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49 Sentences With "breakfasted"

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

To limber up, Mr Kaine dropped in on the Virginia state delegation as they breakfasted at their hotel.
These genes were much more active when the men had fasted before exercise than when they had breakfasted.
In the medieval port town of Trani, on Puglia's Adriatic side, I breakfasted on sfoliatelle and fresh blood orange juice.
In the morning, congratulating myself on not having used the emergency phone, I breakfasted on cloudberry doughnuts and homemade dried reindeer.
Least surprising, the men wound up with an energy surplus when they had breakfasted and then sat, taking in about 490 more calories that day than they burned.
And yet, like many New Yorkers, I've breakfasted all my life on buttered rolls, wrapped in plastic, foil or wax paper and sold for about a dollar at any corner deli, bodega or coffee cart.
We breakfasted together, gathered around a small table eating cereal and bananas and orange juice at Bill's request, my older son's chubby legs swinging, milk dripping from his spoon as he grinned at the old man across the table.
In a posh Washington hotel, two powerful visitors—first Maxine Waters, the Democrat who chairs the House of Representatives' financial-services committee, and then Mike Crapo, the Republican head of the Senate banking committee—address a roomful of well-breakfasted bankers.
She had breakfasted on nothing but tea — a troubling window into the Crawley women's diet — and she had just come from a very contentious meeting with the board members of Downton Cottage Hospital, who have been debating whether to merge with the Royal Yorkshire County Hospital, a process that would mean consolidating fund-raising operations and enhancing technoxxck;j;kafdls2jt-b2n-jjjsddxxa … Sorry, Tom, that was my head nodding once more onto the keyboard; this story line just does that to me.
Trewey is nowhere as an equilibrist, compared to a gallant veteran who breakfasted at my table, this morning.
A rushlight would faintly illuminate his bedroom during the hours of darkness.2 July 1792. Byng rose early in the morning and sometimes breakfasted as late as nine.29 August 1782. Broadly speaking, dinner (lunch) was at two o’clock.
Stebbing knew many literary figures. He breakfasted with Samuel Rogers, and was introduced by Basil Montagu to Coleridge's set at Highgate. He conversed with Walter Scott, corresponded with Robert Southey, heard Thomas Moore sing his Irish ballads, and knew Thomas Campbell and Charles Dickens.
Tradition holds that Marquis de Lafayette breakfasted at Roberts Inn during his 1824 tour of America. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2006. It is located off of Route 144 next to the Dunkin Donuts off the intersection of Route 144 and Route 97.
McGuire, p. 23 In a report to the Board of War, Washington admitted the capture of two cannons, two officers and 20 men from Colonel Proctor's Regiment. General Greene reported to his wife, "The British Generals breakfasted and I [dined] at the same house that day". This event happened at the Van Horne House, also known as Convivial Hall.
Thomas McKay spent most of his later years between his farms at Champoeg and Scappoose. At some point he became a United States citizen. In 1840, he drove more than 3,600 sheep and 661 cattle from California to Fort Nisqually for the HBC. In 1841, members of the overland party of the Wilkes Expedition met and breakfasted with McKay at his Champoeg farm.
Daniel O'Connell passed through Kilmac' on a campaign trail and he wrote:Source. Letter from Daniel O’Connell to his wife about campaigning in Co Waterford, 19 June 1826, Irish Monthly 12 (1884) 216. :We breakfasted at Kilmacthomas, a town belonging to the Beresfords but the people belong to us. They came out to meet us with green boughs and such shouting you can have no idea of.
During World War II the building was used by refugees, Jews, and ambassadors from countries that had severed diplomatic relations with Italy. At the end of the war, Pope Pius XII greeted 800 Roman children who breakfasted at St. Martha Hospice after receiving their First Communion. It served as a home where senior clerics could live their last years. Increasingly it served as a residence for clerics assigned to Vatican offices.
That agreement was signed in President Read's office, and the signees breakfasted together afterward. In her role as Superintendent of Atlanta University, concurrent with her presidency at Spelman, Read was part of arrangements to include women students at Atlanta University into the Spelman student body and college community. Read was awarded an honorary degree by Oberlin College in 1939. Read was elected President Emeritus when she retired from Spelman in 1953.
A friend, Lee Shippey, columnist for the Los Angeles Times, recalled Garland's regular system of writing: > . . . he got up at half past five, brewed a pot of coffee and made toast on > an electric gadget in his study and was at work by six. At nine o'clock he > was through with work for the day. Then he breakfasted, read the morning > paper and attended to his personal mail. . . .
POWs slept on double-decker bunk beds under two blankets. The French had a small building of their own. Guards lived in a small room opening onto the Americans' quarters. Each day the men rose at 06:00 and breakfasted on Red Cross food and potato soup, bread and hot water (for coffee) which they drew from the farm kitchen. At 06:30 they washed their spoons and enameled bowls and cleaned their barracks.
The chimney was typically in the corner, and the doors were low and wide. Our travelers breakfasted with the Friends at Burlington, whom they denominated as being "the most worldly of men in all their deportment and conversation." Although, elsewhere his descriptions and the relations of the Indians' impressions of the Quakers are not so flattering. They went hence in a shallop to Upland, stopping at Takany (Tacony), a village of Swedes and Finns, where they drank good beer.
In 1990, Mac Coille won a Jacob's Award for his work as presenter of Morning Ireland. Mac Coille regularly interviewed politicians such as Gerry Adams and Eoin Ryan Jnr, and breakfasted politically with CNN broadcaster Larry King on Super Tuesday in February 2008. Mac Coille has also worked on One to One, a television interview series broadcast on RTÉ One. In radio he worked on the Good Friday Agreement and the 2008 United States presidential election.
Ferguson spent a great deal of time at Pitfour but also had an apartment in St James Place, Westminster, Middlesex. Ferguson became the third Laird of Pitfour on the death of his father, Lord Pitfour, in 1777. The Third Laird was a known associate of James Boswell and together with his brother Patrick, who was the designer of the Ferguson rifle, breakfasted with Boswell in November 1762. Other close associates were William Pitt the Younger and Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville.
289–90 French breakfasted with Kitchener (31 March) who told him that he and Joffre were "on ... trial" over the next five weeks, and that the Allied governments would reinforce other theatres unless they made "substantial advances" and "br[oke] the German line". There were rumours in both British and French circles, probably baseless, that Kitchener coveted French's job for himself.Holmes 2004, p. 285 French also objected (2 April 1915) to rumours that Joffre was trying to put the BEF under Foch's command.
On 14 August 1788 George III, Queen Charlotte, and their three eldest daughters, when on their way to Cheltenham, breakfasted at Hill House with Paul, and visited Obadiah Paul's cloth manufactory at Woodchester Mill. Paul was one of the party who accompanied Sir Walter Scott to the Hebrides in 1810. He died on 16 December 1820. On his death the baronetcy expired, but was revived on 3 September 1821 in the person of his cousin, John Dean Paul, the father of Sir John Dean Paul the banker.
Knight 2005, p. 497 Nelson returned briefly to Merton to set his affairs in order and bid farewell to Emma, before travelling back to London and then on to Portsmouth, arriving there early in the morning of 14 September. He breakfasted at the George Inn with his friends George Rose, the Vice-President of the Board of Trade, and George Canning, the Treasurer of the Navy. During the breakfast word spread of Nelson's presence at the inn and a large crowd of well wishers gathered.
He found the Admiralty in disarray and wrote to his friend Field Marshal Haig about the lack of drive. On 19 June 1917 First Sea Lord Jellicoe confessed to the War Cabinet that they were losing.Van der Kloot, W., Great Scientists wage the Great War, Stroud: Fonthill Media, 2014, Chapter. 5 Haig and Geddes breakfasted with Lloyd George to demand a new administration in the Admiralty. On 6 July 1917 Geddes, strongly recommended by Haig, returned to civilian life as First Lord of the Admiralty.
Napoleon breakfasted off silver plate at Le Caillou, the house where he had spent the night. When Soult suggested that Grouchy should be recalled to join the main force, Napoleon said, "Just because you have all been beaten by Wellington, you think he's a good general. I tell you Wellington is a bad general, the English are bad troops, and this affair is nothing more than eating breakfast". Napoleon's seemingly dismissive remark may have been strategic, given his maxim "in war, morale is everything".
Millar practised as an architect for a short period after graduating, but decided to become a journalist in 1932, starting with a newspaper in Glasgow. He worked as an ordinary seaman on a freighter for four months and tried his hand at writing film scripts. He moved to The Daily Telegraph in 1936. After managing to befriend an officer on the yacht Nahlin, chartered by King Edward VIII in 1936 to tour the coast of Dalmatia, he breakfasted with the King and the ship's captain the next day.
A railway station opened in Rye in 1851 and there are various references in the Benson books to a local station. In the BBC's 2014 dramatisation, townsfolk gather at a station depicted as "Tilling Town" in the hope of catching a glimpse of the Prince of Wales. In John van Druten's play, Make Way for Lucia (1948), based on Benson's novels, Lucia refers to Georgie Pillson and Major Benjamin Flint having breakfasted together in East Tilling. This appears to be the next station on the line between Tilling and London.
With his crime act, Győrkös caused severe damage to the Hungarist movement and ideology, they argued. Following the murder, the MNA's links with the Russian intelligence were revealed, albeit Political Capital already wrote about this close relationship in August 2014, but with limited attention in accordance with the MNA's marginalization. On 2 November, Népszava published a photo where Jobbik MP and foreign policy expert Márton Gyöngyösi and Gábor Szalai, a journalist of the Hídfő.ru and a former member of the MNA, breakfasted together and discussed in a café.
Shortly after 10 am, the three judges went to the courthouse, in the market place at that time, and the Special Commission was read. The judges then breakfasted at the bishop's palace, after which a service was held in the cathedral and attended by 50 of the principal inhabitants of Ely. The sermon, preached by Henry Bate Dudley, was "that the law is not made for a righteous man, but for the lawless and disobedient". After the service, around 1 pm, the court reconvened; the grand jury was sworn in, and Mr W. Dunn Gardner elected the foreman.
In the morning, Luard bathed and breakfasted, and then spent some time writing letters to his son and to Colonel Warde. He then walked to the railway line at Teston, hid in some bushes, and jumped in front of the 9.09 train from Maidstone West to Tonbridge. He had pinned a note to his coat saying, 'Whoever finds me take me to Colonel Warde'. On hearing of Luard's death, Colonel Warde went to Southampton and broke the news to Luard's son, Captain Charles Luard, in the cabin of the steamer on which he had just arrived.
After arriving at Lejjun at 03:30, the 2nd Lancers watered, fed, and breakfasted before setting out at 05:30 for Afula on a "three-squadrons front followed by the 11th Light Armoured Car Battery and a subsection of the 17th Machine-Gun Squadron." Ten minutes later, the centre squadron was fired on by six companies of the 13th Depot Regiment and military police, supported by 12 machine guns, which Liman von Sanders had ordered to occupy the Musmus Pass at Lejjun at 12:30 on 19 September. They had had to march from Nazareth to Lejjun, a distance of .Falls 1930 Vol.
They arrived from Antelope Springs, east of Tombstone, where they had been rounding up livestock with their brothers and had breakfasted with Clanton and Tom McLaury the day before. Both Frank McLaury and Billy Clanton were armed with a revolver and a rifle, as was the custom for riders in the country outside Tombstone. Apache warriors had engaged the U.S. Army near Tombstone just three weeks before the O.K. Corral gunfight, so the need for weapons outside of town was well established and accepted. Billy and Frank stopped first at the Grand Hotel on Allen Street, and were greeted by Doc Holliday.
Crowds of patients were always waiting, and for three hours he examined them and prescribed, finding some who were already ill, and others only affected by fear. When he had seen all he breakfasted, and visited patients at their houses. On entering a house he had a disinfectant burnt on hot coals, and if hot or out of breath rested till at his ease, then put a lozenge in his mouth and proceeded to examine the patient. After spending some hours in this way, he returned home and drank a glass of sack, dining soon after, usually off roast meat with pickles or other relish.
French threatened to resign if Gough were not reinstated.Holmes 2004, pp. 183–184 In another meeting at the War Office (23 March), Gough demanded a written guarantee from French and Ewart that the Army would not be used against Ulster (possibly influenced by Major-General Henry Wilson, who had recently suggested similar terms to J.E.B. Seely (Secretary of State for War), and with whom Gough had breakfasted that morning). At another meeting with Seely, who – by Gough's account – attempted unsuccessfully to browbeat Gough by staring at him, Seely accepted French's suggestion that a written document from the Army Council might help to convince Gough's officers.
The Times, October 10, 1799. Aylmer Bourke Lambert, a British botanist, is on record as having written in January 1800 to Richard Pulteney of Blandford (now Blandford Forum), in the English county of Dorset, as follows: > "I breakfasted with Sir Joseph [Banks] on Monday morning who is recovered > from the Gout and in high Spirits. We had a good deal of laughing about the > Tractors. Perkins has published several Cases communicated by my Father, and > presented me with a copy of his Book."Clarke, Tom, in La Posta: A Journal of > American Postal History, Vol 28, number 2 (whole number 164), May 1997, pp > 16-17.
Staying in Monmouth for just a couple of days, Nelson visited the Naval Temple and the Roundhouse on Kymin Hill, where he breakfasted and admired the views. He was struck with the Naval Temple, saying that "it was the only monument of its kind erected to the Royal Navy in the Kingdom". Sir Richard Colt Hoare saw the Temple in 1803, soon after its construction, and was unimpressed, describing it as "in very bad taste". Monmouthshire artist and author, Fred Hando, who described many Monmouthshire landmarks in his series of articles for the South Wales Argus running from 1922-1970, visited the Temple in 1964.
At the artillery of the 4th Indian Division fired on Nibewa from the south- east, around and at the tanks began the attack with the 31st Field Battery RA and flanked by the Bren Carrier platoons of the Indian infantry. The Italians had concentrated their 28 M11/39 tanks beyond the perimeter wall, where the tank crews were caught while warming engines. The Italian tank crews had no time to react before their tanks were knocked out. The British tanks broke down the walls and drove into the camp, where the Italians had just breakfasted; Maletti advanced with a machine-gun and was killed by a gunshot wound.
Frank McLaury At around 1:30–2:00 pm, after Tom had been pistol-whipped by Wyatt, Ike's 19-year-old younger brother Billy Clanton and Tom's older brother Frank McLaury arrived in town. They had heard from their neighbor, Ed "Old Man" Frink, that Ike had been stirring up trouble in town overnight, and they had ridden into town on horseback to back up their brothers. They arrived from Antelope Springs, east of Tombstone, where they had been rounding up stock and had breakfasted with Ike and Tom the day before. Both Frank and Billy were armed with a revolver and a rifle, as was the custom for riders in the country outside Tombstone.
Till his death in 1991, the Nobel laureate writer Isaac Bashevis Singer lived in the northern end of Miami Beach and breakfasted often at Sheldon's drugstore on Harding Avenue. There are many kosher restaurants and even kollels for post-graduate Talmudic scholars, such as the Miami Beach Community Kollel. Miami Beach had roughly 60,000 people in Jewish households, 62 percent of the total population in 1982, but only 16,500, or 19 percent of the population in 2004, said Ira Sheskin, a demographer at the University of Miami who conducts surveys once a decade. The Miami Beach Jewish community had decreased in size by 1994 due to migration to wealthier areas and aging of the population.
Scott had previously speculated that Amundsen might make his base in the Weddell Sea area, on the opposite side of the continent; this proof that the Norwegians would be starting the race for the pole with a 60 nautical mile advantage was an alarming prospect for the British. The two groups behaved civilly towards each other; Campbell and his officers Harry Pennell and George Murray Levick breakfasted aboard Fram, and reciprocated with lunch on the Terra Nova. Amundsen was relieved to learn that Terra Nova had no wireless radio, since that might have imperilled his strategy to be first with the news of a polar victory. He was worried, however, by a remark of Campbell's that implied that Scott's motorised sledges were working well.
As I pass the Island (Egg Rock) I > notice the ice foot adhering to the rock about 2 feet above the surface of > the ice generally-- the ice there for a few feet in width slants up to it & > owing to this the snow is blown off it. This edging of ice revealed is > peculiarly green by contrast with the snow methinks. So, too, where the ice > settling has rested on a rock which has burst it & now hold it high above > the surrounding level-- Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson are reported to have sometimes enjoyed sitting on Egg Rock, watching the water flow by. Daniel Chester French, who sculpted the sitting figure of Lincoln in the Lincoln Memorial as well as the Minute Man statue just downstream from Egg Rock at the Old North Bridge and the statue of Emerson in the Concord Free Public Library, breakfasted there occasionally.
Dr. Mitchell breakfasted with Theodore Roosevelt on the morning following his inauguration, and there is some evidence to support that they were on familiar terms with each other, due in part possibly to Dr. Mitchell's pastorate in Washington, D.C. from 1869 to 1878. With Dr. Mitchell's retirement in 1904 came the pastorate of Dr. Andrew Van Vranken Raymond, D.D., who came to the church in 1906 from the office of president of Union College. Dr. Raymond served first supplied the pulpit as the stated "supply pastor", but then following the death of his wife in 1907, congregation decided to extend to him a call as pastor which he decided to accept. It was during Dr, Raymond's tenure as pastor that on February 2, 1912, the church celebrated its centennial in style, with the sanctuary decorated for the occasion with ropes of green garland, touched here and there with red and white flowers and the dates 1812 and 1912 adorning either side of the chancel.
While Walpole gave tours to the more important visitors, he shrank from less dignified attention and "retreated to his cottage in the flower garden" while his housekeeper gave tours to the public. In a letter to George Montagu in 1763, Walpole complained: "I have but a minute's time in answering your letter, my house is full of people, and has been so from the instant I breakfasted, and more are coming- in short, I keep an inn; the sign, the Gothic Castle...my whole time is passed in giving tickets for seeing it, and hiding myself when it is seen- take my advice, never build a charming house for yourself between London and Hampton-court, everybody will live in it but you." Warburton notes that while Walpole may have been annoyed from time to time, he also came to see his estate contributing to the public's enjoyment when he had doubts about his endeavour. "He arrives at the conclusion that all he has done is for the benefit of others rather than for himself".
The home was also host to Hanna's famous large breakfasts of corned beef hash and pancakes, over which the most important political decisions of the moment would be made.Morgan, 1919, p. 176. These meals were so politically important that President Theodore Roosevelt breakfasted with Hanna every Sunday. McKinley and other politically powerful people visited the home so much that it became known as the "Little White House." It was at just such a breakfast on March 10, 1902, that J. P. Morgan asked Senator Hanna whether the United States government had any intention of filing an antitrust lawsuit against the recently formed Northern Securities Company.Beschloss, 2008, p. 132.The Northern Securities Company was a "trust" formed in 1902 by E. H. Harriman, James J. Hill, J.P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, and other industrialists for the purpose of controlling the Northern Pacific Railway, Great Northern Railway, and Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. The company was sued in 1902 by the United States Department of Justice for violating the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890.
The place was for the most part an oasis of tranquility for Hazlitt. As he reported: > :Days, weeks, months, and even years might have passed on much in the same > manner.... We breakfasted at the same hour, and the tea-kettle was always > boiling...; a lounge in the orchard for an hour or two, and twice a week we > could see the steam-boat creeping like a spider over the surface of the > lake; a volume of the Scotch novels..., or M. Galignani's Paris and London > Observer, amused us till dinner time; then tea and a walk till the moon > unveiled itself, "apparent queen of the night," or the brook, swoln with a > transient shower, was heard more distinctly in the darkness, mingling with > the soft, rustling breeze; and the next morning the song of peasants broke > upon refreshing sleep, as the sun glanced among the clustering vine-leaves, > or the shadowy hills, as the mists retired from their summits, looked in at > our windows.Works, vol. 10, p. 287.
Rosalynn Carter with former First Ladies Barbara Bush, Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush and Michelle Obama during the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum on the campus of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, on April 25, 2013 In 2010, she criticized television crime dramas that portrayed mentally ill people as violent, when in fact they were more prone to being victims of crime. On May 7, 2010, she attended the Michelle Obama-hosted Mother's Day Tea at the White House, and was joined by her granddaughter Sarah and infant great-granddaughter. In June, the Carters cut the ribbon at the grand opening of the Best Western Plus Windsor Hotel in Americus, Georgia.Former President Jimmy Carter Cut the Ribbon at the Grand Opening of the Historic Best Western Windsor Hotel in Americus, Georgia (June 23, 2010) On October 26, Carter appeared at a discussion panel at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum. On October 12, 2011, the Carters breakfasted at Poste Moderne Brasserie in Washington, D.C., while the two were in town for the twentieth anniversary of Every Child by Two. After the death of Betty Ford on July 8, 2011, Carter delivered a eulogy during a memorial service.

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