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"accustoming" Antonyms

15 Sentences With "accustoming"

How to use accustoming in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "accustoming" and check conjugation/comparative form for "accustoming". Mastering all the usages of "accustoming" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But they're nudging open the door to the industry, and slowly accustoming people to letting robots take care of their food.
ARE YOU SURE YOU ARE PROPERLY ACCUSTOMING YOUR CLIENT TO THE CURRENT CONDITIONS WHERE M & A WHEN IT EVEN COMES CLOSE TO POTENTIALLY PUSHING THE LINES SEEMS TO BE SOMETHING THE ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT DIVISIONS ARE SAYING NO. VARNEY: I AM 100% POSITIVE THIS DEAL IS DOABLE WITH THE PACKAGE OF DIVESTITURES I'VE TALK ABOUT.
Courtesy Glenstone Museum © 2018 Bruce Nauman / Artists Rights Society I have videocassettes that Nauman gave me of his late mentor in the art of breaking horses, an old cowboy named Ray Hunt, demonstrating how to do it by gentle stages—from accustoming the animal to the feel of a strap lightly touching its back to gaining its acceptance of saddle and rider—except when one steed, viciously aggressive, required a few calmly dissuasive punches on the nose.
The 24-year-old saw his time in Europe as a way of accustoming himself to competing abroad: "Here I learned how to acclimatise and cope with different eating habits".Vazel, Pierre-Jean (13 June 2011). Bailey edges Blake 9.97 to 9.98 in Strasbourg. IAAF. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
There were even provinces where, when the natives alleged > that they were unable to pay their tribute, the Inca ordered that each > inhabitant should be obliged to turn in every four months a large quill full > of live lice, which was the Inca's way of teaching and accustoming them to > pay tribute.
Its diet changes with the seasons, accustoming itself to what is available locally.Rock Squirrel - Spermophilus variegatus Nature Works The rock squirrel forages for its food on a daily basis, by climbing trees and bushes and finding food on the ground. Rock squirrels collect generous amounts of food items in their cheek pouches, which are quite large. One researcher counted 62 Gambel's oak acorns carried in one squirrel's pouch.
Their marked intellectualism, so frequently objected to, in no way constitutes a hindrance to mysticism (Meschler, "Jesuitenaszese u. deutsche Mystik" in "Stimmen aus Maria-Laach", 1912). On the contrary, they make man's moral will truly free by removing the hindrances, while, by cleansing the heart and by accustoming the mind to meditative prayer, they are an excellent preparation for the mystical life. Louis of Granada, O. P. (died 1588), also belongs to this period.
He remained in the service of the crown, holding the position of Groom of the Bedchamber from 1662 to 1672, and in September 1664, he was sent as ambassador to Sweden, where he remained for the next two years, "accustoming himself to the northern ways of entertainment, and this grew upon him with age". In 1667, he was sent, jointly with Lord Holles, as plenipotentiary to negotiate the Treaty of Breda, which, after the disgraceful summer, was finally concluded at Breda.
The coureur debauched Frenchmen by accustoming them to fully live with indigenous, and indigenous by trading on their desire for alcohol. The issues caused a great rift in the colony, and in 1678, it was confirmed by a General Assembly that the trade was to be made in public so as to better assure the safety of the indigenous population. It was also forbidden to take spirits inland to trade with indigenous groups. However these restrictions on the coureurs, for a variety of reasons, never worked.
There, a Johanniter rescue assistant and police officers > stabilized the unconscious subject well enough that, by the time the > ambulance and rescue helicopter arrived, the subject was again conscious and > could be transported. MSAR training with a helicopter air ambulance In areas > where ground-based transport is especially difficult or slow (both urban > areas and wilderness), people in need of urgent medical care often are > transported by helicopter. In these areas, MSAR teams train in working with > helicopters. Training involves identification of suitable landing spots, > accustoming horses to helicopters operating in close proximity, and > helicopter safety.
Northern populations of double-banded plover are commonly found to have inhabited sandy beaches and sandpits as well as few pairs accustoming to shell banks in harbours with few found on gravel beaches and nesting sites generally found clustered around stream-mouths. During the breeding periods, males create numerous nests constructed on open patches of slightly elevated sand or on shells and occasionally in cushion plants which are all mostly padded with various materials retrieved from close by. Birds found in the southern parts of New Zealand, such as Stewart Island, prefer to breed on unprotected sub- alpine and stony areas but become coastal during off-breeding months where they feed around the beach areas. Braided rivers are also an ideal habitat preferred by many dotterels around the Canterbury areas.
Wellesley promises victory and is given command. He then details Laurence, Temeraire, Iskierka and eight talon-picked dragons (mostly of Temeraire's former formation) into the English countryside, there to attack French foraging parties with the intent of starving out the Grand Armée, particularly the ever-hungry dragons, and reducing Napoleon's zone of control. Laurence's orders specify that no pitched battles are allowed, and no quarter is to be given, despite the British guerrillas having clear superiority in military strength; Laurence, understanding, demands that the rest of the formation receive written orders that they follow Laurence's commands without specifying what those commands may be, thus protecting the formation from culpability in war crimes. The mission is instrumental in accustoming the citizens of Britain to the presence of dragons, who are now defending them against the depredations of French foraging parties; despite the larger size of these resistance fighters, the British countryside becomes as protective of them as any other.
If he still kept some of the old vocabulary, some of the old imagery, he was yet accustoming people to hear moving subjects treated in a manner more free and simple than before; so that his was a sort of conservative reform, preceding the violent revolution of Victor Hugo and his army of uncompromising romantics. He seems himself to have had glimmerings of some such idea; but he withheld his full approval from the new movement on two grounds: first, because the romantic school misused somewhat brutally the delicate organism of the French language; and second, as he wrote to Sainte- Beuve in 1832, because they adopted the slogan of "Art for art," and set no object of public usefulness before them as they wrote. For himself (and this is the third point of importance) he had a strong sense of political responsibility. Public interest took a far higher place in his estimation than any private passion or favour.
Bailey, 49. The British interpreted the treaty and its secret clause to have a potentially great impact on their relations with Russia, the Ottoman Empire, and the established balance of power. Hale argues that Lord Palmerston was stung into action “since he mistakenly believed that [the treaty’s] secret clause had given Russian warships free passage through the straits.”William Hale, Turkish Foreign Policy 1774-2000, (London: Frank Cass Publishers, 2000), 25. Additionally, Palmerston and the rest of the British government saw that “while the immediate advantages of the treaty were slight, the ‘potential advantage to Russia’ was very great, in that ‘in accustoming the Porte to the position of vassal’ Russia had ‘prepared the way for a repetition of the 1833 expedition.’”Bailey 53. They feared that this potential for future Russian intervention in the Ottoman Empire would threaten British connections with India and trade in the Near East as a whole, though as Bailey puts it, “The Foreign Secretary’s immediate concern, however, was the problem of the Straits.”Bailey, 53.
Cioroianu, p. 65; Document 234, 20 November 1946, in Pokivailova, p. 15 A reference to "techniques" was also made by Ana Pauker in conversation with Soviet officials; she nevertheless expressed her belief that, without such techniques, the overall result was not going to be upwards of 60% (Pauker also voiced concern that such a figure, while a victory for the BPD coalition, would result in a minority for the PCR itself).Pauker, quoted by Shutov, Document 234, 20 November 1946, in Pokivailova, p. 14 Historian Adrian Cioroianu assessed that the dissemination of optimistic rumors contributed to accustoming the public to the idea that the government could obtain the majority of the votes, and made the ultimate result less questionable in the eyes of observers.Cioroianu, p. 65 Other Soviet documents, dated November 6 and 12, summarize a conversation with Emil Bodnăraş, who went on record indicating that fraud was being prepared to raise the percentage from 55-65% to 90%;Giurescu, "Marea fraudă...", Part VI; Pokivailova, pp. 11–12 compared to the mandates awarded to the BPD according to the official results, his estimation came within 1%, though this was not the case for the mandates obtained by other competitors.

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