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27 Sentences With "casting away"

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

It's about casting away those lasting impressions of what was driven into me as a young person.
In announcing the agreement, Mr. Corker insisted that he was not casting away his concern about the debt.
Ironically, one could also argue that buying cordless headphones at the behest of the world's biggest corporation is not exactly the best example of casting away society's puppet strings.
While checking this out I learned that this sustainable society's challenges include the Mongolian Death Worm, so if you're thinking about casting away the chains of urban living, consider that.
" Among the services listed on the Psychic Kaballah Network's site are spiritual readings, predictions for the future, protection and casting away of evil spirits, and help to "resolve court cases victoriously.
But the debate made clear that Ms. Harris is prepared to find ways to set herself apart from the pack, casting away any lingering doubts that her campaign was unwilling to draw direct contrasts with her Democratic opponents.
During a lecture, the comedian-activist noted Jesus Christ and John Coffey share the same initials (although Stephen King said he got the name from an Emerson College professor), compared Coffey's healing powers to casting away demons, and emphasizes how two prisoners were executed before Coffey (Jesus was hung between two thieves).
The film reflects Lawrence's focus not only on casting away sexual taboos, but also the examination of the British class system.
Yet religion which is supposed, above all, to teach the casting away of ego, itself has the egoism of sects and religious institutions. And this is what makes me dislike religionists. . . . True religion is born from the abyss of despair.
Jake ultimately finds freedom by casting away his dreams and burdens to his son, Jesus, symbolized by the throwing of his old basketball over the prison wall and magically onto the Big State court where Jesus is practicing alone. Jesus clutches the ball, knowing it is a message of hope from his father.
He then moves on to four bells and repeats the casting away argument showing that there will be four different sets of three. Effectively, this is a recursive process. He continues with five bells using the "casting away" method and tabulates the resulting 120 combinations. At this point he gives up and remarks: > Now the nature of these methods is such, that the changes on one number > comprehends the changes on all lesser numbers, ... insomuch that a compleat > Peal of changes on one number seemeth to be formed by uniting of the > compleat Peals on all lesser numbers into one entire body; Stedman widens the consideration of permutations; he goes on to consider the number of permutations of the letters of the alphabet and of horses from a stable of 20.
Cambridge University Press, 1995; Location where Alice Parker was hanged, Salem, Massachusetts. On May 12, 1692, Alice Parker was charged with a number of additional acts of witchcraft, including casting away Thomas Westgate and bewitching Mary Warren's sister. Margaret Jacobs also said she had seen her in North field in an apparition. Alice denied all accusations, and said she wished the earth could open and swallow her.
The Offences against the Person Ordinance prescribes a number of specific types of attempted murder, including by using poison, wounding another (§ 10), by destroying or damaging building (§ 11), setting fire to or casting away ship (§ 12) and attempting to shoot or drown (§ 13), which are all punishable by life imprisonment. Attempted murder by other means not specified in the statute (§ 14) shall be liable to imprisonment for life.
Richard Clarke's Account of the Casting Away of the Delight (1584) in David B.Quinn Ed The Voyages and Colonising Enterprises of Sir Humphrey Gilbert, Vol.1, London:Hakluyt Society, 1940 p423-26. The area was known to English, French, and Basque fishermen in the 1500s and there were a few French stages at St Lawrence itself, for the early French ship fishermen for the fishing season. However, settlement actually began in the early to mid-1700s.
The origin and meaning of the name Retkinia is uncertain. It has been suggested that the name originates from ret kiń, an expression glossed as "cast the net."Załuska and Załuska, p. 13. This could either refer to the act of throwing fishing nets (which would suggest that the area was rich in fish) or to casting away hunting nets and settling down, which would account for the origin of farming in the area.
Eliot (2009), p. 138 Eastwood initially did not want to toss the badge, believing it indicated that Callahan was quitting the police department. Siegel argued that tossing the badge was instead Callahan's indication of casting away the inefficiency of the police force's rules and bureaucracy. Although Eastwood was able to convince Siegel not to have Callahan toss the badge, when the scene was filmed, Eastwood changed his mind and went with Siegel's preferred ending.
Of a central importance is the gift of tongues, which is the sign of being baptised by the Holy Spirit, resembling the New Testament's Pentecost day. There are also gifts of healing, spiritual visions, dream interpretation, casting away demons and discernment, among others. Believers are encouraged to ask for these gifts in prayer, so that all the congregation may have a personal experience with God. In a typical prayer room there could be one prophesier for each thirty believers.
The Comăneci salto is a gymnastics manoeuvre on the uneven bars, developed primarily by Romanian gymnast Nadia Comăneci. It is listed as an E-rated element in the current Code of Points. To perform a Comăneci salto, the gymnast begins in a support position on the high bar and, casting away from it, performs a straddled front somersault, regrasping the same bar. In the 2006 FIG Code, the Comăneci salto remained one of the hardest manoeuvres point-wise, and retained the E rating.
The Consolation of Sorrows or Casting Away of Sorrows (Arabic Tasliyat al-aḥzān), attributed in the manuscript to "Eliya, the bishop of Jerusalem", was a popular philosophical text and survives in eight manuscripts. It is inspired by and quotes liberally from the Art of Dispelling Sorrows of the Muslim philosopher al-Kindī. The modern Egyptian philosopher Abdel Rahman Badawi considered it to be "of little philosophical interest". It is written in the form of a letter to an anonymous Christian friend who had fallen into disgrace.
A common danger: a danger in which vessel, cargo and crew all participate; a danger imminent and apparently 'inevitable', except by voluntarily incurring the loss of a portion of the whole to save the remainder." :"2nd. There must be a voluntary jettison, jactus, or casting away, of some portion of the joint concern for the purpose of avoiding this imminent peril, periculi imminentis evitandi causa, or, in other words, a transfer of the peril from the whole to a particular portion of the whole." :"3rd.
The area around the pilings yields pileperch, walleye surfperch, silver surfperch, and other common pier species. Mid-pier, casting away from the pier, yields small tom cod (white croaker) and herring (queenfish), jacksmelt, yellowfin croaker and an occasional halibut. Action at the end of the pier is improved by the surrounding artificial reef which is located about from the end. Fish at the deepest water end include bonito, Pacific mackerel, jack mackerel, barracuda, an occasional white seabass or even yellowtail, and reef visitors like kelp bass, sand bass and sculpin (scorpionfish).
Spanish ships in a storm Events changed otherwise, the weather turned; an easterly wind turned into a gale and for a few days the storm would continue. This time however there were no catastrophic results such as those of 1588 and the Spanish were more organised in ship-to-ship communication. At first, the Adelantado tried to ride out the storm in the hope that the weather would relent; but at dawn the next day, the winds only intensified. For three days the storm blew, Spanish ship losses increased, the San Lucas ran aground off the Lizard casting away their horses and mules.
German infantry massing for a counter-attack during the afternoon at the higher end of the valley between Polderhoek and the Gheluvelt Spur were easily seen and a Stokes mortar was moved to Jericho. The crew opened rapid fire, which sent the German troops running for cover, casting away rifles and equipment. Very few of the Germans reached Gheluvelt, no attack followed and for several hours German stretcher-bearers under a Red Cross flag were allowed off the Menin road to rescue wounded. During the evening a large number of German reinforcements came up to the château and some were shot down by Lewis gunners.
AJ Graham,"The Foundation of Thasos", The Annual of the British School at Athens, Vol. 73 (1978), pp. 61-98. A generation or so later, the poet Archilochus, a descendant of these colonists, wrote of casting away his shield during a minor war against an indigenous Thracian tribe, the Saians.Zafeiropoulou F., A., Agelarakis, “Warriors of Paros”. Archaeology 58.1(2005): 30–35. Thasian power, and sources of its wealth, extended to the mainland, where the Thasians owned gold mines even more valuable than those of the island; their combined annual revenues amounted to between 200 and 300 talents. Herodotus says that the best mines on the island were those opened by the Phoenicians on the east side of the island, facing Samothrace.
Shipwreck survivors published early survival narratives about their experiences at Sable Island, beginning with the sinking of the Delight in 1583.Rainer K. Baehre “The Casting Away of the Delight” in Outrageous Seas: Shipwreck and Survival in the Waters off Newfoundland, 1583–1893 McGill-Queens Press (1999), p. 12 The first formal history of the island, Sable Island: its History and Phenomena, was written in 1894 by George Patterson. Many other histories of the island and its shipwrecks have been published since, such as Lyall Campbell's two books - Sable Island, Fatal and Fertile Crescent in 1974 and Sable Island Shipwrecks: Disaster and Survival at the North Atlantic Graveyard in 1994 - and more recently, A Dune Adrift: The Strange Origins and Curious History of Sable Island, written in 2004 by Marq de Villiers.
Sections 11 to 15 dealt with attempts to murder and have been repealed. See now the Criminal Attempts Act 1981. Section 11 – Administering poison or wounding or causing grievous bodily harm with intent to murder This section replaced section 2 of the Offences against the Person Act 1837 (7 Will 4 & 1 Vict c 85). Section 12 – Destroying or damaging a building with gunpowder with intent to murder This section replaced section 2 of the Arson Act 1846 (9 & 10 Vict c 25) (Malicious injuries by fire) Section 13 – Setting fire to or casting away a ship with intent to murder Section 14 – Attempting to administer poison, or shooting or attempting to shoot, or attempting to drown, suffocate or strangle with intent to murder This section replaced section 3 of the Offences against the Person Act 1837.
The two firms that ran the Chrysteneh, the Riverdale and the Caroline A. Peene began blocking docks that the Shady Side wanted to use and casting away her lines. There were reports of passengers being assaulted, and at one point a fence and a locked gate were erected to block access to the Shady Side, over which passengers clambered. The other operators believed Shady Side must be running at a great loss and would not be able to continue, while the operator of the Shady Side, Walter H. Shupe, manager of the Columbia Line, said they were acting within their rights and that they had taken the matter to the Yonkers Police Court. It was reported in several papers that this strategy was so popular that in September Shady Side's owners hired a larger boat, the Americus, which had a capacity of 1,500 passengers, to keep up with demand, and that the Americus was owned by a secret society numbering 800,000 members called the "Sons of Columbia", who chartered the Americus for sixty days at $160 per day.

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