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11 Sentences With "by the bye"

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

N.F.L. players and coaches are accustomed to preparation by rote, and their routines are most definitely disrupted by the bye.
An unrelated TV show called King Kong Skull Island, written by The Bye Bye Man's Jonathan Penner and Stacy Title and produced by IM Global, is also coming soon.
" On pp. 67–68 he wrote: "One has to beware, however, of these appellations that appear to be of purely Arabic origin, they are often ancient Hebrew names converted by a process of popular etymology into words familiar to the Arabs. In many cases slight phonetic changes assist the process. These , by the bye, are not arbitrary, but are subject to real laws.
In D.E. Williams' The Life and Correspondence of Sir Thomas Lawrence, KT Vol II, 1831, pp. 4-5. Williams cites Lawrence's honorary diploma: > AMERICAN ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS. New York, 20 day of Jan. 1818. Be It > Known, that Sir Thomas Lawrence, R. A., London, has been duly chosen an > Honorary Member of the American Society of Fine Arts, and, as such, is > entitled to all the rights and privileges given to Honorary Members by the > bye-laws of the said Academy.
Henry “Harry” Alloway (1856-1939) was an American journalist, publisher, and the financial editor of The New York Times from 1896 to 1906. He also owned several New York and New England newspapers, including The New Haven Palladium, The New Haven Union, The Hartford Evening Post, and The Wall Street Daily News. Alloway initiated The New York Times takeover in 1896 by Adolph S. Ochs and helped the Chattanooga journalist negotiate the buyout. After leaving The New York Times to run his own newspapers, Alloway maintained a regular column in the Wall Street Journal, “By-the-Bye,” which appeared regularly for fourteen years.
In September 2011, Ray returned to performing live on drums after eleven years, participating in a reunion of his early 1980s band Fade To Black as part of San Francisco's Deathstock music festival. Later that year, Ray rejoined Scott Miller, backed up by The Bye Bye Blackbirds, as drummer for a December 4 performance at the Starry Plough in Berkeley. Gil Ray on drums with Rain Parade in September 2013 In 2012, Gil Ray joined Rain Parade, a band that was originally active in the Paisley Underground scene in Los Angeles in the 1980s. The reunited Rain Parade line-up also included original members Matt Piucci, Steven Roback, and John Thoman, augmented by Mark Hanley and Alec Palao.
The Post Office opened on 1 February 1873 and closed in 1885. However, a Post Office agency has been run in the town for many years, usually in the General Store. In 1876 the settlement at Tooleybuc was described in the following terms: > Tooley Buc is on the New South Wales side of the river, and is on the mail > road between Swan-hill and Balranald, being nearly equidistant between the > two places. There is no township there, unless a large public-house and a > small and comical-looking wooden chapel, which, by the bye, appeared to be > unused, can be held to constitute one, but there is a good deal of > settlement in the neighbourhood.
Although asphalt use took off in the 1830s, Mechanic's Magazine noted the existence of a pamphlet from 1621, by "a certain Monsieur d'Eyrinys" stating he had discovered large quantities of asphaltum in the vicinity of Neufchâtel, and that prior to his discovery, asphaltum was only known to exist in the Dead Sea. Mechanics Magazine added "we wonder, by-the-bye, no 'Dead Sea Asphalt Company' has yet made its appearance in the market", and wondering whether the lack of such a market take-off in two centuries hinted at limitations of the product. Nevertheless, "By the end of 1838, at least two other companies, Robinson's and the Bastenne company, were in production". Indeed, in 1838, there was a flurry of entrepreneurial activity over asphalt, which had uses beyond paving.
"This I only mention by the bye, in this my Preface to the Reader, whom I pray the Heavens to Crown with Profperity, in preferving him from having any bufinefs to adjufl with mofi of the Miniflers of State, and Priefts; for let them be never fo faulty, they'll flill be faid to be in the right, till fuch time as Anarchy be introduc'd amongft us, as well as the Americans, among whom the forrycfl fellow thinks himfelf a better Man, than a Chancellor of France. Thefe People are happy in being fcreen'd from the tricks and fliifts of Miniflers, who are always Maflers where-ever they come. I envy the fiate of a poor Savage, who tramples upon Laws, and pays Homage to no Scepter. I wish I could fpend the reft of my Life in his Hutt, and fo be no longer expos'd to the chagrin of bending the knee to a fet of Men, that facrifice the publick good to their private intereft, and are born to plague honeft Men".
Greek boy defending his wounded father by Ary Scheffer, a French painter(1795–1858) In 1798, as a hostage of the Turks in Ottoman Greece, François Pouqueville had an uneasy view of the Greeks he encountered in the close entourage of his Ottoman guards. Not unlike Lord Byron who later, at his death in 1824, also became a symbol of philhellenism,"Byron had yet to die to make philhellenism generally acceptable" William Plomer "The Diamond of Jannina" (Taplinger Publishing New York 1970) Pouqueville felt at first unsure of the Greeks' sincerity."By-the- bye, I rather suspect we shall be at right angles in our opinion of the Greeks; I have not quite made up my mind about them, but you I know are decisively inimical." Lord Byron's Correspondence "Letter to Hobhouse"(1805) However, his work as the pashalic's physician in Tripolitza caused his Turkish escort to become gradually sparser and his frequent contacts with authentic Greeks made him appreciate their rich cultural background under a new light.
The full English breakfast, The Telegraph. Anthony Trollope in The Warden describes "the well- furnished breakfast-parlour at Plumstead Episcopi… The tea consumed was the very best, the coffee the very blackest, the cream the very thickest; there was dry toast and buttered toast, muffins and crumpets; hot bread and cold bread, white bread and brown bread, home-made bread and bakers' bread, wheaten bread and oaten bread; and if there be other breads than these, they were there; there were eggs in napkins, and crispy bits of bacon under silver covers; and there were little fishes in a little box, and devilled kidneys frizzling on a hot-water dish; which, by the bye, were placed closely contiguous to the plate of the worthy archdeacon himself. Over and above this, on a snow-white napkin, spread upon the sideboard, was a huge ham and a huge sirloin; the latter having laden the dinner table on the previous evening. Such was the ordinary fare at Plumstead Episcopi." also referred to as 'bacon and eggs' or a 'fry up', typically comprises a choice from rashers of back bacon,Bacon may be either smoked or unsmoked.

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