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138 Sentences With "dwelled on"

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

My husband and I dwelled on this decision for weeks.
Instead, the exchange dwelled on the secrets available to him.
"I have dwelled on these feelings for five years," Tucker wrote.
Each film he made dwelled on the details of those faces.
Many dispatches from the Iowa trip dwelled on his verbal blunders here.
Two months after that hug, Brandt has not dwelled on the moment.
At the outset Mr Trump dwelled on China's gaping trade surplus with America.
In 2019, Roberts's thoughts dwelled on the American democratic project and its vitality.
Trump at the time dwelled on the youngest victims of a chemical weapons attack.
One stood above the others, he said, the man Mr. Fogle has dwelled on.
But the Indians have not dwelled on the outcome, because they remember the journey.
There were long stretches of our career where I felt Sara dwelled on meaningless things.
The rapid pace of the event meant no one thing could be dwelled on for long.
Christians over the centuries have dwelled on the tension that a March 25 Good Friday presents.
Recounting the meeting to reporters, the Democratic senator Dick Durbin also dwelled on another curious moment.
I think of Antonio Delgado in New York, whose blackness was something that Republicans dwelled on.
Because of Gemma, she no longer dwelled on the past more than she should, she explained.
This is why the iPhone 7 announcement dwelled on the camera and its advantages for so long.
Much of Castro's initial coverage dwelled on the irrelevant question of whether he is fluent in Spanish.
" The ads have more explicitly dwelled on border security, the Second Amendment, tax cuts, and "rebuilding the military.
It is certainly true that the media has not dwelled on these attacks, at least not from Democrats.
Few people focused on fixing these problems—instead, most of the speakers dwelled on just how bad everything is.
But where much of the media coverage surrounding Martin's killing dwelled on the ambiguities — did his killer feel threatened?
Figuring there must be an underlying reason, Nege dwelled on this for a year before discovering information online about asexuality.
He dwelled on the numbness in his penis, expressing anxiety about never again being able to have sex or children.
Often after traumatic incidents, some parts are dwelled on and can even get exaggerated over time, while other parts become muddied.
"Lucian was quite interested in the process of aging and he certainly dwelled on signs of aging himself," Mr. Gayford said.
The prosecutors dwelled on a meeting that the four men and others had attended at a restaurant in Beijing in February 2015.
He dwelled on the murders of Kate Steinle and Sarah Root, Americans who were killed by illegal border crossers with criminal records.
Outside of Montana, most news accounts dwelled on Mr. Trump's praise for Representative Greg Gianforte for body-slamming a reporter last year.
I've since dwelled on the themes that came up for me, especially around care and abandonment, more than I would have otherwise.
In a review for USA Today, Barbara VanDenburgh dwelled on the "many bewildering acts committed by otherwise intelligent characters" in the book.
Boeing also dwelled on the machinists' union's opposition to its 2009 decision to open a second Dreamliner assembly line in South Carolina.
But this kind of dull, plodding fact was not the kind of thing the convention's Make America Safe Again evening dwelled on.
The show dwelled on the diversity complaints aired through #OscarsSoWhite, yet blithely mocked Asian-Americans with punch lines that banked on Asian stereotypes.
He said he had not dwelled on the memory very much over the years, but remained puzzled by what he saw that day.
The earlier film concerned a free spirit named Donna (Meryl Streep), who dwelled on a Greek island with her daughter, Sophie (Amanda Seyfried).
The president dwelled on the economy, pointing to the low unemployment rate, continuing growth and the tax cut passed by the last Republican Congress.
They have dwelled on the scarf for the last five years, referencing it in widely circulated memes, GIF sets, and pieces of micro fan fiction.
If a referee dwelled on every piece of feedback given by the crowd, there wouldn't be much focus left to finish the job at hand.
Articles after the defeat dwelled on the playoff disappointment but made no mention that it might have been the Raiders' final game in Los Angeles.
Another, "Don't Let Her," imagines his wife's life as a widow — an unwanted fate that Hayes dwelled on during a long stretch away from home.
Clinton, of course, has been a dogged defender of the Affordable Care Act, while Mr. Sanders has dwelled on the program's not going far enough.
Reached at his Dwan-funded mesa, Mr. Ross dwelled on the "spiritual interests" that inspired his patron's concern for space and light and the land.
In order to emphasize his age, Miller dwelled on the physical pain of fighting crime and how it multiplied the bodily ache of being old.
Most of what I'd read about Alzheimer's dwelled on the end game, on people who were past the point where they recognized their family and friends.
" Many of her routines over the years dwelled on the tribulations of this self-described ugly ducking: "And do you like the dress by the way?
He dwelled on a pay increase that they had received and claimed — erroneously — that they had gone without one for 10 years, until he came along.
Schultz, speaking with presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, dwelled on his tough upbringing along with the "romance of espresso" that he first experienced in Milan, Italy.
She then dwelled on a description of how she would pull back differently, and more skillfully, than Mr. Trump's rapid and chaotic retreat in the past week.
But Mr. Sanders's subsequent statement condemning the violence, which mostly dwelled on how dismissively he felt the party was treating him, did little to soothe Mr. Reid's unease.
Members, both former and current, have discussed the desire to decentralize power away from the party leadership, But so far, the committee has not dwelled on this issue.
But as if introducing himself for the first time, he also dwelled on his origin story as a young Republican, and his rebirth as a precocious campaigner for Trump.
The recent finale of the latter dwelled on whether or not Rob and Chyna should be invited to Khloé's birthday party and whether or not they should actually attend.
But it was not the malice that Tadrint Washington dwelled on, or even the people who had come from near and far to rally for white control of America.
Long passages of the speech dwelled on very detailed issues such as the beauties of Serbian tourist sites, recalling the endless lectures of communist leaders in the Soviet era.
Mr. Trump, in an interview on Friday, barely dwelled on those two rivals, saying that he was already looking ahead to the prospect of a general election matchup against Mrs.
He dwelled on the "mistakes" of prior America leaders and presented a strategy that envisions a world in which the United States confronts China and Russia to protect America's interests.
There was no orchestra this time, but the backing band dwelled on feverishly virtuosic solos — frenetic drums, shredding violins — as if to compensate for the lack of Acropolis-scale forces.
The Warriors' unofficial team spokesman, Draymond Green, insists he and the rest of the league's reigning champions are relishing the fact that the basketball public has dwelled on other matters.
A surprising amount of the speech also dwelled on racial equality — and Kaine and his family's record of fighting for it in Richmond, Virginia, the formal capital of the Confederacy.
At the same time, on the campaign trail Trump often dwelled on the issue of labor force participation, which he noted had fallen considerably over the course of the 21st century.
He dwelled on entrepreneurs who could not profitably expand operations unless others did the same, and on savers who could not improve their financial standing unless others were willing to borrow.
During his campaign, Mr. Trump dwelled on accusations that China had systematically sapped American industrial might, and he has indicated that trade issues will be a priority in dealings with Beijing.
The BLU-97s' detonation in a ring of soldiers was among the most lethal battlefield incidents for Americans in the Persian Gulf war, and he dwelled on it upon arriving home.
Mr. Cruz "often dwelled on the lurid details of murders that other clerks tended to summarize before quickly moving to the legal merits of the case," The Times reported earlier this year.
Luckily, no one dwelled on that point as they learned the news about Frankel's health: That she would be unable to travel because she would be having surgery to remove multiple uterine fibroids.
But his speech in Cleveland dwelled on crime rather than the economy and went on so long that viewers checked out (Trump actually drew a lower television rating than Romney's 2012 acceptance speech).
In a radio interview, he dwelled on how great it was that people sang "God Bless America" just before they were slaughtered by a civilian who converted his rifle into a machine gun.
The risk was always there, so it wasn't something I dwelled on every day, but it was always in the back of my mind, especially when I was dating people and thinking about kids.
But in the course of a meandering news conference, Mr. Trump dwelled on the virtues of his property there, and compared the difficulties of the American presidency to the task of refurbishing a golf course.
In it, she dwelled on the nineteenth-century phenomenon of black entertainers performing in blackface, which many have found demeaning but which she sees as a form of rebellion—African-Americans reclaiming their own stories.
His 2018 book, The Case Against Impeaching Trump, which largely dwelled on the findings unearthed by former special counsel Robert Mueller, went to press only six weeks after he signed the book deal for it.
She instead dwelled on the notorious poster — a public denunciation called a "big-character poster" in Chinese political argot — that she and six other activists put up outside a restaurant on the Peking University campus.
In a speech alongside world leaders, he dwelled on the service of D-Day's American veterans but said little about how he views America's role in the world or its relationship to the Europe of today.
Francona said he had not dwelled on the details of that game, citing another home loss — the 2013 American League wild-card game, in which the Indians lost to Joe Maddon's Tampa Bay Rays — as more devastating.
Yet it wasn't long before the events took on a funereal mood as he talked about the somber themes he's dwelled on since his campaign launch in late April: loss, illness, the dwindling ranks of the middle class.
For the past ten years, I've been documenting and interpreting the Christmas decorations on Bob Dylan's Malibu home, much as the hippest music critics of my youth dwelled on and picked apart the abstract lyrics of his songs.
Trump to GOP: I'm your voice Instead of reaching for inspirational vignettes most nominees use to inspire their nation to greatness, Trump dwelled on the relatives of those killed by undocumented migrants and depicted a violent and dangerous land.
Here are the best and worst moments of a show that dwelled on President Trump and made history in a number of categories, including the first African-American woman to win for comedy series writing: Lena Waithe, above ("Master of None").
"The New History and the Old" (1987) criticized historians who took a psychological approach, or relied on quantitative analysis, or dwelled on everyday life in a historical period to the exclusion of the political, social and cultural forces in play.
Titanfall 2's story borrows from film a lot, to the point that it wouldn't be a surprise to learn James Cameron or Neil Blomkamp had consulted on the game — or that the creators dwelled on every word of the directors' DVD commentaries.
Though his convention speech dwelled on gloomy themes, Nixon did something else, too: He spoke poignantly about his dreams as a boy growing up poor in California, and he appealed to highly educated suburban voters who have eyed Mr. Trump with deep suspicion.
Mainstream media has rarely shown furries in a good light, dating back to Vanity Fair's 2001 exposé of the Midwest FurFest, the wonderfully titled Pleasures of the Fur, which dwelled on the sexual side of furry fandom, its rampant plushophilia and deviancy.
For many, however, his language is not just offensive, but is also opening the door to fringe groups that until recently had dwelled on the margins of Czech political life, including the S.P.D., a neo-fascist group that has called for banning Islam.
He indeed did a roll call of the tribes and ethnicities that built New Orleans, but he dwelled on how they'd come together — in the tapestry made possible by such varied threads — and how much poorer all of us would be without it.
The narrow sliver of concrete and its portable hoop came with specific challenges — duck low if you want to dribble to the right but avoid a collision with the electrical box jutting out from the window, for example — yet Mashour never dwelled on the setting.
And it was also the last time that Full Frontal's maiden voyage really dwelled on the lady elephant in the room — though Bee's decidedly female point of view will obviously continue to inform her comedy, as will her status as a woman in a male-dominated industry.
Nearly two decades later, his colleagues recall how Mr. Cruz, who frequently spoke of how his mentor's father had been killed by a carjacker, often dwelled on the lurid details of murders that other clerks tended to summarize before quickly moving to the legal merits of the case.
Ms. Peterson told the jurors that prosecutors were trying to manipulate them, such as by calling witnesses who dwelled on the tragic details of the attacks — though the defense did not contest that material — and by subtly invoking feelings of tribal nationalism, like referring to "our" ambassador and compound.
The best joke was made by Ted Berg of For the Win, who said: Yahoo's Tim Brown called Colon "everyone's favorite PED abuser," and it does seem to be true that, thankfully, the world at large has let Colon alone and not dwelled on him having failed a drug test once.
At the NATO defense ministers' meeting this week, part of the new administration's first diplomatic engagement in Europe, much of the talk in the hallways dwelled on whether Mr. Mattis could continue to move the Trump administration toward positions on national security issues more palatable to the United States' European allies.
There is a reason that Mr. Comey dwelled on the 113 emails (a few of which had included classified markings, he said), detailing their provenance — 110 came from 93 email chains included in the files originally submitted to the F.B.I., three from emails the bureau found by other means — and their classification level.
Worse were men like Jose Mourinho (who wasn't at Chelsea when I arrived, but who I quickly became familiar with), genuine sociopaths who were inexplicably egged on by an English press which dwelled on "mindgames," as if this handful of awful coaches were actually just putting people on and not deeply fucked up.
As the second half continued drearily, with the fun, good team losing, I thought about what it means to be forgotten and dwelled on the grim reality that much of life is not a Pepsi Super Bowl Halftime Show that launches laughs and good times but rather a reef upon which our hopes and dreams are continually dashed.
" During the summer of 2016, while Pence was auditioning for the role of presidential running mate, his pastor dwelled on Daniel, an Israelite who stayed true to his faith while serving as chief adviser to the pagan tyrant Nebuchadnezzar — "an angry, irrational king," the pastor called him, likening Daniel's situation to that of "the vice presidency, if you will, of the country.
Beyond the question of its contributions to local groups, which the union said were similar to contributions it has made to civil rights and religious groups for decades, anti-union workers dwelled on the indictment last week of a former Fiat Chrysler labor relations official accused of skimming millions of dollars from a training facility to benefit himself and a former U.A.W. counterpart.
136 Half of the book dwelled on this topic, expressed in terms offensive to Catholics. James's approach seemed to be a bargaining chip, or feeler for negotiations, to the diplomat Antoine le Fèvre de la Boderie.
Following the tests, very few changes were made to the cars leading up to the race. The teams that participated reported satisfaction with the information gathered during the tests. The primary concerns expressed dwelled on the roughness of the circuit. The track itself, however, underwent a few upgrades.
Cherokee Indians once dwelled on Paris Mountain, before European men began to colonize North America. The first white man settled in what is now known as Greenville County in 1765. He was an Irishman from Virginia named Richard Pearis. He married a Cherokee woman and became close to the Cherokee tribe.
That was hard to find a new drummer instead of Nick Byckoff. It seemed almost impossible. But it needed to soldier on. Nevertheless, after trying a lot of challengers they dwelled on Anatoly "Alchothron" Boychenko and now it's possible to see that they have not been mistaken with the choice.
The Tricastini dwelled on the west bank of the Rhône river, in a mountainous region, between the Cavari, the Vocontii and the Segovellauni. In the 2nd century AD (Ptolemy), their capital was Noviomagus, likely the modern city of Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux. In the first century AD, it was referred to as Augusta Tricastinorum.
On 19 October 1852 he married Wilhelmina Charlotte, youngest daughter of the Rev. Henry Alright Hughes. She survived him. In 1868 he printed for private circulation at Karachi Remarks on the Indian Army (18 pages), in which he dwelled on the danger of relying on European troops and of neglecting and discrediting the native army, as had been the tendency since the mutiny.
The first Galatasaray SK crest Galatasaray's first emblem was drawn by 333 [School Number] Şevki Ege. This was the figure of a spread-winged eagle with a football in its beak. The eagle was a model emblem that Galatasaray dwelled on in the beginning. But when the name did not attract too much interest, Şevki Ege's composition was pushed aside.
Dartmuthia is an extinct genus of primitive jawless fish that lived in the Silurian period in what is now Estonia. To date only the creature's armored head shield (a typical trait for osteostracids) has been found. Since the mouth is positioned on the underside of the head Dartmuthia is presumed to have dwelled on the ocean floor, sucking its food into its mouth.
According to their oral history, the Jewish minority has dwelled on the island continuously for more than 2,500 years.International Religious Freedom Report 2007: Tunisia. United States Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor (14 September 2007). This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. The first physical evidence that historians know of come from the 11th century found in Cairo Geniza.
Moreover, he prepared Notas para un ensayo de reorganización de la Acción Católica Española, a pamphlet which recommended new organisation of ACEl Siglo Futuro 17.03.31, available here, also El Siglo Futuro 10.03.31, available here and in a competent, somewhat technocratic style dwelled on suggested main threads of its activity.Santiago Martínez Sánchez, El Cardenal Pedro Segura y Sáenz [PhD thesis Universidad de Navarra], Pamplona 2002, p.
Fuller dwelled on his daughter's death, suspecting that it was connected with the Fullers' damp and drafty living conditions. This provided motivation for Fuller's involvement in Stockade Building Systems, a business which aimed to provide affordable, efficient housing. In 1927, at age 32, Fuller lost his job as president of Stockade. The Fuller family had no savings, and the birth of their daughter Allegra in 1927 added to the financial challenges.
277 It denounced Left-wing course of the party leadership "camarilla""camarilla con falta de capacidad intelectual que procede de modo dictatorial"; Casariego scorned also these who tried to court Movimiento, García Riol 2015, p. 279 and dwelled on Traditionalist doctrine.he reminded the Junta jefe Palomino that Carlism was about "monarquia católica, legitimista, descentralizadora, popular, gremial, campesina", pitted against Liberalism and Marxism, García Riol 2015, p. 83, Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, pp.
This eight-episode series featured interviews with various people in the United States in recognition of that nation's bicentennial. Host Larry Solway interviewed such Americans as writer Ray Bradbury, Luckenbach, Texas personality "Hondo" Crouch, billionaire Nelson Bunker Hunt, Georgia governor Lester Maddox and Chicago author- broadcaster Studs Terkel. Each episode dwelled on a particular region of the United States such as California, Florida, the Mississippi River, New England, New York and Texas.
Contemporaneous authors rarely dwelled on early medieval Southeastern Europe. For instance, the Royal Frankish Annals makes a passing reference to Abodrites living "in Dacia adjacent to the Danube near the Bulgarian border"Royal Frankish Annals (year 824), p. 116. on the occasion of their envoys' arrival in Aachen in 824. Bulgaria's territory increased under Krum (c. 803-814), who took Adrianople and forced at least 10,000 of the town's inhabitants to settle north of the Lower Danube in 813.
Christine coped with the move better than May, who was too ashamed to face the neighbours. Christine spent the next few years looking after her mother, who constantly dwelled on the past and eventually suffered a breakdown. Christine got a job as a machinist as Elliston's Raincoat Factory but by 1960 her mother's health weighed heavily on her mind as well as the gossip in the street. May died of a brain tumour at the end of the year.
In the original 1940s Venus series, Venus dwelled on the planet Venus with her female companions. She traveled to Earth and took on the human identity of Victoria "Vicki" Nutley Starr, a journalist and editor for Beauty magazine. She developed a romantic relationship with Beauty editor Whitney Hammond; he and Venus' rival, Della Mason, were among the few people to meet Venus who did not believe her when she claimed that she was a goddess. She helps people repair their broken relationships.
Sam and Four seek refuge in a deserted apartment where Sam experiments with his telekinesis. They watch the news on TV and are see Nine and Five both battling the Mogadorian soldiers, but they are also fighting each other. Four and Sam leave for Union Square to find them. Six narrates chapter 2, where Six, Seven (Marina) and Adam are leaving the Sanctuary, having recently awoken the Entity, or the spirit which previously dwelled on Lorien and now on Earth.
Low budget exploitative films New Year's Evil, Don't Go in the House and Don't Answer the Phone! were called-out for misogyny that dwelled on the suffering of females exclusively. Acclaimed filmmaker Brian De Palma's Psycho- homage Dressed to Kill drew a wave of protest from the National Organization for Women (NOW), who picketed the film's screening on the University of Iowa campus. The year's most controversial slashers was William Lustig's Maniac, about a schizophrenic serial killer in New York.
According to Mormon theology, God the Father is a physical being of "flesh and bones."Doctrine and Covenants Mormons identify him as the biblical god Elohim. Latter-day Saint leaders have also taught that God the Father was once a mortal man who has completed the process of becoming an exalted being.. . . . . . According to Joseph Smith, God "once was a man like one of us and … once dwelled on an earth the same as Jesus Christ himself did in the flesh and like us.".
Concluding then that the river was also not a passage to the west, Hudson exited the river, naming the natives that dwelled on either side of the Mauritius estuary the Manahata. Leaving the estuary, he sailed north-eastward, never realizing that what are now the islands of Manhattan and Long Island were islands, and crossed the Atlantic to England where he sailed into Dartmouth harbor with the Dutch East India Company ship and crew.Robert Juet. Transcribed by Brea Barthel "Purchas His Pilgrimes (Juet's Journal of Hudson's 1609 Voyage)," 28 June 2006.
The turn of the millennium saw Peretti's departure from writing his popular novels. He wrote a 2000 memoir, The Wounded Spirit, which covered his struggles as a child with a facial tumor known as cystic hygroma, which caused him to be mocked by other children and retreat to solitude, until it was eventually treated with multiple surgeries. He dwelled on the subject of bullying in his non-fiction titles No More Victims (2001) and No More Bullies (2003). In 2001, Peretti released Hangman's Curse, the first book in the Veritas Project series for teens.
The game generated enormous interest in the city of Toronto. A total of 27,770 attended, smashing the record for a crowd at an exhibition game in Canada. Before the game few in Toronto had given the Argonauts much of a chance, while post-game reports dwelled on the injuries suffered and the massive traffic snarls the game had created. Given the success at the gate, the Argonauts arranged further games in 1960 and 1961; both were lopsided losses and there were suggestions the team was putting money ahead of the health of its players.
She finally left him and married a younger colleague of Munch. Munch took this as a betrayal, and he dwelled on the humiliation for some time to come, channeling some of the bitterness into new paintings. His paintings Still Life (The Murderess) and The Death of Marat I, done in 1906–07, clearly reference the shooting incident and the emotional after effects. In 1903–04, Munch exhibited in Paris where the coming Fauvists, famous for their boldly false colors, likely saw his works and might have found inspiration in them.
500 and thinking dwelled on the mathematical nature of harmonia. Aristotle, whose Peripatetic school Aristoxenus belonged to, addressed the subject in his work On the Soul. Dewhitt thinks Aristoxenus treatment of the subject was essentially to attempt to describe and locate the elements of the soul, and provide mathematical proofs for these. Aristoxenus is thought contrary to the position of the Pythagoreans, he favoured an intellectual treatment of the subject which Aristotle had set out in his work, which is the exercise of inductive logic with attention to empirical evidence.
In October 2019, as a Deloitte sponsored delegate to the One Young World Summit in London, Gideon was invited to the Windsor Castle as part of a group of 10 young leaders from across the world for a roundtable discussion with the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and Megan Markle of the British Royal Family. His engagement at this meeting dwelled on Education-in-bottles, an educational intervention of his organisation that provides basic educational infrastructure through waste plastic bottles to support access to quality education and empowerment for marginalised girls and vulnerable women in educationally-deprived communities.
When Prebble announced his retirement, Hide quickly indicated that he would seek the caucus leadership. Prebble, however, appeared unenthusiastic about the prospect of Hide succeeding him, and in a speech praising each of the new leadership contenders, pointedly dwelled on the others. The succession method chosen by Prebble also appeared to disfavour Hide: rather than a simple caucus vote, which a conventional leadership challenge would have called, a four-way election involved all ACT party members (although the election remained only "indicative"). Many people consider that the party organisation, in which Douglas has considerable influence, dislikes Hide.
In 1925 the then-mayor of Cologne, Konrad Adenauer, cancelled the purchase of the painting and forced the director of the museum to resign. Dix was a contributor to the Neue Sachlichkeit exhibition in Mannheim in 1925, which featured works by George Grosz, Max Beckmann, Heinrich Maria Davringhausen, Karl Hubbuch, Rudolf Schlichter, Georg Scholz and many others. Dix's work, like that of Grosz—his friend and fellow veteran—was extremely critical of contemporary German society and often dwelled on the act of Lustmord, or sexualized murder. He drew attention to the bleaker side of life, unsparingly depicting prostitution, violence, old age and death.
At the time Estévanez supported the party leader Olazábal in his strategy of re-unification with the Carlists.Blinkhorn 2008, p. 73 In December he participated in a Madrid conferencetitled "Doctrina y Acción Tradicionalista" attended by many Integrist and Carlist heavyweights;El Siglo Futuro 17.12.31, available here in a grand lecture he de-emphasized Integrist threads and dwelled on common Traditionalist principles,Estévanez described Traditionalism as political system which “tiene como principal fin la proclamación del reinado de Dios y de su justicia: el reinado social de Jesucristo” and declared that “adhesionismo a este régimen es imposible”, El Siglo Futuro 17.12.
Estévanez (1st f/R) and other Carlists in Burgos, 1937 It is not clear whether Estévanez took part in the Carlist conspiracy against the Republic.one scholar claims that the Burgos Carlists well were prepared to the coup and gathered lots of weapons but does not mention Estévanez as involved, Castro Berrojo 2006, p. 29 However, immediately after the rebels had taken control of Burgos he published a large article which hailed the insurgents and dwelled on their patriotic stand against the background of such historical events like the battle of Las Navas de Tolosa.Pensamiento Alavés 25.07.
Joseph Sullivan, 1874 engraving Unknown to the gang a friend of the victims, Heinrich Moller was planning to meet the Mathieu party in Nelson to return the horse to Canvastown, however when Moller did not see or catch up on the group on the track or in Nelson that evening, he asked other friends and hotels if they had seen the group. Moller had to return to Canvastown after several days of waiting, and informed the locals of his story. George Jevis rode to Nelson immediately to inform the police, as his thoughts dwelled on foul play. On 18 June the investigation began, and in the evening Levy was arrested.
Pietro Geremia was born in Palermo on 10 August 1399 to aristocrats. Geremia studied at the Bologna college since being sent there in 1417 and was perceived to be an excellent law student and his own pride led him to believe this to be true. One night in 1422 he dwelled on his vain success and what his future would bring when a deceased male relative knocked on his third floor window; Geremia sat upright and asked who was there before seeing this relative. The relative told him that his pride lost him a chance at entering heaven and so warned Geremia not to repeat his mistakes.
As an after effect of a stroke Gilb suffered in 2009, the book is a meditation on the transitory, on impermanence, on "unseen" people, themes and characters Gilb has always dwelled on, now heightened. In Gritos, the collection of mostly autobiographical essays, Gilb locates his work in American letters, and by doing so, claims space for Chicanos in American life and culture. Gilb labels his narrative approach “first-person stupid,” but critics praise its candor, depth, and clarity (despite or maybe because of the author's rejection of heavy-handed commentary).Saldana, Rene, Jr. “Un Grito de Tejas: Required Reading.” American Book Review 25.2 (2004): 17-20. Print. The essays are parable-like: “fool stories” that express learned wisdom.
380.), or more likely Plumer, Byng or Allenby.Hart 2008, p. 250. During the second major German offensive, "Georgette" in Flanders (9 April), Haig issued his famous order (11 April) that his men must carry on fighting "With Our Backs to the Wall and believing in the Justice of our Cause" to protect "The safety of our homes and the Freedom of mankind"Bullock, 2009, p67 - illustration of the Order, with notes by Bullock, whose first day in the Front Line was the day it was issued, and who brought it back as a souvenir – the latter being a real concern after recent British propaganda dwelled on the harsh terms imposed on Russia at Brest-Litovsk.Sheffield 2011, p. 283.
According to the Greek mythology myth, recorded by Antoninus Liberalis, Sybaris or Lamia was a giant beast () that dwelled on Mount Cirphis and terrorized the countryside of Krisa, ancient name of Delphi, devouring livestock and people. The people of the region asked the Oracle of Delphi how to end the depredations. The god Apollo answered that a young man should be offered to the beast to achieve peace from it. The young and handsome Alkyoneus, son of Diomos and Meganeira, was selected to be the victim, but the hero Eurybatus (Eurybarus), son of Euphemos and a descendant of the river god Axios, was overcome with love for Alkyoneus and became determined to save him.
The origin of the name "Poland" derives from the West Slavic tribe of Polans (Polanie), who inhabited the Warta river basin of present-day Greater Poland region starting in the mid-6th century. The origin of the name Polanie itself derives from the Proto-Slavic word pole (field). In some languages, such as Hungarian, Lithuanian, Persian and Turkish, the country's name is derived from the Lendians (Lędzianie or Lachy), who dwelled on the southeasternmost edge of present-day Lesser Poland, in the Cherven Grods between the 7th and 11th centuries — lands which were part of the territorial domain ruled over by the Polans. Their name derives from the Old Polish word lęda (open land or plain).
When they returned, a village woman hinted to Córdova that they had raided a camp of Peruvian rubber tappers in the vicinity, ignoring his prior instructions. Córdova (Ino Moxo) called a tobacco meeting with them in which he recalled his careful training by the former chief, and his own ability to get arms and trade goods. Without drama, he implied his knowledge of their raid, and that if they continued raiding "evil spirits and disastrous times would destroy the tribe". These members joined the discussion, saying many caucheros were now withdrawing from the neighboring forests; more importantly, they dwelled on the unavenged deaths and other losses suffered by the Huni Kui in the past.
He gave a short victory speech in Alexandria, saying, "I go in without having made any promises to any combine, corporation, or person, and shall endeavor to do right, because it is right, and I endeavor to give an administration for the people, for the people, and by the people." There were significant limitations on Governor Nelson's ability to pursue his agenda. The balance of power in Minnesota was shared among five independently elected officials, the state legislature, and the governor. In his inaugural speech on January 4, 1893, he presented himself as a fiscal conservative with an affinity for education and dwelled on statistics related to various state services and for solutions.
He returned to familiar themes from his earlier writing and dwelled on personal experiences linking him with the homeland he has lost. His visit to southwest France in 1925 inspired "Crimson Blood" (1926), a colorful account of a bullfight in Bayonne, followed in 1927 by "The Blessed South", four sketches on Gascony and the Hautes Pyrenees. Then came the predominantly urban sketches made in Yugoslavia, the result of Kuprin's visit to Belgrade in 1928 to attend a conference of the Russian writers in emigration. The three major works of Kuprin's Parisian years were The Wheel of Time (13 sketches styled as a novel, 1929), autobiographical The Junkers (1932), and romantic "Jeannette" (1933), describing an elderly professor's affection for a little girl in his neighborhood.
Reliefs carved into the structural blocks cover "almost every available surface", both inside and out.Wessels-Mevissen and Hardy, 267 Though early press reports dwelled on Buddhist-like aspects of the temple, it is clearly a Hindu temple dedicated to Shiva, who appears prominently in the composite form of Ardhanarishvara, divided between his male form and the female one of Parvati, his consort. Ardhanarishvara appears centrally on the reliefs on both the inside and outside of the rear (west) wall of the sanctuary, a feature not known elsewhere.Wessels-Mevissen and Hardy, 275; Greaves Balarama group on the north exterior wall The large relief groups "exhibit a homogenous sculptural style essentially reminiscent of Gupta art and other sculptural idioms present in this early period"Wessels-Mevissen and Hardy, 267 although the site is a long way from areas controlled by the Gupta Empire by the 460s.
Haig visited Plumer then demanded four French infantry divisions (Foch was offering a cavalry corps) be deployed between St Omer and Dunkirk in case the Germans broke through to Hazebrouck, "the Amiens of the north", a key railhead through which supplies were brought from the Channel Ports – had it fallen the Channel Ports might have been at risk and Plumer's Second Army might have been cut off.Sheffield 2011, p.282Harris 2008, p469 Haig issued his famous order (11 April) that his men must carry on fighting "With Our Backs to the Wall and believing in the Justice of our Cause" to protect "The safety of our homes and the Freedom of mankind" – the latter being a real concern after recent British propaganda dwelled on the harsh terms imposed on Russia at Brest-Litovsk.Sheffield 2011, p.283 He also added that "the French Army is moving and in great force to our support" – in Greenhalgh's view this may have been intended as blackmail.
Over the course of the 1730s and 1740s, Turnbull published a series of pamphlets and books which drew heavily on his theological concerns. He published a small tract in 1731 which was inspired by a passage in Lord Shaftesbury's writings: A philosophical enquiry concerning the connexion betwixt the doctrines and miracles of Jesus Christ, where he maintains that just as experiments confirm scientific theories, so the miracles of Jesus Christ confirm Christian doctrine. Turnbull then wrote a critique of Matthew Tindal in Christianity neither False nor Useless, Tho' not as Old as the Creation in 1732, which dwelled on the relationship between natural religion and revealed religion. In 1740, Turnbull published A Treatise on Ancient Painting, where he argued for the educational usefulness of the finer arts, based on the idea that painting was a kind of language, conveying ideas and truths about life, philosophy and nature, with drawings by Camillo Paderni.

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