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51 Sentences With "belled"

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

If real Gs move in silence, like lasagna, public companies move like belled cats.
The belled sleeves will look pretty much like bell-bottom pants, but on your arms.
David Autor, an MIT economist, reckons we could be heading toward a 'bar-belled shaped economy.
It is an exaggerated scoop neck, terrycloth sweater with super long belled sleeves and a raw hem.
Until then, we touch our bodies like wounds—the belled bruises fingers ringagainst the skin are another way to bloom.
Bloomingdale's fondness for frills was still in evidence a year ago, when she wore a scarlet evening dress with outsize belled sleeves, girlishly bowed at the shoulders, to Vanity Fair's Oscars party.
Ms. Kidambi also performed a solo set, accompanying her voice with belled bangles on her ankles (the ghungroo, a traditional Indian accouterment) and, for the latter half of each piece, the harmonium.
Producer Daniella Pelosini, a regular supplier of Italian roaster Illy, said she will struggle to produce a lot of pulped naturals – a bean prepared from belled mature, red cherries, which top quality brands seek.
Yet I also see tweets from Mr. Trump like the 2013 missive that re-emerged Monday promising "that I'm much smarter than Jonathan Leibowitz — I mean Jon Stewart," and I cannot help seeing another belled cat.
Streams of wool and knit bumped up against each other in swingy dresses; prints were fractured geometries; sleeves belled out just a bit below the elbow; and it added up to more than the sum of its parts.
In 2016, they came at me through Twitter, the occasional voice mail and a few very ugly emails after I was identified by my Jewish-sounding name and "belled" on social media as a target for the alt-right.
She wore her hair pulled back with one of her beloved scrunchies, in navy velvet; a maroon tweedy blazer; slate-blue belled slacks; jewelry in just about every possible place jewelry can go; and carried her own large handbag.
Shearith Israel lent the exhibition a charred Torah scroll rescued from a fire set by British soldiers in 1776 and a pair of exquisitely crafted silver rimonim — belled ornaments for a Torah scroll — fashioned by the esteemed silversmith Myer Myers.
There, among the 17 tightly edited combinations of pleated trousers, tapered at the ankle; double-face jackets in contrasting shades; and vaguely Star Wars-military tunics was one Tropicana cashmere coat, shoulders dropped and sleeves belled to create an almost classical curve.
Then he updated it, abstracted it, married it to wide sporty rugby stripes (also the basis of the court-heeled faux button-up bootees), transformed it into silk tunics with belled sleeves over skater skirts with big side-pockets-cum-panniers, or elastic-waisted jacquard skirts that turned to expose under-trousers/bloomers and so rendered it entirely other.
At Dior, in a show inspired in equal parts by the daywear in the archives of M. Dior and female explorers like Amelia Earhart, Freya Stark and Louise Boyd, the palette was earthy and angsty, the silhouette curved in at the waist from a small, soft shoulder and belled out to the calf, and the decoration was minimal: Embroidery on jackets and coats mapped, literally, the world; far-flung continents were picked out in flowers made of feathers; and tiny tulle ruffles and feathers fogged in the body.
Overall is an inescutcheon of pretence of Stevens: Per chevron azure and gules, in chief two falcons rising belled or.
The pink-belled (D. poliocephala) and the white-bellied (D. forsteni) imperial pigeon are similar and allopatric species. The Mindoro (D.
Flowers sit in the axils of upper leaves. Corolla is white or pale pink with brown veins. Calyx is pubescent, wide-belled and five- petaled. The fruits are naked brown nuts.
The side gables have round-arch windows, and the building is topped by an octagonal cupola with a belled finial. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.
The gudastviri () is a droneless, double-chantered, horn-belled bagpipe played in Georgia. The term comes from the words guda (bag) and stviri (whistling). In some regions, the instrument is called the chiboni, stviri, or tulumi.
The crest was changed in 1959 from a gold falcon rising, wings displayed and inverted, to one rising with wings elevated and addorsed. The falcon is ducally gorged with a red, three-pointed crown around its neck, and belled in gold with red jesses.
The Handbook of the Birds of the World splits this species from the golden-belled starfrontlet on the basis of bill length and plumage. Others lump it with the golden-bellied on the basis of the latter's subspecies C. bonapartei consita, which is intermediate in these characters.
Drawn by Wenceslaus Hollar (d. 1677) Arms of Throckmorton: Gules, on a chevron argent three bars gemelles sable. Crest: A falcon rising proper belled and jessed or. Mottos: (1): Virtus Sola Nobilitas (Virtue is the only nobility); (2): Moribus Antiquis (With ancient manners)Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.
The term cor anglais is French for English horn, but the instrument is neither from England nor related to the various conical-bore brass instruments called "horns", such as the French horn, the natural horn, the post horn, or the tenor horn. The instrument originated in Silesia about 1720 when a bulb bell was fitted to a curved oboe da caccia-type body by the Weigel family of Breslau. The two-keyed, open-belled, straight tenor oboe (French taille de hautbois, "tenor oboe"), and more particularly the flare-belled oboe da caccia, resembled the horns played by angels in religious images of the Middle Ages. This gave rise in German-speaking central Europe to the Middle High German name engellisches Horn, meaning angelic horn.
The marked skillet dimensions refer to interior circumference at the top most part of the flared walls, as the pans are designed to use a lid that coincides with this diameter. _Lid Diameters_ can also lend to confusion, as the correct stainless steel lids of vintage (pre-Corning) Revere Ware have belled lips. These belled lips facilitate the oft-advertised Vapor Seal, a method of locking in moisture, which some believe retain nutrients. Re-sellers and collectors, when measuring the inner circumference of the bell flange, often measure the lids an eighth to a quarter of an inch narrower than proper size, or conversely, measure the outside of the bell flair, adding an additional 1/4" to 3/8" of an inch of diameter.
The family's coat of arms is: Argent a fess gules between six Cornish choughs proper. The supporters are two falcons, proper, belled or. The crest is made up of an eagle sable preying on a partridge or. The motto is "FESTINA LENTE" (Latin: Make haste slowly), although "SEMPER FIDELIS" (Always faithful) is also used.
Arms of Stevens of Winscott: Per chevron azure and gules, in chief two falcons rising belled or. Detail from 1776 mural monument to Richard Stevens and his wife Elizabeth, St Peter's Church, Peters Marland Richard Stevens (1702–1776) of Winscott in the parish of Peters Marland, Devon, was Member of Parliament for Callington in Cornwall (1761–1768).
His chamber music includes Divertimento, oboe and bassoon, 1956 ; String Trio, 1956; Quartet for Stings, 1957; Quintet for Oboe and Strings, 1958, Four Two-Bit Contraptions, flute and horn, 1964, Skizzen, wind quintet, 1967, Laudes, brass quintet, 1971, Concert Variations, double-belled euphonium or euphonium and piano, 1977, and Triple Play for brass trio, commissioned by the Zephyr Brass Trio in 2006.
Arms of Throckmorton: Gules, on a chevron argent three bars gemelles sable. Crest: A falcon rising proper belled and jessed or. Mottos: (1): Virtus Sola Nobilitas (Virtue is the only nobility); (2): Moribus Antiquis (With ancient manners)Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.792 Sir Francis Throckmorton (1554July 1584) was a conspirator against Queen Elizabeth I of England in the Throckmorton Plot.
Tulle is often used as an accent, to create a lacy, floating look. Tulle may also be used in underskirts or petticoats to create a stiff belled shape. Gowns are often puffed out with the use of several layers of stiff tulle. Tulle netting is also used to make veils, since it obscures the features of the face while allowing the wearer to see out.
The probe was spearheaded by a herd of fifteen belled cattle being driven across Route 13 at a point 150 meters northeast of the perimeter. At 23:00 the VC opened fire on the northeast section of the perimeter with a wheel-mounted .50-caliber machine gun located on the railway embankment. One tank operator trained his searchlight on the VC machine gun position and returned fire along with three APCs for around three minutes.
Sheikh Abdullah as-Sahli grave in Balad ash-Sheikh cemetery, 2010 The town is named after Sheikh Abdullah as-Sahli, a renowned Sufi, who was granted the taxes collected from the village by Sultan Salim II (1566-1574). The village contains a maqam ("shrine") dedicated to him. His grave is located in the Balad al-Sheikh cemetery on Mount Carmel. In 1816, British traveller James Silk Buckingham passed by "Belled-el-Sheikh".
Arms of Throckmorton: Gules, on a chevron argent three bars gemelles sable. Crest: A falcon rising proper belled and jessed or. Mottos: (1): Virtus Sola Nobilitas (Virtue is the only nobility); (2): Moribus Antiquis (With ancient manners)Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.792 There have been two baronetcies created for different branches of the Throckmorton family, 6th cousins, both descended from Sir John Throckmorton (d. 1445), Under-Treasurer of England temp. King Henry VI (1422–1461).
The building is clad with green-tinted double-pane glass on windows, with the service core and structure of the building covered with aluminium sheeting skin coated with a light grey fluoropolymer paint. Upon completion, the mass of the building above ground was . The building rests upon 43 belled concrete and steel piles, of average length , which go "through 3 layers of swamp" to solid siltstone bedrock. These piles range in diameter from to .
Llanhilleth () is a village, community and an electoral ward on the A467 road between Ebbw Vale and Crumlin in Blaenau Gwent, Wales. Two large mounds in the field behind the Carpenter’s Arms are the remains of the medieval Llanhilleth castle which originally had two large, stone-built towers. Part of the Monmouthshire Canal ran through the parish; the Ebbw River forms the western boundary of the parish. The twin-belled Church in Wales church of St Mark is located on Brooklyn Terrace, near the High Street junction.
Monument with effigies of Sir John Throckmorton and his wife Margaret Puttenham, SE corner of chancel, Coughton Church, Warwickshire Monument with effigies of Sir John Throckmorton and his wife Margaret Puttenham, SE corner of chancel, Coughton Church, Warwickshire, drawn by Wenceslaus Hollar (d. 1677) Arms of Throckmorton: Gules, on a chevron argent three bars gemelles sable. Crest: A falcon rising proper belled and jessed or. Mottos: (1): Virtus Sola Nobilitas (Virtue is the only nobility); (2): Moribus Antiquis (With ancient manners)Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.
Jazzophone The jazzophone is a comparatively rare sax-shaped double-belled brass instrument, with a trumpet-like mouthpiece. One bell is left open, while the other bell uses a harmon mute with a stem on a trigger that produces a "wah-wah" type of effect. Speculation is that the first was created in 1920, with the first known advertisement for the instrument appearing in a German magazine in 1926, but other musical experts disagree there is another form of jazzophone. Collector "Captain Kazoo" claims to own such an instrument.
He was buried with his wife Mary in the family mausoleum at the Coylton Kirk cemetery. The Chalmer's were connected through marriage with many families in Ayrshire and elsewhere, such as the Campbells of Loudoun, Hamiltons of Cadzow, Cuninghames of Caprington, Wallace of Ellerslie, Craufurd of Craufurdland, Fergusson of Craigdarroch, Farquhar of Gilmilnscroft, etc. The Chalmer of Gadgirth coat of arms is Argent, a demi- lion rampant, Sable, issuing out of a Fess, and in base, a Fleur-de-Lis: all within a border, Gules. Crest - a falcon, belled, proper.
Harold Brasch (see "List of important players" below) brought the British-style compensating euphonium to the United States c. 1939, but the double-belled euphonium may have remained in common use even into the 1950s and 1960s. In any case, they have become rare (they were last in Conn's advertisements in the 1940s, and King's catalog in the 1960s),1963 H.N. White/King catalog (Baritone/Euphonium), and are generally unknown to younger players. They are chiefly known now through their mention in the song "Seventy-Six Trombones" from the musical The Music Man by Meredith Willson.
Arms of Throckmorton: Gules, on a chevron argent three bars gemelles sable. Crest: A falcon rising proper belled and jessed or. Mottos: (1): Virtus Sola Nobilitas (Virtue is the only nobility); (2): Moribus Antiquis (With ancient manners)Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p. 792 Sir Baynham Throckmorton, 3rd Baronet (11 December 1629 - 31 July 1681) of Clearwell, Gloucestershire was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1656 and 1679. Throckmorton was the son of Sir Baynham Throckmorton, 2nd Baronet (c. 1606–64) and his wife Margaret Hopton, daughter of Robert Hopton.
The nomination document describes its exterior as "imposing", and goes on: > The interior, with its belled walls, curving pews and excellent stained > glass, is one of the finest—perhaps the finest at this scale—and most > original in Idaho. The church is notable for its status as the only > commission so far as is presently known of a Boise architectural office then > of some importance Nisbet and Paradice. This elaborate local church was > begun during a prosperous period in 1909, and not dedicated until 1915 or > completely finished until still later. It kept its congregation in financial > straits until 1924, but it was finished nonetheless.
Auguste Vachon was granted arms by the Canadian Heraldic Authority on May 28, 1992. The arms are blazoned:Sable a triple-towered Castle Or windows Gules portcullis shut Sable flaming Gules in chief two Suns Or, and for the crest Above a helmet mantled Sable doubled Or wreathed of these colours a demi bull Gules accorné unguled ringed gorged of oak leaves and belled all Or holding in its dexter hoof a magnifying glass proper rim and handle Sable. On April 3, 2001 Vachon was granted supporters as an honourable augmentation to his arms in recognition of his distinguished service to Canadian heraldry: Upon a grassy mound set with gloriosa Daisies (Rudbeckia hirta) Or two Cardinals (Cardinalis cardinalis) proper.
On receipt of the "blocking back" bell the Kirkpatrick signalman would not have been permitted to offer another Up train to Quintinshill until he had received the "obstruction removed" bell from the Quintinshill signalman to confirm that the shunted train was clear of the Up line. However, although the "train out of section" signal was belled to Kirkpatrick the "blocking back" signal was never sent. Significantly, the "train out of section" signal was sent at 6.34 am immediately after Signalman Tinsley arrived in the signalbox and at the moment when responsibility for working the box was being handed over. Both of the Quintinshill signalmen subsequently claimed that the other man had been the one to send the "train out of section" signal.
Barraud's deceased brother, a London photographer, willed him his estate including his DC-powered Edison-Bell cylinder phonograph with a case of cylinders and his dog Nipper. Barraud's original painting depicts Nipper staring intently into the horn of an Edison- Bell while both sit on a polished wooden surface. The horn on the Edison-Bell machine was black and after a failed attempt at selling the painting to a cylinder record supplier of Edison Phonographs in the UK, a friend of Barraud's suggested that the painting could be brightened up (and possibly made more marketable) by substituting one of the brass-belled horns on display in the window at the new gramophone shop on Maiden Lane. The Gramophone Company in London was founded and managed by an American, William Barry Owen.
He is very quiet and very talented and dedicated to his music; one of the times Thomas really gets angry is when someone insults his music and his playing, like genius pianist John Whittard does. Thomas gives Nadja her first dancing prop: a baton of sorts that has a matching castagnet that attaches to one end, and a belled piece that attaches to the other end. Another thing about Thomas is his practicality; he is gentle and quiet, but he is very down to earth when it comes to day-to-day life, becoming concerned about how the Troupe earns money and the success of their performances. He is rather cowardly when faced with violence and physical danger, and at those times Abel and Sylvie give him alcohol to make him overcome his fear.
In this book, for each herb (clan shield or coat of arms) the blazon, or verbal description of the arms, is first given in authentic heraldic style, followed by a translation from the Polish description by Niesiecki. > Arms: azure, a horseshoe reversed, between its branches, a small cross patée > en abime, both or. Upon a wreath of the colors mantled of his liveries > whereon is set for a crest: out of a ducal coronet, a hawk proper, wings > surgent, belled and jessed, holding in its dexter talons, a charge of the > shield. > On a shield in a blue field is a gold horseshoe, with its heels pointed > straight up, and in its center a cross; on the helmet over a crown is a > goshawk with its wings slightly raised for flight, facing the right side of > the shield.
A mural monument to his wife survives in Peters Marland Church inscribed as follows: > "To the memory of Mrs Elizabeth Clevland wife of John Clevland Esq., Member > of Parliament for the Borough of Barnstaple (where he has been chosen six > successive parliaments) and daughter of Richard Stevens of Winscott. She > died 16 September 1792 aged 65 years" Below is a white marble relief sculpted escutcheon showing the following arms: Quarterly 1st & 4th: Clevland; 2nd & 3rd: Vert, two bars engrailed between three leopard's faces or (Child baronets, of the City of London (1685) (Child of Surat, East Indies and Dervill, Essex, Baronet, created 1684, extinct 1753),Burke's Armorials, 1884 the arms of William Clevland's mother Elizabeth Child). Overall is an inescutcheon of pretence of Stevens: Per chevron azure and gules, in chief two falcons rising belled or.
Ignaz Samuel Pallme (Steinschönau 1 February 1806 \- Hainburg near Vienna 11 June 1877), a Bohemian by birth, undertook a journey to Kordofan in 1837, on commission, for a mercantile establishment at Cairo, in the hope of discovering new channels of traffic with central Africa. In the pursuit of his object, he sojourned (1837–1839) longer in the country than any European before him; the information he furnished respecting the state of this province of Egypt in particular, and of the Belled Soudan in general, may, therefore, be considered the most authentic in existence at that time. That few travellers have visited these countries before Pallme, and subjected the information they were enabled to collect to print, may be deduced from the facts, that scarcely one-half of the places mentioned in Pallme's book are to be found on the maps of that time. The book Kordofan,Pallme, Ignaz Samuel.
Mural monument to Elizabeth Stevens, Peters Marland Church The mural monument to his daughter Elizabeth Stevens (1727–1792) survives in Peters Marland Church, inscribed as follows: > "To the memory of Mrs Elizabeth Clevland wife of John Clevland Esq., Member > of Parliament for the Borough of Barnstaple (where he has been chosen six > successive parliaments) and daughter of Richard Stevens of Winscott. She > died 16 September 1792 aged 65 years" Below is a white marble relief sculpted escutcheon showing the following arms: Quarterly 1st & 4th: Clevland; 2nd & 3rd: Vert, two bars engrailed between three leopard's faces or (Child baronets, of the City of London (1685) (Child of Surat, East Indies and Dervill, Essex, Baronet, created 1684, extinct 1753),Burke's Armorials, 1884 the arms of William Clevland's mother Elizabeth Child). Overall is an inescutcheon of pretence of Stevens: Per chevron azure and gules, in chief two falcons rising belled or.
" Giuseppe Sedia of the Krakow Post noted that the character played by Israeli actor Itay Tiran turns out to be "the most tormented groom ever seen in Polish film". He added that "the distastrous reception is drenched in vodka just like the banquet displayed in Wojciech Smarzowski's The Wedding but purged from any black comedy". Jake Dee from Arrow in the Head rated the film a score of 8/10, writing, "Shot with a steady and sure-handed formalistic lens, played with credible pathos by all involved, belled with a quizzically unnerving score - despite the humor hampering the horror at times - Demon is a bold and balefully bedeviling Polish delight!" Justin Chang of the Los Angeles Times praised the film's cinematography, and called it " A bravura testament to a talent silenced far too soon.". Joshua Rothkopf from Time Out awarded the film 4 out of 5 stars, writing, "Nailing a tricky sense of physical anarchy (as well as some far subtler domestic tensions), Marcin Wrona’s Polish import is an eerie, extraordinarily poised piece of horror.

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