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"foxed" Definitions
  1. unable to understand or solve something
  2. (of the paper of old books or prints) covered with brown spots

41 Sentences With "foxed"

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

Trump in effect out-foxed Fox, using Fox's own narrative against the network. 
All that remained of those days, apart from the stories, were these exotic bottles, their labels brittle and foxed.
Trying to build a way to fit the two concepts together has foxed the company for a long time now.
The rapidly spreading Zika virus has not only become an international public health threat, it has also foxed one India's largest automakers.
Well-thumbed Penguin paperback editions of Murdoch's novels, foxed and sun-damaged, were once staples of Goodwill stores and other secondhand bookshops.
A lifetime of pretending to be a shambles, while preparing for the premiership, leads him to a set of circumstances that would even have foxed Churchill.
This is a problem that has foxed many a startup (notable failures have included Factorli out of Las Vegas), and it will be interesting to see if newer advances will make the challenges here surmoutable.
He seemed a bit stunned by what looked like well-read but battered and foxed editions of his old Fawcett paperbacks; they are still precious to me with the unforgiving and distant Parker as their central character.
We have a pretty complex AV receiver and speaker setup that had foxed earlier, inferior generations of Apple TV. But the 4K version effortlessly placed itself in charge, switching the receiver on and off with it, without us having to program a thing.
In the enormous room beyond, there was a marble fireplace and a candelabra and floor-length windows hung with tattered yellow brocade drapes; the glass in a vast gilt mirror was so foxed that it didn't double the perspective but closed it in, like a black fog.
Heroically, like a girl in a film, she made her way alone through the next-door room, where the pale horse gleamed sinisterly; she jumped when something moved, thinking it was a flutter of stuffed birds, but it was only her own reflection in the foxed mirror.
Mallory Catlett's "This Was the End," produced by Restless NYC and Mabou Mines at the Mabou Mines Theater in Manhattan, is a foxed love letter to Chekhov's 1898 play "Uncle Vanya," which opens with a bunch of characters stranded on a country estate and leaves most of them there, four acts later, a little older, no wiser, conclusively mired.
Among the foxed hardbacks still standing sentry in my sons' abandoned childhood bedroom are "The Gashlycrumb Tinies" by Edward Gorey (1963), "Strega Nona" by Tomie dePaola (1975), the "George and Martha" series by James Marshall (1972 to 1988) and several by Maurice Sendak, including "Where the Wild Things Are" (19403) and "In the Night Kitchen" (1970).
Slightly Foxed: A Potted History Official website. Retrieved 1 October 2016. Instead of books currently marketed by big publishers, Slightly Foxed tends to examine older and more obscure titles. The title, "Slightly Foxed" refers to a description of a book's physical quality, commonly used in the second-hand book trade.
As well as the magazine itself, Slightly Foxed has a books imprint,Our Books Official website. Retrieved 1 October 2016. and between 2009 and 2016 ran a bookshop on London's Gloucester Road.Slightly Foxed Bookshop to close at the end of the month The Bookseller.
Jones, Lewis. "Foxed in Europe", The Daily Telegraph (9 December 1991): p. 15. It was produced by Celtic Films in association with LWT for the ITV network.
Fox married Angela Worthington, an actress and the natural daughter of the English playwright Frederick Lonsdale. She had been the subject of Noël Coward's song "Don't Put Your Daughter on the Stage, Mrs Worthington!" She wrote two books about her life and marriage, Slightly Foxed (1986) and Completely Foxed, and revealed that when she was newly married and first pregnant Fox told her "You do know that I have no intention of being faithful to you. I shall sleep with whoever I like".
Slightly Foxed is a British quarterly literary magazine. Its primary focus is books and book culture. 2016 saw the publication of its fiftieth issue. Notable authors to have written for the magazine include Penelope Lively, Richard Mabey, Diana Athill, Ronald Blythe and Robert Macfarlane.
"Jenufa", The Guardian, 26 November 1975, p. 10; Walsh, Stephen. "The elixir of life", The Observer, 10 September 1978, p. 32; Sutcliffe, Tom. "A bit foxed", The Guardian, 15 November 1980, p. 11; Rosselli, John."Katya Kabanova", The Guardian, 20 May 1982, p. 12; and Walsh, Stephen.
If the dry food matter increases and humidity is decreased, the mean daily activity of the rats drastically declines. They do have some predators such as rattlesnakes, gopher snakes, owls, various raptors, coyotes, foxed, weasels, skunks and house cats. However, predation does not seem to have a noticeable impact on population densities.
Very antique versions have fragile papers may be Foxed in contact with air. Many versions date back to the Ottoman Empire era in Turkey, in Egypt dating back possibly to the Khedivate of Egypt, and production of them in England during WWI. Some are also written in different translations, such as Persian.
The ink is slightly faded and has turned brown with age, but it is still completely legible. The pages are somewhat foxed, but otherwise the 400 year-old document is in remarkably good condition. Page 243 is missing, with a note from Prence that it was missing when he got the document.
The clocks were donated by Mr G. A. Battcock; they were made and foxed by Smith of Derby Group. Red brick is used for most of the construction, typically of the local housing of that time. There is an elaborate pattern of stone work towards the top, just below the bell tower. All the clocks and bells still function.
Helessa, Or The Azalea Azaled, the Fox Foxed, the Sea Rocked... (a Laz maritime movie-novel, performed as a chronicle of the last journey of the feluka Kirbish, or, if you like, as an animated picture of the Laz artist, Hasan Helimishi) (ჰელესა, ანუ ელი ელობდა, მელი მელობდა, ზღვა ფოფინობდა...) is a 2012 Georgian Movie-novel by author Miho Mosulishvili.
Foxed documents can be repaired, with greater or lesser success, using sodium borohydride, proprietary bleaches, dilute hydrogen peroxide or lasers. Each method risks side effects or damage to the paper or ink. Another method is to scan the image and process that image using a high-level image processing program. This can usually remove the effects of foxing while leaving text and images intact.
The Return won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography and the 2017 Folio Prize, becoming the first nonfiction book to do so. It also won the inaugural 2017 PEN/Jean Stein Book Award and the 2016 Slightly Foxed Best First Biography Prize. The memoir was a finalist for the 2016 Baillie Gifford Prize, 2016 Costa Biography Award, 2017 National Book Critics Circle Award and 2017 Los Angeles Times Book Prize.
It was a finalist for the Slightly Foxed Best First Biography award in 2017, which was won that year by Edmund Gordon's biography of Angela Carter. In 2019, his account of the Titanic disaster was published as The Darksome Bounds of the Failing World in the UK and The Ship of Dreams in the US. It was named a Book of the Year by The Times and a Best History Book of 2019 by The Daily Telegraph.
The investigation into the sting operation took a dramatic turn when it was revealed that prostitutes were supplied to three defence officials.Tehelka expose: Armymen bribed with prostitutes, August 22, 2001, Rediff. Both Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) and Samata Party condemned it and raised the questions on ethical side of investigative journalism. However, Aniruddh Bahal, the journalist who was a part of the operation said, “When the demand came from armymen (to have prostitutes) we were foxed.
He then scored the all-important goal two minutes later. On 16 February, Aizawl FC drew 2-2 against a resilient Indian Arrows in an away match. Ionescu produced brilliant delivery for Saighani who slotted it past a helpless Prabhsukhan in 40th minute. Indian Arrows was quick to find the equalizer on the 48th minute as Ashish found Lalrindika with an exquisite delivery, who foxed his marker to trigger a shot at the bottom right corner which beat a diving Avilash.
Microsoft XCPU, codenamed Xenon, is a CPU used in the Xbox 360 game console, to be used with ATI's Xenos graphics chip. The processor was developed by Microsoft and IBM under the IBM chip program codenamed "Waternoose", which was named after one of the two main antagonists (alongside Randall Boggs) in Monsters, Inc. Henry J. Waternoose III."Learning from failure - The inside story on how IBM out-foxed Intel with the Xbox 360", Dean Takahashi, Electronic Business, May 1, 2006 The development program was originally announced on 2003-11-03.
Heavy foxing on the title page of an 1832 textbook Foxing is an age-related process of deterioration that causes spots and browning on old paper documents such as books, postage stamps, old paper money and certificates. The name may derive from the fox-like reddish-brown color of the stains, or the rust chemical ferric oxide which may be involved. Paper so affected is said to be "foxed". Although unsightly and a negative factor in the value of the paper item for collectors, foxing does not affect the actual integrity of the paper.
Linda Leatherbarrow is a prize-winning Scottish writer and illustrator. She is best known for her short story collection, Essential Kit, and her illustrations for John Hegley's comic poems in Visions of the Bone Idol. Her short stories have been broadcast on BBC Radio 4 and published in the British Council's New Writing 8, the London Magazine, Ambit and many other anthologies and literary journals. She is a regular contributor to the literary review, Slightly Foxed, and has interviewed many writers, including Rose Tremain, Kate Mosse, and Susan Hill, for Newbooks magazine.
Crome Yellow was written during the summer of 1921 in the Tuscan seaside resort of Forte dei Marmi and published in November of that year. In view of its episodic nature, the novel was described in The Spectator as "a Cubist Peacock". This was in recognition of the fact that it was modelled on (and publicised as in the tradition of)First edition cover Thomas Love Peacock’s country-house novels.Nicholas Murray, ”Blight, Mildew and Smut”, Foxed Quarterly 34 There diverse types of the period are exhibited interacting with each other and holding forth on their personal intellectual conceits.
Angela Fox, Slightly Foxed – by my theatrical family (London: Collins, 1986) p. 17Alison Boshoff, “The fabulously frisky Foxes” in Thurrock Mail, 23 January 2015 They had three sons, James, Edward, and Robert Fox. Fox has been called "a notorious philanderer", and his conquests are reported to have included Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark (1906–1968), the widow of Prince George, Duke of Kent. He had a long affair with Rosalind Chatto, wife of the actor Tom Chatto, who was his secretary before she became an agent on her own account, and is claimed to be the father of her son Daniel Chatto.
He foxed his marker to trigger a shot at the bottom right corner which beat a diving Avilash. Aizawl continued to pile on the pressure and in the 54th minute Dodoz pierced the net after latching on to a pass from inside the box by Zohmingmawia. The Blue Colts finally equalized the game in the dying minutes when skipper Amarjit Singh Kiyam converted a penalty after Lalrosanga brought down Rahul Praveen inside the box. Ahead of match against Shillong Lajong, on 18 February, Aizawl coach Santosh Kashyap announced their foreign recruits, Kobayashi and Omolaja, had been ruled out for the rest of the season due to injuries.
The building is set on the west side of Ledgelawn Avenue, a residential side street in the main village of Bar Harbor. It is a 2-1/2 story brick building, three bays wide, with a cross-gable roof configuration caused by a projecting section at the left half of the front facade. This projection is fronted by a large flat-roof bay two stories in height, with a band of three windows across the front, and single windows on the angled sides. The first-floor windows have foxed lower sashes topped by diamond-pane transoms, and the second-floor windows have larger diamond panes in a fixed sash, and are set in a stone frame with a Tudor arch.
The specimen has foxed today, giving it an altogether beige hue, but when originally shot, the olive areas of the head were grey as the cheeks, and the yellow and buff on face and underside was pure white. The brown wings and tail were rufous, due to the pheomelanins not being tinged by lipochromes. Thus, this bird is very likely certainly the result of a simple genetic change, perhaps just a single point mutation, affecting some part of the carotinoid metabolism – essentially the same thing that happens in albinism but in a different metabolic pathway. Though the bird seemed to be healthy and had survived to maturity when it found its untimely end through Townsend's gun, no other such specimens have been documented before, nor ever since.
Gill Pyrah (born 16 June 1957 in Manchester) is an English broadcaster and journalist. She presented local programmes for BBC Birmingham in the late 1970s and early 1980s, she has worked for the Daily Telegraph, been a guest presenter on the Radio 4 programme Midweek and chaired the literary quiz Slightly Foxed on BBC Radio 4. Pyrah was in the news during the 2004 Chelsea Flower Show after an incident between garden designer and television presenter Diarmuid Gavin and the contestant in the neighbouring garden, Gardeners' Question Time panellist Bunny Guinness. According to press reports it was Pyrah's questions to Gavin about the cost of his garden and whether it was connected to commitment to getting a gold medal that led to his storming off from a live interview.
Parker was a member of the executive committee of English PEN from 1993 to 1997 and a trustee of the PEN Literary Foundation, acting as chair from 1999 to 2000. He was on the committee of the London Library from 1999 to 2002, subsequently becoming a trustee (2004–07); chair of the Royal Horticultural Society's Lindley Library Advisory Committee (2009–2013); and vice-chair of the Council of the Royal Society of Literature (2008–14). From 2014 until 2017 he was a visiting fellow in the School of Arts at the University of Northampton. Since 1979 Parker has been a frequent contributor of reviews and features to numerous newspapers and magazines, including The Listener, The Independent, The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Times, The Spectator, The Times Literary Supplement, the New Statesman, The Oldie, Slightly Foxed, Apollo and the gardening quarterly Hortus.
He played Russell in the original radio version of After Henry by Simon Brett. A lifelong fan of the writings of the English author Denton Welch, he was instrumental in bringing the third, revised version of Welch's journals to print in 1984, having made the acquaintance of one of Welch's friends who had possessed the manuscript of the original editor's edition.Whitrow, Benjamin (2013) "Feverish Haste", Slightly Foxed 38, In 1989, Whitrow appeared in episode four of the BBC Two sketch show A Bit of Fry and Laurie (series one), playing an irate member of the audience who claimed that Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie had stolen several of their sketches from him. Between 1990 and 1992, Whitrow appeared in the sitcom The New Statesman as Paddy O'Rourke, a Labour shadow minister who feigned an Irish accent when in public to attract the working-class vote.
Parker was an associate editor of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004) and remains an advisory editor for the regular updates to the project. Among the books to which Parker has contributed are Scribner's British Writers (on L. P. Hartley, 2002), the seventh edition of The Oxford Companion to English Literature (2009), Fifty Gay and Lesbian Books Everybody Must Read (2009) and Britten's Century, published in 2013 to mark the centenary of the composer Benjamin Britten. His edition of G. F. Green's 1952 novel In the Making was published as a Penguin Modern Classic in 2012, and in 2016 he wrote an introduction to the Slightly Foxed edition of Diana Petre's 1975 memoir The Secret Orchard of Roger Ackerley. A full-length animated feature film of J. R. Ackerley's book My Dog Tulip, for which he collaborated on the script and acted as advisor to the producers, was released in 2010.

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