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27 Sentences With "giving a party"

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

Mr. Hitz remembered giving a party, the invitation calling for tieless shirts and jeans.
Just giving a party for gay people in Columbus in 21958 was against the law.
There, they are giving a party to celebrate Janet's recent appointment as a government functionary of the unnamed opposition party.
During dinner service, she glides through the dining room, stopping to chat with guests as though she's giving a party at home.
It's full of rich details, like Allman reminiscing about Jimmy Carter, then Georgia's governor, giving a party for Bob Dylan at the governor's mansion.
Upon learning that a blinged-out Bey (Utkarsh Ambudkar) is giving a party at the hotel, the crew is determined to pitch him their business idea.
Marlow, the editor of Breitbart, was asked in an interview what he thought about Google's giving a party in the midst of a crowd that is gunning for it.
Mr. Marlow, the editor of Breitbart, was asked in an interview what he thought about Google's giving a party in the midst of a crowd that is gunning for it.
Mr. Kearney, she acknowledged, is not cheap, just more interested in investing in the house they bought in 2015 in Lynbrook, N.Y., than in giving a party for the ages.
But before the exhibition closes, the museum is giving a party for people to don clothes inspired by the 19th century, when the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and the Freemasons were at peak popularity.
Hosting is what Sofreh's elegant chef and owner, Nasim Alikhani, does, gliding through the dining room and stopping to chat with guests as though she's giving a party at home, seeming totally relaxed and engaged.
When the important questions of the day — human rights, the future of the American trade embargo, Cuba's future — were raised (if not settled), a frothier one came to the fore: Cuba was giving a party.
If all goes smoothly, guests get to linger over a varied and delicious spread, and hosts are left to enjoy the fact that they are giving a party and did not have to cook everything themselves.
Her schedule this week is especially busy: She is giving a party to celebrate the opening of her first U.S. store before returning to London to reunite with her partner, Eoin McLoughlin, and her 1-year-old daughter, Valentine, and to put the finishing touches on her fall/winter 2017 collection, which will be presented during London Fashion Week on Saturday.
On Christmas Eve 1796, Cormorant caught fire by accident at Port-au- Prince and blew up; 95 of her crew were killed (including Gott).Hepper (1994), p.82. A newspaper reported that Gott had been giving a party to celebrate his accession to the command of Cormorant when the accident occurred.Grocott (1997), p.37.
Contrast is often overtly marked by markers such as but or however, such as in the following examples: # It's raining, but I am not taking an umbrella. # We will be giving a party for our new students. We won't, however, be serving drinks. # The student knew about the test on Friday, but still he did not study.
Dr. Paul Christian is giving a party for Janie Webster, a motherless little girl of nine, with a fine singing voice. But, as her father, Bob Webster, is about to leave the bank where he works to go to the celebration, a shortage is found in his books. for which he is held responsible, jailed, and subsequently, in a court trial is found guilty.
About ten years later, the now grown Heathcliff and Cathy have fallen in love and are meeting secretly on Penniston's Crag. Hindley has become dissolute and tyrannical, and hates Heathcliff. One night, as she and Heathcliff are out together, they hear music and realize that their neighbors, the Lintons, are giving a party. Cathy and Heathcliff sneak to the Lintons and climb over their garden wall, but the dogs are alerted and Cathy is injured.
Gwen belongs to a very snobbish aristocratic London family. Most of the family members dress as if it were the nineteenth century, and they don't believe in associating with "commoners." This makes them look down at Gwen, because Gwen and her mother Grace and brother Nick are the only "normal" members of the family. The family is gathered at her grandmother's London castle giving a party to honor Gwen's cousin Charlotte, who is one day older than her.
Rena Sindi Is Giving a Party Kirdar attended Oxford University in England. She later earned a master's degree in international affairs from Columbia University. She moved from London to New York City in 1991, and purchased Sean Combs's townhouse on Park Avenue. As a member of the Manhattan social scene, Kirdar threw "some of the most lavish and unforgettable costume parties" of the 1990s, including Sloan-Kettering's Valentine's Day Ball, New York City Ballet's Dance with the Dancers Gala, and events for the Boys' Club of New York, Saks Fifth Avenue, and Bruno Magli.
A woman dancing on the bar at a bachelorette party in the US The practise of giving a party to honour the bride-to-be goes back for centuries. However, certain American bachelorette party customs involving licentiousness among some social groups may have begun during the sexual revolution of the 1960s. It was uncommon until at least the mid-1980s, and the first book on planning bachelorette parties was published only in 1998. Those uncomfortable with these modern customs of debauchery often celebrate the night before their wedding with a combined stag and doe party, a custom that has become increasingly popular.
The blurb on the inside flap of the dustjacket of the first edition (which is also repeated opposite the title page) reads: It was a typical Dickens Christmas; deep snow everywhere, and down in the little village of Sittaford on the fringe of Dartmoor, probably deeper than anywhere. Mrs Willett, the winter tenant in Captain Trevelyan's country house, was, with her daughter Violet, giving a party. Finally they decided to do a little table rapping and after the usual number of inconsequential messages from the 'other side', suddenly the table announced that Captain Trevelyan was dead. His oldest friend, Captain Burnaby, was disturbed.
Barrett graduated from Seattle University with a degree in philosophy. He returned to Vancouver in 1953 after graduating and married Shirley Hackman. The couple then moved to St. Louis, Missouri where Barrett attended St Louis University and earned a master's degree in social work. The couple and their two children (a third would be born in 1960) returned to British Columbia in 1957 where he found work at Haney Correctional Institute as a personnel and staff training officer and was asked to run for the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation after giving a party member a tour of the facility.
In the first clause, It's raining implies that the speaker knows the weather situation and so will prepare for it, while the second clause I am not taking an umbrella implies that the speaker will still get wet. Both clauses (or discourse segments) refer to related situations, or themes, yet imply a contradiction. It is this relationship of comparing something similar, yet different, that is believed to be typical of contrastive relations. The same type of relationship is shown in (2), where the first sentence can be interpreted as implying that by giving a party for the new students, the hosts will serve drinks.
Ramya calls him and tells him that he can meet her right-away as she is giving a party to her friends at Ashoka hotel but only if he can arrive there in five minutes. Revanth reaches Ashoka hotel but could only see her hand decorated with jewels in a room filled with her friends. Revanth then calls up James and asks him to come to the hotel with five of his friends on bikes. James arrives there with his friends and Revanth asks them to follow Beladingala Baale's friends individually as he is confident that one of them will go to meet Ramya.
Lavatte enters and announces that he is giving a party that night to mark the engagement of his daughter Madeleine to a local nobleman (who it turns out is too old to become her husband). The curé suggests that Lavatte gets the players to entertain his guests that night – they will come cheap if he agrees to allow Madame Bardeau to have more time to pay her debt. The curé is joined by Hector, a young poet on his way to Paris, and when the curé has left and Madeleine enters in search of her father, it becomes clear that the two young people are falling in love. When Lavatte returns he angrily takes Madeleine away, closely followed by Hector.
Some of the stories were reprinted in her second book, Doll Stories, which was published in 1883 under the name Lucie Cobbe. In November 1885 she married John Childe Heaton Armstrong at the register office on The Strand; he was a 34-year-old translator and the elder brother of William Heaton- Armstrong, later a Member of Parliament for the Liberal Party. John and Lucie lived near the British Museum, but he died of gastroenteritis four and a half months after the wedding. In 1893 Armstrong published The Etiquette of Party Giving, in which she not only provided the etiquette of giving a party, but also outlined several types of parties, including "A Clover Tea", "A Cobweb Party", "A Palette Party" and "An Epithet Party".

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