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"e'er" Definitions
  1. contraction of ever.

37 Sentences With "e'er"

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

Plus the clue for 8D is my favorite among the clues I've written; did your mind jump to E'ER?
Mr. Bolotowsky opened with a tune from Handel's "Music for the Royal Fireworks," and the Christmas fare ranged from the inane ("Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree") to the glorious (Michael Praetorius's "Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming").
E'er shall avail her neck to begird with yesterday's ribband.
All here is vain, the strife the struggle vain the world's > wide wholeness, vain! No heav'nly joy want I, no Gehennan midnight, no maid > e'er again in my arms shall I take. My lot, be it e'er only: away from the > aches of knowing, let all be the voiceless void.
First edition (publ. Dial Books) A Season of Gifts is a novel by Richard Peck. It was published on September 17, 2009. The story is broken up into three parts: The Last House in Town, The Fall of the Year, and E'er the Winter Storms begin.
Like his father, he presided over the Scottish district of the church. Early in his mission, he was impressed by a motto he saw inscribed on a building in Stirling, "What E'er Thou Art, Act Well Thy Part". This message became a source of inspiration throughout his life.
Let the love of our land's sacred rights, To the love of our country succeed; Let friendship and honour unite, And flourish on both sides the Tweed. No sweetness the senses can cheer, Which corruption and bribery blind; No brightness that gloom can e'er clear, For honour's the sun of the mind.
O dear Shepherd E'er so loving, so kind so pious Bishop Versiglia. On the fold on the flock of Tak Nga obtain Jesus' and Mary's blessing. (x 2) (Chorus:) Tak Nga School, O happy family, in flamed by our Martyr's deeds. To God, our Father, give honour, glory and thanks for gifts so blessed as these.
Annie wrote another poem, which went: :'How could the pilgrims e'er be contented, :'When savory Finkle's had not been invented?' Annie's poem won the contest, though Eddie took credit for it. With the help of Annie's father, Bobby Stokely, Eddie trained long and hard to make the million dollar shot in June. Not everyone was in Eddie's favor, however.
The German ship was lying there, with rifles in galore. > Up came a British ship and spoke, 'No Germans reach the shore; You are our > Empire's enemy, and so we bid you stand. No German boot shall e'er pollute > the lonely Banna Strand.' As they sailed for Queenstown Harbour, said the > Germans: 'We're undone The British have us vanquish'd: man for man and gun > for gun.
Anderson, the gallant brave, :Who broke upon their slumbers, :E'en little girls and boys shall sing :Your name in tuneful numbers. :5. A thousand blessings on your heads, :Our brave, unflinching leaders, :A light you are upon the path :Of all our brave seceders. :6. Wright, on Carolina's coast, :Was e'er a hero bolder? :He seized a Yankee foe, and made :A breastwork of the soldier. :7.
'Thy light may e'er with us abide', etc. The authorship of the hymns for Terce, Sext and None is now ascribed only very doubtfully to St. Ambrose. They are not given to the saint by the Benedictine editors (see Ambrosian Hymnography), but are placed by Luigi Biraghi amongst his inni sinceri, since they are found in all the MSS. of the churches of Milan.
The smaller window, high on the right, contains a descending dove and a rose blossoming from the ground. The dove is both a symbol of the Holy Spirit and of St. Colomba, who brought Christianity to Scotland from across the Irish Sea. The blossoming rose reminds us of Michael Praetorius' Christmas chorale, "Lo, how a rose e'er blooming". The rose thus signifies the life-giving spilled blood of Christ.
The music notes (with blank lyrics) was printed, preceding the ballad text, in Pills to Purge Melancholy (1719). The melody was also printed with lyrics to an unrelated ballad printed in Watt's Musical Miscellany (1729).An untitled ballad by one Mr. Prior that begins "Who has e'er been at Paris.." Edward Francis Rimbault provided musical history on the tune (on this and other pieces in Percy's Reliques). Melody appended on p.
Did e'er such Love and Sorrow meet? Or Thorns compose so rich a Crown? 4\. His dying Crimson, like a Robe, Spreads o'er his Body on the Tree; Then am I dead to all the Globe, And all the Globe is dead to me. 5\. Were the whole Realm of Nature mine, That were a Present far too small; Love so amazing, so divine, Demands my Soul, my Life, my All.
As he raced down the tunnel back to daylight and safety, he heard a voice behind him declare: ::"Potter Thompson, Potter Thompson! ::If thou hadst drawn the sword or blown the horn, ::Thou hadst been the luckiest man e'er was born." The tunnel appears to have been well known, though the cave remains hidden. A second story tells how this subterranean passage is supposed to run from the Castle to nearby Easby Abbey.
The second (1989) edition of the OED retained almost all the information of the first edition essentially unrevised. The third edition (publication ongoing since 2000) is fully revisiting all entries. A staff member revising the entry for revirginize in 2013 sought to verify the word's earliest citation, from Meanderings of Memory: "Where that cosmetic ... Shall e'er revirginize that brow's abuse". When the staffer failed to locate the work, OED chief bibliographer Veronica Hurst launched a deeper search.
What'er betide our Ocean Bride That nestles 'midst Atlantic's foam, Still far and wide we'll raise with pride A native flag, o'er hearth and home. 4.Should e'er the hand of fate demand Some future change in our career; We ne'er will yield: on flood or field The flag we honour and revere! 5.Fling out the flag o'er creek and cragg; Pink, white and green, so fair, so grand. Long may it sway, o'er bight and bay, Around the shores of Newfoundland.
"Lo, How an Oak E'er Blooming" placed seventeenth in the 1987 Locus Poll Award for Best Short Story. "Into Gold" placed seventeenth in the 1987 Locus Poll Award for Best Novelette. "The Lions Are Asleep This Night" was nominated for the 1986 Nebula Award for Best Short Story and the 1987 Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, and placed thirteenth in the 1987 Locus Poll Award for Best Short Story. "Against Babylon" placed eighteenth in the 1987 Locus Poll Award for Best Novelette.
After rushing to the other end (Cold Blow Lane) the President of the FA performed a brief opening ritual and led the players onto the pitch. Before kick off a brass lion, inscribed (in Gaelic) "We Will Never Turn Our Backs To The Enemy", was presented to the club. However the official Club Motto was already established. The first and second editions of the club handbook (published 1908–09 and 1909–1910) bore the slogan: "We fear no foe, where e'er we go".
Where-e'er your blood has sealed the faith, We brought in triumph through, Goodnight to glory and to death, And that's good morn to you. Chorus Verse 3 Farewell to pens and prison holes, Where fiends themselves broke through, And tortured noble captive souls That they could not subdue, But in the fullness of the day Heaven's justice did we do. Disaster, famine, ruin, may Make fearful answer true. Chorus Verse 4 Goodbye to muster and parade, Goodbye the grand review, The dusty line, the dashing aid, Goodbye our general too.
The club adopted the motto: We Fear No Foe Where E'er We Go. In the 2000s the club started to recognise its unique link with London's docks by introducing Dockers' Days, and archiving the club's dock roots in the Millwall FC Museum. Dockers' Days bring together past successful Millwall teams who parade on the pitch at half-time. Supporters who were dockers are allowed to attend the game for free. In 2011, Millwall officially named the east stand of The Den as the 'Dockers Stand' in honour of the club's former nickname.
Salemenes leaves, and Sardanapalus reflects, > Till now, no drop from an Assyrian vein Hath flow'd for me, nor hath the > smallest coin Of Nineveh's vast treasures e'er been lavish'd On objects > which could cost her sons a tear: If then they hate me, 'tis because I hate > not: If they rebel, 'tis because I oppress not.Act 1, sc. 2, line 408. The Greek slave-girl Myrrha, Sardanapalus' favourite, enters; when Sardanapalus proposes to spend the evening banqueting by the Euphrates she persuades him not to go, fearing some danger there.
Humphrey Cobb, right, is seen with his family December 24, 1908 at the Casa Guidi in Florence, Italy. With his younger sister Virginia and brother Arthur they pose with their mother Alice Littell Cobb, M.D., recently widowed. Humphrey Cobb (September 5, 1899 - April 25, 1944) was an Italian-born, Canadian-American screenwriter and novelist. He is known for writing the novel Paths of Glory (1935),The phrase 'paths of glory' is a quotation from Thomas Gray's Elegy (1751): 'The boast of heraldry, the pomp of pow'r, // And all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave, // Awaits alike the inevitable hour.
The fair was considered the largest horse market in the west of Scotland. Robert Burns refers to the town in his poem "The Inventory" about a plough-horse that he purchased at the fair: "My furr-ahin 's a wordy beast, As e'er in tug or tow was traced. The fourth's a Highland Donald hastle, A damn'd red-wud Kilburnie blastie!"'' Local football team Kilbirnie Ladeside F.C. derive their sobriquet "the blasties" from the poem, a suitable appellation and an epithet which remains to this day due to the town's past of steel and iron production, as a reference to the blast furnaces.
Like many other 17th- and 18th-century women authors, Egerton probably shared her work amongst a coterie of female poets. She states in her dedication to the Earl of Hallifax in Poems on Several Occasions (1703), "They [her poems] never were abroad before, nor e'er seen but by my own sex, some of which have favour'd me with their compliments." At times her works were not only reviewed by her peers, but were also part of collaborative pieces like The Nine Muses—an elegiac tribute to John Dryden. She is best known for her own work The Female Advocate (1686), which argued against social customs that she felt restricted female freedom.
Besides the Turtle Island Quartet, which has released fifteen albums, Summer has played with many other crossover artists. He was a member of the Jazz Chamber Trio with the pianist Alon Yavnai and the Grammy-winning clarinetist Paquito D'Rivera which played primarily Latin jazz. He has also composed pieces for solo cello, including Kalimba and Julie-O, (both the solo and duo versions), the last of which has become very popular among cellists and was included in a 2015 advertising campaign for the Apple Watch. He has also arranged pieces for solo cello including "Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming" and Jimi Hendrix's "Little Wing".
Moonlight Girl continues as a local tradition at a handful of chapters, including Minnesota. The popular Moonlight Girl song was heard around pianos at chapters across the nation: :When we find a girl with golden hair, :And eyes of shining blue, :With lips so rare, and a skin so fair, :And a heart that shall ever be true. : :Then we'll love her and cherish her through the years, :Singing this old refrain, :She's the beautiful sweetheart of old Phi Sig, :In our hearts she will e'er remain. The Phi Sigma Kappa Foundation (PSKF) was formed as a separate legal entity in 1947 to provide scholarships to undergraduates and program support.
This song of praise to our school we raise, Our well loved G.H.S Nor time nor place, can e'er efface Her work of usefulness. For all she's done, our gratitude she's won And our love will ne'er grow less, So we give three cheers, three hearty cheers, To dear old G.H.S CHORUS Then shout with might and main. Her praises once again. With honest heart, she's played her part, And constant she'll remain With frame her work is crowned: Her efforts are renowned, Loudly profess the G.H.S, so let her halls resound, Oh, Lord we pray, from day to day, This school to guide and bless.
O Lady of Presentation For us we bid thee pray That college days may be of worth While we our time abide on earth And trials faced each day. As students of Presentation We pledge to ever be Brave soldiers in the bitter strife For self-assertion in this life And men of dignity. It matters little where we roam In the years that lie ahead The knowledge which we here acquire Shall help our nation to aspire For we are men sincere. Majestic on its verdant hill Our school o'er looks the sea It stands a monument to those Who all their lives to serve it chose That it for e'er may be.
LINES OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF THE LATE JOHN STEPHENS, ESQ. :The master-mind that so long shed :A lustre on our varied page :Has from the mental warfare fled, :And closed his earthly pilgrimage. :But his was no inglorious flight – :It was the behest of his Lord, [pronounced BE-hest] :He battled to the last for right, :And now enjoys his great reward. :Fresh tears may from affliction's eye :Grateful, upon his grave, descend; :And virtue o'er his tomb may sigh, :Who was, through life, their firmest friend :For none like him could plead so well :The miseries of the distressed: :And none like him e'er sought to tell :Abroad the wrongs of the oppressed.
Having reluctantly agreed to allow Mutius a royal burial, Titus then returns to the issue of how he feels his sons have turned on him and dishonoured him; "The dismall'st day is this that e'er I saw,/To be dishonoured by my sons in Rome" (ll.384–385). At this point, Marcus, Martius, Quintus and Lucius declare of the slain Mutius, "He lives in fame, that died in virtue's cause" (ll.390). Other characters also become involved in the affray resulting from the disagreement among the Andronici, and they too are equally concerned with honour. After Saturninus has condemned Titus, Bassianus appeals to him, "This noble gentleman, Lord Titus here,/Is in opinion and in honour wronged" (ll.415–416).
Sometimes the Kellswater runs muddy, but to me it will always run clear, and when e'er I sit down for a study, it reminds me o'them that's no here. Lovely Molly, you're the first girl I courted, it was you drew my heart in a snare, your red rosy cheeks I admired, and your lily-white skin and brown hair. Some say that my Johnnie's no coming, but I know he'll be here in the spring, through the green shady groves we will wander, and among the green bushes we'll sing. Now it's this one and that one may court you, but if anyone wins you but me, both daily and hourly I'll curse them, that stole lovely Molly from me.
The cardinal's fight song is C.U. Marching Song (1931):Fight Song Lyrics (Music by Michael J. MacDonald & Lyrics by Clement Ducy)C.U. Marching Song :Sing a song of C.U.A. for all the world to hear, :Drink a toast to Alma Mater, praise her far and near, :Make a vow you'll e'er be true and do what she taught right, :Whether we win or whether we lose, we'll never give up the fight, :Down the field the men in red and black go marching on :To victory, to victory, :Driving all before them in the struggle toward the goal :Of victory, of victory. :Onward we're marching with all our might, :Marching for C.U. never yielding, ever cheering, FIGHT! :Forever onward we're marching to victory, :For the Red and Black is winning :For C.U.A. it's Fight, Fight, Fight.
He also described how Herbert Hughes collected the tune and then he, Colum, had kept the last verse of a traditional song and written a couple of verses to fit the music.Irish Times, 22 April 1970 One verse was not included in the first publication: Colum soon realised that he had not put in the poem the fact that the woman had died before the marriage, and so he wrote the verse that begins: "The people were saying, that no two were e'er wed, but one had a sorrow that never was said ..." and sent it on to Hughes, too late for publication in that particular collection. This extra verse was published in other collections, along with the other three verses. The lyrics were also published in Colum's collection Wild Earth: And Other Poems (1916), though the traditional origin of the final verse is not mentioned there.
An Arrant Thief says: > All sorts of men, work all the means they can, To make a Thief of every > waterman : And as it were in one consent they join, To trot by land i' th' > dirt, and save their coin. Carroaches, coaches, jades, and Flanders mares, > Do rob us of our shares, our wares, our fares : Against the ground, we stand > and knock our heels, Whilst all our profit runs away on wheels ; And, > whosoever but observes and notes, The great increase of coaches and of > boats, Shall find their number more than e'er they were, By half and more, > within these thirty years. Then watermen at sea had service still, And those > that staid at home had work at will : Then upstart Hell-cart-coaches were to > seek, A man could scarce see twenty in a week ; But now I think a man may > daily see, More than the wherrys on the Thames can be.
In joyful strains then let us sing Advance Australia fair. While other nations of the globe Behold us from afar, We'll rise to high renown and shine Like our glorious southern star; From England soil and Fatherland, Scotia and Erin fair, Let all combine with heart and hand To advance Australia fair. In joyful strains then let us sing Advance Australia fair. Should foreign foe e'er sight our coast, Or dare a foot to land, We'll rouse to arms like sires of yore, To guard our native strand; Britannia then shall surely know, Though oceans roll between, Her sons in fair Australia's land Still keep their courage green. In joyful strains then let us sing Advance Australia fair. The 1901 Federation version of the third verse was originally sung as: Beneath our radiant Southern Cross, We'll toil with hearts and hands; To make our youthful Commonwealth, Renowned of all the lands; For loyal sons beyond the seas We've boundless plains to share; With courage let us all combine To advance Australia fair.

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