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110 Sentences With "hooted"

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

As models pranced down the runway, Jones hooted and hollered.
Other delegates hooted and clapped to drown out her protest.
Above, a woman applauded and hooted from her wrought-iron balcony.
The Phillies fans roared approval; Mets fans in attendance hooted loudly.
During the ride, some of the other chimps hooted, restless and unsettled.
"Damn, you dry-snitched on your boy," someone hooted after the guards left.
"Dear BBC—after Collateral, please stop funding David Hare," hooted a Telegraph headline.
In the evening, vast construction trucks loaded with students drove and hooted through Yerevan.
In the morning, to onlookers' astonishment the computer raucously hooted out the National Anthem.
They hooted like wrestling fans in March throughout a Republican primary debate in Detroit.
Fighting back tears as the crowd yelled, hooted and booed, Williams pleaded her case.
Young men threw firecrackers; cars hooted their horns as they moved slowly through the revelry.
When one referred to the "gentleman in the White House," the otherwise decorous group hooted.
When Debbie Reynolds won the SAG Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015, Meryl Streep hooted her support.
In several Barcelona districts, people banged on balconies railings and dumpsters while passing cars hooted noisily.
"What a shithole!" hooted one of the lads on the train as it pulled into Boston.
" The crowd cheered, they hooted, they left saying things like "he was great" and "I'm in.
A few independent-minded souls averred the incident seemed unclear but were ignored or hooted down.
Nathan and the Zydeco Cha-Chas, who hooted and clattered through bayou rockers and two-steps.
Thousands of protesters waved flags and illuminated mobile phones in the darkness and drivers hooted car horns.
After some back and forth she relented and the president kissed her as the audience hooted their approval.
Residents in the western city of Kisumu, where Odinga has strong backing, cheered and motorcycle drivers hooted their horns.
They hooted and hollered during her speech, as she decried the U.S. "military industrial complex" and its "amoral" economy.
Backstage after his turn on the ramp, the skateboarder Jordan Zoscak hooted and high-fived Dean Mendez, another athlete.
" One of the hosts at the blackjack table hooted with derisive laughter, yelling at them, "You ain't got no guns!
It crashed, he hooted in giggles, because the villagers didn't have enough material to send it up into the air.
The women were hooted and jeered at and roughed up by the police, prompting congressional hearings and generating public sympathy.
Boîte New York night owls have hooted for years that the wildest, weirdest after-dark scenes have flourished somewhere else.
Then one of the older ones hooted, a rising tone that sounded not quite human, but not quite animal either. Ooooooooop!
As a gospel choir sang "Sea of Love," Ms. Levitt did stutter steps to and fro, as the guests hooted their approval.
As he drove out of the building, he hooted and called over reporters who had been waiting for him at a different gate.
Once or twice, while leading a cheer, a speaker said, "Forward with Mug ...," only to stop himself as the audience hooted and laughed.
"Nobody will be able to stop the sustainability revolution," Mr. Gore, wearing a blue sweater, said afterward from the stage, as the crowd hooted.
Each time the one climbing made a hard move, the crowd hooted and cheered, and the others could only guess at what had occurred.
They hooted and hollered as the moon slowly worked its way across the sun — a sight that, with glasses, was visible through the clouds.
A 2016 study suggested that instead of roaring, the T. rex probably cooed, hooted, and made deep-throated booming sounds like the modern-day emu.
Zhou Bao laughed and hooted himself, though not quite as fluently as Ta Shu, who had practiced a lot during his hours at the Beijing Zoo.
In Washington, for the White House Correspondents dinner, Obama lacerated him as payback for his birther crusade, and the DC in crowd hooted at his humiliation.
A 2016 study suggested that the T. rex probably didn't roar, but most likely cooed, hooted, and made deep-throated booming sounds like the modern-day emu.
Next to a pool in the courtyard, a crush of people hooted at drag queens performing under spotlights in a benefit for the victims of the Pulse shooting.
The very fact of his position and his persistence makes opinions that would have been hooted out of the room a few decades ago look respectable in many eyes.
But the Italian section hooted and clapped, even Mario Boselli, the aged former president of the Camera della Moda, the Milan shows' organizing body, as these local celebrities sauntered by.
As the sanctuary staff began to open the truck and move the chimps' cages inside the facility, the occupants hooted and screamed, anxious and uncertain about what was going on.
Even a recent suggestion to reintroduce women-only carriages on London's Underground by Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the opposition in Britain, was hooted down by some of his own supporters.
As the outcome of the vote became clear, deputies in the lower house of Congress hooted, pumped their fists and hoisted onto their shoulders the man who had cast the pivotal vote.
Hours earlier they booed ousted DNC chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz off a stage, and then, to the surprise of the socialist who led their "revolution," they hooted and howled their disapproval at him.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported that, according to police, Sharp's partner was "hooted at" in a McDonald's parking lot in late February, while Sky News claimed that she'd been "honked at" in the drive-thru.
My own view, largely unchanged since the days when Mitt Romney was hooted at (including by a then pro-amnesty Donald Trump!) for mentioning "self-deportation," is that workplace enforcement is that less-cruel way.
Hundreds of Lungu's supporters, most of them young men draped in the regalia of the ruling Patriotic Front (PF), took to the streets, chanting slogans and singing, while drivers hooted their car horns in celebration.
Snapchat's new Camera desktop camera app brings AR masks to Twitch, Skype… There were plenty of other minor announcements during the conference's keynote: As CEO Emmett Shear made the announcements, audience members hooted and hollered with delight.
Henry's most notorious later public appearance was his doomed curtain call, in 1895, after the première of his play "Guy Domville," when he was cruelly led onstage by an exasperated actor-manager to be hooted by the London audience.
As they hooted derisively at their Republican colleagues on Thursday after a narrow, party-line approval of legislation to roll back the Obama-era health care law, Democrats glimpsed the mirror image of their own politically disastrous health care experience.
When Luis Camacho, another member of Madonna's troupe, dared him to French-kiss Trupin, Gauwloos all but leapt from his seat and crossed the table for a passion round of PDA, as the pop star and other dancers hooted and hollered in approval.
All of this was at play when Biden got up to deliver a speech at Friday's IBEW conference, hugged IBEW President Lonnie Stephenson, took his place at the podium, and cracked a joke: "I had permission to hug Lonnie," he told the crowd, which hooted with laughter and applauded.
This year, the league outdid itself by holding the event outdoors for the first time, in a park in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, where more than 70,000 people drank beer, rubbed elbows with fans of rival teams and hooted and hollered as the names of the first 32 players chosen were announced.
The polls, the "analytics," remained in Clinton's favor, yet Obama, with the unique vantage point of being the first African-American President, had watched as, night after night, immense crowds cheered and hooted for a demagogue who had launched a business career with blacks-need-not-apply housing developments in Queens and a political career with a racist conspiracy theory known as birtherism.
The county jail and courthouse lay at the bottom of a hill on Court Street, and near the top of the hill, where Dubuque Street intersected, sometimes the relatives or friends—girlfriends, mostly, drunken girlfriends—of inmates came and stood, and waved and hooted, because we could get a pitiful glimpse of that particular spot from the cell block's southeast corner, through the very last window.
She remembered that high school trip, hiding in the bathroom and running the shower water while Jared and his buddies hooted over the women's bodies that writhed and crashed into one another like F1 cars on the hotel big screen, loudly asking Sam how her masturbation was going, and then the teacher demanding an explanation for the hundreds of dollars of room charges in front of the assembled class, as she blushed and Jared beamed.
As the scene plays out, Kaelin is reveling in near-disbelief over his seeming good fortune — both personally and professionally, without noting that the uptick sprang from the death of once roommate Nicole Brown — when he's hooted and whooped at admiringly by a bevy of hotties driving by who recognize him from TV. But he barely has a moment to enjoy the attention when another passerby threateningly condemns him for his association with Simpson, who in the pre-trail, post-Bronco chase days appeared perhaps at the most guilty in the public's eyes.
When he shinnied up to remove the banner, some in the crowd hooted catcalls.
In Italy, males hooted more emphatically when the female was in the vicinity.Galeotti, P. (1998). Correlates of hoot rate and structure in male Tawny Owls Strix aluco: implications for male rivalry and female mate choice. Journal of Avian Biology, 29, 25-32.
The messengers refused to hear an explanation about the Broadman Bible Commentary from the head of the Sunday School Board. Messengers actually booed ("hooted and hollered at...") Herschel H. Hobbs, the respected elder statesman and former president of the SBC, when he urged restraint.
The only person who doesn't laugh at him is Yefim. They become close friends. One day they see the Fire-Fairy again, and again the eagle-owl scares her away. Fedyunka is convinced that the Fairy would have shown them the way to gold if the owl had not hooted.
Territorial Governor John C. Frémont, who had been the first Republican presidential candidate in 1856, was largely an absentee appointee. But in February 1881 he suggested to the territorial legislature that they fund a state militia to ride against the outlaws and stop the rustling. The legislators hooted down his plan.
On May 3, 1917, Shiplacoff introduced a resolution to request Woodrow Wilson to reconsider his appointment of Elihu Root as head of the United States Commission to Russia. He was "hooted down by the members of the Assembly" and a motion was then introduced and "uproariously carried" that no mention of the resolution be made in the official journal.
Malcolm was what would later be known as a Loyalist, a supporter of royal authority. A Bostonian, he worked for the British customs service, and pursued his duties with a zeal that made him unpopular. Commoners often "hooted" at Malcolm in the streets, and sailors in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, tarred and feathered him in November 1773.Young, 47.
He disabled the building's elevator, and had his remaining men barricade themselves at the top of the stairs with orders to shoot any intruders on sight. The sheriff went outside and tried to talk the crowd into going home, but to no avail. According to an account by Scott Ellsworth, the sheriff was "hooted down". About 8:20 p.m.
They were satisfied that all level crossing safety measures were in place at the time of the accident. According to one official, the train driver "even hooted to let the [truck] driver know that he was approaching". The South African cabinet sent its condolences to the families of the victims. Additionally, senior government officials visited them to offer their support.
Blue plaque commemorating Jesty's pioneering work at Upbury Farm at Yetminster. Jesty's experiment was met with hostility by his neighbours. He was labelled inhuman, and was "hooted at, reviled and pelted whenever he attended markets in the neighbourhood'". The introduction of an animal disease into a human body was thought disgusting and some even "feared their metamorphosis into horned beasts".
The Whigs found Nelson acceptable because, although he was a Democrat, he had a reputation as a careful and uncontroversial jurist. The Senate confirmed Nelson's appointment on February 14, 1845, after just ten days. Samuel Nelson was the only Supreme Court Justice to be appointed by President Tyler.Finkelman, (1994), "Hooted History": History, 19: 83–102. 10.1111/j.1540-5818.1994.tb00022.
""News Notes". Sporting Life, June 7, 1902, p. 17. He was released from the Senators because of his drinking habits and for "attempting to disorganize the team," and he then signed with the Milwaukee Brewers later that month. In his first start for Milwaukee, McMackin was "hooted unmercifully by the 4,000 spectators, who, by their jeering, drove him to the bench.
"Football Row in Havana; Florida University Students Hooted for Breaking Up Game," The New York Times, p. S1 (December 29, 1912). Retrieved July 31, 2010. A trial was scheduled and Pyle was released on bail that evening, at which point he and the Gators quickly boarded a steamship for Tampa, an escape which caused the coach to be branded a "fugitive from justice" by Cuban authorities.
Early public performances were not, however, without incident: during one performance "the curtain had to be brought down after Lucky's monologue as twenty, well-dressed, but disgruntled spectators whistled and hooted derisively ... One of the protesters [even] wrote a vituperative letter dated 2 February 1953 to Le Monde."Knowlson, James, Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett (London: Bloomsbury, 1996), pp. 387, 778 n.
Thirty-nine letters from Fisk to Mansfield were published in the New York Herald one week after Jim Fisk's death. They contained no insight into Fisk's business dealings, just evidence of his love for Mansfield and his jealousy of Stokes. Mansfield sued Fisk's widow for $200,000 that she claimed Fisk owed her, but she lost the suit. Mansfield went to Boston, where crowds followed her and hooted her in the streets.
"Football Row in Havana; Florida University Students Hooted for Breaking Up Game", The New York Times, p. S1 (December 29, 1912). Retrieved July 31, 2010. A trial was scheduled and Pyle was released on bail, at which point he, the team, and the Gators' entire traveling party quickly boarded a steamship for Tampa, an escape which caused the coach to be branded a "fugitive from justice" by Cuban authorities.
As a hard-line Loyalist, Malcolm often faced abuse and provocation from Boston's Patriots, the critics of British authority. People often "hooted" at him in the streets, but Governor Thomas Hutchinson urged him not to respond. A confrontation with Patriot shoemaker George Hewes thrust Malcolm into the spotlight. On January 25, 1774, according to the account in the Massachusetts Gazette, Hewes saw Malcolm threatening to strike a boy with his cane.
The third major protest under the slogan of Grand National Revolt occurred on Bulgaria's Independence Day. Thousands gathered at the Largo after 17:00 to demand the government's resignation. Chairman of the National Assembly Tsveta Karayancheva was met by protesters in Veliko Tarnovo where she delivered a speech on account of Independence Day. Protesters hooted and shouted "resign" throughout her whole speech, forcing her to interrupt it on one occasion.
Chitrasena was breaking new ground and there were instances of him being actually hooted off the stage. Not belonging to the traditional dancing 'parampara' it took him years of hard work to be recognised as an artiste in his own right. Even the traditional dancers who were the proud custodians of an ancient heritage going back over 3,000 years, looked on Chitrasena with derision. There were no proper theatre facilities.
This precaution brought back a crowd just going to quarters. Just then a prisoner broke a gate chain with an iron bar and a number of the prisoners pressed through to the prison market square. After attempts at persuasion, Shortland ordered a charge which drove some of the prisoners in. Those near the gate, however, hooted at and taunted the soldiery, who fired a volley over their heads.
Though the envoy and his followers were hooted and mishandled in the city, Sultan Tuman bay II was inclined to fall in with the Selim I's demand; but his infatuated emirs overcame his better judgment, and the Ottoman messengers were put to death. Tidings of disaster now followed rapidly on one another. Terror and dismay pervaded Cairo. The treachery of Khayr Baig and many other emirs made the prospect all the darker.
If opa (a common owl) perched in a barn or on trees near the house and hooted, its call was a foreboding of death among the near relatives of the residents. Biskinik, the sapsucker, was known as the newsbird. If he landed on a tree in a family's yard early in the morning, some "hasty" news would come before noon. If he perched there late at night, the news would come before morning.
He has not only filed Wolfe's teeth but stuck his tail between his legs," and called the film "a calamity of miscasting and commercial concessions". In Rolling Stone, Peter Travers wrote, "On film, Bonfire achieves a consistency of ineptitude rare even in this era of over- inflated cinematic air bags." Gene Siskel, in The Chicago Tribune, wrote "preview audiences have hooted the film's revisionist ending, which concludes with a sermon. I didn't hoot because I was too sad.
The one thing that stands out to me is that we scored in the first two minutes. I had thrown a flat pass to our blocking back on a fake for a 60-yard play to about their four-yard line. Ace Gutowsky punched it over for the score and I kicked the extra point. If we celebrated when we made a touchdown like the way they do today we would have been hooted off the field.
Wickwire (1980), p. 16 He attended manoeuvres along with the Duke of York where they encountered his old opponent Lafayette.Duffy, p. 279–280 In October 1785, Cornwallis wrote dismissively of Prussian military manoeuvres while in Hanover, writing that: Their manoeuvres were such as the worst General in England would be hooted at for practising; two lines coming up within six yards of one another, and firing in one another's faces till they had no ammunition left: nothing could be more ridiculous.
Charles Cornwallis, an experienced "American" officer who witnessed the same maneuvers in Prussia, wrote disparagingly; "their maneuvers were such as the worst general in England would be hooted at for practicing; two lines coming up within six yards of one another and firing until they had no ammunition left, nothing could be more ridiculous". The failure to formally absorb the tactical lessons of the American War of Independence contributed to the early difficulties experienced by the British army during the French Revolutionary Wars.
He quotes extensively from Keats's "The Eve of St. Agnes", after which he offers for comparison some of Gifford's own poetry, "improverished lines" written "in a low, mechanic vein",Hazlitt 1930, vol. 11, p. 122. stating that the reader might easily judge which was superior, and lamenting that it was only for his low birth and his political associations that Keats with "his fine talents and wounded sensibilities" was "hooted out of the world" by Gifford or someone writing under his editorship.Hazlitt 1930, vol.
Antonya English, "100 things about 100 years of Gator football ", St. Petersburg Times (August 27, 2006). Retrieved March 1, 2010. During the first quarter of the second game Pyle and his team left, alleging that the Cuban team persisted in playing by the old rules, and the coach was arrested for violating a Cuban law prohibiting a game's suspension after money was charged."Football Row in Havana; Florida University Students Hooted for Breaking Up Game", The New York Times, p. S1 (December 29, 1912).
While much of the show is directed toward radio comedy, a portion is usually devoted to some more sentimental and sometimes dark stories put together by Keillor and others. The program occasionally also features political satire. At the beginning of the June 5, 2004, show (broadcast from Meadowbrook Musical Arts Center in Gilford, New Hampshire), Keillor announced that former U.S. President Ronald Reagan had died. A member of the audience hooted and cheered loudly, but Keillor, a staunch Democrat, gave the Republican Reagan a warm tribute in the form of a gospel song.
In July 1577 he and other students of law formed a community in the town of Douay and resided together in a rented house. This establishment was soon broken up by the troubles with local Calvinists. Ely was hooted as a traitor in the streets of Douay, and the members of his community and of the English college were subjected to frequent domiciliary visits; which satisfied the municipal authorities but not the populace. In consequence William Allen found it necessary to move the college from Douay to Rheims in 1578.
According to an Indian Express report Rashtriya Janata Dal government was selective in visiting the place of massacre.The leaders frequently visited the places were Dalits were killed but gave less importance to the places were "upper caste" were the victim.During "Afsar massacre", Lalu Prasad condemned the incident but avoided visiting the site as during his earlier visits at "Senari" and other places were "upper castes" were killed, he was hooted by the kinsmen of the victims. Meanwhile, the "Mianpur" was the last big massacre perpetrated by Ranvir Sena after which it went into dormancy.
As a result, they had no time to avoid the van, crashed and spun out of control into the other lanes. Others took evasive action by driving onto the hard shoulder and up the sides of the cutting. These were followed by articulated lorries, one of which jack-knifed sideways across all three lanes of the motorway. One driver—Mr Alan Bateman—managed to free himself from his car and ran back down the central reservation to warn others, but was ignored and was even hooted by some drivers as they continued towards the crash.
"Ustad Amir Khan", from "Great Masters of Hindustani Music" by Susheela Misra Retrieved 20 August 2018 Amir Khan moved to Bombay in 1934, and there he gave a few concerts and cut about half a dozen 78-rpm records. These initial performances were not well received. Following his father's advice, in 1936 he joined the services of Maharaj Chakradhar Singh of Raigadh Sansthan in Madhya Pradesh. He performed at a music conference in Mirzapur on behalf of the Raja, with many illustrious musicians present, but he was hooted off the stage after only 15 minutes or so.
Santley took on three new roles: Papageno in Mozart's Magic Flute, Creonte in Cherubini's Médée and Pizarro in Beethoven's Fidelio (opposite Tietjens). In September there was a short touring season, in which he played Don Giovanni (with Mario) for the first time, at Manchester. He also sang Caspar in Der Freischütz in London in October. Santley then went on to appear in a season at La Scala, Milan, where Il trovatore was staged for his debut there as de Luna (he alone of all the cast was not hooted by the audienceIllustrated London News, 3 March 1866, p.
There was a five-minute delay before a replacement could be rigged and Collier executed. A newspaper report referred to the event as a "shocking scene on the scaffold" and reported that the crowd cried "Shame!" and hooted when Collier made his second appearance on the scaffold. Although Smith's final public execution was held in 1866, he carried on to perform more executions elsewhere. Smith was to hang 20 men and one woman, Sarah Westwood, at Stafford, plus a further three men at Chester, one woman at Kirkdale, two men at Shrewsbury, six men at Warwick and one man at Worcester.
As described in a film magazine, when the weavers of Thurms, Scotland, enraged by the reduction in the price of the "web," burn down a factory, Gavin (Hackathorne), the "little minister," intervenes with the constables on their behalf. His intervention is resented and he has a clash with Thomas (Oliver), riot leader and chief elder of the Kirk. The constables are hooted out of town. Lady Babbie (Compson), a supposed young gypsy woman, is suspected of having notified the police against the rioters, but when Gavin questions her, her beauty charms him and he allows her to go.
He "went once before on one of these junkets and he wants to go again," a Los Angeles Times political commentator said. Ash later announced he would not go. "The Watchman," Los Angeles Times, March 8, 1927, page A-8"The Watchman," Los Angeles Times, March 6, 1927, page 10"The Watchman," Los Angeles Times, March 9, 1927, page A-7 A "large delegation of his constituents . . . hooted and jeered" at Ash during a City Council meeting to protest the paving of Avenue 57 from Highgate Avenue to York Boulevard "within a few feet" of property that he owned.
One driver – Alan Bateman – freed himself from his car and ran back down the central reservation to warn approaching motorists, but was ignored or hooted by some drivers as they continued towards the crash. In a period of 19 seconds, 51 vehicles became involved in a pile-up. Car fuel exploded along with the highly combustible material being carried in one of the vans (possibly deodorant) and the resultant series of explosions closed the carriageway for four days as the charred wrecks were removed and the road surface replaced. Ten people were killed and 25 others were injured, making it one of the worst pile-ups on a motorway in Britain.
It is a historical comedy on the subject of the Portuguese Revolution of 1640. This play was construed as casting reflections on the first consul Napoleon, who had hitherto been a firm friend of the avowed republican Lemercier. His extreme freedom of speech finally offended Napoleon, and the quarrel proved disastrous to Lemercier's fortune for the time. In 1803, he earned a severe disappointment on the première of his tragedy Isule et Orovèse which was widely ridiculed and hooted by the public; consequently, at the beginning of the third act Lemercier withdrew his manuscript. He published his text with annoted “hootings” in order to pay deference to his public.
Enquiries by justice or numerous journalists are often made about Balkany's city management. But Balkany and his wife always react by claiming that they are targeted. "Je me demande s'il n'y a pas une volonté de nuire...", interview by Jean-Pierre Thiollet, France Soir, 2 July 2009 Balkany made international news on 17 July 2012, just days before the vote on a new national sexual harassment bill, when male lawmakers in the National Assembly including Balkany hooted and made catcalls as Housing Minister Cécile Duflot, who was wearing a floral dress and speaking about an architecture project. "We were just admiring her," Patrick Balkany, a conservative legislator, told Le Figaro.
The association between the owl and the goddess continued through Minerva in Roman mythology, although the latter sometimes simply adopts it as a sacred or favorite bird. For example, in Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Cornix the crow complains that her spot as the goddess' sacred bird is occupied by the owl, which in that particular story turns out to be Nyctimene, a cursed daughter of Epopeus, king of Lesbos. As for ancient Roman folklore, owls were considered harbingers of death if they hooted while perched on a roof, and placing one of its feathers near someone sleeping could prompt him or her to speak and reveal their secrets.
While playing major league baseball, Jones became known as "Jumping Jack" Jones, and was considered "the twirling marvel of his time." The nickname was based on his distinctive pitching delivery which involved "a leap skywards to give further impetus to the ball." On August 20, 1883, The Sporting News described the reaction to his delivery during a game in Cleveland: > He is a tall, good-looking, finely-built fellow, a thorough gentleman and > all that, but when he wants to add pace to his ball he jumps fully two feet > with every delivery. It is a very funny act, and last week, in Cleveland, as > he jumped the crowd hooted.
When the governor entered rue Notre-Dame toward 14:30 pm, a crowd of protesters threw rocks and eggs and other projectiles against his carriage and the armed escort protecting him. He was hooted at by some, applauded by others along the way. The representatives, also protected by an armed escort, arrived at the meeting with the governor in the Bonsecours Market by way of the ruelle Saint-Claude. After the ceremony for the presentation of the address, the governor and his escort returned to Monklands by taking rue St-Denis in order to avoid conflict with the crowd still demonstrating against his presence.
Indeed, it notable sheer further confuses the matter. The Niagara’s high topsides compare to contemporary designs but its coach house hints at the traditional shapes and trim of older designs." A review in Cruising World written by Jayne Finn in 2006, stated, "Traditional looks combined with modern features draw frequent compliments for the Niagara 35 ... Under way, the boat is stable and stiff, and we've had the rail of our Niagara 35, Phantasia II, in the water only once, when beating down Lake Huron in 20 knots of wind. On that same trip we hooted and hollered downwind at over 8 knots on a day on which virtually no one else was out.
Shortly after that incident Sheehy Skeffington was seen climbing up onto the steps of Nelson's Pillar on Sackville Street, and haranguing a crowd of inner-city paupers to stop looting shops. He was hooted and jeered, and his next move was then to cross the street, enter the GPO, and demand to speak to James Connolly, one of the principal leaders of the insurrection, who was also a labour leader and sympathetic to Sheehy Skeffington's socialism. Connolly sent out some armed men to quell the looting. The men climbed an overturned tramcar to berate the looters, and even fired shots over the looters' heads.Max Caulfield, The Easter Rebellion: The outstanding narrative history of the 1916 Rising, Kindle edition, at location 2427 of 6699 (accessed 10 April 2016).
Inwood returned to a hero's welcome in Broken Hill in October 1918 but at an event organised in his honour gave a controversial public speech. He claimed he had "been stoned by mongrels at the train", when he had departed to fight and with his return "those mongrels were the first to shake me by the hand". Newly enlisted soldiers had been hooted and jeered at by militant socialists in Broken Hill on their departure, but there is no evidence stones were thrown. Inwood went on to assert that, "If the boys stick together like they did in France there will be no Bolshevikism in this town... I would like to be at one end of the street with a machine-gun and have them at the other end".
Chocquet was born in Lille in a wealthy family of silk millers. At a very young age, he devoted all his resources to the purchase of works of art: paintings (including those of Eugène Delacroix, Gustave Courbet, Honoré Daumier) porcelain, and furniture. In 1875, when he attended the 1875 Impressionist sale at the Hôtel Drouot, he fell in love with the paintings hooted by the audience. He asked Auguste Renoir to paint a portrait of his wife and their little daughter Marie-Sophie who died at the age of five, based on a photograph. During this first sale of the "Société anonyme des artistes" at the Hôtel Drouot on 24 March 1875, the painters' receipts did not cover their expenses, the average price of a painting amounting to 100 fr.
In 1869 she made a similar arrangement with the Pennsylvania Hospital, where in November 1869, a group of about thirty of Woman's Med students were verbally and physically harassed by male medical students. Anna Broomall, 1871 graduate of Woman's Med and future faculty member, recalled "the [male] students rushed in pell-mell, stood up in the seats, hooted, called us names and threw spitballs, trying in vain to dislodge us." The incident sparked very public debates in the local and national press about the propriety of the presence of female medical students at clinical demonstrations but the result was the inevitability and acceptance of co-ed clinics. In addition to educating medical students and advocating for woman physicians, Dr. Preston also practiced medicine, attending at Woman's Hospital and maintaining her own private practice.
After the role of composer Kerosinov in the movie Anton Ivanovich is Angry glory literally followed on Martinsons heels – the boys in the courtyard hooted after him: Benzin-kerosene goes!. One of his latest roles was the role of Mr. Frankland in the adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle's novel The Hound of the Baskervilles. He married his first wife, Ekaterina Il'inichna Ilyina (born: 1900, St Petersburg, Russia, died: 1985, New York, USA), a beautiful actress, in 1927, whom he met during his acting studies; their daughter, Anna, later a successful artist and costume designer, was born in 1928 (died New York, 2012). Although they had never officially divorced, he married his second wife, dancer Lola Dobrohotova, who was later exiled by the government for alleged connections to "foreign elements" and died in exile; they had a son, Alexander (1939-2001).
Nothing is more confused than to be ordered into a > war to die or to be maimed for life without the faintest idea of what's > going on.Hanoi Hannah, 16 June 1967 Few if any desertions are thought to have happened because of her propaganda workThe Search for Hanoi Hannah, by Don North and the soldiers "hooted at her scare tactics". They were sometimes impressed, however, when she mentioned the correct location of their unit (when they would "give a toast to her and throw beer cans at the radio"), named US casualties and welcomed Navy ships into port with their correct arrival details and crew members' names. There were exaggerated legends of her omniscience, with rumors that she would give clues about everything from specific future North Vietnamese attacks to soldiers' girlfriends cheating on them at home.
They were exposed to public demonstrations in several occasions between Lyon and the border before they finally left France on the bridge of Beauvoisin, where they were hooted from the French shore, while salvos of artillery from the Italian shore welcomed them to Savoy, where they were welcomed by a royal guard of escort and the chief palace officials of the King of Sardinia, who installed them in the Chateau de Chambery. They continued to visit their niece Clotilde at the royal court of Turin, but stayed only a fortnight: "not even the touching and gracious welcome offered to them by the royal family, the affection shown to them by the Comte d'Artois and the Prince and Princess of Piedmont, their nephew and niece, could make them forget the anguish and perils they had left behind them, and which encircled their family and country with gloom. Mme Victoire wept continuously, Mme Adelaide did not cry, but she had almost lost the use of speech." They arrived in Rome on 16 April 1791, where the pope gave them an official welcome with ringing of bells, and where they stayed for about five years.

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