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171 Sentences With "good words"

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

With my words because I have all the good words.
There have been some good words, but so far no effect.
McEvoy said he had taken good words of advice leading into the meeting.
Enable him to find the right words: good words, true words, healing words.
The Zoroastrian mantra is manashni, gavashni, kunashni: good thoughts, good words, good deeds.
Astin, who plays his assistant, only had good words to say about the gritty actor.
Sure, these are good words to follow for my friend trying to land her dream job.
But hey, a good Words With Friends partner can be even harder to find than love.
Writing is good words in good order; poetry is the best words in the best order.
Stand up for yourself – and have some good words ready, even if you're better known for throwing punches.
"UNDEMOCRATIC", "gerrymandered" and "fix-up" are good words to describe Malaysian politics, dominated since independence by a single party.
For the writer, this may be the number of good words he can produce when he sits down to type.
"They were a few good words, but after that, how he will actually proceed, we will wait and see," she said.
But the principle is to catch all of the language in use, and not merely to admit the good words, whatever those are.
"We have politicians, they might speak good words, not sleep with prostitutes, be a good neighbor," evangelical pastor Victor Fuentes said in June.
"Herzog feels that he has to say a few good words about me, because I talk about universal values," Odeh told me later.
Talking with Meryl on and off the camera, she had some really good words of advice and told us to, most importantly, have fun.
Hemmer was candid for most of the interview and had good words for Smith, but kept silent about whether Smith had given him any advice.
Things are always morally ambiguous in Otto Düring-land, dark strains of raw ambition and craven self-promotion lurking just under the good words and righteous sentiments.
Mr. Long's Obama-era predecessor, W. Craig Fugate, declined on Friday to expound on the agency's preparations, but he had good words to say about the administrator.
But, as so many of us have learned over the course of our marriages, good words and intentions must turn into healthy marital habits and patterns or they will soon ring hollow.
I typed many words in response to those messages — some of them even borderline good words — but came no closer to completing my job for the day: writing this article about Slack.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk marked the end of the year by tweeting congratulations to his team, and few would doubt they deserved his good words, since 133 was a challenging year for the automaker.
While it is true that Nowruz has its origins in Zoroastrianism, one of the first monotheistic religions, who is going to argue with a religion whose maxim is "Good thoughts, good words, good deeds"?
I remember John, at the time, had a motorcycle repair book and indeed he had a used motorcycle in the office, but so his go-to book for good words would be this repair book.
Though some on social media have questioned the taste of consumers wanting an "El Chapo" shirt, the brothers say Barabas' mission is to bring philosophy and fashion together and surround themselves with good words, good thoughts and good deeds.
But Johnson's fame has never dispelled the idea that the lexicographer is a humdrum, bookish type who reads for precision and who dutifully approves the "right" meanings of "good" words while preventing "wrong" definitions and "bad" words from entering the dictionary.
Although Cameron led the campaign for Remain, anyone coming from afar to For the Record might almost think it was the work of a Europhobic Brexiteer, so few good words does he have to say about the EU: "Integration had gone too far," he laments.
Its recent announcement came cloaked in a lot of feel-good words about how important privacy is and how blocking cookies would boost the practice of browser fingerprinting, a relatively rare method of online tracking that uses metrics like fonts installed or screen size to create unique profiles of each user.
" PLAY-BY-PLAY Pentagon preparing for military to house as many as 20,000 migrant children  -  Reuters Feinstein, Cruz, Durbin and Tillis working on immigration deal  -  The Hill Court allows administration to proceed with dismantling consumer protection bureau   -  WaPo EU announces 25 percent tariffs on American goods  -  USA Today AUDIBLE: THE PARSON AND THE PIMP "We have politicians, they might speak good words, not sleep with prostitutes, be a good neighbor.
I have not wanted good words, and exceeding kind and regardful usance.
Nesbit's first published works were poems. In March 1878, when she was not yet twenty, the monthly magazine Good Words printed her poem "Under the Trees".Macleod, Donald (ed.), Good Words, vol. 19 (London: Daldy, Isbister & Co., 1878), p.
As well as these and many magazine articles, he edited the Golden Treasury edition of Burns, and wrote a novel, Alfred Hagart's Household, which was serialised in Good Words in 1865.Good Words, Omnibus edition for 1865 (Ed. Norman MacLeod), Strachan & Co.
Macleod, Donald. "Anthony Trollope." Good Words for 1884 pp. 248–52. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
Retrieved 1 June 2011. Simon Cooke, PhD. "Good Words", The Victorian Web. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
Oliphant, Margaret ("Mrs. Oliphant"). "Anthony Trollope". Good Words for 1883. pp. 142–44. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
London: The Silverbridge Press. p. 20. Trollope, Anthony. "The Widow's Mite". Good Words for 1863. pp. 33–43.
They do not pay for our > country, now over-run with white people, and they do not pay for horses and > cattle. Good words will not give me back my children, they will not give my > people good health and stop them from dying. It makes my heart sick to think > of all the good words and broken promises.
Judith Wittosch Malcolm. "Good Words", The Oxford Reader's Companion to Trollope (R. C. Terry, ed., Oxford University Press, 1999) pp. 219–221.
"Some reminiscences of my Life." Good Words. William was also an ancestor of the poet Armine Kent and the architect Arthur Blomfield.
Good Words was known for its illustrations, by such artists as John Everett Millais and Arthur Boyd Houghton and engraved by the Brothers Dalziel.
Larsen, pp. 204–05 Prestwich began writing during the 1870s, publishing two anonymous novels and a series of articles explaining geology in Every Girl's Magazine and Good Words. In these articles she laid out the history of geology and discussed the evidence for and against various hypotheses. She also wrote popular versions of at least two of her husband's scientific papers for Good Words.
The novel was first published in serial form in the monthly periodical Good Words from January to December 1865. It was then published in two volumes in 1866.
Ellen Moody's Website: Mostly on English and Continental and Womens' Literature. Retrieved 25 May 2011. Malcolm, Judith Wittosch. "Good Words" in The Oxford Reader's Companion to Trollope, ed.
By using free will, people must take an active role in the universal conflict, with good thoughts, good words and good deeds to ensure happiness and to keep chaos at bay.
In his autobiography, Trollope states that during his life, he received a total of £1645 for Rachel Ray. The affair did not affect the personal friendship of Trollope and Macleod. The novelist continued to write for Good Words: seven more stories and two novels, The Golden Lion of Granpère and Kept in the Dark, were published in the magazine. The rejection of the novel by Good Words ended the plan to have it illustrated by Millais.
Norman Macleod In 1862, when Trollope was near the peak of his reputation, he was approached by Norman Macleod. A well-known Scottish Presbyterian pastor and chaplain to Queen Victoria, Macleod was a personal friend of Trollope's and a fellow member of the Garrick Club. However, he wrote to Trollope in his capacity as the editor of the sixpenny monthly Good Words. Good Words, established in 1860 by Scottish publisher Alexander Strahan, was directed at Evangelicals and Nonconformists, particularly of the lower middle class.
Most of Hong Xiuquan's knowledge of the scriptures came from the books known as "Good Words to Admonish the Age" written by the Chinese preacher Liang Fa, as well as a localized Bible translated into Chinese. Many Western missionaries grew jealous of Hong and his local ministry. These competing missionaries were fond of spreading defamatory rumors such as his "lack of baptism." (Hong and his cousin were in fact both baptized according to the way prescribed in the pamphlet "Good words to admonish the age").
Under Fo Guang Shan's objective to "foster talent through education" the museum has an educational curriculum which hosts educational courses that follow the Three Acts of Goodness - doing good deeds, speaking good words, thinking good thoughts.
Alexander Strahan (1833–1918) was a 19th-century publisher. His company, Alexander Strahan & Co., based at Ludgate Hill in London, published what was arguably one of the dominant periodicals in the 1860s, a monthly magazine called Good Words.
Christowell was serialized in Good Words from January to December 1881."Richard Doddridge Blackmore" entry in The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature: 1800-1900, (1999), Cambridge University Press. It was then published as a three-volume novel in 1882.
Directly evident in the Gathas is the description as the strongest, the sturdiest, the most active, the swiftest, and the most awe- inspiring of youths (Yasna 57.13), and as the figure that the poor look to for support (57.10). In the ethical goals of Zoroastrianism ("good thoughts, good words, good deeds") as expressed in Yasna 33.14, Sraosha is identified with good deeds. This changes in Zoroastrian tradition (Denkard 3.13-14), where Sraosha is identified with good words. In Yasna 33.5, the poet speaks of Sraosha as the greatest of all (decision makers) at the final renovation of the world.
He worked for Once a Week, Good Words, London Society and others; among the many books he illustrated were Pilgrim's Progress, Arabian Nights, and Watt's Diine and Floral Songs. Works by him are in the Victoria and Albert Museum, Norwich and Liverpool.
Visitors can also experience releasing sky lanterns in a virtual way. The pagoda serves as a Children's Gallery and is designed with interactive games which children can interact with. A 3D theatre allows them to learn how to practice doing good deeds, saying good words, and having good thoughts.
Outside philately, Melville was editor of the Heartsease Library, Cosy Corner, Good Words and Sunday Magazine. Melville's skill as a journalist has been partly attributed to the training he received from the press baron Sir Alfred Harmsworth, later Lord Northcliffe, founder of The Daily Mirror and The Mail.
First edition title page. Kept in the Dark is a novel by the 19th-century English novelist Anthony Trollope. One of his lesser and later works, it nonetheless has interest. It was published in eight monthly installments in Good Words in 1882, and also in book form in the same year.
In 1863, Norman Macleod wrote that the magazine had a circulation of 70,000. In the following year, it advertised itself as having a monthly circulation of 160,000, although that number is probably exaggerated. In 1906, Good Words was amalgamated with the weekly Sunday Magazine, and published in that format until 1910.
In Zoroastrianism, active participation in life through good thoughts, good words and good deeds is necessary to ensure happiness and to keep the chaos at bay. This active participation is a central element in Zoroaster's concept of free will. In the Avesta, the sacred scriptures of Zoroastrianism, fasting and mortification are forbidden.
His diploma picture was Jacobites, 1745. Pettie was a hard and rapid worker, and, in his best days, a colourist of a high order and a brilliant executant. In his early days he produced a certain amount of book illustration. His connection with Good Words began in 1861, and was continued until 1864.
Guess what, if they're my friend, I pull it out. I'm not interested in hurting people, and it's not just because of 9/11." Reflecting on his thoughts near the end of Bush's second term in 2007, Miller still had good words for Bush. "After 9/11 it was a different world.
During the years 2012–2013, both The Guardian and The Independent wrote about the Wyscout Platform spending good words in reference to the dimensions of its database,From royals to the palace boy-scout by appointment. The Independent (14 August 2013). The Guardian also praised the possibility to spot potential skilled footballers using the online platform.
S.R. Crockett's Men of the Moss Hags tells the story of the Gordons of Earlstoun. Published in 12 serial instalments in Good Words Magazine, it was subsequently published by Isbister in 1895. Alexander's brother William Gordon is the hero of the story. A sequel, Lochinvar was serialised in The Christian World Magazine and published by Methuen in 1897.
He is ready to help white gold- > diggers to drive the Indians from their country. We can drive them from us, > and we will, with rocks and bows and arrows. Good words do not last long > unless they amount to something. They do not pay for insults and dead > people. They do not protect my father’s grave.
S.R. Crockett's Men of the Moss Hags tells the story of the Gordons of Earlstoun. Published in 12 serial instalments in Good Words Magazine, it was subsequently published by Isbister in 1895. William's namesake, William Gordon, is the hero of the story. A sequel, Lochinvar was serialised in The Christian World Magazine and published by Methuen in 1897.
Liang Fa (1789–1855), also known by other names, was the second Chinese Protestant convert and the first Chinese Protestant minister and evangelist. He was ordained by Robert Morrison, the first Protestant missionary in the Qing Empire. His tract Good Words to Admonish the Age was influential on Hong Xiuquan, who went on to lead the Taiping Rebellion.
Millais was also very successful as a book illustrator, notably for the works of Anthony Trollope and the poems of Tennyson. His complex illustrations of the parables of Jesus were published in 1864. His father-in-law commissioned stained-glass windows based on them for Kinnoull parish church, Perth. He also provided illustrations for magazines such as Good Words.
He engraving extensively after Fred Walker, John Everett Millais, Frederick Sandys, Richard Doyle, Richard Ansdell, Fred Barnard, and other major illustrators, from 1860 onwards. A series of articles on Fred Walker, Charles Henry Bennett, George John Pinwell, and Fritz Eltze, which Swain wrote for Good Words (1888-89), were incorporated in Toilers in Art, edited by Henry C. Ewart (1891).
Hayford speculates that when Melville added the character Queequeg, he took Bulkington's role as Ishmael's companion, or "sleeping partner". His implied role as "truth-seeker" was given to Starbuck. Hayford offers no guess for why Melville did not remove Bulkington entirely, "beyond the humdrum one that Melville, like lesser writers, found it hard to throw away good words he had written".
United States Postage Stamps 1922-1925. This is a list of publications by Fred Melville. The list is primarily of philatelic books, however, Melville also wrote a great many articles about philately and in addition was editor of the popular journals Heartsease Library, Cosy Corner, Good Words and Sunday Magazine,"Fred Melville Biography" by Michael Goodman in Furnell, Michael., ed.
Abtin () is a character in Shahnama (national epic of Persia), who is the father of Fereydun. His name translated in English means, "The one with good thoughts, good words and good deeds". These three traits are very important characteristics in Zoroastrianism. Unlike how it is spelt, the pronunciation of the name is not "Abtin" but it is rather "Aub-teen".
Good Words was a 19th-century monthly periodical in the United Kingdom. It was established in 1860 by Scottish publisher Alexander Strahan. Its first editor was Norman Macleod. After his death in 1872, it was edited by his brother, Donald Macleod, though there is some evidence that the publishing was taken over at this time by W. Isbister & Co.Collections Princeton University.
Neill 351 The novel originally appeared in 1880 in the Evangelical serial Good Words (January- December) with 33 illustrations by John Collier.Michael Millgate, Thomas Hardy: A Biography (New York: Random House, 1982), pp. 206-7. The three-volume first edition was published in October 1880.Michael Millgate, Thomas Hardy: His Career as a Novelist (New York: Random House, 1971), p. 149.
He excelled at all the things a man could excel at. But he began to lose his health, and this alarmed all of his friends. When he got sick, friends visited his house to see him, but there was nothing they could do to save him. All they had for him was good words, and wished they could be more like him.
He was nearly fired for this incident but was saved by the Korean court who put in many good words for his valor.Letters by Song Yingchangentries in the annals of Seonjo Wu was one of the most active general in the war, being stationed in Korea for extensive periods of time during the peace talks, and also part taking in the second war of 1597-98.
In the following year, she left London, which had then grown unendurable to her. At first, she was in danger of lapsing into invalidism, but her health improved after moving to Aberdeen. She is best known by her nom de plume, Edward Garrett, in the pages of the Sunday Magazine, Good Words, The Quiver, Sunday at Home, The Girl's Own Paper, Pall Mall Gazette, and others.
Marionneau, p. 4 He received his Bachelor of Letters degree in 1848.Marionneau, p. 5; Walker, Robert, "Maxime Lalanne, a Short Study of His Life and Work", Good Words for 1884, ed. Donald McLeod (London: Isbister and Co. 1884) (hereinafter "Walker"), p. 90. Although his artistic talent was noted by his comrades and teachers, Lalanne pursued a career in law rather than in art.
Upon reading them, he concluded that the novel was unsuitable for the magazine. He emphasised to Trollope that he had found nothing morally objectionable in the story; however, he felt that the negative portrayal of all of the Evangelical characters would seriously offend his readership. Publishing Rachel Ray, he wrote, would "keep Good Words and its Editor in boiling water until either were boiled to death".
Nika is also the name of a river in north of Iran. Zoroastrianism, the ancient Iranian religion believes in the motto "Pendar Nik" (Good Thoughts), "Goftar Nik" (Good Words), and "Kerdar Nik" (Good Deeds). In the Pashto language, Nika is a male given name meaning "grandfather". In Saraiki language Nika means "little" and used to be a popular nick name for the youngest boy in the family .
Slightly different versions were published in 1884 in the Good Words magazine and in 1885 in Tiresias and Other Poems. Many of these poems were published in the privately printed Book of Helen's Tower. Some were engraved on metallic plates displayed in the tower's upper room. This includes Tennyson's and Houghton's poem, as well as the poem called To My Dear Son, written by Dufferin's mother.
Godwin's essay was publicly endorsed by Frank H. Winter, retired Curator of Rocketry at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, and by David Baker, editor of the British Interplanetary Society's magazine, Spaceflight. Leitch's proposal for rockets appeared in September 1861 in the magazine Good Words, effectively pre-dating the modern proponents of rocketry, such as Robert Hutchings Goddard and Konstantin Tsiolkovsky by more than three decades.
Macleod was the object of particular derision among Free Churchmen, as one of the "Forty Thieves": a group of ministers who had sought a compromise between the seceding Evangelical faction and the remaining Moderates, and who had refused to join the secession, pleading the importance of maintaining the Established church. This Free Church animosity was involved in the attack on Good Words: although the Record was staunchly Anglican, investigation by other journals revealed that the author of the anonymous articles was Thomas Alexander, a Presbyterian minister who had aligned himself with the Free Church during the Disruption. The controversy did no harm to the circulation of Good Words, which continued to increase. However, it prompted Macleod, who up to that time had left most of the editorial duties to Strahan, to call for the galley proofs of Rachel Ray, which he had not read.
On 25 August 2015, Karan signed with the most successful club of Albania, KF Tirana, on a one-year deal with an option to renew it for another year. During his presentation, he said that his compatriot Ivan Gvozdenović had told to him "many good words for the club" and that he has heard that Tirana is the best Albanian club in history. He was given the number 5.
At the Back of the North Wind is a children's book written by Scottish author George MacDonald. It was serialized in the children's magazine Good Words for the Young beginning in 1868 and was published in book form in 1871. It is a fantasy centered on a boy named Diamond and his adventures with the North Wind. Diamond travels together with the mysterious Lady North Wind through the nights.
Inkersley wrote in Outing vol. XXV (1894–95) on San Francisco's Olympic Club and as a sports reporter on rowing, yachting, college football and track and field. In 1897 he took part in the Mazamas expedition to Mount Rainier, writing an article on it in 1901 for Good Words, illustrated with photographs by Edward S. Curtis. He wrote in 1898 for the Strand Magazine on the Chinese opera in California.
Good Words was directed at evangelicals and nonconformists, particularly of the lower middle classes. The magazine included overtly religious material, but also fiction and non-fiction articles on general subjects, including science. The standard for content was that the devout should be able to read it on Sundays without sin. It became known as a "fireside read", which could be shared and enjoyed by adults and children, servants and masters.
It sold over a million copies and with it Hocking become one of the most popular authors in England. The novel was adapted to silent film in 1920 as Her Benny. In 1894 Hocking became editor of Family Circle and two years later helped establish Temple Magazine, a Sunday magazine in the style of Good Words. His novel The Strange Adventures of Israel Pendry (1899) is autobiographical of his Cornish youth.
Many religions have value frameworks regarding personal behavior meant to guide adherents in determining between right and wrong. These include the Triple Jems of Jainism, Judaism's Halacha, Islam's Sharia, Catholicism's Canon Law, Buddhism's Eightfold Path, and Zoroastrianism's good thoughts, good words, and good deeds concept, among others. Religion and morality are not synonymous. While it is "an almost automatic assumption." in Christianity, morality can have a secular basis.
After her marriage, Haweis continued to paint; however, she experienced many interruptions caused by social obligations and family matters. In the early stages of her career, she produced some beautiful woodcuts for Cassell's Magazine, which her husband edited, and for Good Words. Reverend H.R. Haweis was also an author. Beginning with his book for children, Pet; or Pastimes and Penalties (1874), she began illustrating and designing the covers of his books.
Her first published writing was a success. It was published in English in 1868 in the evangelical magazine Good Words as "How it all happened" and the story was soon reprinted in French and later in German. The English version was also printed as an American pamphlet. The story was issued under the pen name of Mrs Olinthus Lobb but for most of her work she used her own name.
Taboo terms are used as insults, epithets, and expletives because they damage the listener's face, which might destroy social harmony — especially if the speaker and listener are socially distant from each other. For this reason, terms of insult are socially taboo and dysphemistic. Breaking a social taboo can act as an emotional release, with the illocutionary act of expressing a feeling or attitude. Bad or taboo words for many things far outnumber the "good" words.
Familiaris, "John Halifax", Letter to The Times, 21 April 1926. Dobell illustrated Craik's 1860 collection Our Year. As a student at the Academy schools, Clarence Dobell introduced his future brother-in-law Briton Riviere to pre-Raphaelite painters.'Death of Mr. Briton Riviere: A Popular Animal Painter', The Times, 21 April 1920 He was a contributor to Good Words from its inception in 1860, and an occasional contributor to Once A Week.
That Haoma is the righteous Protector of their health, and longevity; by way of receptors in the human body that believe Haoma connects with to heal. Based on their beliefs, they declare Marijuana/Cannabis/Haoma to be "the teacher, the protector, the provider". And further, that the proper religious use promotes "Good Thoughts, Good Words, Good Deeds, none of which is harmful to the health, safety, welfare, or morals of society in general".
The Wall Street Journal. Accessed on 31 August 2016. The religion states that active and ethical participation in life through good deeds formed from good thoughts and good words is necessary to ensure happiness and to keep chaos at bay. This active participation is a central element in Zoroaster's concept of free will and Zoroastrianism as such rejects extreme forms of asceticism and monasticism but historically has allowed for moderate expressions of these concepts.
Turning to journalism, he edited the Inverness Courier and the Montrose Review. Having settled in London in 1864, he joined for a short time the Daily Telegraph. While writing for other papers, he acted as general literary adviser to the publishing firm of Alexander Strahan (later William Isbister &Co.;), and assisted in editing their periodicals: Good Words, Sunday Magazine (from 1869 to 1879), and The Contemporary Review from 1866 to 1872, while Henry Alford was editor.
Rudzitis was the head, editor, proofreader, and often translator of this publishing house. You can find many good words about Rudzitis in Helena Roerich's dairy. Under the leadership of Rudzitis, the Society published the works of the Roerichs, Living Ethics, H. P. Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine and the works of Rudzitis himself. "A scientist and a poet, such a combination is rare, but you have it, your work and your scientific nature is remarkable", – Helena Roerich wrote.
Making brooms, 2012 In 1797, the quality of brooms changed when Levi Dickenson, a farmer in Hadley, Massachusetts, made a broom for his wife, using the tassels of sorghum, a grain he was growing for the seeds. His wife spread good words around town, creating demand for Dickenson's sorghum brooms. The sorghum brooms held up well, but ultimately, like all brooms, fell apart. Dickenson subsequently invented a machine that would make better brooms, and faster than he could.
"The Tay > Bridge by A. Grothe, C.E., Manager Of The Tay Bridge Contract." from Good > Words (1878) quoted in Minutes of Evidence p. 164. – full article can be > retrieved at Despite this, on 22 September 1877, the first engine crossed the bridge, and upon its completion in early 1878 the Tay Bridge was the longest in the world. While visiting the city, Ulysses S. Grant commented that it was "a big bridge for a small city".
The Graphic (1889). The Daily Graphic (1890), The English Illustrated Magazine (1891-4), The Pall Mall Budget (1893), The Yellow Book (1894), The Daily Chronicle (1895), The New Budget (1895), The New Budget (1895), Good Words (1896), The Lady’s Pictorial (1898), The Pall Mall Gazette (1899), Black & White (1900), Strand Magazine (1903, 1910–11), Punch (c. 1920) Also The Penny Illustrated Paper, The Pall Mall Magazine, The Gentlewoman, The Ludgate Monthly, The Windsor Magazine, Pearson’s Magazine.
He worked as a journalist in London and Glasgow, where he became editor of the Glasgow Weekly Herald and later a leader-writer for the Glasgow Herald.Guy Canton, The Poems of William Canton, Harrap, 1927, pp. 5-8 In 1891 Canton moved to London, where he worked for the religious book and magazine publisher W. Isbister, later being appointed as editor of the Sunday Review and the Sunday Magazine . He also contributed articles and poems to Good Words.
Morality and religion is the relationship between religious views and morals. Many religions have value frameworks regarding personal behavior meant to guide adherents in determining between right and wrong. These include the Triple Gems of Jainism, Islam's Sharia, Catholicism's Canon Law, Buddhism's Eightfold Path, and Zoroastrianism's "good thoughts, good words, and good deeds" concept, among others. These frameworks are outlined and interpreted by various sources such as holy books, oral and written traditions, and religious leaders.
Although most of Hughes' later paintings are not well regarded, it is considered that the black and white drawings of his later career were some of his best. He illustrated several books, including Tom Brown’s Schooldays (1869), George Macdonald's At the Back of the North Wind (1871) and The Princess and the Goblin (1872) and Christina Rossetti’s Sing Song (1872) and Speaking Likenesses (1874). He also produced numerous illustrations for Norman MacLeod's monthly magazine, Good Words.
Gong Choi-King suffers harsh beating as her punishment and eventually passes away. Before passing away, she tells Sam-ho to always remember the significance of her name("Speak good words, do good deeds, show good will."). (Sam-ho literally means three goodness) She also tells her to help and work together with Kam-ling as if they are related sisters. Around the time of Choi-king's death, Dowager Concubine Cheng's son, Lee Yi (prince) encounters the six years old Sam-ho.
In 1955, Bartle, a Democrat, with no previous political experience, was asked to run for mayor of Kansas City on the Citizens' Association ticket. Although the Citizen's Association (of which Bartle had been a founder) had helped sweep the Pendergast political machine out of power in 1940, Bartle chose to run as an independent with Citizen Association support.Time (April 11, 1955); Spence, 79. Bartle even had good words to say for his millionaire opponent, Berl Berry, a Lincoln-Mercury dealer.
Born in Tehran, Shahbazi move to Germany in 1985, studying photography and design at the University of Applied Sciences and Arts in Dortmund from 1995 to 1997. From 1997 to 2000, Shahbazi attended the Zurich University of the Arts, Switzerland, specializing in photography. She currently lives and works in Zurich. Her first successful sequence Goftare Nik/Good Words of color photographs taken in Iran (published as a book in 2001 with Hatje Cantz) led to the Citibank Private Bank Photography Prize in 2002.
Andrew Wynter (1819- 12 May 1876, Chiswick) was an English physician and author. Born in Bristol, Wynter studied medicine at St George's Hospital and set up a London practice. He edited the British Medical Journal 1845-60, took a M.D. in 1853 and became a member of the College of Physicians in 1861. Wynter was a frequent contributor to periodicals, including Ainsworth's Magazine, the Cornhill Magazine, Fraser's Magazine, the Edinburgh Review, the Quarterly Review, the London Review, Good Words, and Once a Week.
"Portrait of Lacon Stockton" by George Harvey Sir George Harvey was the author of a paper on the "Colour of the Atmosphere," read before the Edinburgh Royal Society, and afterwards published with illustrations in Good Words; and in 1870 he published a small volume entitled Notes of the Early History of the Royal Scottish Academy. Selections from the Works of Sir George Harvey, PRSA, described by the Rev. AL Simpson, FSA Scot., and photographed by Thomas Annan, appeared at Edinburgh in 1869.
He was the son of a painter and decorator from Clifton Street, west Belfast. Of his seven brothers, four, George (1869–1955), Jack (1872–1926), Edwin (1877–1952) and Norman (1879–1917), were also illustrators. He was educated at the Government School of Art in Belfast, and won a scholarship to study in Kensington in 1882, where he began a lifelong friendship with the British sculptor Albert Toft. He contributed illustrations to the English Illustrated Magazine, Bits and Good Words.
Although not a Christian, she said she came to greatly appreciate the Historic Peace Churches and Catholic Worker Movement. Guzder wrote a book about the religious left titled Divine Rebels: American Christian Activists for Social Justice Raised as a Zoroastrian, Guzder told NPR that her own beliefs center on "good words, good thoughts, good deeds". Guzder also helped Shyalpa Rinpoche, a Tibetan Buddhist lama, to compile his oral teachings. She also assisted Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges research his book Death of the Liberal Class.
The encyclopedia Natural History (Pliny) claims that Zoroastrians later educated the Greeks who, starting with Pythagoras, used a similar term, philosophy, or "love of wisdom" to describe the search for ultimate truth. Zoroaster emphasized the freedom of the individual to choose right or wrong and individual responsibility for one's deeds. This personal choice to accept aša and shun druj is one's own decision and not a dictate of Ahura Mazda. For Zoroaster, by thinking good thoughts, saying good words, and doing good deeds (e.g.
The emperor liked the wine, and later asked Yan Song about it, who was quite surprised and had to confess that he knew nothing about the wine. Yan almost severed relations with Zhao Wenhua for this transgression if not for the good words by Yan's wife. In another incident, Zhao Wenhua was so drunk that he failed to bow and kneel when receiving a gift from the emperor through an eunuch. As Minister of Works, Zhao Wenhua was responsible for constructions in the Forbidden Palace.
He espoused an ethical philosophy based on the primacy of good thoughts (andiše-e-nik), good words (goftâr-e- nik), and good deeds (kerdâr-e-nik). The works of Zoroaster and Zoroastrianism had a significant influence on Greek philosophy and Roman philosophy. Several ancient Greek writers such as Eudoxus of Cnidus and Latin writers such as Pliny the Elder praised Zoroastrian philosophy as "the most famous and most useful". Plato learnt of Zoroastrian philosophy through Eudoxus and incorporated much of it into his own Platonic realism.
We've got a label now which are great and I respect them lots and have nothing but good words to say about them, but it is difficult when you change members. George obviously left, which was hard for us, but everyone has different reasons and has different things going on. Now that I’m making this decision myself I understand why George made that decision two years ago. At the time you don’t really get it, until you have the same feelings as him, which I now have.
Thomson and Tait were angered, and an undignified public exchange of correspondence took place in the pages of the Philosophical Magazine, and the rather more popular Good Words. Tait even resorted to championing Colding's cause in an attempt to undermine von Mayer. Though Tyndall again pressed von Mayer's cause in Heat: A Mode of Motion (1863) with the publication of Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe's Edinburgh Review article Thermo-Dynamics in January 1864, Joule's reputation was sealed while that of von Mayer entered a period of obscurity.
1232656 While producing black- and-white drawings for Punch, du Maurier created illustrations for several other popular periodicals: Harper's, The Graphic, The Illustrated Times, The Cornhill Magazine, and the religious periodical Good Words. Furthermore, he did illustrations for the serialisation of Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery, which is often seen as the first detective story of novel length to have appeared in English.The original edition illustrated is available at the Internet Archive: Section 1 Retrieved 1 February 2013. Once a Week, Vol.
There was much controversy for many of his lyrics. In the song "Las niñas de hoy en día son todas unas..." Porta describes women as "easy" generating much controversy. With "Cosas de la vida" Porta a new era begins trying to ingest love rap, which was criticized by those who like only Rap Hardcore but was greeted positively by good words and feelings it conveys. Porta also belonged to a rap group called "Rap Comando" which had as members a Porta, DJ Datz, h0lynaight, and Bazzel Chus.
" Not content with ruling his own college, he desired to govern the whole university. He prevented Gilbert Ironside, who "was not pliable to his humour," from holding the office of Vice-Chancellor. He "endeavoured to carry all things by a high hand; scorn'd in the least to court the Masters when he had to have anything pass'd the convocation. Severe to other colleges, blind as to his own, very partiall and with good words, and flatterers and tell-tales could get anything out of him.
Drew said he was not surprised it was his name that was called, considering he'd been in the Bottom 2 a couple of times and despite tremendous support from his hometown, Ontario does not vote like some other parts of the country do. He then later said he was happy to leave on a high note and had nothing but good words for the Top 2 finalists Mitch MacDonald and Theo Tams.Block, Sheri. "Drew Wright feels privileged just to have made it to Top 3", CTV.
In contrast, The Seattle Times film reviewer Jeff Shannon thought the film novel and praised it for returning to the simple tropes of early horror films. He enjoyed the combination of gore and humor, although Hartlaub did not find that the humor redeemed the film. Although critic Dennis Harvey found the script full of plot holes, they were no more so than in the average slasher film. He criticized the main character of Eddie as bland, but had good words for Andrew Levitas' performance as the hedonistic Chaz.
Responding to the critics accusing him of being partial, the writer has said: “If I had any doubt that I had disgraced my people that would break me. But they think that when I say two good words about some Armenian I must say three good ones about an Azerbaijani. But it’s not my business to keep that foolish balance! In my story I depict a character and his perception of reality. His mind is very fragile; he’s on the brink of insanity.”"“It is like being pregnant all your life...".
In 2009 he released Prefiero ser trovador: décimas con amor y humor () as a book + CD bundle, which was later followed in 2011 by Punto decimal: décimas para decir más, also a book + CD bundle. In 2010 he wrote a motivational book, Abracadabra: buenas palabras ("Abracadabra: Good Words", ). He also wrote Paso a paso… por el Camino de Santiago: Crónica de un peregrino ("Step by Step… Through the Road to Santiago: Chronicle of a Peregrine", 2014, ), a memoir chronicling his experience during his peregrination to the Santiago de Compostela Cathedral in Galicia, Spain.
C. A. Creffield, "Zimmern, Helen (1846–1934)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004) Retrieved 21 October 2017 Her first appearance in print was a story for Once a Week. She was soon writing for the Argosy and other magazines. A series of children's stories first published 1869–71 in Good Words for the Young was reprinted as Stories in Precious Stones (1873) and followed by another collection, Told by the Waves. A series of tales from the Edda appeared in Old Merry's Monthly in 1872 before being republished.
Hooman (also spelled Houman, Human, Whoman) - هومن is a Persian male name which means benevolent and good natured. It is featured on the Faravahar of the Zoroastrian faith. The three "Hu's" are represented by the three sections of the wings of the Faravahar. It consists of the word "Hu" which is a combination of Humata, modern-day Pendar-e or Andeesh-e Nik (Good Thoughts), Hukhta, modern-day Goftār-e Nik (Good Words), and Huvarshta, modern-day Kerdār-e Nik (Good Deeds), and the Persian word "Man" which means "Me" or "I" in Persian.
In 1874, from failing health, Duncan was obliged to seek parish help. In 1878, Mr. W. Jolly of Inverness, who had visited him the preceding year, gave an account of Duncan in Good Words, which brought him some assistance; in 1880 a public appeal was made on his behalf. He died on 9 August 1881 in his eighty-seventh year, having left the balance of the fund raised for him to furnish prizes for the encouragement of natural science, especially botany, among the school children of the Vale of Alford.
In 1836, at the age of 22, Hong returned to Guangzhou to retake the imperial examinations. While in Guangzhou, Hong heard Edwin Stevens, a foreign missionary, and his interpreter preaching about Christianity. From them, Hong received a set of pamphlets entitled "Good Words for Exhorting the Age", which were written by Liang Fa, Stevens's assistant, and contained excerpts from the Bible along with homilies and other material prepared by Liang. Supposedly, Hong only briefly looked over these pamphlets and did not pay much attention to them at the time.
Liang was an important participant in the establishment of Protestantism in China, but is most remembered for the influence of his tracts on Hong Xiuquan and his Taiping rebels, for whom Good Words to Admonish the Age became a sacred text. Liang's grave was found to be on land purchased for the expansion of Lingnan University (formerly Canton Christian College and now Sun Yat-sen University). He was re-interred in the center of the college campus on the site reserved for the college chapel. The site was dedicated 7 June 1920.
His own literary work, nearly all of which originally appeared in its pages — sermons, stories, travels, poems — was only a by-product of a busy life. By far his best work was the spontaneous and delightful Reminiscences of a Highland Parish (1867). While Good Words made his name known, and helped the cause he had so deeply at heart, his relations with the queen and the royal family strengthened yet further his position in the country. Never since Principal Carstairs had any Scottish clergyman been on such terms with his sovereign.
He reveals his condition to the band but brushes off their sympathy, wishing to make music and perform for however long he has left. The band embraces in solidarity. On the day of Live Aid, Freddie reconnects with Jim Hutton, Mary, and his family, and heeds his father's Zoroastrian maxim, "Good thoughts, good words, good deeds". Freddie and the band are in top form at Live Aid, performing "Bohemian Rhapsody", "Radio Ga Ga", "Hammer to Fall" and "We Are the Champions", and helping increase donations during the event.
Humata, Huxta, Huvarshta (Good Thoughts, Good Words, Good Deeds), the Threefold Path of Asha, is considered the core maxim of Zoroastrianism especially by modern practitioners. In Zoroastrianism, good transpires for those who do righteous deeds for its own sake, not for the search of reward. Those who do evil are said to be attacked and confused by the druj and are responsible for aligning themselves back to Asha by following this path. Faravahar (or Ferohar), one of the primary symbols of Zoroastrianism, believed to be the depiction of a Fravashi or the Khvarenah.
According to established protocol, good codewords are unambiguous words that can be easily pronounced and readily understood by those who transmit and receive voice messages by radio or telephone regardless of their native language. Traditionally, all family members' code names start with the same letter. The codenames change over time for security purposes, but are often publicly known. For security, codenames are generally picked from a list of such 'good' words, but avoiding the use of common words which could likely be intended to mean their normal definitions.
Summer days (1866) In 1859 he joined the Artists' society in Langham Chambers, and from 1860–65 achieved great success as a black and white illustrator for popular journals of the day such as Cornhill Magazine, Once a Week, Good Words, Everybody's Journal, and Leisure Hour.Walker's first published illustration was in Everybody's Journal, 14 January 1860, for a story by Edmond About called "The Round of Wrong" (Phillips, p. 11). Much of his work during this period was engraved by Joseph Swain. He was introduced to satirist and author William Thackeray, the Cornhill's editor, for whom he provided drawings (e.g.
Review of Burn, Witch, Burn from Chicago Reader Film historian William K. Everson, though critical of Night of the Eagle for its predictability, found good words for the story and Janet Blair's performance. David Pirie of Time Out magazine, while not happy with the casting of Janet Blair, acknowledged Hayers' direction "an almost Wellesian flourish" and the script being "structured with incredible tightness".Review of Night of the Eagle in the 1999 edition of Time Out Film Guide, Penguin Books, London. Author S. T. Joshi declared it particularly notable for its realistic portrayal of campus politics.
He edited in 1882 the fourth edition of Murray's Handbook for Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and Somersetshire, and published in that year a Historical Sketch of Bere Regis, Dorset. Four addresses on The Church of England delivered in Lincoln Cathedral in September 1886 were published by Venables that year. He was a major contributor to William Smith's Dictionary of the Bible, Dictionary of Christian Antiquities, and Dictionary of Christian Biography; also to the Encyclopædia Britannica, John Kitto's Biblical Encyclopædia, and the Dictionary of National Biography. He was a frequent writer in the Saturday Review, The Athenæum, The Guardian, and Good Words.
When he notices and addresses the arrival earlier, the fate of death > comes upon the other. Most farmers try to save themselves against the damage > threatening their fields in such a way by plowing and sowing the field from > outside first, because in grain cultivated in such a way no Bilsenschnitter > can break in. When threshing the grain which was cut, the Bilsenschnitter > comes, giving good words, that something in the farmstead may be borrowed > him, which must not happen. For revenge at the Bilsenschnitter, twigs of > juniper are added during threshing of the tithed grain.
"Homeward Bound", from The Voyage of the Beagle (1890) Pritchett drew illustrations for Good Words in 1881 and 1882, and made drawings for H. R. Mills's General Geography (1888) and the 1890 edition of Charles Darwin's The Voyage of the Beagle. Exhibitions of his work were repeated in London between 1884 and 1890, and he lectured on his travels. He was an enthusiastic yachtsman, and an expert on yachts and craft of all kinds. He illustrated the Badminton Library volumes on Yachting (1894) and Sea Fishing (1895), and wrote much of the text of the former.
295 Gilbert's 1865 book, The Magic Mirror (about a mirror that grants wishes), containing stories with a moral was illustrated by his multi-talented son. Gilbert also wrote histories and articles and stories for numerous periodicals (often anonymously), including Cornhill, Temple Bar, St. Paul's, the Quiver, The Contemporary Review, The Sunday Magazine, Good Things, Good Words, Strahan's Boy's and Girl's (sic) Annual and The Fortnightly Review.Plumb, p. 296 Among Gilbert's best-known, and most popular, works were his Innominato tales of the supernatural, published in various magazines, including Argosy, and finally collected in The Wizard of the Mountain (1867).
Rachel Ray is an 1863 novel by Anthony Trollope. It recounts the story of a young woman who is forced to give up her fiancé because of baseless suspicions directed toward him by the members of her community, including her sister and the pastors of the two churches attended by her sister and mother. The novel was originally commissioned for Good Words, a popular magazine directed at pious Protestant readers. However, the magazine's editor, upon reading the galley proofs, concluded that the negative portrayals of the Low church and Evangelical characters would anger and alienate much of his readership.
The name literally translates to "I have good thoughts, good deeds, and good words." Non-Persian languages do not have their own version of the name such as "men" in Mazandarani or "Mu/Mi" in Eastern Gilaki but the pronunciation may differ slightly during speech such as "men" in Mazandarani or "mən" in Gilaki instead of the Persian pronunciation "mæn". It is the antonym of "Doshman" - دشمن, which means malevolent, enemy, or fetes. The name has become more popular in Iran as several people with that name have become famous singers, writers, engineers, doctors, and the such.
She contributed poetry and fiction to periodicals that included Dickens's All the Year Round, the Churchman's Shilling Magazine, the Religious Tract Society's Girl's Own Paper, the Sunday Magazine, Good Words and The Quiver. By 1891, when she described herself in the census as a novelist, she had written around 35 novels, aimed in most cases at girls, although she also wrote some for adults. Many of them end tragically, but look forward to happiness after death. Anna Cavaye, or, The Ugly Princess tells of a dying child comforted by knowing she has brought other people together.
Nevertheless, with regard to Rockefeller Center, of which Hood was the chief designer, Rand, despite her earlier negative comments in her journals, was subsequently cited as having some good words for the RCA Building. More intriguingly, as Heynick points out, Rand is quoted in a 1943 newspaper interview as referring to Hood's McGraw-Hill Building as the most beautiful in New York, thus, apparently, seeing Hood in a different light. This, Heynick argues, was justly so. Rand's creating of the negative fictional character of Peter Keating required her to draw exclusively upon the negative aspects of Hood's career as she perceived it.
In 1493 King Henry VII transferred him from Salisbury to Winchester, a see which had been vacant over a year. During the seven years that he was bishop of Winchester Langton started a school in the precincts of the palace, where he had youths trained in grammar and music. He was a good musician himself, used to examine the scholars in person, and encourage them by good words and small rewards. Finally, a proof of his ever-increasing popularity, Langton was elected Archbishop of Canterbury on 22 January 1501, but died of the plague on the 27th, before the confirmation of the deed.
Charles Bennett contributed small illustrations to these and other magazines, although identifying them is hindered by the absence of his distinctive monogram. By 1855 he was better known and was invited to design the masthead and front page cartoon for the first issue of the Comic Times (1855). He also contributed to Diogenes (1855) and Comic News (1863-1865) as well as mainstream illustrated magazines such as The London Journal (1858), Good Words (1861), London Society (1862-1865) and Every Boy's Magazine (1864-1865). His occasional full-page illustrations (such as the page of characters from Twelfth Night) appeared in Christmas and New Year editions of The Illustrated London News.
Underneath The Asho Faravahar Is A Sign In Gujarati Letters Reflecting The Deep Impact Of Gujarati On Parsi Culture. The Sign In Gujrati Reads “Humata, Hukta, Hvarshta” Which Translate As Good Thoughts, Good Words, Good Deeds. Like Other Parsi Temples Elsewhere, This Building Also Has A Verandah Where The Worshippers Assemble For Ritual Washing Of The Exposed Body Parts Before Entering A Spacious Hall Meant For Jashan And Other Prayers. In The Heart Of The Building Are Twin Rooms, One In The Center And The Other Under The Vaulted Dome Called Qibla, Where The Sacred Fire Is Enthroned In A Steel Container ‘Afargan’ Mounted On A Platform.
Brendon Massei began touring regularly around 1993, first under his own name, then under the moniker Supperbell Roundup, before finally settling on Viking Moses in 2003. In the style of rock/soul, Viking Moses became known in 2004, thanks to Devendra Banhart's Golden Apples of the Sun compilation and good words, followed by a signing by Alan McGee (Creation Records founder, manager of Oasis and Mogwai). Viking Moses has toured with Scout Niblett, Phosphorescent, Little Wings, and The Shivers. Massei is also known for bringing musicians including Deer Tick's John McCauley, Mike Sherk of Mandarin Dynasty, Nat Baldwin of the Dirty Projectors and Jana Hunter on their first tours.
Many of Linskill's early writings, such as Tales of North Riding in 1871, published under the pseudonym "Stephen York", appeared in Good Words magazine. Three of her major novels were Between the Heather and the Northern Sea in 1884, The Haven under the Hill in 1886, and In Exchange for a Soul in 1887. Though she had moved away from Whitby early in her life, she was forced to return on her father's death, as her siblings and mother were left impoverished, requiring her for financial security. The turbulent and noisy life in Whitby posed a challenge to a writer who preferred a peaceful and solemn environment.
Plate with Tennyson's poem in the upper room of Helen's Tower Tennyson's poem as published in Good Words in 1884, illustrated with a picture of Helen's Tower Dufferin's mother, Helen, Lady Dufferin, née Sheridan, was a noted songwriter and playwright in her time. Her sister Caroline Norton also was a successful writer, and their grandfather was Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751–1816), playwright, poet and owner of London's Drury Lane theatre. To please his mother, Dufferin asked several poets to write poems about her and the tower. Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Robert Browning, Thomas Carlyle, Sir Edwin Arnold, Rudyard Kipling, Richard Garnett, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, and Lord Houghton contributed.
"There's not a good word > to be said about anyone's behavior in this whole mess", claims one > character—and certainly Mr. Kramer has few good words to say about Mayor > Koch, various prominent medical organizations, The New York Times or, for > that matter, most of the leadership of an unnamed organization apparently > patterned after the Gay Men's Health Crisis. In 2014, HBO produced a film version directed by Ryan Murphy with a screenplay by Kramer. It starred Mark Ruffalo, Matt Bomer (who won a Golden Globe Award for his performance), Taylor Kitsch, Jim Parsons, Alfred Molina, Julia Roberts, Joe Mantello, Jonathan Groff, and BD Wong.
He instituted temperance refreshment rooms, a Congregational penny savings bank, and held services specially for the poor. Despite his relatively liberal stance on some issues, he was one of many clergy who preached against Verdi's La Traviata. In a sermon just after its 1857 Scottish premiere, Macleod argued that 'no woman could hear it without a blush' In 1860 Macleod was appointed editor of the new monthly magazine Good Words, illustrated by Arthur Hughes, Francis Arthur Fraser (1846–1924), John Leighton, James Mahoney (1810–1879), Francis S. Walker, Townley Green and others. Under his control the magazine, which was mainly of a religious character, became widely popular.
From then on she was turning away work, as she was offered more commissions than she could complete. She was also published in Cassell's Magazine, The Quiver, The English Illustrated Magazine, The Queen, Pall Mall Magazine, Pearson’s Magazine, The Idler, Madame, Good Words, The Ludgate Monthly, and The Temple Magazine Hammond is regarded as a member of the Cranford School along with the C. E. Brock, H. M. Brock, Fred Pegram, F. H. Townsend and the inaugurator Hugh Thomson. The school was strictly speaking a shared style, as the individual artists had no particular relationship with each other. It was a style which celebrated a sentimental, pre-industrial notion of ‘old England’.
Indian-Asian psychology, like South African and Latin American psychology, suffers "from a lack of resources stemming from the political and economic instability of both [India and Asia]" (Lawson, 2007, p. 438). Though it is true that Indian ad Asian (especially Chinese) psychologies were initially very influenced by European and American psychology, local "social, religious, and philosophical pressures and beliefs" have since affected the psychology of the region in huge ways (Lawson, 2007, p. 439). Formal institutions both cultivated and oppressed psychology in the India-Asia region (Lawson, 2007, p. 439). Turbulent and shaky are good words to describe the political atmosphere that these regions endured, which of course was reflected in the field of psychology.
Ned and Edna start dating, and Edna is on top of the world when she learns she can return to teaching as long as she also does some weekend work as a prison guard. Fed up with Homer and Bart's attitudes towards Edna and Ned's romance, Marge shames Homer into putting in some good words about Edna with Ned. Homer takes Ned to Moe's and when he sees that Ned truly does love Edna, he actually does what Marge asked him to and praises their relationship. Unfortunately, the other barflies then make references to Edna's extensive dating history, and Ned is surprised that she has been with many of Springfield's men, including Aerosmith drummer Joey Kramer.
Their household staff and the printers they employed corrected and adapted the missionaries' message to reach the Chinese and they began to particularly frequent the prefectural and provincial examinations, where local scholars competed for the chance to rise to power in the imperial civil service. One of the native tracts, Liang's nine-part, 500-page tome called Good Words to Admonish the Age, found its way into the hands of Hong Xiuquan in the mid-1830s. Hong initially leafed through it without interest. After several failures during the examinations, however, Hong told friends and family of a dream in which he was greeted by a golden- haired, bearded man and a younger man whom he addressed as "Elder Brother".
Valkyrie and Raven, 1862 wood- engraving by Joseph Swain after Frederick Sandys, illustration to the Hrafnsmál Swain was one of the most prolific wood-engravers of the nineteenth century. His own work is not always signed, and the signature "Swain sc" must be taken to include the engraving of assistants working for his firm. In the later 19th century his wood-engravings were generally printed from electrotypes; but those done for Punch were printed from the original wood- blocks. Nearly all the illustrations in the Cornhill Magazine were engraved by Swain, and he also worked largely for other periodicals such as Once a Week, Good Words, The Argosy, and for the publications of the Religious Tract Society and the Baptist Missionary Society.
Vane was widely recognized by contemporary chroniclers as a gifted administrator and a forceful orator. Even the royalist Clarendon had good words for him, and wrote of him as follows: "He had an unusual aspect, which ... made men think there was something in him of the extraordinary; and his whole life made good that imagination." Also, Clarendon credited Vane with having possessed "extraordinary parts, a pleasant wit, a great understanding, a temper not to be moved", and in debate "a quick conception and a very sharp and weighty expression". The 1662 biography The Life and Death of Sir Henry Vane the Younger by Vane's chaplain George Sikes included John Milton's "Sonnet 17", written in 1652 in praise of Vane, and presented to Vane that year.
The school takes its name from the town of Ojai's original name of Nordhoff. The town, in turn, was named in honor of the author Charles Nordhoff who wrote the book "California for Health, Pleasure and Residence", published in June 1872. Early settlers of European ancestry were said to have been impressed with the book enough to move to and settle the area, eventually naming the town after the author. The following statement was included in an obituary written just after his death, which occurred in San Francisco on July 14, 1901: :The town of Nordhoff was named for Charles Nordhoff, in appreciation of the good words spoken of the Ojai Valley as a health resort, both as a writer and in personal talks with friends.
In April 1863, however, the Calvinist Evangelical Anglican weekly Record launched a six-article series attacking Macleod and Good Words. It accused Macleod of attempting to reconcile God and Mammon, labelled Trollope "this year's chief sensation writer", and of his writing, declared, "In some of these trashy tales the most ungodly sentiments are uttered and left to work their evil effects upon the young mind". Trollope was probably an incidental target of the Record's attack, which was directed principally at Macleod. The Disruption of 1843, in which nearly half of the clergy and laity of the Church of Scotland had left that body to form the Free Church of Scotland, had created lasting enmity between the members of the two churches.
On November 20, he had Morrison baptize his son Jinde ("Tsin-tih"). A month later, Morrison appointed him as a lay evangelist for the London Missionary Society and in 1827 ordained him as a full minister, the first native Chinese to do so. He preached at hospitals and chapels and, after writing his own tracts, thought to distribute Christian literature to the scholars gathered for the prefectural and provincial imperial exams. He printed 7,000 or 70,000 tracts in a single year and personally distributed them to the thousands who came for the tests in Guangzhou and in the prefectural seats of Guangdong.. It was at one such session that Hong Xiuquan first encountered Liang's work Good Words to Admonish the Age.
He added "On the other hand, we do not mean to deny that such intelligence may act according to law (that is to say, on a preconceived and definite plan)". The scientist Sir David Brewster (1781-1868), a member of the Free Church of Scotland, wrote an article called "The Facts and Fancies of Mr. Darwin" (1862) in which he rejected many Darwinian ideas, such as those concerning vestigial organs or questioning God's perfection in his work. Brewster concluded that Darwin's book contained both "much valuable knowledge and much wild speculation", although accepting that "every part of the human frame had been fashioned by the Divine hand and exhibited the most marvellous and beneficent adaptions for the use of men".Good Words (1862), Volume 3. p. 170.
Examples include attacks in spam filtering, where spam messages are obfuscated through the misspelling of “bad” words or the insertion of “goodwords; attacks in computer security, such as obfuscating malware code within network packets or to mislead signature detection; attacks in biometric recognition where fake biometric traits may be exploited to impersonate a legitimate user; or to compromise users' template galleries that adapt to updated traits over time. Researchers showed that by changing only one-pixel it was possible to fool deep learning algorithms. Others 3-D printed a toy turtle with a texture engineered to make Google's object detection AI classify it as a rifle regardless of the angle from which the turtle was viewed. Creating the turtle required only low-cost commercially available 3-D printing technology.
They returned to Nei Lingding on October 31. Stevens also joined Tradescant Lay on the Himmaleh on another, less successful coastal tour, despite the Huron voyage having prompted the imperial council to issue mandates to the coastal viceroys to strenuously oppose any more such expeditions. Stevens became directly affiliated with the ABCFM's work among the Chinese on 7 July 1835 or March 1836. After the Chinese convert and missionary Liang Fa began distributing tracts with Qu Ya'ang to the candidates attempting the prefectural and provincial examinations, Stevens joined Liang in missionizing at the Guangzhou testing grounds.. He is generally believed to have been the foreign missionary who gave Hong Xiuquan his copy of Liang Fa's 1832 Good Words to Admonish the Age after his second failed imperial examination in Guangzhou.
Spielmann, p. 368 He advocated the principles of Mill and Jeremy Bentham. One of his best-known essays was an 1857 piece called "The City of Unlimited Paper", which became famous during the monetary panic of 1857. In the 1860s he was on the staff of Good Words under Norman Macleod as editor. Hollingshead wrote a number of books from the 1850s into the 1860s, including On the canal: a narrative of a voyage from London to Birmingham (1858); Under Bow Bells (1860, a collection of some of his essays), Rubbing the Gilt Off (a collection of his early political essays (1860) Odd Journeys (1860, a collection of travels), Ways of Life (1861, a volume of humorous papers), Ragged London (1861, a collection of his reports for the Morning Post), and Underground London (1862).
However, an Azeri presentation on the history of Baku, which calls the shrine a "Hindu temple", identifies the trident as a Zoroastrian symbol of "good thoughts, good words and good deeds"., even though the trident symbol is not associated with Zoroastrianism One early European commentator, Jonas Hanway, bucketed Zoroastrians, Sikhs, and Hindus together with respect to their religious beliefs: "These opinions, with a few alterations, are still maintained by some of the posterity of the ancient Indians and Persians, who are called Gebers or Gaurs, and are very zealous in preserving the religion of their ancestors; particularly in regard to their veneration for the element of fire." Geber is a Persian term for Zoroastrians, while Gaurs are a priestly Hindu caste. A later scholar, A. V. Williams Jackson, drew a distinction between the two groups.
Wragge needed experience in weather reading so he set up two weather stations weather station in North Staffordshire in 1879 at Oakamoor railway station for low level readings, and a high level station at Beacon Stoop in the Weaver Hills in North Staffs, not far from Parkhouse farm, Farley, where he moved after a time at Farley Cottage. These readings were made continually until 1883 and the results were sent to him at Ben Nevis when he was in Scotland. He became a prolific writer and was a weekly contributor in the Cheadle Herald newspaper from 1879 to 1885 and Good Words and the Midland Naturalist, who supported his work. He became a firm friend of W.H.Goss the porcelain manufacturer in Stoke-on-Trent, a fellow member of the North Staffordshire Naturalist and Archeological Field Club.
This view was contested. Loyola and Jesuitism in its Rudiments (London, 1849; several editions) and Wesley and Methodism (London, 1851; 1863, 1865, and New York, 1852) were followed by a popular work on the Christian argument, The Restoration of Belief (London, 1855,; several American editions), an anonymous publication. Logic in Theology and Ultimate Civilisation were volumes of essays reprinted in part from the Eclectic Review during 1859 and 1860, and were followed in turn by The Spirit of Hebrew Poetry (London, 1861; numerous editions), a volume of lectures, originally delivered at Edinburgh. After Considerations on the Pentateuch (London, 1863; two editions), in which he opposed the conclusions of John William Colenso, and a number of short memoirs for the Imperial Dictionary of Biography, his last work was Personal Recollections (London, 1864), a series of papers, in part autobiographical, which had appeared in Good Words.
In The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story, author and literary critic Frank O'Connor, though generally an admirer of Hemingway, gives one of the most colorful and uncharitable summations of "The Short Happy Life": > Francis runs away from a lion, which is what most sensible men would do if > faced by a lion, and his wife promptly cuckolds him with the English manager > of their big-game hunting expedition. As we all know, good wives admire > nothing in a husband except his capacity to deal with lions, so we can > sympathize with the poor woman in her trouble. But next day Macomber, faced > with a buffalo, suddenly becomes a man of superb courage, and his wife, > recognizing that[...] for the future she must be a virtuous wife, blows his > head off. [...] To say that the psychology of this story is childish would > be to waste good words.
Music of Prince of Qin Breaking up the Enemy's Front () is a palace music and dance of Tang Dynasty period. It was for banquets at first, but later was used to worship. According to Good Words of Sui and Tang (《隋唐嘉话》), Old Book of Tang, Treatise of Music (《旧唐书·音乐志》) and Extensive Records of the Taiping Era (《太平广记》), in 620, the Prince of Qin Li Shimin defeated the army of the rebellion commander Liu Wuzhou, the privates of Hedong (河东) danced and sang, the soldiers used the old melody which was popular among the Tang army to fill the new lyric, that is the embryonic form of Music of King Qin Breaking up the Enemy's Front. In early 627, Tang Taizong called Wei Zheng to write seven lyrics, Lü Cai to compose the music, formulated the music officially.
The Muslim Brotherhood is a Sunni Islamist organization created in Egypt in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna. BBC stated that: > “The movement initially aimed simply to spread Islamic morals and good > words, but soon became involved in politics, particularly the fight to rid > Egypt of British colonial control and cleanse it of all Western influence. > While the Ikhwan [Brotherhood] say that they support democratic principles, > one of the group’s stated aims is to create a state ruled by Islamic law, or > Sharia. Its most famous slogan, used worldwide, is: ‘Islam is the > solution.’” One of the Brotherhood's most notable and famous theorists, Sayyid Qutb – labeled by The Washington Post as the Brotherhood's “intellectual godfather” – was widely understood to be one of the main inspirations for Osama bin Laden. Qutb's famous book, “Milestones”, became a “classic manifesto of the terrorist wing of Islamic fundamentalism”, according to The New York Times'.
In February 1545, George sent a letter to Henry VIII, to be forwarded by his English contact Ralph Eure, (who was killed at the battle of Ancrum Moor). George wrote that the war was losing Henry's support in Scotland and offered advice; > "the Scots are informed that you would make gentlemen no better than > shepherds, and by reason of the extreme war that uses killing women and > young children and Scots prisoners that come forth of England, gentlemen say > that Your Majesty will have a plane conquest of this realm, and that you > will kill men women and children. This bruit (rumour) puts a great fear in > the peoples's hearts and turns their hearts clearly from you: but gentle > handling and good words will turn the favour of the people which may be a > great help to Your Majesty's affairs."State Papers Henry VIII, vol.
For they … by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple," and Matthew 18:10–18, which recounts the parable of the Good Shepherd, and provides the procedure to follow in dealing with those who err: > "… if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault > between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy > brother. But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, > that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established. > And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he > shall neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and > a publican. Verily I say unto you, whatever ye shall bind on earth shall be > bound in heaven; and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in > heaven.
The Fifth Hamlet (Wucun, 五村) of the Triple Mountain (Sanshan, 三山) Township of Yingde was the home base of bandits headed by Ou Yang (欧阳), who established his reign ruthlessly by executing those who are suspected of being sympathetic of communists. Additionally, the hamlet chief was punished as well, fined heavily in terms of rice that totaled 1,200 kg. However, such brutal acts only alienated him and his fellow bandits from the local population, with many of them fleeing their homes to escape the bandits. Despite the initial fear and reluctance to talk to the communists when the communist 2nd Company of the 394th Regiment of the 132nd Division first entered the hamlet in September 1950, the local populace was soon won over by the communists, nine of villagers joined the communist forces, while those who fled their homes also returned, after hearing the good words about communists from those who stayed behind and met the communists.
In the fifth reading (, aliyah), Jacob foretold that raiders would raid Gad, but he would raid on their heels.. The eighth open portion (, petuchah) ends here. In the continuation of the reading (, aliyah), Jacob foretold that Asher's bread would be the richest, and he would yield royal dainties.. The ninth open portion (, petuchah) ends here. As the reading (, aliyah) continues, Jacob called Naphtali a hind let loose, and he would give good words.. The tenth open portion (, petuchah) ends here. In the continuation of the reading (, aliyah), Jacob called Joseph a fruitful vine by a fountain whose branches ran over the wall, archers shot at him, but his bow remained firm; Jacob blessed him with blessings of heaven above and the deep below, blessings of the breasts and womb, and mighty blessings on the head of the prince among his brethren.. The fifth reading (, aliyah) and the eleventh open portion (, petuchah) end here.
This was an obvious usurpation of Zoroastrian dualism, a sacrilege against the moral preeminence of Ahura Mazda. The pessimism evident in fatalistic Zurvanism existed in stark contradiction to the positive moral force of Mazdaism, and was a direct violation of one of Zoroaster's great contributions to religious philosophy: his uncompromising doctrine of free will. In Yasna 30.2 and 45.9, Ahura Mazda "has left to men's wills" to choose between doing good and doing evil. By leaving destiny in the hands of fate (an omnipotent deity), the cult of Zurvan distanced itself from the most sacred of Zoroastrian tenets: that of the efficacy of good thoughts, good words and good deeds. That the Zurvanite view of creation was an apostasy even for medieval Zoroastrians is apparent from the 10th century Denkard, which in a commentary on Yasna 30.3–5 turns what the Zurvanites considered the words of the prophet into Zoroaster recalling "a proclamation of the Demon of Envy to mankind that Ohrmuzd and Ahriman were two in one womb" (Denkard 9.30.4).

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