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44 Sentences With "dakers"

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

According to a report from Bloomberg's Gillian Tan and Marion Dakers, WeWork trademarked a brand called "Play By We," with a focus on professional gaming and gaming-related events.
Jane Lane (1905–1978) was the pen name of Elaine Kidner Dakers.
In December 2007, Christmas Invitational was held, hosted by Club AquaticMontreal. Dakers made the Senior National Time Standards, qualifying for Olympic Trials in April in the 200m breaststroke. At the Canadian National Trials held at Montreal in January 2008, Dakers set her personal best times in the 200m and 400m individual medley. Dakers finished 34th in the 200m breaststroke and 44th in the 100m breaststroke.
British Listed Buildings. Retrieved May 8, 2013.Dakers, Caroline (1993). Clouds: The Biography of a Country House, World Print Ltd, .
Dakers married Elisabeth Williams (d. 1997) in 1952. They had four daughters. He died in Salisbury, Wiltshire, on 10 March 2003.
Dakers (1999), pp. 97–98. Burne-Jones completed it in 1882.MacCarthy (2011), p. 268. Burne-Jones's painting Dies Domini hung in the drawing room.
When Dakers notes that many patients have been injured in industrial accidents at the foundry, he comes into conflict with its owner Sir Joseph Higgins, and the owner's son-in- law Dr Craig, who owns the town's competing medical practice. He writes a report criticising the condition of the foundry and buildings the workers live in but Craig, who is also the local Health Officer, deliberately mislays it. When Dakers performs a life saving tracheotomy on a child with diphtheria, and takes the child to the hospital, he is charged with misconduct, as the hospital charter precludes infectious cases. As a child Jonathan Dakers met Edie Martyn (Beatrice Campbell).
The Slavonic tribes of Bohemia, Moravia, and Slovakia were formerly embraced within the great Moravian Empire.Kunoši, A. (1944). The basis of Czechoslovak unity. London: A. Dakers limited.
Lionel Frederick Dakers CBE (24 February 1924 – 10 March 2003) was an English cathedral organist who served in Ripon Cathedral and Exeter Cathedral.The Succession of Organists. Watkins Shaw.
Dakers 1999, p. 168. Fildes house was larger than Marcus Stone's, and costlier to build.Dakers 1999, p. 167. Shortly after Fildes had commissioned Shaw to design his house, Fildes' grandmother, Mary, had died, leaving him her property.
First edition People of the City is the debut novel of Cyprian Ekwensi first published in 1954 by Andrew Dakers Ltd. The novel was a predecessor to a number of other city novels in the Nigerian tradition.
Hartshorne Island () is an island between Dakers Island and Howard Island in the eastern Joubin Islands, Antarctica. It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Sidney G. Hartshorne, Master of RV Hero on her first Antarctic voyage to Palmer Station in 1968.
On December 22, 2008, Fresno Hockey Club, LLC announced that the Fresno Falcons team would cease operations immediately citing operating cost due to dwindling attendance, lack of corporate sponsorships and the faltering economy. President Dave Dakers of the Victoria Salmon Kings ECHL team expressed some negative commentary on the Falcons team management abilities, but praised the team itself as being "competitive". The owners did not do all they could to salvage the situation, according to Dakers and gave up too easily as there were still other options available to minimize the economic damage. He was rather disappointed and not too pleased as quoted in the Victoria Times Colonist newspaper article.
The story revolves around the life of Jonathan Dakers (Denison), a small town doctor. He is training to be a surgeon when his father dies. Due to the resulting financial problems, he cannot continue his training. He buys a share in Dr. Hammond's general practice in Wednesford, a poor foundry town.
The text was originally published in 1933 by Oxford University Press, London, and was illustrated with plates by C. E. Brock. It was reprinted by the same publishing house in 1950 with new illustrations signed "D. White". Meredith and Co. was reprinted by Andrew Dakers, Ltd., London, and printed in Czechoslovakia.
Shaw had prepared preliminary designs of Woodland House by August 1875, and building began early in 1876, with construction being undertaken by W. H. Lascelles. The initial cost of building the house was £4,500.Dakers 1999, p. 169. Fildes and his family moved into the house in the Autumn of 1877.
Tredinnick believes that new music is the natural result of faith. He has written that "Creativity goes hand in hand with an alive experience of the Lord as Christians express their own love and share their faith in words."The World of Church Music: A Collection of Essays, ed. Lionel Dakers.
Headway was a five piece British Britpop revival band from Hucknall, Nottinghamshire. In early 2003, childhood friends singer/guitarist, David Wright, and guitarist, Joe Watts, recruited two more members. These were Dave Astbury on bass and Johnny Dakers on drums (later replaced by David Wright's brother Jay). The keyboardist Tom Harrison was added and Headway had fully formed.
One of the stated goals of this Congress, held in Paris, France, in 1937, was to discuss ideas and methods for implementing Wells's ideas of the World Brain. Wells himself gave a lecture at the Congress. Reginald Arthur Smith extended Wells's ideas in the book A Living Encyclopædia: A Contribution to Mr. Wells's New Encyclopædism (London: Andrew Dakers Ltd., 1941).
The Normands were based in London from 1885, where Ernest had his studio and received support from the circle around Lord Leighton. They lived in Holland Park, an area known as the residence of many other artists of the day.Caroline Dakers, The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1999. Frequent visitors to their home included Leighton, Millais, Prinsep, and Watts.
Born in London, she was a member of the Thornycroft family of sculptors, which included her maternal grandfather John Francis, her father Thomas Thornycroft, her mother Mary Thornycroft, and her younger brother Hamo Thornycroft.Caroline Dakers, The Holland Park Circle, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1999; pp. 177-83 and ff. Hamo and Helen's sisters Alyce (1844-1906) and Theresa (1853-1947) were both artists as well.
When his condition was not alleviated, he turned to wintering in Florence. In the summers, he at first stayed at Burne-Jones’s house in London and later at the Elms, the western half of Little Campden House on Campden Hill, the eastern half of which was occupied by Augustus Egg.Caroline Dakers, The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society (Yale University Press, 1999), pp. 49 and 53.
On April 10, 2017, the Toronto Blue Jays claimed Kelly off waivers from the New York Mets. Kelly was recalled by the Blue Jays on April 18 and placed on the team's 25-man roster, sat on the team's bench, and was then designated for assignment on April 21 without having appeared in a Major League game.Tom Dakers (April 21, 2017). "Jays Call Up Mat Latos, DFA Ty Kelly", bluebirdbanter.
Caroline Dakers, The Holland Park Circle (Yale University Press, 1999), p. 20. Spencer-Stanhope traveled with Watts to Italy in 1853 and to Asia Minor in 1856–57. Upon his return, he was invited by Dante Gabriel Rossetti to participate in the Oxford Union murals project, painting Sir Gawaine and the Damsels.Jane A. Munro, “‘This Hateful Letter-Writing’: Selected Correspondence of Sir Edward Burne-Jones in the Huntington Library” Huntington Library Quarterly 55 (1992), p.
My Brother Jonathan is a British television drama series which first aired on BBC 2 in five episodes between 12 August and 9 September 1985.Baskin p.288 It is based on the 1928 novel of the same name by Francis Brett Young, which had previously been made into a 1948 film My Brother Jonathan. Jonathan Dakers is an idealistic young doctor in a coal-mining area of Northern England around the time of the First World War.
Phoenix Roadrunners Statistics and History [ECHL] :Game Played: 72 TIE- Dean Tiltgen (2005–06), Peder Skinner (2007–08) :Goals: 27 TIE- Justin Aikins (2006–07), Sean O'Connor (2007–08) :Assists: 42- Daniel Sisca (2007–08) :Points: 60 Daniel Sisca (2007–08) :Best +- (Min. 40 games): +4 - Brent Henley (2005–06) :Penalty Minutes: 271- Brent Henley (2005–06) :Wins: 17- Craig Kowalski (2008-09) :GAA (Min. 15 games): 2.34- Taylor Dakers (2007–08) :SV % (Min. 15 games): .
The garden at the rear of the house featured raised flowerbeds which Dakers described as being "planned according to those pleasances depicted in medieval romances; beds of scarlet tulips, bordered with stone fencing". On a mosaic terrace, around a statue of a boy holding a hawk, sculpted by Thomas Nicholls, Burges and his guests would sit on "marble seats or on Persian rugs and embroidered cushions." The garden, and that of the adjacent Woodland House, contain trees from the former Little Holland House.
Dakers was born on 24 February 1924 in Rochester, Kent. He studied organ under Harold Aubie Bennett at Rochester Cathedral and Edward Bairstow at York Minster. He was a Special Commissioner for the Royal School of Church Music (1958–1972); Director of the Royal School of Church Music (1972–1990); President of the Incorporated Association of Organists (1972–1975); Secretary of the Cathedral Organists' Association (1972–1988); and President of the Royal College of Organists (1976–1978). He was appointed CBE in 1983.
Marion Dakers,"Banks have another crack at talking about women", Daily Telegraph, 22 March 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016. In response to the recommendations in that review, HM Treasury launched the Women in Finance Charter. There are now over 330 firms of all shapes and sizes across financial services signed up to the commitments of the Charter – from global banks to credit unions, the largest insurance companies to the smallest fintech start- ups – with headquarters in the UK, USA, Europe and Asia.
Williamson was born in Ilfracombe, North Devon, the son of noted author Henry Williamson and his second wife Christine Duffield. He is divorced, with one daughter, Bee Williamson. He was educated at Exeter Cathedral School under Lionel Frederick Dakers (later head of RSCM), and at Millfield School, Street, Somerset. He started a Physics degree at Imperial College, University of London, but abandoned Physics for rock theatre, working at Glastonbury Festival and the Rainbow Theatre and crewing for The Rolling Stones in the 1970s.
Rutter composed the psalm setting in 1973 for Lionel Dakers and the Incorporated Association of Organists. He chose verses 1–7 (in the King James Version numbering) from Psalm 47, a psalm calling to exalt God as the king of "all the earth" with hands, voices and instruments. The Hebrew original mentions the shofar, which is given as trumpet in English. The psalm is often associated with the Feast of the Ascension, because it mentions God going up with a shout.
He died without issue in 1868, aged 52 at his mansion "Wooton Lea" near Glen Osmond.Obituary South Australian Register 8 December 1868 accessed 2 March 2011 On 1 December 1869 the widowed Eliza Faulding married family friend Anthony Forster but they divorced six years later. Scammell became sole owner on the founder's death in 1868. He immediately appointed Philip Dakers as the company's London buyer, and in 1876 built a prominent warehouse in King William Street later expanding to James Place which became the front office address.
During the march, he was wounded in the stomach by shrapnel from an artillery shell. Hospitalised at the No. 7 General Hospital at Boulogne in France, he had a kidney removed, and at one point his condition was so grave that his parents were given special permission to visit him. They were accompanied by Diana Manners and a private doctor and nurse. He left the hospital on 1 June and was allowed to return to Mells to recuperate for the summer of 1915.Dakers, pp. 86–87.
An article published in 1987 in the Musical Times by Dakers,The RSCM: Past, Present...and Future, states that "Our policy is to provide music of quality and interest for every contingency which can then be absorbed into a choir's working repertory. Aston, Oxley, How, Shephard, and Sumsion feature in our catalogue because they measure up to these needs, produce what we want and what we can consequently sell in large numbers." Darkers, L: SCM: Past, Present...and Future,The Musical Times,Vol. 128, No. 1732, June 1987.
Tellez was assigned to the Triple-A Buffalo Bisons in late March. In his first game for the Bisons, Tellez hit two home runs to lead the team to a 4–2 victory over the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders. From that point on, however, Tellez struggled in Triple-A. In 122 games, he hit .222 with six home runs and 56 runs batted in. On November 20, 2017, Tellez was added to Toronto's 40-man roster. Tellez began the 2018 season playing again for the Bisons.Tom Dakers (April 11, 2018).
Sometime after her marriage, John Skelton, Poet Laureate of England commemorated Anne, her mother, and her two half-sisters, Elizabeth and Muriel in his poem Garlande of Laurrell, which is about an event that had occurred when he was a guest in the Howard residence of Sheriff Hutton Castle. Anne's mother, along with her three daughters and gentlewomen of her household, had placed a garland of laurel, worked in silks, gold, and pearls, upon Skelton's head as a sign of homage to the poet. The stanza which is addressed to Anne reads: "To my Lady Anne Dakers of the sowth".Skelton, Brownlow, p.
Dakers, pp. 209–210. To either side of the pedestal are matching panels onto which are inscribed the names of the village's war dead. At the same height are flanking walls of coarsed, squared rubble from the nearby Doulting Stone Quarry, set back at the ends and topped with a yew hedge. In front of each wall is a small stone bench that protrudes across the base of the column, and above the benches, fixed to the wall, are round plaques bearing the dates of the Second World War and the names of the village's dead from that conflict.
Having been dismissed from the Army, albeit without punishment, he was on 29 June 1918 served with notice of call- up as a conscript, but successfully applied to Hampstead Military Service Tribunal for exemption as a conscientious objector.Dorothy Plowman (Ed), Bridge into the Future, Letters of Max Plowman, Dakers, 1944, pp 125-130 In July 1918 Plowman gave a positive review in the Labour Leader to Siegfried Sassoon's anti-war poetry collection Counter-Attack.Jean Moorcroft Wilson, Siegfried Sassoon 1886–1918 (1998), p. 467. It was in response to a request in a letter from Plowman that Sassoon campaigned for Philip Snowden in Blackburn, in the December 1918 General Election.
Shephard was a chorister at Gloucester Cathedral, where the organist was then the composer Herbert Sumsion before taking a degree at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. While at Cambridge, Shephard studied under composer David Willcocks, Hugh Macdonald, the great expert on Berlioz, and Alan Ridout. He started his musical career as a lay clerk in Salisbury Cathedral Choir, and at this time was Conductor of the Salisbury Grand Opera Group, the Farrant Singers, Guest Conductor of the Salisbury Orchestral Society and Musical Director of various productions at the Salisbury Playhouse. It was at this time when he was greatly influenced by Richard Seal and Lionel Dakers, the former director of the Royal School of Church Music.
Her teachers there included Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, who had the strongest influence on her later work, as well as Frank Bernard Dicksee and William Powell Frith. Hylas and the Water Nymphs, a representative example of her work In 1884 she married painter and fellow Royal Academy student Ernest Normand, but kept her maiden name – a choice considered unusual at the time – because she had already begun to establish her reputation as an artist, having been a frequent exhibitor at the annual Royal Academy exhibitions since 1881. Rae and Normand lived in Holland Park, the residence of many other artists of the day.Caroline Dakers, The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1999.
A group of Women's Liberation activists, led by Anne Summers including Bessie Guthrie and Jennifer Dakers, squatted an abandoned property in Westmoreland Street, Glebe and set up the refuge in response to the lack of services & support available to women & children suffering from domestic violence. Initially, there was no support from governments, with the staff at the centre providing security with nothing more than a cricket bat. They were one of a number of activist groups who had squatted in derelict houses in the Anglican Church owned "Glebe Estate" in the pathway of a proposed freeway part of which was to pass through the area. The building, along with the other 700 dwellings on Glebe Estate, was purchased from the Anglican Church by the Whitlam Government in 1974 and the refuge was granted a lease.
Years later, in 2000, Shephard and Dakers would both contribute to The IAO Millennium Book, Thirteen essays About the Organ, a publication which comprises contemporary writings related to the organ and written by distinguished composers of the day. Shephard's article was entitled Composing for the Church today, in which he discussed current demands on church music composers in the 20th century. His first opera, The Turncoat was composed for the Salisbury International Arts Festival.Grevlos, L: The Chamber Operas of Richard James Shephard based on Sacred Legends, pp 23–7. University of Northern Colorado (2005). As a composer, he has written operas, operettas, musicals, orchestral works, music for television, and chamber music but is perhaps best known for his choral worksRichard Shephard, Salisbury Symphony Orchestra (November 1992). Retrieved on 21 June 2010.Grevlos, L: The Chamber Operas of Richard James Shephard based on Sacred Legends, pp 5,28,32. University of Northern Colorado (2005).
The Battle of Brechin was fought on 18 May 1452 during the reign of James II of Scotland, about two and a half miles north north east of Brechin.John Parker Lawson (1839), "Historical Tales of the Wars of Scotland, And of the Border Raids, Forays and Conflicts" It has been regarded as part of the civil war during his reign between the king and an alliance of powerful noble families led by the Black Douglases, which as the king won was significant in the development of a relatively strong centralised monarchy in Scotland during the Late Middle Ages. A royalist army formed by the Clan Gordon and Clan Ogilvy, led by Alexander Gordon, 1st Earl of Huntly, defeated the rebel Alexander Lindsay, 4th Earl of Crawford, a leading ally of the Black Douglases.David Dakers Black, The History of Brechin (Brechin: Black & Co., 1839), pp.
In 1867, at the age of seven, Mary died of scarlet fever and was buried in at the English Cemetery in Florence. Her father designed her headstone.Nic Peeters and Judy Oberhausen, “L’Arte della memoria: John Roddam Spencer Stanhope and the Tomb of His Daughter Mary,” from Marble Silence, Words on Stone: Florence’s English Cemetery, The City and the Book III International Conference 3–5 June 2004, online. Robin of Modern Times (1860) Though his family accepted his occupation as a painterCaroline Dakers, Clouds (Yale University Press, 1993), p. 213. and took a great interest in art, Evelyn’s parents disparaged the achievements of “poor Roddy” and regarded the painters with whom he associated as “unconventional.”Elise Lawton Smith, Evelyn Pickering de Morgan and the Allegorical Body (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2002), p. 18. Considered among the avant-garde of the 1870s, Stanhope became a regular exhibitor at the Grosvenor Gallery, the alternative to the Royal Academy.

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