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33 Sentences With "drudges"

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

On the bright side, humble drudges will at least still have a reason to head home.
Is it secretly recruiting people — an army of complacent drudges — to act as its protectors and propagators?
It's quite possible that Drake is the only Scorpio to ever live who doesn't thrive by holding eternal drudges.
Regulatory lawyers, those steeped in the staggering legal minutia produced by Brexit, have lately gone from drudges to rainmakers.
But despite the twinge of disappointment that September's arrival inevitably drudges up, there is one thing that we can appreciate about fall 2019.
Death is the moment when all eyes are upon the poet for the last time; beyond, for most harmless drudges, lies the abyss.
We have the InfoWars, we have the Breitbarts, we have the Drudges, in which information is passed, things that that bear no resemblance to reality whatsoever.
Her name was Mathilde Pincus and she'd been given that award in 1976 for her services to theater as a copyist and music supervisor; I was one of her lowermost drudges.
And I don't think I'm overstating matters when I tell you it felt as though the sun decided to come down from behind the clouds and hang out with us tiny earthbound drudges.
Richard Hakluyt the younger, one of the many colorful characters who fill these pages, saw the continent as "one giant workhouse," in ­Isenberg's phrase, where the feckless poor could be turned into industrious drudges.
As the week drudges on, with Friday seeming still just far enough from reach, here's something that will pair just right with the sheet mask and wine you might be sinking into this evening: the "home cafe" video.
As the election cycle drudges on with two women leading conversations about gender equality, addressing the reality of pregnancy discrimination and what it means for women's economic stability and mobility is a critical issue for every 2020 candidate.
For office drudges, the underemployed or those crushed by college loans, the slim chance that a $100 investment may someday reap close to $100 million — as would have happened with an investment of that amount in Bitcoin in 2010 — is too enticing to pass up.
OD: But just to kind of reset here maybe a little bit, I think we're focusing a lot on maybe the characters like Mike Cernovich and those guys, but there's also the whole other more mainstream pro-Trump media, the Breitbarts and the Matt Drudges, who are vastly influential and big players in this.
The aunt's imagination dwells on medieval saints; the speaker's imagination dresses drudges in indigo (and all that that implies); the drudges imagine the young men around them as Saint Georges (and all that that implies).
The boat's speed can be controlled by slacking or tightening the jib, while the skipper handles the drudges, and sorts out the recovered oysters.
Besides discrimination in pay, colored units were often disproportionately assigned laborer work, rather than combat assignments.James McPherson, "The Negro's Civil War". General Daniel Ullman, commander of the Corps d'Afrique, remarked "I fear that many high officials outside of Washington have no other intention than that these men shall be used as diggers and drudges."Official Record Ser.
American producer Justin Noto, that selected the places for the filming along with Jesse Roberts, commented that the group was "interested in a look that seemed like the drudges of New York, the old 1970s feel." A Japanese version of the song was included at the Japanese studio albums Alive and the greatest hits album The Best of Big Bang 2006-2014.
For the skeptical and splenetic speaker, the legendary characters, the saints, are merely old buffoons (rhymes with "pantaloons"). But the Polish aunt pulls the speaker off his high horse. She tells him that the women he dreams of are "common drudges," whom his imagination dresses exotically ("swathed in indigo") and pictures as figures in a pre-Raphaelite painting, who burn secretly for otherworldly saints. What the speaker imagines of the ordinary women is almost accurate.
In February 1964, feminist Betty Friedan wrote the two-part essay "Television and the Feminine Mystique" for TV Guide, wherein she criticized the way women were portrayed in television. She summarized their depiction as stupid, unattractive, and insecure household drudges. Their time was divided between dreaming of love and plotting revenge on their husbands. Samantha was not depicted this way and Endora used Friedan- like words to criticize the boring drudgery of household life.
They had lost caste; they had taken to drink; they were the drudges of larrikins who ill-treated them; some had been in gaol; none were enjoying the protection of decent homes. So, far the lack of better prospects, they sought the Chinamen, who at least pay them well and treat them kindly.' and these prostitutes were found in Queensland, Victoria, and New South Wales in the countryside amongst the Chinese settlements. A lot of the prostitutes were Irish Catholic girls and women in colonial Australia.
497 Many regiments struggled for equal pay, some refusing any money and pay until June 15, 1864, when the Federal Congress granted equal pay for all soldiers.U.S. Statutes at Large, XIII, 129-31 Besides discrimination in pay, colored units were often disproportionately assigned laborer work, rather than combat assignments. General Daniel Ullman, commander of the Corps d'Afrique, remarked "I fear that many high officials outside of Washington have no other intention than that these men shall be used as diggers and drudges."Official Record Ser.
Examining Windschuttle's use of sources for the view women were treated like slaves and drudges, he says Windschuttle relies on a selective reading of just two of many sources in an early work by Ling Roth, "written at the height of Social Darwinist orthodoxy" (1899). However, Ling Roth did not "write" these sources; he simply translated the diaries of the first contacts by the French explorers. One is from Péron, who noted scars on women, and interpreted them as signs of domestic violence, which however he had never witnessed. Other early observers took this scarring as an indigenous cultural practice.
Innis discusses various aspects of Ptolemaic rule over Egypt including the founding of the ancient library and university at Alexandria made possible by access to abundant supplies of papyrus. "By 285 BC the library established by Ptolemy I had 20,000 manuscripts," Innis writes, "and by the middle of the first century 700,000, while a smaller library established by Ptolemy II...possibly for duplicates had 42,800."Innis (Empire), pp. 112–113. He points out that the power of the written tradition in library and university gave rise to specialists, not poets and scholars — drudges who corrected proofs and those who indulged in the mania of book collecting.
As the Piankeshaw were not party to the litigation, "no Indian voices were heard in a case which had, and continues to have, profound effects on Indian property rights."Dussias, Allison M., "Squaw Drudges, Farm Wives, and the Dann Sisters' Last Stand: American Indian Women’s Resistance to Domestication and the Denial of Their Property Rights", 77 N.C. L. REV. 637, 645 (1999) Professor Blake A. Watson of the University of Dayton School of Law finds Marshall's claim of "universal recognition" of the "doctrine of discovery" historically inaccurate. In reviewing the history of European exploration Marshall did not take note of Spanish Dominican philosopher Francisco de Vitoria's 1532 De Indis nor De Jure belli Hispanorum in barbaros.
They had lost caste; they had taken to drink; they were the drudges of larrikins who ill-treated them; some had been in gaol; none were enjoying the protection of decent homes. So, far the lack of better prospects, they sought the Chinamen, who at least pay them well and treat them kindly.' and these prostitutes were found in Queensland, Victoria, and New South Wales in the countryside amongst the Chinese settlements. A lot of the prostitutes were Irish Catholic girls and women in colonial Australia. In late 1878, there were 181 marriages between women of European descent and Chinese men as well as 171 such couples cohabiting without matrimony, resulting in the birth of 586 children of Sino-European descent.
At the time of the Norman conquest, Leeds was evidently a purely agricultural domain, of about in extent. It was divided into seven manors, held by as many thanes; they possessed six ploughs; there was a priest, and a church, and a mill: its taxable value was six pounds. When the Domesday records were made, it had slightly increased in value; the seven thanes had been replaced by twenty- seven villains, four sokemen, and four bordars. The villains were what we should now call day-labourers: the soke or soc men were persons of various degrees, from small owners under a greater lord, to mere husbandmen: the bordars are considered by most specialists in Domesday terminology to have been mere drudges, hewers of wood, drawers of water.
A synopsis of the book published in 1910 states: > This is a romance of the Virginia tobacco fields and has for its central > figure Christopher Blake. He is the descendant of a rich and aristocratic > family, and through reduced fortunes is obligated to work as a laborer on > the estate which for generations has been owned by his forebears. Upon the > death of his father, when he is only ten years old, he suddenly finds home > and fortune snatched from him, and with a blind mother and two sisters to > support he begins a life of toil. He foregoes education and drudges > unceasingly that his mother may be kept in ignorance of her change of > fortune and that his twin sister may not have to work.
The Houses themselves are to some degree alive, in the same way TARDISes are, and the furniture can move about, occasionally growing into 'Drudges' who function as servants for the family. The Doctor was loomed in the House of Lungbarrow in the mountains of South Gallifrey, but unique among the house's cousins, he has a belly button. This sterility backstory is contradicted by on screen depictions and descriptions of the Master and the Doctor as children, the Eleventh Doctor stating he slept in the cot he brings out of his TARDIS and references made to the Doctor and the Master having parents, the Doctor himself being a father and the Master having a daughter. The Virgin New Adventures establish a religion on Gallifrey centred around the three main gods, Time, Death and Pain.
In 2001, she was named the paper's first female Editorial Page Editor, a position she held for six years. She resigned from this post at the beginning of 2007 to take a six-month leave to focus on writing her book When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women from 1960 to the Present, returning to the Times as a regular columnist in July 2007. Beyond her work as a journalist, Collins has published several books: The Millennium Book, which she co-authored with her husband, CBS News producer Dan Collins; Scorpion Tongues: Gossip, Celebrity and American Politics; America's Women: Four Hundred Years of Dolls, Drudges, Helpmates, and Heroines; the aforementioned When Everything Changed; and As Texas Goes: How the Lone Star State Hijacked the American Agenda."Collins, Gail" (2014).
He appears never to have tried to patent any of his inventions and it seems unlikely that he earned much if anything from his published works. There is some indication from his final work (see below) that he may also have lost money when several Boston banks collapsed during 1814 and 1815. His final published work was something of a departure from his usual topics: a polemical pamphlet that appeared in 1816 (A Dissertation on the Real Cause and Effectual Cure of the Present National Distress) in which he strongly criticised the political establishment of his day and set out his proposals for reforms to the public finances and the banking system. The Dissertation is, however, above all a plea for proper recognition of working farmers, the ‘miserable drudges of agriculture’ who (Amos asserts) are ‘the very basis of national prosperity’, in contrast to what he saw as the vested interest of the landowning class.
During the 18th century, the term was often used as a synonym for a still vaguer man of taste or a pretend critic. In 1760, Oliver Goldsmith said, "Painting is and has been and now will someday become the sole object of fashionable care; the title of connoisseur in that art is at present the safest passport into every fashionable Society; a well timed shrug, an admiring attitude and one or two exotic tones of exclamation are sufficient qualifications for men of low circumstances to curry favour." In 1890, Giovanni Morelli wrote, "art connoisseurs say of art historians that they write about what they do not understand; art historians, on their side, disparage the connoisseurs, and only look upon them as the drudges who collect materials for them, but who personally have not the slightest knowledge of the physiology of art." The attributions of painted pottery were an important project to the History of Ancient Art and Classical Archeology (Ancient Greece and South Italy).
Time magazine was distinctly lukewarm about the book: > While there is meticulous method in [the protagonist's] madness, there is > not nearly enough madness in the narrative methods of Richard Condon (The > Manchurian Candidate). What the author intends is a black comedy on the > peril of an obsessive delusion; what he achieves is a hybrid between > bedroom-comedy pink and olive-drab boredom.... > > Despite clever barbs and lucent epigrams ("Respect is the only successful > aphrodisiac"), Any God Will Do is not as acidly funny as it keeps promising > to be. In the past, Condon cultists have been treated to comic narrative > leaps performed with the agility of a Macedonian goat, and to sly > surrealistic glimpses into the lives of Oedipal wrecks and decent drudges > who turn up naked at the Last Judgment. But in this book much of the elan is > gone; it sometimes appears as if Condon is padding to keep from plotting.

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