cashmere tank.
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  • The Portuguese monarch praises in round terms the edifying zeal of the primate, but wisely confined himself to his own crusades in India, which were likely to make better returns, at least in this world, than those to Palestine. The History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic — Volume 3
  • Some of these funds will invest wisely, but many will pursue non-commercial goals, from job creation to crony enrichment.
  • Our recipe book is the Book of Fate, to be interpreted wisely and with some imagination.
  • But in the well-made cake, the plums are wisely scattered all through, and every mouthful is a pleasure. An Old-Fashioned Girl
  • Perhaps wisely given his own travails at the crease, he was not asked how to deal with slow left-arm. Times, Sunday Times
  • This was followed by a string of curse words that the censors wisely bleeped out.
  • Perhaps for once he'd wisely spent his coin on an honest trull. More Conan Fan Fiction!
  • The best questions will be answered directly by Pattinson, Stewart and Lautner, so ask wisely and be sure to submit by Fri., TWILIGHT SAGA NEWS JUNE 9TH: ECLIPSE CLIPS, ROBERT PATTINSON, KRISTEN STEWART & MORE | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews
  • The three of us stood around the machine nodding wisely.
  • She'd be forgiven for ranting even a bit more about voter apathy, but she wisely takes the high road in describing the disenfranchised young women who reject much of the rhetoric of their feminist foremothers.
  • They have chosen their footage wisely — and possily hysterically — as Rotaru, Miller and editors Harrison Engle and Drew Kilcoin culled 200 hours of material into a crammed 91 minutes. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • Well, RPT, they each came out of a public university med school about $150K or so down, got paid peanuts for their internship and residencies, started actually earning money in heir mid thirties, worked hard in private practice, paid it all off, and lived wisely. The Volokh Conspiracy » Just Wondering
  • As you see, you can create a lot of visual (not to mention tactile) interest by simply choosing your filler material wisely.
  • He talked about the aftermath of patriation and he very wisely noted that while patriation is a major milestone in our history, it is not the end of anything. Why Pay Twice? The Cost of Double Government
  • But they have spent wisely and have made a lot of good additions to their squad.
  • Therefore the Commons did well and wisely, when they sent us here, not to attack this or that servant who may have peculated, but to punish the man who was sent to reform abuses, and to make Bengal furnish to the world a brilliant example of British justice. The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 12 (of 12)
  • Very wisely no new building is permitted - and although old buildings can be converted a very vigilant conservation lobby makes sure that villages preserve their outward aspect.
  • a varied class of thoughts, active, although repressed as out of harmony with the selected life of consciousness; layer after layer, new sets of motives underlying motives were laid bare, and each patient's interest was strongly enlisted in the task of learning to know himself in order more truly and wisely to "sublimate" himself. Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex
  • There is so much waste and mismanagement in government that the best way to balance the books is by economizing, streamlining, and cutting out the waste and spending the money you have more wisely.
  • However, I believe, on the whole, we may wisely leave such matters in the hands of Providence; that if we have the power of teaching the right to anybody, we should teach them the right; if we have the power of showing them the best thing, we should show them the best thing; there will always, I fear, be enough want of teaching, and enough bad teaching, to bring out very curious erratical results if we want them. The Two Paths
  • Few comedic gambits are more likely to guarantee disaster than impressions of heavily accented family members, territory that he wisely steered clear of.
  • As a matter of fact, it could well be just like those presents...unless the Government wisely invests in arboriferous potation receptacles. Stimulating Your Interest
  • Experience suggests that the public will remain wisely sceptical on the question.
  • Congratulations on winning a Westminster seat, Peter, but - if I may be so bold - choose your friends wisely before parking your btm on the green benches ;- ! Sleep-walking to disaster?
  • Invest wisely in IT and you'll keep your eternal balance sheet in the black.
  • It really didn't matter the immediate precipitant: both sides used their extra fifteen minutes to do just as they wanted, which is not to say both sides deployed the extra time wisely. Pachacutec: Patrick Fitzgerald's Closing Argument
  • In-house information technology people began to shift from building customized applications to helping their companies choose wisely among open systems vendors.
  • The club has spent wisely on the course recently in reshaping the fairways, re-designing bunkers and spinneys and treating the fairways and greens.
  • It has become almost a cliché to murmur wisely that cutting public spending significantly will be much easier said than done. Times, Sunday Times
  • Scotchman is silent upon the subject of "vivers," and wisely talks not of either "crowdy" or barley meal, but tells of the time when he was a sitter in the kirk of the Rev. Peter Poundtext, showing his Christian charity by the most profound contempt as well for the ordinances of the Sketches and Tales Illustrative of Life in the Backwoods of New Brunswick, North America
  • But they harvest wisely, they are not wasteful and they never overcut. Project Pope
  • This sums up very neatly his belief that people should be given both responsibility and opportunity, and that they will use both wisely.
  • The sharp breakthrough came when Ross unwisely tugged Wes Hoolahan just inside the home penalty box.
  • If you command wisely, you'll be obeyed cheerfully. Thomas Fuller 
  • There's a place where boys perhaps wisely fear to tread, somewhere where the boundaries of rock and jazz blur.
  • It has become almost a cliché to murmur wisely that cutting public spending significantly will be much easier said than done. Times, Sunday Times
  • My mother smiled wisely, glancing upward briefly before turning her gaze to me.
  • There are tens of thousands of e-mails in that trove, a lot of people speaking unguardedly, unwisely and impolitically. You shall know them by their work
  • God has wisely deposited the treasure in earthen vessels like ourselves, 2 Cor. iv. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)
  • In its metamorphosis from novella to film, it wisely maintains the convention of narration, but unwisely pushes it to the wayside.
  • I bought one of those and my mum dutifully kept hold of it until all the colours gradually slipped together and became a sort of blah browny sandy colour, when she wisely decided it was no longer worth holding onto.
  • Choose your scrub wisely by looking for something with alpha-hydroxy acids and/or glycolic acid. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wow whata sad story-the guy gets out of his stand a little early and gets shot in the back by his buddy-choose your hunting partners wisely I guess. Illinois Hunter Killed By Friend In Bowhunting Accident
  • On the other side, but equally healthful, may be put the fact that the style and structure of the originals and earlier versions, and especially that verse division which has been now so unwisely abandoned, served as safeguards against the besetting sin of all prose writers of their time, the habit of indulging in long wandering sentences, in paragraphs destitute of proportion and of grace, destitute even of ordinary manageableness and shape. A History of Elizabethan Literature
  • It seems to me that we have pretty wisely recognized, over time, that in fact a person's ostensible theology tells us pretty little about how corrupt or evil he's going to be.
  • I shall not dwell upon the career of Sophia -- who has pursued her life in Paris very wisely, shrewdly, circumspectly, not to say commercially, thus showing how honest bourgeois ancestry can triumph over the flightiest of modern temperaments. Personality in Literature
  • These are the confectioner's tricks of the trade - use them wisely.
  • Educating a farmer on the agronomic value of crop rotation and helping them find additional markets for more crops will usually ensure that they rotate wisely.
  • In the logic of the play, Iona is cast as a politically dangerous figure because of her perverse erotic engagements, although Shelley wisely never particularizes the full range of Iona's so-called perversity; and the ultimate crime that all of Iona's transgressions metaphorizeSwellfoot's "castration" is punished even before it is committed, since Swellfoot calls for the beheading of the Queen before she confronts him directly with her own demands for political power. Shelley
  • Wisely selecting the six ball for the side pocket, you carefully position the cue ball.
  • There are more pluses than minuses, but we have to use the technology carefully and wisely.
  • To acquire wealth is difficult, to preserve it more difficult, but to spend it wisely most difficult of all. 
  • For those of us who were taught in grade school to revere him and in college to shrug him off, the beard is an obstacle to fresh acquaintance, and Newton Arvin has wisely chosen a frontispiece in which the forty-eight-year-old man is obscured only by burnsides. Longfellow
  • In legislating so that securitizers "won't sell garbage to investors," Congress wisely mandates that securitizers be long in assets pooled -- assets in which transactions would otherwise leave securitizers neutral and untempted by any opportunity to short. Louis M. Guenin: Regulating Collateralized Debt Obligations, the Elephant in the Room Untouched by Financial Reform Bills
  • Fortunately, Townshend's guitar noodling never steps into the realm of being entirely gratuitous, and as with all the best songs on Heathen, Bowie's vocals are wisely left to dominate.
  • Those that wisely left room for dessert can sample the variety of delicious ice cream cakes, or choose a pancake with a sweet filling of their choice.
  • I'm sure that I'm not persuasive enough to convince anyone to cut back and spend more wisely.
  • In the old version of the film this is scored with orchestral music, which the restoration has wisely removed.
  • I am boldened to proclaim I am what I appear to be, and have aimed rightly and struck my mark wisely. Appearances
  • Some people may invest wisely but many will not, and there are financial sharks looking for such tasty morsels. Times, Sunday Times
  • Deaths and permanent neurological damage from anoxia have occurred when surgeons have unwisely performed immediate consecutive bilateral thoracoscopy rather than two separate operations.
  • However, all the evidence suggests that a modest sum can grow substantially if invested wisely over a long period.
  • Nebbou wisely lets the story and performances speak for themselves, confining his personal flourishes mainly to an extravagant "orientalist" ball that Dumas stages at his chateau. Latest News - Yahoo!7 News
  • Perhaps wisely given his own travails at the crease, he was not asked how to deal with slow left-arm. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since the issue has been popularised, ‘more respondents may be giving what they perceive to be a legally safer answer to a question about the type of songs they download,’ the survey wisely notes.
  • Either way, there are interesting times ahead for the EU, who has so unwisely expanded beyond the Oder-Neisse line. Those pesky East Europeans
  • Heins,38 Roald commented ruefully in response, deciding wisely that to be placatory was the most sensible course of action. Storyteller
  • All the envy, exasperation and spite he filtered out of his own quiet, grid-based paintings he dumped into hellzapoppin 'art-world cartoons (wisely prologued in William Rubin's conservative but razor-sharp installation as big photostats near the entrance). Every Picture Tells
  • Webster chose the vignettes wisely, including accounts of Orde Wingate and the Chindits, Merrill's Marauders, and Chennault's Flying Tigers.
  • Actually, I think that leopard is the best OS for a netbook if you use wisely the stacks and dock. The Problems With A Hackintosh Netbook, Six Months Out | Lifehacker Australia
  • And, generationally, most parents are neither tech- nor internet-savvy enough to appropriately and wisely advise their own kids on safe surfing. April Rudin: Why Parents Must Be On Top of Their Kids' Online Escapades
  • The minister was tasked with checking that British aid money was being spent wisely.
  • Nobody can accuse ME of not using my idle time wisely.
  • At his headquarters he unwisely made a stand, and after a two-week battle was forced to retreat.
  • Though he had fine words to say about democracy, in truth he doubted the ability of the people to act wisely.
  • Sentimentality always cloaks brutality, as Jung once wisely observed, and wolves in sheep's clothing are always ready for the big chance.
  • Sometimes it seems more support is given to people buying Tupperware than to those of us who want to parent wisely.
  • Geddes nurtured the belief that common ground in culture, if used wisely, could do society real, practical good.
  • He does not pursue into modern times his lively thought about the connection between commerce and art; wisely, perhaps.
  • Our man had wisely decided to be picked up at the farm.
  • What is the point of saving money if those savings are not invested more wisely?
  • When it comes to love your emotions calm down just enough for you to handle relationships wisely. The Sun
  • He wisely wore camouflage on his trips to Frankfurt: long-term investor brown.
  • If you are a church member, how do you know that your tithes and offerings are being used wisely?
  • Darius was immensely relieved to see his begrimed, dust-ridden target in one piece, but wisely did not show it.
  • Indeed so and Mr Starr wisely avoids making any premature judgment on their choice.
  • He spits truth, struggle and pain but in such an educated and wisely put manner.
  • In Canada, as elsewhere, the tariff exemplifies that right, whether in your opinion the tariff is applied wisely or not. The Romance of Intra-Empire Trade
  • In this the author has wisely comported himself in imitation of a higher power; and he proves it by _atqui_. Droll Stories — Complete Collected from the Abbeys of Touraine
  • One of the party pamphlets distributed in ceremonies in Mandalay reads: "In the election, it is important to use the ballot wisely and correctly.
  • To acquire wealth is difficult, to preserve it more difficult, but to spend it wisely most difficult of all. 
  • She is always hard up because she doesn't lay out her money wisely.
  • 1.5.29: Lorde how I gan in wrath vnwisely me demeane. "Songes and Sonettes written by the ryght honorable Lorde Henry Haward late Earle of Surrey, and other"
  • While they wisely stuck to their game plan of short passing and quick movement, the Hoops reverted to hopeful long balls and aimless passes into space.
  • And because the script has wisely avoided writing them as stereotypically American, there are no jarring notes in the casting mix.
  • And Tan wisely dropped the controversial plans to change the club's name. The Sun
  • Asked for advice on how to become a billionaire, he used to joke that the trick was to choose your parents wisely. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tom enjoyed just three frothy pints, and he wisely quaffed a liter of H20 before bed.
  • And because the script has wisely avoided writing them as stereotypically American, there are no jarring notes in the casting mix.
  • Entirely unaware of His Majesty's unerring aim in hitting large surfaces at short range, we welcomed him cordially to our midst, and rather unwisely presented him with the freedom of the jungle, a ceremony which carried with it the privilege of bagging anything he could hit with his slungshot, in season or out of it. The Autobiography of Methuselah
  • We know that people have worked hard for their money, and that governments must spend it wisely.
  • Asked for advice on how to become a billionaire, he used to joke that the trick was to choose your parents wisely. Times, Sunday Times
  • William wisely would not accept the throne until he was recognized as legitimate king by Parliament.
  • By investing wisely she accumulated a fortune.
  • If it is priced wisely, Octavia sales next year should increase even further.
  • Wisely, Shakeshaft does not base her conclusions on evidence that comes so close to anecdotal accounts.
  • He would have liked to have left them behind altogether, and even tried to laugh Beth out of what he called her sentimental attachment to odds and ends; but as most of the things had belonged to Aunt Victoria, she took his ridicule so ill that he wisely let the subject drop. The Beth Book Being a Study of the Life of Elizabeth Caldwell Maclure, a Woman of Genius
  • Due care for health, the opportunity for earned and needed recreation, the claims of charity, courtesy, and hospitality, in fine, the immediate urgency of any duty selfward, manward, or Godward, should always take precedence of routine-work however wisely planned. A Manual of Moral Philosophy
  • With no dramatic surprises of fortune, and no great sorrows, his life had scarce any other alternation than that it went round with the earth through night and day, and would have been tame but for his necessary labor in an art which he loved wisely and with the untumultuous sentiment of an after-honey-moon constancy. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 35, September, 1860
  • It also can be found in this amusing 1355 wedding ditty: "Give your cunny wisely and beg after the wedding. Jodi Lampert: Deconstructing John: Revisiting His Bad Language
  • He cursed softly to himself and watched the fire fade from her face and the soft luminous glow of the appealing woman spring up, of the appealing woman who foregoes strength and panoplies herself wisely in her weakness. IN THE FOREST OF THE NORTH
  • Miller wisely intrudes her own voice as little as possible in the book.
  • The rogue had wisely beforehand consulted Adair, who had approved of his proposal on the subject, and so excellent was his "kettler" pronounced, that from henceforward it was the everyday meal of the party; and though others tried to surpass him when their turn came, they all confessed that they could never do it, and it was voted that it was unequalled by the best Scotch hotch-potch, which it much resembled. The Three Commanders
  • Her parents wisely signed her up for ballet classes when she was four and liberated her from her own anxiety.
  • The body said that "draconian cuts in support services "will inevitably lead to deterioration in service, which can be avoided if CIOs spend wisely. Computing
  • He wisely underplays his role, evoking a man of deep contradictions.
  • Many city administrations have wisely adopted new urbanist principles. Times, Sunday Times
  • The light going on didn't wake me up though, as I had wisely legislated for it by drinking far too much wine.
  • Some jurisconsults, indeed, have wisely held that the contumacious person ought not to be condemned unless the crime were clearly established; but other lawyers have been of a contrary opinion: they have boldly affirmed that the flight of the accused was a proof of the crime; that the contempt which he showed for justice, by refusing to appear, merited the same chastisement as would have followed his conviction. A Philosophical Dictionary
  • There are those of us who advised in vain that this sordid matter be quietly and wisely settled and not be bruited about in public.
  • Wisely, the view of the dramatically illuminated boulders, the striking spruce trunk in the center of the room and the signature wooden roof whose narrow spokes - "latilla" in Spanish - give the restaurant its name, remain unmolested. Azcentral.com | news
  • I am going to suggest instead that you spend what little money you have wisely on a judicious amount of investment make-up. Times, Sunday Times
  • With a slowing economy, burned-out workers, and an escalating energy crisis, how can a company make sure its investments in office space, technology, and work force are wisely spent?
  • If people could decipher the signs that foretold events, the events would be predictable and humans could act wisely.
  • Surely, too, as our learned friend has wisely stated, the loss in any recoinage ought, in full justice and honesty, to fall not upon the people of England, but upon the government of England. The Mississippi Bubble
  • Wisely, in the brief rehearsal time allotted to them before this season began, Capucilli, Dakin, and their assistants developed a chorus that performed with maenadic power and unity.
  • I enjoy the feeling of scavengering for ammo and using my bullets wisely -- now i'll probably just be as careless as i want Siliconera
  • As this week's Shameless Woman, she tells us about the precious aspects of being in a band and why choosing your "bandies" wisely is so important. Shameless Magazine: latest blog entries
  • The pair were engrossed in conversation for more than an hour, fuelling speculation the overworked minister had unwisely opened her heart to a political opponent.
  • Despite his protestations, the authorities have wisely decided to cage the miscreant youth.
  • Try to be objective if you want to spend your money wisely.
  • It is my experience that those in authority are wisely frowning on the rather wild statements which from time to time are made with regard to 'potentialities' of the north. Canada's Century If …
  • A fine line that should be trod wisely in order to create a future where everyone can gain from the benefits of using this technology.
  • He wisely wore camouflage on his trips to Frankfurt: long-term investor brown.
  • Invest the money wisely.
  • And as wisdom will evidence itself in meekness, so meekness will be a great friend to wisdom; for nothing hinders the regular apprehension, the solid judgment, and impartiality of thought, necessary to our acting wisely, so much as passion. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • Invention furnishes Art with all her materials, and without it, Judgement itself can at best but steal wisely. Alexander Pope 
  • The track seems prepared to venture into a long landscape of guitar noodling and ambling electronics, but the band wisely resists the temptation.
  • Thus, it is crucial that one be tactful and select his words wisely.
  • Who is it that so wisely, delicately and beautifully arranges and transforms the ugly -- that is, the sightless, formless substance of the earth into flowers? My Life in Christ, or Moments of Spiritual Serenity and Contemplation, of Reverent Feeling, of Earnest Self-Amendment, and of Peace in God
  • In Pathé's first exciting scoop in 1911, Winston Churchill, then the home secretary, was minded to wear a silk top hat to the Sidney Street siege, where he took it upon himself to direct police operations against armed Latvian robbers holed up in a jeweller's shop it included holding back the fire brigade and wisely letting the thieves burn to death when the building went up in flames. Rewind TV: Ocean Giants; Who Do You Think You Are?; The Story of British Pathé: the Birth of the News; Wilfred – review
  • To acquire wealth is difficult, to preserve it more difficult, but to spend it wisely most difficult of all. 
  • Hoping to damp down any potential negative commentary that the catagory 3 Gustav could bring to McCain/Palin's trek to the White House, the GOP hierarchy wisely scaled back opening day activities of the much 'ballyhooed' convention. "New" Hurricanes Affect Presidential Politics: Gustav and Jeremiah Wright
  • The auction houses quite wisely retreated, leaving specialist dealers bemoaning what they alleged were short-sighted policies.
  • Not long after Merida was founded, a Mexican poet described the renewal that comes every year at this time to those who wisely till their fields and plant ahead, in these words: "Here by the Supreme Giver, one and all, in stintless grace and beauty, are bestowed. Remarks By President To Business Community Of Merida Mexico
  • 'Marino Faliero' was the first of his productions in which, relinquishing the so-called classic rules, he endeavored, as a French critic fitly remarks, to introduce a kind of eclecticism in stage literature; a bold attempt, tempered with prudent reserve, in which he wisely combined the processes favored by the new school with current tradition. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 11
  • No offense is unforgivable unless you make It'so . Use your power wisely.
  • Some story threads are underdeveloped, and Emily's soppy character is wisely ditched early on.
  • The director steered clear of portraying him as a cheeky imp and wisely made him a nameless creep.
  • There are no agencies over here to help unthinking people get their unwisely spent money back.
  • They sometimes unwisely expose themselves to the dangers of long courtships, waiting, for example, to complete graduate school.
  • He was essentially a decent man who loved not wisely: at times foolish but always generous and admirably unembittered. The Times Literary Supplement
  • : D close to it actually, the number one rule for actors in demand is chose your projects wisely. you might also think about why she would not want to relocate ---- think: other work opportunities. blog comments powered by Disqus Casting Couch: CRIMINAL MINDS, LOST | the TV addict
  • It is reassuring to know that the Scottish Executive husbands the expenditure it makes on our behalf so wisely.
  • In article one, we learned about posturing ourselves wisely to make friends.
  • A babe who was acquiring knowledge she lacked the judgment to use wisely, at a frightening rate. TREASON KEEP
  • With stooped shoulders and arms strategically placed to conceal unwisely revealed untoned tummies, the streakily applied fake tan denotes that the future is clearly both bright and orange.
  • Jaspers looked at Mr. Steger very flatly and wisely — almost placatingly under the circumstances — and The Financier
  • Mr. Fassbender's lord of the cursed manor is worthy of his governess's love, even though he's no match for the one played by Timothy Dalton when it comes to bottomless despair or towering rage, and though he can't, or wisely won't, touch the doomy self-regard that Orson Welles brought to the role. See Jane Blossom: An Enthralling 'Eyre'
  • Other wisely used drugs are based on increasing the cerebral blood flow, but there is now good evidence that this flow is not impaired. The Residue Report - an action plan for safer food
  • Don Giovanni, described by Mozart and Da Ponte as a "Dramrna giocoso," has been brainwashed even more thoroughly than The Magic Flute by the intervening generations of those who loved their opera unwisely but too well. An Autobiography
  • In this case, Obama wisely chose not to let facts speak for themselves (as they clearly had not done two months earlier when McCain succeeded in spinning a stunningly successful Obama tour of Europe and the Middle East into a beauty pageant allegedly bespeaking Obama's narcissism, empty celebrity, and appeal to foreigners). Drew Westen: Lessons Learned from the Election of 2008: Looking Back and Looking Forward
  • Martin found he liked the strange new drink, but Jack wisely made his next drink orange and lemonade.
  • To acquire wealth is difficult, to preserve it more difficult, but to spend it wisely most difficult of all. 
  • Ben was positively itching to get his fingers on the keyboard, but Lia wisely didn't let him.
  • Sestak, as Terry Madonna, director of the Franklin & Marshall College Center for Politics and Public Affairs noted, wisely "husbanded" his money till the end of the campaign, turning the election "into a five-week process rather than a twelve-week process. Specter Turns To Ground Game To Avoid Coakley-Like Defeat
  • So wisely I shut my letter, (after unwisely having driven everything to the last moment!) ” and now I have silk to tie fast with ... to tie a 'nodus' ... 'dignus' of the celestial interposition ” and a new packet shall be ready to go to you directly. The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
  • Overall, the book is remarkably readable, partly because the editors have wisely allowed a certain quirky dryness of tone to creep in.
  • In Pathé's first exciting scoop in 1911, Winston Churchill, then the home secretary, was minded to wear a silk top hat to the Sidney Street siege, where he took it upon himself to direct police operations against armed Latvian robbers holed up in a jeweller's shop it included holding back the fire brigade and wisely letting the thieves burn to death when the building went up in flames. Rewind TV: Ocean Giants; Who Do You Think You Are?; The Story of British Pathé: the Birth of the News; Wilfred – review
  • Until the final callback by Elizabeth to confirm that all was handled well, I was amazed and realized that I could not have spent my money any more wisely.
  • In the fire of an argument words are it's fuel, choose your words wisely. If you throw in wood or paper, the fire will burn evenly then put itself out. But if you throw oil or gasoline, the fire will spread fiercely and unmanageable. Anthony Liccione 
  • Simply stated, debt is not the route to wealth or sustained economic growth unless it is wisely invested to achieve a rate of return to our economy over and above the cost of the funds borrowed.
  • Abraham onward it was introduced, slowly but foreseeingly, all-wisely and all-knowingly, for otherwise humanity were lost. William of Germany
  • So wisely I shut my letter, (after unwisely having driven everything to the last moment!) -- and now I have silk to tie fast with ... to tie a 'nodus' ... 'dignus' of the celestial interposition -- and a new packet shall be ready to go to you directly. The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Barrett, Vol. 1 (of 2) 1845-1846
  • This year, though, he has wisely kept his mouth shut and let his play do the talking.
  • ‘He's a very good man,’ she repeated and Kate nodded, wisely remaining silent on the subject.
  • He then continues to give him very sage, wise advice regarding governing wisely.
  • If you've read The Rum Diary, you'll notice that certain characters and events have been amalgamated, erased or enlarged, often cleverly and wisely, but that Robinson's gentler tone is slightly at odds with Thompson's marvellously splenetic and bilious prose. Johnny Depp is back as a very different Hunter S Thompson
  • Judge Mallet wisely decided to postpone his ruling until September 13 in order to give himself time to deliberate on the matter.
  • I choose to utilize this time wisely by doodling stick figures engaged in various activities.
  • To acquire wealth is difficult, to preserve it more difficult, but to spend it wisely most difficult of all. 
  • I am going to suggest instead that you spend what little money you have wisely on a judicious amount of investment make-up. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although there's an element of feral sensuality in Davalos' portrayal, the film wisely keeps any potential sexual energy between her and Diesel at arm's length.
  • He wisely perches his sleeping bag on top of a dune to avoid their onslaught.
  • He has chosen wisely and well, inviting us to reflect and meditate on his selections.
  • When I got to the the short pieces, I unwisely assumed them as fillers to get the record up to a realistic duration for a CD.
  • Taking advantage of various low-cost housing schemes and managing your income wisely can provide the extra fillip needed to get a mortgage large enough to buy your first house.
  • We chose our steps wisely, not wanting to misstep when a slip could prove fatal.
  • On swam Birdalone, not as one who had a mind to drown her for the forgetting of troubles, but both strongly and wisely; and she turned over on to her back, and looked on the stars above her, and steered herself by them thitherward whereas she deemed was the land under the wood. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • While some farming cooperatives such as Nueva Vida are managing their lands wisely, others are tempted by the financial rewards of large-scale logging.
  • Once you learn what to look for, you can buy wisely at auctions, estate sales, or straight off the showroom floor.
  • King had wisely left the business to Parliament, and, when the circumstances of the times, and the sincere horror in which good men held what they called regicide and sacrilege are duly considered, it must be owned that Parliament acted with humanity and moderation. Life of John Milton
  • Water melts at what we call the freezing, but might just as wisely, though not as conveniently, call the melting, point; and radiates as it cools into the most beautiful of all known crystals. The Crown of Wild Olive also Munera Pulveris; Pre-Raphaelitism; Aratra Pentelici; The Ethics of the Dust; Fiction, Fair and Foul; The Elements of Drawing
  • To acquire wealth is difficult, to preserve it more difficult, but to spend it wisely most difficult of all. 
  • The four daily services are based very closely on The Book of Common Prayer, with psalms and canticles wisely chosen from the breadth of the whole tradition.

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