Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"arduously" Definitions
  1. in a way that involves a lot of effort and energy, especially over a period of time

77 Sentences With "arduously"

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

Many of those plans, though arduously pursued, were never realized.
We arduously convince young children to believe in Santa, and they do.
Not from Little Rock or the congressional campaign he was arduously waging against Republican Rep.
Abroad, Trump would be in someone else's realm, a position he's arduously avoided for most of his career.
In fact, most of that season's 16 contestants have regained much if not all the weight they lost so arduously.
Over the course of five hours they moved the frozen, arduously-collected archive of arthropods, many from the Hawaiian Islands.
Using the genetic genealogy from the women, investigators arduously constructed family trees and profiles and compared them against a DNA database.
But while theirs was of blissful nirvana, our enthusiasm was replaced by heavy breathing as we arduously munched our way towards oblivion.
One video shows a Locatelli bovine taking an incredibly lengthy (and noisy) dump; another shows a tractor arduously moving tonnes of crap.
And in his own country, he is one of the few musicians working arduously to pass on traditions in danger of disappearing.
The British contingent arduously protested the decision after reviewing video of the fight and the WTF overturned the judges' decision in an unprecedented move.
But there is plenty of blame to go around, as all factions within the West Wing worked arduously to help craft and sell the bill.
Using arduously intricate glass beadwork, Lou has recreated a bottle of cleaning fluid at scale, making an elaborately decorative object of a banal domestic product.
"We feel that deal is going to happen, and we continue to work arduously toward that," White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said on Fox News.
With Putin, Trump has regularly worked arduously to guard his conversations, including asking for notes taken by his interpreter after their first encounter in 2017.
Using the genetic genealogy of Jane Doe and Janet Doe, investigators arduously constructed family trees and profiles and compared them against a Family Tree DNA database.
Every app doesn't need a Stories feature, and it fragments the audience so creators have to arduously cross-post multiple times to reach the maximum audience.
Salman Rushdie's "The Satanic Verses" aside — it was published three years before Mr. Ellis's novel — it's difficult to recall a recent novel that was so arduously condemned.
Four repeat songs from Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music and six more select other material by Smith artists, all arduously remastered to augment depth and grain.
As a result, we make decisions not by arduously ticking off a list of pros and cons, but by assessing the information, or cues, that are most readily available.
Laura Magnusson – Blue Magnusson's Blue is a single channel video of the artist, shot on a seafloor, moving arduously through the water as she burrows through the afterlife of sexual violence.
Considered the father of Canada's health system, he arduously built up the components of universal health care in that province, even in the face of an infamous 23-day doctors' strike.
But every sound and riff you hear on the album was arduously rehearsed over the course of a year by a group of young musicians who were remarkable in their own right.
Mets 29, Phillies 113 | 211 innings The baseball season is arduously long and rewards the emotionally even-keeled, so forgive Asdrubal Cabrera if, in one dramatic moment, it all came pouring out.
Various versions of Iago's famous "Credo" suggest that it was pondered "arduously," she said, while "Falstaff" fans will be intrigued by drafts Verdi discarded, like the first version of the opera's fugue finale.
It takes longer than everyone predicted, new potential issues will rise and fade by the hour, and eventually, arduously, an agreement to avert another shutdown will be reached -- or at least that's the plan.
The rest of it — arduously crafted new strains on a spectrum as vast as wine vintages, "designer" highs, a fuller appreciation of how pot enhances creativity and the senses — is a matter of taste.
He's the picture of lean play on a team that fetishizes "clutter-free basketball," arduously winnowing the chaff from his game to hone a more precise sense of timing and ever more flaw-free mechanics.
With this work she accomplished an appropriation-transgression of Maurizio Cattelan's "A Perfect Day" (1999) piece by performing it as an anti-masochistic escape act; arduously working her way free of the self-imposed tape trap.
At its front, a 72015-pound cart bearing a 2724,212-pound bronze sculpture was, in a group effort, arduously pushed, pulled, thrust, and jimmied over the cracked sidewalks and buckled cobblestones of the city's Old Market neighborhood.
The medium's role in an evolving view of gay rights -- slowly and arduously -- provides the fodder for a fine Apple TV+ documentary, "Visible: Out on Television," which explores various breakthroughs and signature moments over five distinct parts.
It is about how these survivors—clinging to a divine assurance that an unknown and faraway land will become their new home—arduously cross the seas, determined to refashion themselves as a new people, a nation of victors rather than victims.
There is increasing conversation about "physician wellness" these days, as we look at how young doctors are trained, and at the physical, emotional and spiritual pathways of those who are supposedly (and arduously and extensively) trained to take care of others.
During this period, a campaign brought rural self-reliance to cult level, as local officials throughout the country were organized to visit Shanxi Province to study an arduously hewed terrace system claimed to free the community from the need for government help.
Just under half of Angelenos are Hispanic or Latino, and the local galleries have offered key support to artists I saw at the fairs, including Rafa Esparza, whose performances and installations use arduously cast adobe bricks, and Tanya Aguiñiga, whose beguiling wall-mounted weavings draw on both pre-Columbian and American feminist traditions.
British Prime Minister May has asked European Council President Donald Tusk to delay Brexit from March 29 until the end of June and said she was preparing for a third vote in the British parliament on the exit deal she arduously negotiated with the EU. Traders are increasingly worried that should her deal fail to get parliamentary approval next week, there are few outcomes which would be positive for markets in the short-term.
I had to practice arduously and break down into tiny components every move I make.
Following the 2016 Summer Olympics, they are training arduously for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
In continuation of this program, the IPE intends to continue arduously collecting, organizing and disseminating this environmental data, and information on corporate violations from around China.
In their earnest exodus to America, the Santuzzu children arduously clear away the weeds and briars in what seems a vast and rugged wilderness, managing to cultivate their own unknown, yet nonetheless beautiful, version of their Papa's paradisiacal vision—building, at last, a home-away-from home.
His personal herbarium grew to over 20,000 specimen sheets. Of these, 8,330 were of his own collections, and described by Roger Lawrence Williams as "testimony to leisure time arduously spent." The others Osterhout acquired via trading or purchase. Upon his death, all of his sheets were bequeathed to the Rocky Mountain Herbarium.
Supporters believe participants learn tenacity when they fail and must move on, and they practice arduously trying to achieve something which proves even more valuable when they are successful. From some child contestants' perspectives, pageants are fun and a way to make new friends, and they are able to feel good about their friends winning.
The village church, St. Mary's, dates from the late 12th century but has been extensively renewed since that time including an almost complete rebuilding in 1876.Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust: Church of Saint Mary, Cyffylliog. Accessed 15 April 2013. Although the church has been arduously restored, it retains its late medieval ceiling and an unusual Georgian ‘hearse house’.
The school she and her siblings attended was eight miles away from their home and required them to walk arduously the entire way. Young began quilting at approximately age 13, when her father brought home scraps of fabric from Camden. Young married Lucius Young at age 16, and they had nine children. Lucius died in a car accident in 1970.
Good nature and sincerity might be of her own character, but the education by Haru's mother was great.Shimoju[2003:89] Shizuko Yamada referred to the severe circumstances of Haru. However arduously she might have been educated, there was nothing humble in her mind.Shimoju[2003:90] To the contrary, Haru was too kind to other people, and this nature brought her considerable difficulties.
Craig Gilner, the narrator, is 15 years old and lives with his family in a middle-class Brooklyn neighborhood. He attends the prestigious Executive Pre- Professional High School, having studied arduously to win admission. Once admitted, however, he becomes overwhelmed by the school's intense academic pressure. He has a longstanding crush on Nia, who is dating his best friend, Aaron.
When he brought the first Bagel to Japan, most food retailers rejected it because Japanese preferred their food soft. Kitamura arduously explained how to eat bagels to each individual consumer and traveled to all the major cities in Japan. The first year, he exported 100,000 bagels and three years later sold 1 million bagels in Japan. Within his first five years, his bagel sales reached 3 million.
Marco Dente's skill as an imitator was clear. The artist is said to have 'forged so precisely' in so many of his prints. It is common to see evidence of Dente's precision through his replication of arduously minute details of the master copy. Michael Bryan, in his Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, portrays Dente as a professional forger, with deceptive intents of his imitation.
They disembarked at Callao on April 24, 1814 to support Viceroy José Fernando de Abascal y Sousa, who had been working arduously to maintain his viceroyalty and the bordering territories under Spanish control. Maroto and his troops, which included San Bruno, were placed under the orders of Brigadier Mariano Osorio and sent to Chile, which had risen in rebellion after the French invasion of Spain.
His only surviving child was Mary Caroline that he had with his second wife, Mary McLean Jarvis. Unable to approve of his daughter's suitor, Jarvis broke their relationship and arranged for Mary Caroline to travel to Europe for a "Grand Tour", which did not relieve her broken heart. Mary Caroline contracted tuberculosis after throwing herself "arduously into church work". Mary Caroline came to Denver with Bishop George M. Randall to cure her case of tuberculosis.
Just over a year after the Siamese campaign, on 30 April 1550, King Tabinshwehti was assassinated by one of his advisers. Instead of submitting to Tabinshwehti's chosen successor Bayinnaung, vassal rulers of major regions as well as those of small remote towns all declared themselves independent. The kingdom Tabinshwehti had arduously built up in the previous 16 years appeared ruined.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 258Phayre 1967: 102–103 Thado Dhamma Yaza was no exception.
In December 2003, Za-Kpota was the centre of a serious child trafficking scandal. It erupted after rival traffickers gave the Nigerian police pictures of children from Za-Kpota working arduously in quarries and farms in Nigeria, authorised by their parents due to extreme poverty. The police located 261 boys, aged 6–16 in Abeokuta in Ogun State and sent them back to Benin on trucks. Seven traffickers were arrested and incarcerated.
Ellen May (née Newman) Neel (Potlatch name Kakaso'las) was born on November 14, 1916 in Alert Bay, British Columbia.Nuytten, 43 Her parents were both mixed race and she was a member of the Kwakwaka'wakw tribe. Neel learned Northwest carving from her maternal grandfather, Yakuglas/Charlie James, a noted totem carver and from her uncle, the famed sculptor Mungo Martin. While attending St. Michael's residential school Charlie arduously taught Neel line work, old styles, stories and dedication.
1970: Targum staff threatens strike if editors appoint new editorial board without staff input. Staff election of editors established through Targum caucus. Tony Mauro elected editor-in-chief over prior editors' choice. 1978: The Targum staff strikes after demands for honoraria are not met. 1980: The Targum Publishing Company files its papers of incorporation on July 1, 1980, following a year of negotiations with the University and an arduously fought battle to pass the student vote for funding.
He worked as arduously on his rehabilitation as he had on any work he ever created. Expecting to recover fully, he continued to sculpt almost every day… He was unaware that cancer was invading his body. Three weeks before he died, he became debilitated by pneumonia. It wasn’t until a couple of days before the end that the rapidly spreading cancer was discovered.” Hart died on August 13, 1999, two days after doctors at Johns Hopkins Hospital diagnosed him with cancer.
Furthermore qianzhuang tended to be very locally run operations and were typically run only by a single family, or a close set of associates, in contrast the piaohao maintained branch offices across China, this allowed money to be paid into one branch office and withdrawn from another branch office - essentially "sent" - without there to be any actual physical silver sycees or strings of copper-alloy cash coins having to be arduously transported, under heavy guard, across great distances bringing many risks with them.
He worked arduously for the welfare of the country. He travelled over the whole territory in North Borneo, and introduced numerous settlers, built a new town at Jesselton and converted the country from lawlessness to peace. In December 1904, Sir Ernest returned to England, and in February 1904, he was appointed as the British Resident of Perak. During his administration in Perak, he had successfully reorganised the administration in Perak, and established various clubs and introduced many sports to the state.
Since first stepping foot on American soil, Panther Bior has been arduously working to get established in a new culture while struggling with a myriad of mixed emotions: Interviewed in the Pittsburgh Catholic, Panther said, "It gives one hope. Now we are in America. But we think of when we were in the desert, with no clothes. I flash back to how my brothers missed the chance to come to America...I have tears of joy and tears of sorrow," he said.
Worth shot most scenes in anamorphic widescreen using a 35 mm Panavison Panaflex handheld camera. Due to a limited budget and tight schedule, Worth found it more effective to simply sit down in a nearby chair to shoot close- ups of the actors rather than arduously set up a tripod each time. He also had to underexpose scenes featuring Locke because of her extremely fair complexion. The lead actress has expressed appreciation for Worth's photography of her in Death Game.
Visiting Cabo de Hornos can be done on a day trip by helicopter or more arduously by charter power boat or sailboat, or by cruise ship. "Doubling the Horn" is traditionally understood to involve sailing from 50 degrees South on one coast to 50 degrees South on the other coast, the two benchmark latitudes of a Horn run,The Last Time Around Cape Horn. The Historic 1949 Voyage of the Windjammer Pamir by William F. Stark. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers.
From the outset the films and vaudeville acts were accompanied at the piano. Billy Good, the pianist from 1920–1922 recalled the very long hours worked by all the staff and particularly himself arduously craning up at the screen from the rather dingy pit recessed into the floor in front of the stage. However, the 'pit neck ache' didn't matter since he was 100% engrossed in the music and loved every minute of it playing two houses every night except Sunday for £1-15s–0d. a week.
During this time, Figueredo composed arduously, home-schooled his children, and secretly conspired to overthrow the Spanish-backed Cuban government. Figueredo and his co-conspirators began to organize in earnest in 1867, and they asked Figueredo to compose something that would serve as "our 'Marseillaise'." Figueredo composed the song "La Bayamesa" and first delivered it before the Comité Revolucionario de Bayamo on August 15, 1867. Repeated during the Corpus Christi celebrations in Bayamo of June 1868, "La Bayamesa" quickly caught the attention of local Spanish authorities.
Some of Tucker's writing reflected a growing political skepticism of the workings of democracy beginning with the 1796 election. By the late 1820s, he was persuaded that political leadership positions should be reserved primarily for prosperous people with a tangible, and taxable, interest in government. Andrew Jackson's election in 1828 was for Tucker an example of the "triumph of democratic demagoguery which could bring about class warfare." Tucker worked arduously in Virginia to oppose Jackson and was a solid supporter of Henry Clay, with his second choice being Daniel Webster.
Her research focused on dark nebulae and the Milky Way galaxy. In 1932, she joined Annie Jump Cannon, Margaret Harwood, and Vibert Douglas in studying a solar eclipse at different locations across New England and Canada. "Miss Slocum has been working arduously with the other scientists at the delicate job of adjusting and checking the elaborate instruments which are to be focused on the sun at the time of the eclipse," reported the Boston Globe. She was also involved in the study of (named after its discoverer, Clarence Lewis Friend) in 1939.
In 1975, Treviño started her 35-year career as a children’s librarian. She worked for the San Antonio Library System for 28 years and with Houston Public Library, serving one of the largest Spanish-speaking communities in the United States for the last seven years of her career before retiring. She was an active member of the American Library Association, the Texas Library Association, the Association for Library Service to Children, the Public Library Association, and REFORMA, serving on many committees. Treviño worked arduously to create and promote children library services for Latinos.
Chatham was aided by Robert B. Smith III and James Hamilton Caldwell, Jr. during the trial, which started on September 19, 1955. He understood the national attention that the case was attracting, but said that he was "not concerned with the pressure and agitation which the trial ... produced, either within or outside the state of Mississippi". Chatham arduously implored the 12 members of the all-white jury to look past prejudice to bring justice to the crime. Nevertheless, a not guilty verdict was delivered on September 23, after just 67 minutes of deliberation.
Earth Crisis recorded Destroy the Machines in the studio of progressive thrash metal band Believer in Pennsylvania, being introduced to them by friend Jim Winters of Conviction, who also toured with Earth Crisis. Guitarist Scott Crouse, who admired Believer, was inspired by them to practice arduously and improve his technique. On the album, the band determined to make the songs sound like "somebody continuously hitting something with a hammer", picturing every song as "pounding, pounding, [and] pounding." MetalSucks described Destroy the Machines as a "hardcore take on the Pantera/Exhorder/Prong school of late 80s-early 90s power groove thrash".
Approval of these two later ships was calculated to keep the balance between the Austrian and Hungarian parts of the Dual Monarchy. Only one went to the Austrian-owned STT, the other going to the Hungarian Danubius Yard at Hungarian-controlled Fiume, and the two ships' names carefully chosen to reflect, respectively, Austrian and Hungarian national pride. Montecuccoli retired as head of the naval administration on his 70th birthday, 22 February 1913, and was succeeded by Anton Haus. The Austro-Hungarian fleet, so arduously modernized by Montecuccoli and maintained in wartime by Haus as a 'fleet in being', was parcelled out among the victorious powers after 1918.
Ho arduously sought to define what constitutes Asian-American jazz: "What makes Chinese American music Chinese American? What would comprise an Asian American musical content and form that could transform American music in general rather than simply be subsumed in one or another American musical genre such as 'jazz'?" He polemicized against "the white assimilationist notion of the petty bourgeois Asian American artist that anything by an Asian American artist makes it Asian American," pointing out that, for instance, "Yo-Yo Ma is a cellist who happens to be Chinese/Asian American, not a Chinese/Asian American musician." Fred Ho, "Beyond Asian American Jazz," in Wicked Theory, Naked Practice: A Fred Ho Reader.
Her first sermon was preached in 1748 at Castle Donington, whence she proceeded to London, attending over eighty meetings on her way. She remained in London until the middle of 1749, from which time till 1758 she appears to have done little more than attend to meetings in the neighbourhood of her own residence, and those at Atherstone and Matlock. In 1758 she visited Yorkshire and Lancashire, and in 1760 made an extended tour, which embraced most of the meetings in the western and midland counties, as well as London and Norfolk. During the following year she visited Ireland, where she remained several months, working so arduously as to seriously injure her health.
He was not the politest of men, and a little verse was composed around his apparent inability to remember to say "please". The crew boiled some spaghetti and placed it in one of his collecting jars, causing him momentary excitement at the thought of having discovered a new species, and a standing joke claimed the penguins seen alongside were said to shout out "Clark, Clark" and chase after the ship whenever he was at the wheel. He worked arduously at his biological recording from the moment the expeditions set out, recording the specimens encountered using dredging nets as the ship progressed southwards. When the ship became trapped in the ice he continued with his work, dissecting penguins and recording the changes in the plankton levels in sea.
Following this, the prince began worship at the Gassan and Yudono mountains, which led to the enshrinement of all three deities at the temple located on the summit of Mount Haguro. Following the establishment of the Dewa Sanzan mountains as a center of ascetic religious beliefs, many people began to make yearly pilgrimages to the mountains to pay reverence, even arduously trekking thousands of miles to visit the shrines during the summer months. These pilgrimages held significance to many religions and the mountains served as a place of learning for various belief systems, but were most particularly important to shugendō. Several notable individuals made this pilgrimage to the Dewa Sanzan to include En no Gyōja, the founder of shugendō asceticism, as well as Kūkai, the founder of the Shingon Sect.
Klobuchar with Lindsey Graham and John McCain in Latvia in 2016 In March 2007, Klobuchar went on an official trip to Iraq with Senate colleagues Sheldon Whitehouse, John E. Sununu, and Lisa Murkowski. She noted that U.S. troops were completing their job and working arduously to train the Iraqis. Klobuchar opposed President George W. Bush's plan to increase troop levels in Iraq in January 2007. In May 2007, after Bush vetoed a bill (which Klobuchar voted for) that would fund the troops but impose time limits on the Iraq War, and supporters failed to garner enough congressional votes to override his veto, Klobuchar voted for additional funding for Iraq without such time limits, saying she "simply could not stomach the idea of using our soldiers as bargaining chips".
On 21 November 2016, at around 6pm, a powerful southerly change occurred in Melbourne, which resulted in the death of 10 people, who were asthmatic and succumbed to respiratory failure.Melbourne thunderstorm asthma victims left waiting for ambulances which had not been despatched by Karen Percy (ABC News) Thousands of others across the city experienced allergic reactions and asthma-like symptoms triggered by the storm.Coronial investigation uncovers tenth thunderstorm asthma death by Aisha Dow (The Age) This was due to a stark southerly wind (60 km/hour) that distributed ryegrass pollen into the moist air, rupturing them into very fine specks, small enough particles to enter people's lungs, as they were sucked up into the warm updraft of air forming the storm cells, before they returned to earth in the storm's cool down-draft, spreading across the land in the storm's efflux area.Thunderstorm asthma deaths: ambulance dispatch 'unlikely' factor – coroner by Melissa Davey (The Guardian) Hospitals and medical centres in the city had to arduously manage 8,500 emergency calls in the space of just five hours, and the hospitalisation of 1400 people.
His riding spanned the Central Coast, then including the large pulp mill town of Ocean Falls and the western part of the Cariboo and the Squamish-Lillooet in a time when the largest town was Bralorne, and both were isolated as well as separated by each other by vast mountains. Other voters were in the Chilcotin Plateau and Cariboo, over yet another set of mountains and/or huge plateaus from the other towns on the coast and in the southern part of the riding. In those days Squamish was still only accessible by ferry from downtown Vancouver, and the rail line came no farther south. Most of the remaining major towns in the riding, Squamish, Lillooet, Powell River, Sechelt, Ocean Falls and Bella Coola, were all separated from each other and all those mentioned by either water or rail - or, in the case of Lillooet to Bella Coola, an arduously long and difficult drive via 100 Mile House and Williams Lake; the latter was among the three or four largest towns in the riding and is today central to the Cariboo riding.
If, today, legal systems of European origin are usually divided into civil law originated in the framework of late Roman positive law with codified written principles and the English common law, giving precedential authority to prior court decisions,Lobban (2007), p. 1 the latter practices were in older times not quite exclusive for England. Such systems dominated in the historic lands of the Kingdom of Bohemia as late as the beginnings of the Modern Age,Klabouch (1961), p. 202 and even longer in the then Polish and Hungarian lands. Common law was abolished by Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand II only after the loss of national sovereignty in 1627 – some years after the fateful defeat in the Battle of White Mountain (1620).Schelle (2007) In a spirit similar to some English lawyers Všehrd extolled irretrievability of legal customs in which the experiences of past ages had been condensed, as Všehrd put it, “from ancestors and old Czechs arduously and diligently found.”Všehrd (1874), Zavřenie, pp. 458-459; Ibidem, IX, 10, 14, p. 453; Ibidem IX, 10, 17 (petit); Lobban (2007), p.
Professor Zicman Feider Zicman Feider (1903–1979) was a Jewish Romanian acarologist, a remarkable researcher and a gifted academic, whose work continues to influence by many generations of biologists, some of whom studied zoology under his supervision. His name as a researcher is forever associated with the enigmatic group of Acari a.k.a. Acarina (a taxon of arachnids that contains mites and ticks), for which he arduously worked to perfect their taxonomy. Alone or in collaboration with his numerous disciples, he described and created 1 phalanx and 2 sub-phalanxes, 16 families and 8 subfamilies, 40 genera, 4 subgenera, and 145 species new to science. One could only compare professor Feider’s work with that of Aristide Caradgea, who studied micro- Lepidoptera, attracting all the world researchers of that group to come in a pilgrimage to his modest place in Grumazesti, Neamț, Romania. Similarly, Feider’s strenuous line of work encompassed Acari collections from all over Europe, St. Helen Island, North Korea, Nepal, Mongolia, India, Vietnam, Brazil, Venezuela, and Chile, making his lab in the Alexandru Ioan Cuza University (Romanian: Universitatea „Alexandru Ioan Cuza”; acronym: UAIC), of Iași, Romania, a Mecca of the world’s acarologists.

No results under this filter, show 77 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.