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"fancying" Synonyms
caring wanting considering liking wishing loving craving desiring feeling like preferring favoring(US) enjoying relishing favouring(UK) desiderating coveting savouring(UK) savoring(US) digging adoring spoiling for after eager for itching for looking for raring for bent on crying out for desperate for dying for feeling in need of hankering after hankering for having a fancy for having a need for having an inclination for hoping for feeling sensing having a feeling getting the impression feeling in one's bones having a hunch believing conjecturing having a funny feeling presuming supposing suspecting betting deducing gathering having a sneaking feeling having a sneaking suspicion having a suspicion holding hypothesizing(US) imagining thinking guessing surmising conceiting conceiving envisaging envisioning reckoning visualising(UK) visualizing(US) assuming picturing fantasising(UK) finding attractive lusting after burning for taking to going for leching after leching over having a crush on having a pash on having the hots for carrying a torch for having an eye for having a soft spot for having taken a shine to conception notion idea concept impression thought view belief interpretation understanding perception picture abstraction theory image hypothesis consideration intellection conceptualisation(UK) conceptualization(US) daydream fancy fantasy reverie vision hallucination dream musing trance inattention inattentiveness wool-gathering absent-mindedness absorption brooding chimaera(UK) chimera(US) conceit making construction manufacture creation production assembly building fabrication composition forging manufacturing producing creating forming invention modeling(US) modelling(UK) formation mass production molding(US) More

86 Sentences With "fancying"

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

There, cat-fancying villains of the future conspire to eradicate dogs.
But who can blame Trump for fancying himself an expert in nutrition?
I also had an instant of fancying that I could drink again.
Its rulers built luxury hotels and apartments, fancying they were creating a second Dubai.
And "Lucky Strike" finds him fancying an unreadable, ungettable man who smells of Lucky Strikes.
It's a hobby, the same as painting model airplanes, or flying drones, or pigeon fancying.
At the thought of any of the Housewives fancying themselves particular experts of style, she laughs.
Some end up fancying other contestants (who also happen to be coupled up with other people).
Arriving just in time for cuffing season, "Too Many People" is a song about fancying everyone.
The issue was all hers for fancying him even though he'd already been elected to the Bettencourt Society.
The Indian team has done really well in recent years and will be fancying its chances in the championship.
Of course, women don't wear Spanx to mince around the house fancying themselves, and I'm not about to either.
It was probably quite young to be so obsessively crushing on somebody but I remember really, really intensely fancying him.
Despite fancying themselves rational creatures, people are often more influenced by tribal identification or the personal appeal of a candidate.
A general preference for obedience and authority, evinced by fancying good manners over curiosity, say, was especially prevalent among Trump supporters.
Her father had no say in this cat fancying because the unalterable slide of dementia had transformed him into a furious, bewildered stranger.
A whole meme farm emerged courtesy of that single question, with just about everybody fancying themselves the be-all end-all arbiter of Camp.
The renamed Toro Rosso, now known as Red Bull's fashion brand AlphaTauri, will also be fancying their chances of improving on last year's sixth.
There's a market for luxurious things, but fancying up tech isn't the way to approach it Luxury is supposed to be permanent, indelible, and indivisible.
So I was free to tell my own story: that I was amazing, and that if I fancied girls, then fancying girls must be amazing, too.
" For many British rock fans, the Monkeys' whirlwind tune about fancying someone in a nightclub is shelved in our brains somewhere between "Mr Brightside" and "Cigarettes and Alcohol.
One of a number of Chinese companies fancying itself to become "the Apple of China," Xiaomi first rose to global notoriety by selling products that looked like utterly shameless Apple ripoffs.
These days, fancying someone isn't such a relay race; you can just like their selfies and watch all their Instagram stories on your alt account from the comfort of your own bed.
LONDON (Reuters) - This year's men's singles at Wimbledon promises to be the most open for a decade, according to Spanish veteran Feliciano Lopez, who is quietly fancying his own chances of a deep run.
For those fancying an out-of-town location, there is the Beast's Castle ( "Beauty and the Beast"), nestled in a deep forest on a mountain top, or Prince Eric's Castle ("The Little Mermaid"), beside the sea.
Sharing little more than its name with the renowned carmaker that this year won the Le Mans endurance series, PD's primary business is in fancying up everyday goods and gadgets and pricing them like exclusive luxury items.
Finally, our film critic says Wes Anderson's new animated movie "Isle of Dogs" — set in a fantasy version of Japan where cat-fancying villains conspire to eradicate dogs — can be easier to admire than to flat-out love.
Split into two halves led by members Jake Ewald and Brendan Lukens respectively, Holy Ghost moves beyond their former themes of punk scene politics, fancying girls, and feeling awkward to deal primarily with personal struggles with death and depression.
While you could just recycle that little black dress you've worn for five years straight, Valentine's Day is the perfect excuse to dress to impress — whether you're fancying up for your partner or hosting a movie marathon with your three best friends.
"Control Me," from their debut album Silk Canvas (could you imagine a more perfect R&B album title?!) shows how seamlessly they fold pidgin lyricism into a story of fancying someone who's… not worth with it: " this one dey craze be something".
This synopsis barely skims the surface of a multilayered, impudent, lacerating exhibition that pricks pretense and self-delusion on every level, from mega-rich collectors fancying themselves pillars of civilization to politically committed artists rationalizing their aspirations to the high-end gallery system.
Fancying and being rejected by straight women is so core to the lesbian experience that it makes sense to elevate Blanchett to godlike status as a comment on our relationship with the straight world, and having this collective subtext and humor gives us a code and a community.
Besides struggling to find an inoffensive way to deliver the news, I was also terrified that if I spoke The Ick into existence for Nathan, then the entire glorious facade of our burgeoning relationship would come crumbling down with it, and I was quite enjoying fancying someone (every couple of weeks when their beard grew back out again).
"Think of sweet and chocolate," she writes: Left to folly or to fate, / Whom the higher gods forgot, / Whom the lower gods berate; / Physical and underfed / Fancying on the featherbed / What was never and is not The poem, published in 1950, sweeps through the life of Annie Allen, an ordinary black girl who dreams of finding happiness and attaining self-consciousness in 19823 stanzas.
Their less dignified roommates will balk at the statue at first—until they are added to the very top, circling the (Eli Manning-esque) dome of the king of statues, somewhere high in the clouds: Sooner or later, the Patriots, fancying themselves a cutting-edge franchise, will have to get in the game with this statue of a great Patriot: What, you don't think Colin Kaepernick is a true patriot?
The man of sense is the visionary or illusionist, fancying things as permanencies, and thoughts as fleeting phantoms.
As well as an autobiography, The Man Who Made Beamish, Atkinson also wrote several books on the history and traditional pastimes of the North East – amongst them leek growing and pigeon fancying.
This culminated with the Times' fifth album "Up Against It" (1985). Fancying themselves as pirate televisionaries, the Times proceeded by decimating in fiction, within the parameters of songwriting, every symbol of western civilisation with their final ARTPOP! album "Enjoy".
Audlem has clubs for tennis, badminton, football, cricket, golf, pigeon racing (or pigeon-fancying), caravanning, bell ringing and bowls. Cyclists meet informally at the Old Priest-House Cafe. Saint James' Primary School is the only school in the village.
Fancying the nutter, she goes along with it in spite of the warnings of Sophie. As an agony aunt, she'd better write a letter to herself pretty quickly, because this one looks like it's going to end in tears if not worse.
Rick wakes up next to a young, but unknown woman, fully clothed. His initial shock and confusion is tempered by his realisation that he can boast about a sexual conquest to the others. His housemates are doubtful. Vyvyan is repulsed by the notion of a woman fancying Rick and is also jealous.
DC Comics' 2009 revival of the Red Circle characters included the Web. The new incarnation of John Raymond is a spoiled, slacker womanizer, fancying himself a socialite. His brother David, a social worker, has distanced himself from his family, choosing to help the poorer as a social worker. Despite their differences, John always admired David.
Stahr and Cecelia meet the man over supper where Stahr gets drunk and gets involved in a violent confrontation. Cecelia takes care of him and they grow closer. Cecelia's father, however, becomes more and more unhappy with Stahr as a business partner and has wanted to get rid of him for a long while. He could not approve less of his daughter's fancying him.
When the owner of a large cafe in Montmartre and a notorious blackmailer is murdered, suspicion points at young artist Lucien Borell who owed him money. Things look worse for Lucien when his father arrives and, fancying himself a criminologist, uncovers evidence that accidentally makes his son look even more guilty. On his second attempt, however, he is able to unmask the real culprits.
John Paul tells Craig he made up fancying Sarah as an excuse. Craig and John Paul's friendship gets back on track and they get back together with their girlfriends. At Hannah's 18th birthday party, Craig is furious when he catches a drunken Sarah kissing Rhys. John Paul tells Craig that Sarah is not good enough for him and emotionally confesses that he is in love with him.
When Jacob helped a man talk to his crush, another reporter for the publication commented that he was "Fancying himself as a bit of a ladies' man, and channelling Ryan Gosling in romcom Crazy Stupid Love." The Mirror's Nicola Methven dubbed the character a "hunky, maverick nurse". After Elle told Jacob that Blake was his son, Reilly (What's on TV) branded them a "traumatised trio".
The song is described as having a "stomping electro-R&B; tune". The intro has been described as "a demented elasticated siren effect bouncing from speaker to speaker", which has been called a hybrid of Girls Aloud's "Biology", and Britney Spears' "Womanizer", but with a more "euphoric disco feel". According to Popjustice, the song is lyrically about "fancying dangerous men". Flo Rida appears in the intro and during the middle eight.
When Justin returned, Ali could not forgive him, despite Justin trying to tell Ali that he had changed for the better. Eventually, Ali began to believe Justin as the pair began to get along better. Ali started to develop feelings for Nicole, but he never managed to tell how he felt about her as she had fallen for Justin. Despite Nicole fancying his step brother Ali's relationship with Justin became stronger.
Ridley has stated that he had already started formulating ideas for The Fastest Clock in the Universe during the original production of his previous play The Pitchfork Disney. Ridley has said that he was partially inspired in writing the play by what he felt at the time was “[a new] kind of male vanity that was really coming to the foreground... where men were beginning to... promote themselves as sexual objects... Men were kind of almost like saying ‘We can have it all now... We can have the girls fancying us and we can have men fancying us. We can have just whatever we like.’ There was this kind of strange... polysexuality that was kind of running through everything... That as a kind of character thing fascinated me... This kind of cult of physical perfection was something that I thought had... something that was really theatrical.” Ridley particularly was intrigued by how this new form of masculinity he observed contrasted to how his father’s generation perceived masculinity.
Fancying himself a poet, Trimalchio recites one of his finer poems whereupon Eumolpus accuses him of stealing verses from Lucretius. Enraged, Trimalchio orders the poet to be tortured by his slaves in the villa's huge kitchen furnace. The guests are then invited to visit Trimalchio's tomb where he enacts his own death in an ostentatious ceremony. The story of the Matron of Ephesus is recounted, the first story within a story in the film.
Mingy, the curmudgeonly money-keeper who resists spending money for "fancying up the village" is also outlawed. Along with Muggles who has become involved with "Them" because of her seeing the fires on the Sunset Mountains. The "Outlaws" paddle up the river to Gummy's stone cabin on The Knoll. They move in but the cabin is too small for all of them and decide to sleep outside until a new house is built.
His interest lay, "not in grand historical paintings but in the beauty of the everyday observed at first hand, the view from his window, the racing pigeons shown by miners at a local Pigeon Fancying fair, a bunch of flowers in a jug". Some of his paintings reflect his travels in the USA and Australia. Favourite subjects include birds, Nature, and people in the street. He worked both in oils and watercolour.
Voice-over actor Johnny Hardwick has described Dale as fancying himself as a "William S. Burroughs" or "Jack Nicholson" type, guy who thinks he knows all the angles. He believes most tabloid beliefs and urban legends, distrusting virtually every authority figure. Dale is also seen to be a musician, with the electronic keyboard as his principal instrument. His resume includes a stint with the Propaniacs, Big Mountain Fudgecake, and the Dale Gribble Bluegrass Experience.
Clairmont's mother traced the group to an inn in Calais but could not make Clairmont go home with her. Godwin needed the financial assistance that the aristocratic Shelley could provide. Clairmont remained in the Shelley household in their wanderings across Europe. The three young people traipsed across war-torn France and into Switzerland, fancying themselves like characters in a romantic novel, as Mary Shelley later recalled, but always reading widely, writing, and discussing the creative process.
The story opens in the late summer of 1955. Nineteen-year-old Harry Preston, having been granted an early discharge from national service with the RAF, moves to London from a small English provincial town to find life and adventure. Fancying himself as a writer, he drifts towards the central district of Soho, and soon enough he is included in the destitute but creative environment of the new Beat Generation. Harry meets an out of work actor, James Street.
A pigeon fancier with his racing pigeon Pigeon keeping or pigeon fancying is the art and science of breeding domestic pigeons. People have practised pigeon keeping for about 10,000 years in almost every part of the world. In that time, humans have substantially altered the morphology and the behaviour of the domesticated descendants of the rock dove to suit their needs for food, aesthetic satisfaction and entertainment. People who breed pigeons are commonly referred to as pigeon fanciers.
The paper was self-styled "The Ferret", fancying itself as "lean and nosey".Purported retrospective digital website nationreview.com (Melbourne, Vic.) Nation Review was aimed at Australia's new urban, educated middle class, providing mocking political commentary, offbeat cartoons, iconoclastic film, book, music and theatre reviews, and food, wine, chess, and even motoring columns. The paper's satirical tone matched the style of Australian university newspapers like Honi Soit and Tharunka, from which publications many of its contributors and editors had graduated.
A certain George Laidlaw is show to be obsessed with the national debt and Margaret keeps believing that God is speaking to her. Charles Seymour is from an aristocratic family and he is wrongly placed in the asylum by his family to avoid his marriage with his lover who the family deems unsuitable for him. Various incidences of sexual violence between fellow inmates are noted in the asylum. Allen's teenage daughter, Hannah, craves for attention and starts fancying Tennyson.
Gally is down at Blandings and writing his memoirs, to the horror of all who knew him in their wild youths, particularly Lord Emsworth's neighbour and pig-fancying rival Sir Gregory Parsloe-Parsloe. While sinister forces, including the efficient Baxter and the unpleasant Percy Pilbeam, scheme to put a stop to the book, Ronnie Fish and his old pal Hugo Carmody are entangled in difficult relationships, which require much subterfuge, some pig-theft and a little imposter-ing to resolve.
It also has its own parish and Roman Catholic church, St. Luke the Evangelist, with the parish priest being, as of 2016, Fr. Gary. The full Roman Catholic parish name is Kilmore Road West, the original townland of Kilmore Big being entirely to the west of the Kilmore Road, in Artane. Notable local activities include pigeon fancying and boxing, both based in the local community centre. Soccer also commands the allegiance of a large section of the community as does Gaelic football.
Fatboy and Mercy say an emotional goodbye, but Fatboy stops her taxi and proposes marriage, realising she can stay in the country if they are married. Mercy agrees but Grace is opposed to the plan until she realises that Fatboy loves Mercy. Kim points out that Fatboy seems embarrassed about getting married and that Mercy does not seem to love him, and admits to fancying Fatboy. Fatboy then tells Kim why he is really marrying Mercy, but also that he wants to be married for real.
Widower Marlon Dingle (Mark Charnock) was desperate to get young Donna Windsor (Verity Rushworth) to stop fancying him, so begged Danny to take her on a date. The evening was a big success and, after a few teething problems, they get together properly. But after a few months of dating – and a holiday in Rome – Donna and Danny realized they weren't meant to be and split up. There was no hard feelings and Danny returned to working with Rodney and living with Len and Pearl.
Tyler needs another load of help on his schoolwork, so a student-tutor comes to the house to try to help Tyler revise, although it's Marlene the student tutor puts his attention on. When this tutor makes a pass at Marlene, Boycie enters and mistakes the kiss for an epileptic fit, so Boycie – who is running for Mayor – attempts to revive the tutor with mouth to mouth – which leads to the tutor fancying Boycie instead. Meanwhile, Tyler tries to impress Beth by joining the school's rugby team.
There can be a kind of upholding of ourselves, of making ourselves important, while we compare ourselves with someone else, no matter in what way, and that is conceit.Gorkom (2010), Definition of conceit The Atthasālinī (II, Part IX, Chapter III, 256) gives the following definition of conceit: : ...Herein conceit is fancying (deeming, vain imagining). It has haughtiness as characteristic, self-praise as function, desire to (advertise self like) a banner as manifestation, greed dissociated from opinionatedness as proximate cause, and should be regarded as (a form of) lunacy.
Yo Yo is the son of a 1920s billionaire who, although having everything he fancies and living in a cavernous old castle, is not happy, fancying the simple life of a beautiful circus actress. When the stock-exchange crashes, rendering him both poor and free, he joins the circus where his love interest is performing, and falls madly in love. They have a son who starts in the circus as a clown but later becomes a successful actor and uses his new wealth to buy back his father's castle.
Head of a small railway station Yakov Ivanovich Golovach is obsessed with reading historical novels about knights. Fancying himself as the hero of one book – Don Diego, he loves to fight with an imaginary opponent. He is caught in the act by the female residents of the surrounding villages who came to the station of the arriving mail train in order to sell their simple culinary creations Laughter of the peasant women drives Yakov Ivanovich furious. In a rage he orders to detain violators of the railway rules who are crossing the railway line.
In 1678, Rosewell obtained a canonry at Windsor, and in 1682 resigned the headmastership. According to a rumour of the day, his resignation was caused by his falling into a fit of melancholy madness, in consequence of having killed a boy by immoderate flogging, and fancying that the King's messengers were coming to arrest him. The story does not sound very probable, and the less so as he was elected a Fellow of Eton in 1683. His successor as Head Master was Charles Roderick, Etonian and Kingsman, who had been Usher (Lower Master) from 1676.
Jacques Duquesne grew up as a privileged youth in the (fictional) Southeast Asian nation of Siancong, then under French rule. Unlike his father and other European residents, Duquesne held no prejudice against the Siancongese natives, and after performing an act of kindness for a native servant, he was invited to join a communist rebellion against French rule. As the costumed Swordsman, Duquesne, fancying himself a swashbuckling freedom fighter, helped liberate Siancong, only to learn the rebel leader Wong Chu had killed Duquesne's father. Devastated and disillusioned, Duquesne departed Siancong to seek adventure.
The Code of the Woosters is the third full-length novel to feature two of Wodehouse's best-known creations, Bertie Wooster and his valet Jeeves. It introduces Sir Watkyn Bassett, the owner of a country house called Totleigh Towers where the story takes place, and his intimidating friend Roderick Spode. It is also a sequel to Right Ho, Jeeves, continuing the story of Bertie's newt-fancying friend Gussie Fink-Nottle and Gussie's droopy and overly sentimental fiancée, Madeline Bassett. Bertie and Jeeves return to Totleigh Towers in a later novel, Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves.
He shows them his newfound Happiness Machine running in perfect order — his family. Chapter 14 — As the Spaulding family prepares to shake out the rugs, Douglas and Tom's imaginations turn this chore into a magical discovery, fancying that they see the happenings and neighbors in their town in the stains of one rug. A lavish metaphor at the end of the chapter describes Tom beating the rug so hard that the dust rises up to meet him, another surrealistic chapter ending possibly a reference to the Judeo- Christian belief that man was created from dust. Chapters 15–16 (Season of Disbelief) — Mrs.
The race is Britain's largest and has been called "the world's greatest". The organisation was featured in a 1969 documentary, Time on the Wing, made by Turners Film Productions for Vaux Breweries on pigeon fancying and pigeon racing in the North East of England. This showed officials and convoy organisers discuss arrangements for the trip to the Vaux-Usher International Gold Tankard Pigeon Race which involved the transport of some 19,000 birds. Tommy Newton of the Houghton Federation was the owner of the winner of the first race from Lille they organised in 2000, the first winner from that club since 1938.
ITV publicity describe him as being fond of pigeons and betting whilst disliking household chores. Stuart Heritage of newspaper The Guardian describes Jack as having "a constant downbeat aura of a person who knows that his entire life has been a joyless procession of gloomy disappointments." Another reporter of the newspaper, Mark Lawson, described Jack as "A pigeon-fancying, flat-cap-wearing, wise-cracking, philandering, Sinatra-loving Lancashire lad, Jack epitomised the vivid character comedy in which the serial specialises." In 1991 Tarmey spoke of Jack's changes in attitude over his early years in the book Life on the Street.
The next morning, Rodney returns to his flat and finds Cassandra and Stephen seemingly alone together. Rodney, suspecting Stephen of fancying Cassandra, finally snaps and spitefully punches Stephen, breaking his nose, but finds that Joanne is also there (she had planned to visit her parents, but could not do so because of the train strike). He is promptly thrown out by Cassandra. Back at Nelson Mandela House, Del speaks with Raquel over the telephone, before he learns the unintended consequences of his actions the previous night as Albert was hit on the head by the stone that Del threw through the hotel window.
Now as the second series unfolds, he must help Marnie and Michael as much as he can to help find the Book and stop Toledo taking over and finding the Book before Marnie. He has also appeared in two Ken Loach films: Ae Fond Kiss... and My Name Is Joe. He has also had roles in Once Upon a Time in the Midlands, Les Misérables (1998), Braveheart and Rab C Nesbitt, among others. He has directed for High Times, The Basil Brush Show, Tinsel Town and My Parents Are Aliens, and has written and directed a short film, Caesar, on pigeon-fancying.
However, an argument with Leeroy proves too much for Lateysha after initially fancying him and she finally decides to pack her bags and leaves. After a couple of days away, the girls realise how much they're missing Lateysha and go to visit her at home. Lateysha decides to return to Cardiff with them but doesn't get the welcome back she was expecting from the boys. Aron begins to develop feelings towards Nicole and he takes her out for a date, but at the end of the night things aren't very successful as she ends up with Lateysha instead.
First published in The Magnet No. 1400 - 3 November 1934 Vernon-Smith and the Famous Five are complaining loudly at Prout's decision to impose detentions on the Remove for the rest of the term. A match with Rookwood School is due the following Wednesday and the Remove are faced with the prospect of cancelling this, and every other football match, for the remainder of the term. Unknown to them, Prout is passing outside. He overhears himself being described as “that old ass, Prout”, “that terrific and ludicrous old fathead, Prout”, as “having a swelled head through fancying himself as headmaster”, and who “can’t help being a fool”.
Victoire, as her sisters, had a close relationship with her brother, viewed her mother as a role model, and followed her sister Madame Adélaïde in her campaign against the influence of Madame de Pompadour and, later, Madame du Barry. She also had a close friendship with her favourite lady-in-waiting the Marquise de Durfort, who "afforded to Madame Victoire agreeable society. The Princess spent almost all her evenings with that lady, and ended by fancying herself domiciled with her." In contrast to her elder sister Adelaide, Victoire was described as "good, sweet-tempered, and affable", and well liked both by society and her staff.
At Winchester School of Art, Eno attended a lecture by Pete Townshend of The Who (also an ex-student of Roy Ascott) and cites that lecture as the moment he realised he could make music despite lacking a formal musical education and his ongoing hobby of pigeon fancying preoccupying his energies. Whilst at school, Eno used a tape recorder as a musical instrument and experimented with his first, sometimes improvisational, bands. St. Joseph's College teacher and painter Tom Phillips encouraged him, recalling "Piano Tennis" with Eno, in which, after collecting pianos, they stripped and aligned them in a hall, striking them with tennis balls. From that collaboration, he became involved in Cornelius Cardew's Scratch Orchestra.
Danny, whilst fairly successful in his role in the drama department and fancying himself as a ladies' man, is over-confident and his own brashness often leads to his own downfall, particularly regarding Alison. Willbond and Edwards developed their characters from earlier, sketchier incarnations of the pair they had performed, partly improvised, at various comedy festivals. The curry night element which plays a part in each episode, was also developed from another previous sketch Edwards had performed in, about a group of businessmen who were obsessed with going for a curry and "the hotter the better", again at various comedy gigs. The planned second series was put on hold when a television version for BBC Two was considered.
The old people will in their > hearts murmur at these moving dispensations. The younger people, though > aching in every bone, and "tired to death," will relish the change, and > think the new closets more roomy and more nice, and delight themselves > fancying how this piece of furniture will look here and that piece in the > other corner. The still "younger ones" will still more enjoy it. Into the > cellar and upon the roof, into the rat-holes and on the yard fence, into > each room and prying into every cupboard, they mill make reprisals of many > things "worth saving," and mark the day white in their calendar, as little > less to be longed for in the return than Fourth of July itself.
Metcalfe described Jacqui's attitude towards Mercedes, stating, "Jacqui knows what Mercedes is, she knows what she's like – but she resorts to judging her because she's just trying to support her". Metcalfe explained that if Jacqui kept the affair secret Mercedes would be "relieved" that she still has Riley, and although she would not immediately think of Carl, Mercedes was worried that "they could end up in bed together again". Metcalfe went on to say that Mercedes "loves Riley" but "can't help fancying Carl", adding that for Mercedes "there's a difference between love and lust". The Daily Star announced that after lying about being pregnant for several weeks, Mercedes was to launch a "vicious" attack on Mitzeee (Rachel Shenton), saying she tried to make up for her "mistake" by "turning on the tears and apologising".
Despite being given temporary legislative authority, Millspaugh's reforms were unable to rejuvenate the Iranian economy. Reza Shah terminated the authority on grounds of Millspaugh’s repeated noncompliance with the Shah’s requests for increased military expenditure. Millspaugh managed to implement a number of reforms, including a new taxation law that hit the poor hard but financed Reza Shah’s Trans-Iranian Railway project, which got underway in 1927. The mission’s accomplishments were repeatedly hampered by internal political rivalries in Iran and a widespread system of patronage and graft among many leading Iranian politicians. Fancying himself the successor to Morgan Shuster’s unfulfilled legacy of restructuring Iran’s economy, in 1925 Millspaugh published a book on his assignment in Iran, "The American Task in Persia". Discussing Iran’s shattered economy, Millspaugh’s book sympathetically portrayed Iran and Iranians, but heaped criticism on the Iranian bureaucracy.
The North was also the theme of Melody's next project, an investigation of Northern Soul dancing, in which she visited soul clubs, and learned how to dance in strangers' living rooms. Melody then created her first theatre show, Northern Soul (2012), working with the director Ursula Martinez and the choreographer, Janine Fletcher of The Two Wrongies. The show brought together material from the pigeon and soul projects, with stories from Melody's own childhood in Cheshire. Reviewing the piece in Total Theatre, Thomas Bacon wrote, 'Victoria Melody just wants to join in, and in Northern Soul she presents herself as a sharing artist....The premise of Northern Soul builds upon this sense of sharing as Melody leads us through the documentation of her endeavours to immerse herself in two distinct, yet marginal worlds: Pigeon Fancying and the cult of Northern Soul.
In the first book, Trainers V. Tiaras; Shiraz worries that her school Mayflower Comprehensive will still live up to its reputation of being "Superchav Academy" a nickname given to the school by the local newspapers and especially with a stunt that happened during the Christmas assembly which Shiraz was the instigator of; however, that all started to change, once a new English teacher Miss. Bracket arrived and saw potential in Shiraz and was concerned why she would not want to succeed, however Shiraz' world is turned upside down when her best friend Carrie Draper starts fancying a local boy called Bezzie Kelleher and sets a double date for both Bezzie, Carrie and Wesley Barrington Bains II (Bezzie's best friend) and Shiraz, the date did not go to plan as both Bezzie and Carrie dropped off Wesley and Shiraz whilst they go for a drive around Essex, Shiraz is not too sure if she fancies Wesley or not.
He was opposed to the liquor and fur trades, core businesses of the Hudson's Bay Company, and to marriage 'à la façon du pays', shaming some members of his congregation into going through an Anglican marriage ceremony with their female native partners.Sarah Carter, Aboriginal People and Colonizers of Western Canada to 1900, University of Toronto Press (2003) - Google Books pg 74 In addition, the Hudson's Bay Company director Nicholas Garry wrote that "West is not a good Preacher; he unfortunately attempts to preach extempore from Notes, for which he has not the Capacity, his discourses being unconnected and ill-delivered. He likewise Mistakes his Point, fancying that by touching severely and pointedly on the Weaknesses of People he will produce Repentance."Nicholas Garry, Diary of Nicholas Garry, Deputy-Governor of the Hudson’s Bay Company from 1822–1835: A Detailed Narrative of His Travels in the Northwest Territories of British North America in 1821 . . .
The Quarterly Review largely agreed, calling Disraeli's production: > A book which he calls a novel, but which is after all a political pamphlet, > and a bid for the bigoted voices of Exeter Hall… It sins alike against good > taste and justice…That there are happy thoughts and epigrammatic sentences > sown broadcast in its pages need scarcely be said of a novel written by Mr. > Disraeli. But as the true pearl lies embedded in the loose fibre of a > mollusc, so Mr. Disraeli's gems of speech and thought are hidden in a vast > maze of verbiage which can seldom be called English, and very frequently is > downright nonsense…So far as feeling is concerned Lothair is as dull as > ditch-water and as flat as a flounder.R. W. Stewart (ed.) Disraeli's Novels > Reviewed, 1826–1968 (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1975) pp. 268–69. The Conservative Pall Mall Gazette made the best of Disraeli's stylistic carelessness by speculating that Lothair "Must have cost the author, we cannot help fancying, no effort whatever; it was as easy and delightful for him to write as for us to read."W. F. Monypenny and George Earle Buckle The Life of Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield (London: Macmillan, 1912–22) vol. 5, p. 167.

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