Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"galoshes" Definitions
  1. rubber shoes (no longer very common) that are worn over normal shoes in wet weather

116 Sentences With "galoshes"

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

"Don't put those galoshes in deep storage yet," Willis said.
Buses kick up waves that stream over Gore's galoshes and soak his socks.
So depending where you live, you may want to break out your galoshes.
They slipped over the shoes worn in the spaceship, like galoshes for the rain.
They slipped over the shoes worn in the spaceship, like galoshes for the rain.
The galoshes were from Canada, his underwear from Korea and his tie from Playboy Neckwear.
I pulled on my galoshes, climbed out of the track and waded into the church.
Sometimes described as a pair of galoshes, an egret's feet are no clunky, rainy-day shoes.
Sorenson put on high green galoshes and met Reid at his polling place at 7 a.m.
You'll discover everything from rain galoshes that fit over high heels to motion-activated toilet-seat lights.
"If you own stocks with substantial China exposure, your portfolio is wearing cement galoshes," the host said.
And tie a necktie and pull on galoshes and pick up a toothpick and comb and cash?
"I said a prayer and gave a blessing," Monsignor Moraglia said, showing pictures of himself wearing galoshes.
If you do decide to visit during these months, it's advisable to pack galoshes, or hip waders.
Then, in 1923, B.F. Goodrich, an American company best known for tyres, put zips on its rubber galoshes.
Inspired by the classic Chelsea boot, they're an elegant (but just as waterproof) twist on your standard galoshes.
Black pants, green blazer with matching beret, a white turtleneck dickey, and white galoshes to go over sneakers.
Just last week, we were in London, where effortlessly chic updos were the perfect complement to umbrellas and galoshes.
It made her crazy to look at him and so she stared at her feet, at her ubiquitous galoshes.
If she had to do it over again, she would have asked a friend to pack galoshes for her, too.
The rain rains yet harder, and she puts on a yellow slicker and galoshes and goes out with a flashlight.
Her rapper husband, 42, matched his wife with a pair of tall galoshes that he wore over his navy blue suit.
Of course, if you're looking for a more standard waterproof shoe, you could also go with SWIMS' classic galoshes or rain boots.
In the adjoining shop, we found the owner, Nicolas Durand, in muddy overalls and rubber galoshes taking a break to read the newspaper.
Grab your rim-salted margarita glass and your galoshes because there is now a cloud that can answer all of your Happy Hour prayers.
The company first came to fame for its rubber galoshes but has since found better ways to keep rainwater (and water in general) away from your shoes.
Beside them stand a few tough-looking Greek men in galoshes with knives—salvage entrepreneurs who tear the grounded boats apart to reuse or sell the wood and engines.
The FBI released surveillance video from February 2014 that showed the 51-year-old janitor and the girl with pink galoshes walking together down the hallway of a Washington hotel.
It'd be hard to argue that they're not useful for everyone at one point or another, but I just can't see myself trucking through the rain in calf-high rubber galoshes.
Alison Van Eenennaam, the animal geneticist in charge of the proceedings, kept watch from off to one side, galoshes firmly planted in the damp manure, eyes fixed on a portable ultrasound monitor.
He wore a suit and a tie and was cleanshaven, approaching middle age, with galoshes over his shoes, $156 in his pocket and four bullet holes in the back of his head.
As Lorenz pulled on tall galoshes to enter the pool, carefully steadied herself on the raft, and toweled off her hands after each exit, the inconvenience of the water became ever more apparent.
On a classically damp Seattle day near the turn of the last decade, skateboard legend Mark "Monk" Hubbard stood in galoshes and raingear at the center of a skatepark he had nearly finished building.
The townspeople wear galoshes in their houses, flood their floors with water, they use poison, electrical currents, gasoline, battle tactics, all to no avail, and again the story feels like a fable for our time.
Underneath the dillydallying in the final scene — the hunt for lost galoshes, the worry over train times — are the terror and giddy excitement that accompany change and the knowledge of how powerless we are to prevent it.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads On a light gray day last October, I donned a pair of oversize galoshes and life jacket, picked up a paddle, climbed into a rowboat, and set out on Newtown Creek.
As senators enter the chamber each day, they will be able to drop off iPhones or iPads in their assigned compartments, much the way kindergartners deposit their galoshes and backpacks at the start of the school day.
"Here, we have the alpha and the omega of enslavement in North America," Mr. Givens said, pointing at some tall brick walls and, next to them, an archaeological site where two women in dusty galoshes pored over clipboards.
Image: NOAAStock up on your canned beans and galoshes, folks: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's 2017 Atlantic Hurricane Season Outlook dropped this morning, and for the first time in years, the weather monitoring agency is predicting more hurricanes than average.
Doug Jones—an A&T alum who grew up on a hog farm and who runs the swine unit—will offer white pullover galoshes for your shoes and he'll dig through a cardboard box to find a jumpsuit to cover your clothes, as if you're prepping for surgery.
She needs a new coat, an elegant one like those she's seen on other mothers, something stylish to go with the other stylish clothes she means to buy, and the boots, the right boots, not just the galoshes she's slipped on every morning all winter; it's spring now, isn't it?
Even the longest, "Overnight Freeze (Heptasyllabics)," distills its language for maximum sonic effect, both intoxicating and intoxicated with sound: I approacheach glimpsy-glaziered gapgulch afraid my galoshes squelchbreak their skittery sketches or skidheel slide a childprancepuncturing every damn sash I can smash, whatever blanchedand specious glow my outstanced kick can dislodge. . . .
His frequent use of Dutch angles, for instance, adds drama to shots of serpentine military columns or soldiers eating at a long canteen table, and a number of his images in Frente a frente use objects to tell the stories of their owners: the improvised cloth galoshes of militiamen, rows of cups and plates lying expectant for their absent owners.
Galoshes. Galoshes, also known as dickersons, gumshoes, rubbers, or overshoes, are a type of rubber boot that is slipped over shoes to keep them from getting muddy or wet. In the United States, the word galoshes may be used interchangeably with boot, especially a rubberized boot. In the United Kingdom, however, a galosh is an overshoe made of a weatherproof material to protect a more vulnerable shoe underneath and keep the foot warm and dry.
The central theme of the series is not dissimilar to The Galoshes of Fortune (1838) by Hans Christian Andersen.
"Reel Around the Fountain" and "Fame" previously appeared on Weiland's 2008 album "Happy" in Galoshes (the former only available on the "Deluxe" edition).
Waking up in his own age Knapp assumes it was all a dream and now fancies his own time period as the best. Next, a watchman tries the galoshes on. He wishes to be the lieutenant, because he assumes his life is much better than his. The galoshes do their work and suddenly the watchmen becomes the lieutenant, sitting at his desk.
Though she does grant the student a favor. She takes off his galoshes and takes them back with her, causing him to be brought back to life.
Elio Fiorucci was born in Milan on 10 June 1935, son of a shoe shop owner. One day in 1962, Elio came up with the idea of making galoshes in bright primary colours whilst working at his father's shop. When they were featured in a local weekly fashion magazine, the galoshes caused a sensation. Following a trip to London in 1965, Elio was determined to bring Carnaby Street fashions to Milan.
"Happy" in Galoshes is the second solo album by American rock singer Scott Weiland. Weiland, known for his roles as the lead singer in Stone Temple Pilots and Velvet Revolver, released his first album, 12 Bar Blues in 1998. Ten years later, "Happy" in Galoshes served as the official follow-up. Two versions have been released, a single disc and double disc deluxe version—the deluxe edition offers a second disc of 10 extra tracks.
As the galoshes remain in the hospital one of the young night internes tries them on. His task is to guard the hospital fence, but he wishes to get out for a while, wondering whether he "could get his head through the fence and escape." As soon as he thinks this his head is stuck and he's unable to pull it back. He struggles for a while, until he wishes he was free again, which is granted by the galoshes.
Galoshes are now almost universally made of rubber. In the bootmakers' trade, a "galosh" is the piece of leather, of a make stronger than, or different from, that of the "uppers", which runs around the bottom part of a boot or shoe, just above the sole. A more modern term for galoshes could be rubber boots or bad weather shoes. Overshoes have evolved in the past decades and now are being made with more advanced features, such as high traction outsoles.
Meanwhile, the watchman picks up the galoshes at the hospital and turns them in at the police station where they are accidentally given to a clerk whose galoshes happened to have been lost too. During a walk the clerk meets a friend who is a poet and desires to live his life, for it seems to be much more enjoyable than his. At first the clerk enjoys being a poet full of inspiration. Then he wishes he was a lark, but is caught by a little boy and sold off to a family, where he is put inside a cage.
Paloalto is the debut album by alternative rock band Paloalto. It was produced by Rick Rubin and released by American Recordings in 2000. Scott Weiland of Stone Temple Pilots covered "Some Things Must Go This Way" for his 2008 album "Happy" in Galoshes.
"Happy" in Galoshes was originally reported to be a double album, but in actuality, it is a single album that is being offered in a deluxe edition. On September 17, 2008, Spin.com posted an exclusive stream of "Paralysis",SPIN.COM Exclusive Stream: Scott Weiland, "Paralysis" Sep.
"Happy" in Galoshes debuted at #97 on the Billboard 200, selling 10,500 copies in its first week. The album received a 3.5/5 score from Rolling Stone magazine, and a four out of a possible five from Allmusic. Entertainment Weekly wasn't as approving, giving it a C– score.
"Arnold, Gary (May 1, 1972). "A Moving Elegy-in-Advance". The Washington Post. B1. Penelope Gilliatt of The New Yorker wrote, "The robots have endearing qualities, paddling about as if in galoshes, and they play a wonderful game of poker, but this is sci-fi with the soul of an editorial.
The Singles 1992–2003 became available on December 9, 2008 for the video game Rock Band 2. Adrian Young played drums on Scott Weiland's album "Happy" in Galoshes. No Doubt headlined the Bamboozle 2009 festival in May 2009, along with Fall Out Boy. The band completed a national tour in mid-2009.
Barembach was completely destroyed in 1875 by a violent fire. After the reconstruction of the village almost immediately after the disaster, the economy first restarted with livestock and forestry. There were also mills and sawmills producing galoshes which later changed to weaving. An enterprise was set up by Camille Glaszmann which specialised in Theatrical property.
452–54 Yusupov had visited Rasputin regularly in the past few weeks or months.Maria Rasputin, p. 13 The following day, the two sisters reported their father missing to Anna Vyrubova. Traces of blood were detected on the parapet of the Bolshoy Petrovsky bridge, as well as one of Rasputin's galoshes, stuck between the bridge pile.
He used this for pictorial work. Its large negative was ideal for the detailed retouching he did. He kept his equipment in the trunk of his car. In addition to cameras and tripods, he had a machete, shovel, child's white parasol, bee smoker, compass, toilet paper, and galoshes and old shoes for swamp jobs.
But this knowledge — as well as what was added over time in these lessons — was solid and thorough. It was systematic and correct knowledge that was impossible for me to lose.” Although that teacher was popular with his pupils, he aroused suspicion for going about in Moscow with a light summer coat and without galoshes.
An unconfirmed legend states that an Englishman named Radley invented galoshes. He suffered from rheumatism and wanted to keep his feet dry. While reading De Bello Gallico by Julius Caesar he noticed a description of protective cloth overshoes "gallicae" and decided to capitalize on the idea. He patented cloth overshoes reinforced with rubber to keep the feet dry.
"Missing Cleveland" is the first single from American rock musician Scott Weiland's second solo album, "Happy" in Galoshes. The single was released on November 11, 2008. In the U.S., the song peaked at number 28 on the Modern Rock Chart. The music video for "Missing Cleveland" was directed by Kevin Kerslake, who has worked with Weiland before.BLABBERMOUTH.
He concludes that it would be better off if his body could rest, while the spirit flies on without it. The galoshes grant his wish and he is now peacefully dead. Andersen concludes with a quote by Solon: "Call no man happy until he rests in his grave." Dame Care then tells the other fairy that her predictions have indeed all came true.
It was the first film in the United States to portray the "flapper" lifestyle. By that time, the term had taken on the full meaning of the flapper generation style and attitudes The use of the term coincided with a fashion among teenage girls in the United States in the early 1920s for wearing unbuckled galoshes,"Flappers flaunt fads in footwear" 'The New York Times' (January 29, 1922). The article alleges the origin of the fashion was a Douglas Fairbanks costume in the film The Three Musketeers, in which he wore his boot-tops turned down. and a widespread false etymology held that they were called "flappers" because they flapped when they walked, as they wore their overshoes or galoshes unfastened, showing that they defied convention in a manner similar to the 21st century fad for untied shoelaces..Strong, Marion in .
As the party concludes Councilor Knap decides to go home. He finds the galoshes, puts them on and is sent back to the reign of King Hans. He is not immediately aware of what happened, but does notice that the unpaved streets are full with filth and mud. He notices a procession for the Bishop of Seeland and assumes it's for the bishop from his time period.
In later years Adams gathered rubber from old galoshes for the insides of baseballs. A tanner then used horsehide to create the balls. As late as 1863, Adams was one of the three most prominent makers of baseballs in New York, continuing to produce them by hand. Adams also played a role in producing baseball bats, choosing which wood to use and overseeing the manufacturing process.
There the nodules of iron were washed out of the soil matrix. The workers, mostly peasants, were well paid for this difficult and dangerous work. The galoshes (Gollutch) they wore became the nickname for the residents of Bethoncourt.Association Bethoncourtoise pour la sauvegarde et la mise en valeur du patrimoine locale In the mid-nineteenth century, an important segment of the population consisted of highly skilled watchmakers.
One is old, Dame Care, the other is a minion of Dame Fortune. The dame has brought a pair of galoshes along that can transport whoever wears them to whatever time, place or condition in life that he desires. And his every wish in regard to time and place will be instantly granted. Dame Care predicts that it will nevertheless make the person unhappy, wishing he was back in the present.
He talks with a canary and parrot, who both lament the days when they were still free. As it so happens the cage door is open and the clerk tries to fly away, but is attacked by a cat. He manages to fly back to his own home, where the spell is broken again. Then the fairy tale concludes with the clerk's neighbour, a theological student, asking for the galoshes.
However, with the advent of paved streets and rubber galoshes, pattens became obsolete by the end of the 19th century. Thus, the company's main function is now as a charitable body rather than a guild or trade association for pattenmakers. The Pattenmakers' Company ranks seventieth in the order of precedence of City Livery Companies. Its motto is Recipiunt Fœminæ Sustentacula Nobis, Latin for "Women Receive Support From Us".
Happiness Comes at Nine o'Clock (Sreća dolazi u 9) is a Croatian fantasy film directed by Nikola Tanhofer. It was released in 1961. It was preserved and, in 2003, restored by the Croatian State Archives. It is based on the fairy tale The Galoshes of Fortune by Hans Christian Andersen, and was the first feature- length fantasy film in Yugoslav cinematography, and the last role of Mila Dimitrijević.
Should he catch more than five minnows, he would invite his friends to dinner. He puts on a mackintosh and shiny galoshes, takes his rod and basket, and sets off with "enormous hops" to the place where he keeps his lily-pad boat. He poles to a place he knows is good for minnows. Once there, the frog sits cross-legged on his lily-pad and arranges his tackle.
He notices the lieutenant had written a poem called, "If Only I Were Rich", which confesses that the lieutenant actually feels he is short on money and is lonely as a result. Then he realizes he would rather be a watchman, because he at least has a wife and children who share his joy and sorrows. The galoshes then transform him back into himself. The watchman, still unaware what has happened, watches a falling star.
In 1898, Polón founded Suomen Gummitehdas Oy (Finnish Rubber Works) - a manufacturer of galoshes and other rubber products. In the early 1900s, the Finnish Rubber Works established factories near Nokia and used the town's name in the company's branding. After World War I, the Nokia Company was nearing bankruptcy and was acquired by the Finnish Rubber Works. In 1932, the Finnish Rubber Works also acquired the Suomen Kaapelitehdas Oy (Finnish Cable Works).
The transition from a traditional wooden sole to one of vulcanized rubber may be attributed to Charles Goodyear and Leverett Candee. The qualities of rubber, though fascinating to Goodyear, were highly dependent on temperature: it was tacky when hot, brittle when cold. Vulcanization of rubber tempered its properties so that it was easily molded, durable, and tough. A rubberized elastic webbing made Goodyear's galoshes (circa 1890) easy to pull on and off.
The company opted to use Gideon Sundback's fastener on a new type of rubber boots (or galoshes) and referred to it as the zipper, and the name stuck. The two chief uses of the zipper in its early years were for closing boots and tobacco pouches. Zippers began being used for clothing in 1925 by Schott NYC on leather jackets. In the 1930s, a sales campaign began for children's clothing featuring zippers.
Another common stereotype is of the image of a dominatrix wearing a skin-tight, usually jet-black, latex or PVC catsuit. Some latex enthusiasts are also turned on by the wearing of draped latex garments such as cloaks. Other rubber paraphernalia, such as wet suits, gas masks, splash suits, Mackintoshes, galoshes, Wellington boots, rubber/plastic pants, and diapers are also often added to the scenario. Heavier fetishists often attempt duplicating all kinds of "everyday wear" into a rubber counterpart.
Colchester Rubber Company catalogue pages from around 1890 The Colchester Rubber Company manufactured high end rubber footwear for men, women and children. Their speciality products were working boots for cold and wet weather, rain boots and galoshes. To complement these products, during the short summer season of April to July, they also made and sold canvas and rubber shoes under the classification of “Tennis” shoes. The somewhat misleadingly named “Tennis” shoe range included shoes for walking, baseball, bicycle, tennis and yachting.
Rear admiral Reginald Neeld, his wife Beatrix and daughter lived in the manor house in 1899–1924. During the First World War, the hall at Twatley became a packing station for boxes of leggings, galoshes and Red Cross parcels destined for the Front. The estate was bought from Honora and George Wilder's heir, Graham Wilder, in 1925 by Herbert Choplin Cox, a Canadian. A Deputy Master of the Beaufort Hunt, he used the estate to hunt and added more land to it.
Regional terms are common: around their area of origin, (Liverpool, in north west England) they are often referred to as 'Galoshes'. In Northern Ireland and central Scotland they are sometimes known as gutties; "sannies" (from 'sand shoe') is also used in Scotland. In parts of the West Country and Wales they are known as "daps" or "dappers". In London, the home counties, much of the West Midlands, the West Riding of Yorkshire and north west of England they are known as "pumps".
"The Galoshes of Fortune" ()Rossel, (2004), p.24 is a literary fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen about a set of time-travelling boots, considered to be inspired by the folktale of the "seven-league boots" (syvmilestøvler). The tale was first published by C. A. Reitzel in Copenhagen, Denmark on 19 May 1838 with The True Soldier (one-act verse play) and "That Was Done by the Zombie" (poem) in Three Poetical Works. Reitzel paid Andersen 40 rixdollars for the story.
He wishes he could travel to the Moon and suddenly the galoshes send him there at the speed of light. There he meets several Moon men who all wonder whether Earth is inhabited and decide this must be impossible. Back on Earth the lifeless body of the watchman is found and he is brought to a hospital, where they take his shoes off, breaking the spell again. He awakens and declares it to have been the most terrible night he had ever experienced.
The Velvet Revolver songs "For a Brother" and "Pills, Demons, & Etc" from the album Libertad are about Michael. Weiland said in an interview with MTV News in November 2008 that several songs on "Happy" in Galoshes were inspired by the death of his brother and his separation from Mary Forsberg. In the same article, MTV News reported that Weiland had not done heroin since December 5, 2002. Weiland also admitted that he went through "a very short binge with coke" in late 2007.
Trofimov enters in search of his galoshes, and he and Lopakhin exchange opposing world views. Anya enters and reprimands Lopakhin for ordering his workers to begin chopping down the cherry orchard even while the family is still in the house. Lopakhin apologizes and rushes out to stop them for the time being, in the hopes that he will be somehow reconciled with the leaving family. Charlotta enters, lost and in a daze, and insists that the family find her a new position.
He also plays the guitar, keyboards, ukulele, and is adept at computer programming for song writing and music production. Beers has co-written tracks for INXS including "Listen Like Thieves", "Don't Change", and "Perfect Strangers". From 2008, Beers has been concentrating on his song writing in Los Angeles, as well as the INXS album, Original Sin released on 8 November 2010. He co-wrote the song "Tangle With Your Mind" with Scott Weiland of Stone Temple Pilots for Weiland's solo CD Happy in Galoshes (2008).
In 1900, he established the wholesaling agency Røwde & Co. Among other things he imported Swedish Gislaved rubber products, but he also wanted such products to be produced domestically. In 1906, he established the rubber factory Viking Gummivarefabrik in Heggedal in Akershus. After it was destroyed in a 1913 fire, Røwde relocated the factory to Askim in Østfold, where it was re-organized in 1920 as Askim Gummivarefabrik. The Viking brand became known for its galoshes and rubber boots, as well as from 1931 for car tires.
Russian valenki Valenki (; sg valenok ()) are traditional Russian winter footwear, essentially felt boots: the name valenok literally means "made by felting". Valenki are made of wool felt. They are not water-resistant, and are often worn with galoshes to keep water out and protect the soles from wear and tear. Valenki were once the footwear of choice for many Russians, but in the second half of the 20th century they lost most of their appeal in cities, due to their association with rustic dress.
Softdrive Records (formerly known as Lavish Records) is an independent record label Softdrive Records founded by Stone Temple Pilots/ex-Velvet Revolver singer Scott Weiland in 2006. The now-defunct band The Actual was the first band to be signed to the label. Weiland's second solo album, "Happy" in Galoshes, was released on Softdrive Records on November 25, 2008. Weiland's last endeavor with Softdrive was to produce and release the Vox Waves in 2015, the band never released the album due to circumstances surrounding Weiland's Death.
Most of the concealed shoes found to date are made of leather, but wooden clogs and rubber galoshes have also been reported, among others. The overwhelming majority (almost 98 per cent) have been worn, and many show signs of repair. All ages are represented in the shoe sizes, from babies to adults, but there is little difference in the ratio of adult male to female shoes, at 21.5 per cent and 26.5 per cent respectively. Most finds are of single shoes, but some pairs have also been discovered.
They discuss many topics and Knap keeps misinterpreting these medieval topics for events that happened in his own lifetime. For instance, he confuses a remark about the Black Plague with a reference to a cholera epidemic in the 19th century. As the evening continues they all begin to drink more and Knap is repulsed by the vulgar behaviour of the people. He decides to sneak out, but the others pull him back from under the table by his feet, thereby pulling off the galoshes and breaking the spell.
Then a new teacher named Mikhail Kovalenko is assigned to Belikov's school, and he brings with him his lively and cheerful sister Varenka. Instantly all the ladies at school decide that Belikov should marry her, and she seems not to mind. Belikov, like everybody else, is fascinated with this woman who arrives at the scene 'like Aphrodite', but is dogged by his usual fear of some unforeseen complications. Things start to get wrong for Belikov when somebody draws a caricature of him in galoshes, with Varenka on his arm.
The title of the 2007 single was first reported to be called "Beautiful Day", but more recent sources reported it to be "Learning to Drive". Scott told Hollywood Exclusive that "the song we wrote is almost perfect for the film because, on one end, it's beautiful and almost pristine -- and on the other side of things, it's really twisted and it's like you're on a psychotic roller coaster ride in slow motion". The song, as "Beautiful Day" (not "Learning to Drive"), appears on Weiland's second solo album, "Happy" in Galoshes.
June mentions that she was taught a formal curtsey in the event that she married a diplomat and Aunt Martha frequently proudly refers to their common Bronson lineage. Ward also mentions the Bronson clan's concerns about Ward providing for June in a manner she is accustomed to at their wedding. June mentions her father occasionally. Apparently, he was a practical man, for, according to June, he discouraged her as a child from buying an opal ring in a jewelry store window and urged her instead to spend her money on a pair of galoshes.
Two rows of hooks were located on both the partition and the corridor wall for the students to hang their wraps on and during inclement weather they left their galoshes on the floor next to the wall. The building had hard wood floors and beautifully varnished scrollwork and woodwork throughout the building. Twice each year, the floor was mopped by women hired specifically for this purpose using big long mops, boiling water, and strong soap. The first mopping was done before the beginning of the school year and the second during Christmas break.
The first twelve episodes of the series focus on the day-to-day life of Ayumu Aizawa as he visits his father, a veterinarian, at a small town in the countryside. Ayumu has spent his visit thus far aimlessly biking across the valley, but a chance meeting with a girl named Miku sends him searching for a long-lost friend of his, Wakkun. Upon finding Wakkun, he discovers that the boy has not aged since he and Ayumu played as children. Wakkun is also wearing clothes very similar to the raincoat and galoshes that Ayumu wore habitually as a child.
After separating in 2002, Stone Temple Pilots reunited in April 2008 for a 75-date North American tour. Scott Weiland would hear new material from Robert and Dean DeLeo while the band performed sound checks during the tour, but he would not collaborate in the songwriting process until he was through promoting his solo album, "Happy" in Galoshes. Despite the band's intent, a future album from the group was uncertain. On June 12, 2008, Atlantic Records filed a lawsuit against Weiland and Eric Kretz, claiming the two had threatened to terminate their contract unless changes were made.
Mr. Knightley goes to Emma to comfort her about the news of Frank, and to reveal that he is in love with her and hopes to marry her. Initially pleased with his offer of marriage, Emma develops a nosebleed when she realizes how upset Harriet will be. Interfering one last time, she goes to Mr. Martin to make amends, offering him a portrait of Harriet she drew herself. Harriet tells Emma she has accepted Mr. Martin's offer of marriage, and that her father has revealed himself now that she is of age; he is not a gentleman, but a tradesman who makes galoshes.
After removal from the horse, the hide is measured from the root of the tail 18 inches forward on the backbone. The hide is cut at right angles to the backbone and the resulting pieces termed a "front" (the forward part) and the "butt". The term cordovan leather applies to the product of both the tanned fronts and tanned butts, but is especially used in connection with the term galoshes, meaning the vamps or boot-fronts cut from the shell of the butt. After being tanned, leather from the "front" is typically used in the fabrication of gloves, or blackened, to be used in the tops of shoes.
To make canvases, foot-rags, floor mops and flour bags were stretched out against wooden parcel boxes. To make thread for knitting and embroidery, inmates collected loose threads from rags and underwear and held them together with soap. Needles were made from fishbones saved after meals or dug out from frozen waste piles, pieces of wire sharpened to points, or the teeth of combs. Using wire needles and ink made from the rubber of galoshes, burned to ash and mixed with water and sugar, Sgovio developed a technique for tattooing fellow inmates. The sets and costumes for theater productions showcased artists’ abilities to make something out of nothing.
He also teamed with Nick Altrock, who later took baseball clowning to legendary heights with Al Schacht. Among Schaefer's legendary antics are diversionary tactics with umbrellas, raincoats and galoshes, to get games canceled on account of the weather. In one story he wears the outfit out onto the playing field, in another he wears it to the plate during a drizzle, but when the umpire sends him back to the dugout to take it off, the rains begin to pour, forcing the umpire to indeed call the game. An account of Schaefer wearing a raincoat onto the field occurs in the July 4, 1906, edition of the Washington Post.
Although he garnered a reputation as a general who was both impatient and impulsive and had little tolerance for officers who had failed to succeed, he fired only one general during World War II, Orlando Ward, and only after two warnings, whereas Bradley sacked several generals during the war. Patton reportedly had the utmost respect for the men serving in his command, particularly the wounded. Many of his directives showed special trouble to care for the enlisted men under his command, and he was well known for arranging extra supplies for battlefield soldiers, including blankets and extra socks, galoshes, and other items normally in short supply at the front. Patton's views on race were complicated and controversial.
Springfield was founded in 1796 by a group led by Jebediah Springfield (in reality a cover identity for notorious pirate Hans Sprungfeld) who, after misinterpreting a passage in the Bible, left Maryland trying to find "New Sodom." After he refused to found a town where men were free to marry their cousins, half of the group left. The dissenters founded the nearby town of Shelbyville, after fellow pioneer Shelbyville Manhattan, and the two cities remain rivals for centuries. Springfield reached its pinnacle in the mid-20th century, when it became the home of the world's first Aquacar factory; one half of the U.S. was said to wear Springfield galoshes and Springfield's streets were literally paved with gold.
In an interview with The Pulse of Radio regarding the album, Weiland stated: "It'll definitely be a sonic journey like the first album was, a little bit more focused since I'm not on a narcotic journey like I was on the last one. But, you know, still sort of all over the map, because my influences are so wide and varied."BLABBERMOUTH.NET Scott Weiland To Release '"Happy"' In November Sep. 2, 2008 In an interview with MTV News, Weiland stated that the songs on "Happy" In Galoshes were inspired by the death of his brother, Michael (who also played drums on a song on the album), and Weiland's separation from his wife of eight years, Mary Forsberg.
Before being elected Prime Minister in 1964 the then Labour Party leader Harold Wilson toured the area and promised major redevelopment under a Labour government, though this did not take place for another generation. In 1856 a wealthy US entrepreneur, Henry Lee Norris, established the North British Rubber Company in the buildings of the former Castle Silk Mill alongside the Union Canal. The company's Castle Mill premises eventually covered of land in the area and employed thousands of workers over five generations in manufacturing a variety of products from galoshes and rubber Wellington boots to solid rubber wheels for Thomson steam traction engines (after 1870), pneumatic tyres (after 1890) and hot-water bottles.
Valenki (synonymic and semantic related expressions which mean the same – vа́lenukhi (pl.), vа́lezhki, vа́leni, vа́lentsi, kа́tanki) – warm felted highboots made from dried sheep’s wool; they are usually hard by their form, but there are soft types which are made for a corresponding footwear. Valenki are a kind of traditional Russian footwear which is usually worn for walking on dry snow when the weather is frosty. Valenki wear out most quickly from the bottom and very often are soled with leather or other durable material to prevent this, so they are often worn with galoshes. Also, to protect from getting wet – they use a rubber sole, and there are valenki with glue-sew and molded soles.
There is a poem by Kenneth Fearing entitled "Dear Beatrice Fairfax" in which he metaphorically lambastes social status as product guarantees. Another popular song from 1919, "Oh By Jingo! (Oh By Gee You're The Only Girl For Me)," by Albert Von Tilzer with lyrics by Lew Brown, makes a reference in the third verse: : Home they went with spirits wilted : On account of they were jilted : (All the By-Goshes, with hearts down to their galoshes!) : All winter long they brooded—that is, all but very few did : (They left to join a fan club for Lana Toyn-a.) : The rest wrote to Beatrice Fairfax : Got the how-to-make-him-care facts : So came the spring : They sailed once more to sing...
In 1864, Michael was legally separated from his wife. On the evening of Sunday 26 April 1868 Michael went for a walk dressed in a great-coat, cap and galoshes; two days later his body was found floating in the Clarence River. The medical evidence stated that there was a deep cut over the right eye "such as might be produced by falling on a broken bottle". The coroner's jury returned an open verdict, and although a set of verses Michael had written a few weeks before suggested to some people that he had contemplated suicide, the possibility of this was indignantly denied by his friend, Sheridan Moore, who declared that the evidence suggested either foul play or accident, rather than suicide.
While STP went on hiatus after the release of Tiny Music ..., Weiland released a solo album in 1998 called 12 Bar Blues. Weiland wrote most of the songs on the album, and collaborated with several artists, notably Daniel Lanois, Sheryl Crow, Brad Mehldau and Jeff Nolan. On November 25, 2008, Weiland released his second solo album, "Happy" in Galoshes, produced by Weiland and songwriting-producing partner Doug Grean. Weiland went on tour in early 2009 to promote the album. Scott Weiland & The Wildabouts perform at the Howard Theatre in Washington, D.C. on March 11, 2013, as part of the Purple At the Core Tour On August 30, 2011, Weiland released a covers album, A Compilation of Scott Weiland Cover Songs, exclusively through his website.
Thomas' formal education began at Mrs Hole's dame school, a private school on Mirador Crescent, a few streets away from his home.Ferris (1989), p. 35. He described his experience there in Quite Early One Morning: > Never was there such a dame school as ours, so firm and kind and smelling of > galoshes, with the sweet and fumbled music of the piano lessons drifting > down from upstairs to the lonely schoolroom, where only the sometimes > tearful wicked sat over undone sums, or to repent a little crime – the > pulling of a girl's hair during geography, the sly shin kick under the table > during English literature. alt=A wide three storied building with windows to the upper two stories and an entrance on the ground floor.
Though Irontail tries all day to deliver eggs with unsuccessful results, he is only able to deliver one egg to a sleeping hobo. However, it's still one egg more than Peter delivered. Therefore, Irontail becomes the new Chief Easter Bunny, passing laws to make Easter a disaster such as: Painting eggs brown and gray, ordering the candy sculptors to make chocolate tarantulas and octopuses instead of bunnies and chicks, and having Easter galoshes instead of bonnets. Meanwhile, Peter, ashamed that his bragging and irresponsibility led to this tragedy, leaves April Valley until he meets Seymour S. Sassafras (the narrator), an eccentric peddler and inventor, who supplies April Valley with the colors to paint the eggs with from his Garden of Surprises, like Red, white, and blue cabbages, purple corn, striped tomatoes, and orange string beans.
They were available in a variety of styles, calf- or knee-length, with a Cuban or Louis heel, which could be pull- on, or zip-fastened for a closer fit. Worn with calf-length and finally knee- length skirts, they often featured decorative features such as elaborate stitching or fur trim. Russian boots were stylish throughout the 1920s as the fashionable alternative to galoshes in winter. They also somehow acquired a racy reputation, as the sort of footwear worn by girls who frequented saloon bars and speakeasies. By the mid-1920s, British shoe manufacturers were reporting record orders for high-legged women’s boots and they were so popular that they were being blamed for causing women to catch colds, have accidents in the street, and even injure themselves.
Members of the committee was unhappy with the level of protection the local community was receiving from the police, so it introduced its own system of local patrols, using hand-picked unemployed men to patrol the streets of the East End every evening from midnight to between four and five the next morning. Each of these men received a small wage from the Committee, and each patrolled a particular beat, being armed with a police whistle, a pair of galoshes and a strong stick. The committee itself met each evening at nine in The Crown, and once the public house closed at 12.30 am the committee members would inspect and join the patrols. These patrols were shortly to be joined by those of the Working Men's Vigilance Committee.
Skins of hunted bears Polar bears have long provided important raw materials for Arctic peoples, including the Inuit, Yupik, Chukchi, Nenets, Russian Pomors and others. Hunters commonly used teams of dogs to distract the bear, allowing the hunter to spear the bear or shoot it with arrows at closer range. Almost all parts of captured animals had a use. The fur was used in particular to make trousers and, by the Nenets, to make galoshes-like outer footwear called tobok; the meat is edible, despite some risk of trichinosis; the fat was used in food and as a fuel for lighting homes, alongside seal and whale blubber; sinews were used as thread for sewing clothes; the gallbladder and sometimes heart were dried and powdered for medicinal purposes; the large canine teeth were highly valued as talismans.
Film "Man in a Shell" (in Russian) based on this story The story, narrated by Burkin, a gymnasium teacher, to his friend Ivan Ivanych Chimsha-Gimalayski after a long day spent hunting in the countryside, tells the story of his colleague Belikov, a teacher of Greek and the antagonist of the story. Suffering from paranoia (he wears a pair of galoshes and a heavy coat even in the warmest weather) Belikov clings to official regulations and insists that others do so as well, being suspicious and wary of everything, because "one can never tell what harm might come from it". He terrorizes not only his school, but the whole town with his petty demands, protests against all sorts of real or imagined disorder. Everybody is scared of this man whose habit is visiting people and sitting silent for an hour by way of "maintaining good relations with his colleagues".

No results under this filter, show 116 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.