Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

21 Sentences With "agues"

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

While the tech companies do have business interests that push them to oppose the ban, the brief also agues that the ban is downright un-American.
Andy Morabe, IXI's marketing director, agues that these three agencies have been cleared to use counter-drone technology in a signed letter from the FBI director.
The report goes further than just detailing Baltimore's stingray indiscretions; it agues that the city's use of cell site simulators disproportionately impacts minority communities, with serious repercussions.
There are several reasons, he agues, but the most baffling of all is that, supposedly, a diamond ring (especially a big one) indicates that a woman is high-maintenance.
Public rites, such as the remembrance of war dead and the installation of a new head of state, which have always been religious in character, should be replaced by secular ones, the report agues.
Details: Nielsen, in the letter, agues that the law as it stands restricts DHS's ability to deport migrant children, serving as "another dangerous 'pull' factor," as she seeks to address the "root causes of the emergency" that led to the rise in border crossings since February.
The complaint — which has also been filed with other EU data protection agencies — agues that the systematic broadcasting of people's personal data to bidders in the adtech chain is inherently insecure and thereby contravenes Europe's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which stipulates that personal data be processed "in a manner that ensures appropriate security of the personal data".
Human settlement in the area dates to prehistoric times. Some Hill Forts (at Agues (Soto de Agues), Campiellos and Corona de Castro) also Dolmen (at Pumarín, Unqueru, Campu La Braña und Monte Caón) are open to visitors. The Romans built some bridges along the Rio Nalon. In the Middle Ages the area was held by the Order of Santiago.
In the 19th century, the town produced leather, cotton, silk and tobacco. Fevers and agues were prevalent owing to bad drainage and the overflowing of the river; and the death rate was higher than the birth rate.
Stone, E. (1763). An Account of the Success of the Bark of the Willow in the Cure of Agues. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 53. The bark is often macerated in ethanol to produce a tincture.
San Andrés de Agues (variants: Agüés; Agüis; San Andrés d'Agues) is one of three parishes (administrative divisions) in Sobrescobio, a municipality within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in northern Spain. It is in size, with a population of 274 (INE 2005).
Edward Stone found that the bark of the white willow (Salix alba) could substitute for Peruvian bark in the treatment of ague. The major turning point for salicylate medicines came in 1763, when a letter from English chaplain Edward Stone was read at a meeting of the Royal Society, describing the dramatic power of willow bark extract to cure ague—an ill-defined constellation of symptoms, including intermittent fever, pain, and fatigue, that primarily referred to malaria. Inspired by the doctrine of signatures to search for a treatment for agues near the brackish waters that were known to cause it, Stone had tasted the bark of a willow tree in 1758 and noticed an astringency reminiscent of the standard—and expensive—ague cure of Peruvian bark. He collected, dried, and powdered a substantial amount of willow bark, and over the next five years tested it on a number of people sick with fever and agues.
Isarn seems to believe that Cathars and Waldensians both believe some form of Manichaeism. He defends marriage against virginity as the supreme chastity. He is convinced moreover that the Ja no fara crezens heretje ni baudes / Si agues bon pastor que lur contradisses ("Yet they would not believe heretics (Cathars) or Waldensians / If they had a good pastor to contradict them [the heretics]"). At the end of the dialogue, the Cathar bishop is converted.
Alison Brito Agues (born 27 October 1984) is a Cape Verdean footballer who plays as a goalkeeper. He currently plays with Windsor Arch Ka I in the Macanese Premier Division. He first appeared in the Macanese club CD Monte Carlo and was one of the first Cape Verdeans to play soccer with a Macanese club. A year later, he played with Casa do FC Porto for the next three years and in 2013 with Windsor Arch Ka I as of 2014.
Gutierrez began playing piano at the age of 15 and was no stranger to music as his older brother Robert Gutierrez was part of the powerhouse tejano band Grupo Estrella. By age 18 he was contributing to albums with A.B. Quintanilla III for artists like Selena, Escalofrio, Los Agues, and as part of the group Chikko. Gutierrez continued as a session musician and toured for acts like DJ Kane, La Conquista, Frankie J, Paula DeAnda, Elida Reyna y Avante, Clarissa Serna and joined the power house group Mi Stereo where he continues to tour in the United States, Mexico, South and Central America.
The sheer numbers of people dying from sickness in England caused economic inflation to flatten out. In the late 1550s the English language had not yet developed a proper name for the flu, despite previous epidemics. Thus 1557's particularly severe form of influenza was either perceived as a "plague" (like most other epidemics) or a "new disease" in England. Even though no reliable records of sweating sickness epidemics exist after 1551, "the sweat" was one name used to describe the usually deadly, flu-like fevers and "agues" plaguing the English countryside from 1557 to 1558.
His major work on gardening appeared in 1608, as 'Floraes Paradise beautified and adorned with sundry sortes of delicate Fruits and Flowers ... with an offer of an English Antidote ... a Remedy in violent Feavers and intermittent Agues.' The preface is dated from 'Bednal Green, 2 July 1608.' An appendix of 'new, rare, and profitable inventions' describes among other things, Plat's fireballs and his experiments in making wine from grapes grown at Bethnal Green. In his description of gardening experiments, Plat states the name of his informant in all cases where he had not done the work himself.
In the eighth edition of the instruction manual for this device he claimed that "electricity is almost a specific in some disorders, and deserves to be held in the highest estimation for its efficacy in many others". He recommended its use for nervous disorders, bruises, burns, scales, bloodshot eyes, toothache, sciatica, epilepsy, hysteria, agues and so on. He also made improvements to the Cuff microscope, building it into a portable case and calling it a chest microscope. In the early 1770s, Edward Nairne constructed the first successful marine barometer by constricting the glass tube between the cistern and register plate.
The novel's title refers to a line from one of John Donne's epigraphs: > His mercies hath applied His judgments, and hath shaked the house, this > body, with agues and palsies, and set this house on fire with fevers and > calentures, and frightened the master of the house, which is my soul, with > horrors, and heavy apprehensions, and so made an entrance into me. This epigraph describes the basic theme of the novel: a troubled soul, the alcoholic Cass, is badly shaken by the "fire" of an encounter with evil, in the form of the aristocratic Mason Flagg. Ultimately, Cass' experiences with Flagg provide Cass with the inspiration he needs to redeem himself.
The 1557 influenza severely impacted the British Isles. British medical historian Charles Creighton cited a contemporary writer, Wriothesley, who noted in 1557 "this summer reigned in England divers strange and new sicknesses, taking men and women in their heads; as strange agues and fevers, whereof many died." 18th Century physician Thomas Short wrote that those who succumbed to the flu "were let blood of or had unsound viscera." Flu blighted the army of Mary I of England by leaving her government unable to train sufficient reinforcements for the Earl of Rutland to protect Calais from an impending French assault, and by January 1558 the Duke of Guise had claimed the under-protected city in the name of France.
In the past, people who lived in the marsh frequently suffered from malaria, then known as ague or marsh fever, which caused high mortality rates until the 1730s. It remained a major problem until the completion of the Royal Military Canal in 1806, which greatly improved the drainage of the area. This disease probably arrived here with mosquitoes as soon as the weather became warm enough after the end of the last glacial, around or before the time of the Roman occupation. The strain responsible was most probably Plasmodium vivax, as records and texts describe agues or fevers at three or four-day intervals. Prior Anselm, of nearby Canterbury, recorded in the 1070s and 1080s a case that had every appearance of malaria. ‘A doctor in the house’? The context for Anselm of Canterbury’s interest in medicine with reference to a probable case of malaria. Journal of Medieval History, Volume 30, Issue 3, September 2004, Pages 245-261 Although five indigenous mosquito species are capable of being hosts for the malarial parasite, only the Anopheles atroparvus species breeds in sufficient numbers here to act as an efficient vector.

No results under this filter, show 21 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.