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162 Sentences With "in want"

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

Face it, Dems — you are in want of stalwart leadership.
Speed freaks in want of a sports car are also well served.
The special counsel's investigation has resulted in: Want the best from VICE News in your inbox?
But, just as he loses his keys, he'll constantly find himself in want of a pick.
The galaxy's collective mania burned bright and furious and then, in want of fuel, began to die.
He has exited the series still unattached, which makes him, conveniently, a single man in want of a wife.
How much, honestly, does anybody like—as in, want to pay for and sit and listen to—freestyle rap?
It's a truth universally acknowledged that anyone in want of attention could do worse than take possession of Jane Austen.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a young woman facing the undead horde must be in want of a knife.
She also finds herself in want of a wife — a truth universally acknowledged for the prosperous bachelor, as Jane Austen noted.
Elevated and sleek aesthetics, artful choreography, and dulcet breathy vocals come together in "Want" like a delicious and heady drug. 23.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single person in want of an Iron Throne must be in need of therapy.
Memorable Line: ''It is a truth universally acknowledged that a zombie in possession of brains must be in want of more brains.
At Fort Campbell, Mahaffey Middle School, around 40 years old, has for more than a decade been in want of deep renovations.
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a novel that has earned a good fortune, must be in want of a film adaptation.
New Zealand shares inched higher and briefly touched a record high, although investors were left in want of fresh cues to spur movement.
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that an electorate in possession of a terrible president, must be in want of a celebrity savior.
Wittingly or otherwise, it appears that Washington — enervated and perhaps in want of an "out" — is closer to entertaining greater leniency toward Pyongyang.
The long-delayed $250 million plan to renovate Geffen Hall, the orchestra's drab home, has been delayed, in want of money and vision.
The someday-king (he hopes) of England, Prince Charles, is a man in possession of a fortune and in want of a wife.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single, foul-mouthed young girl in possession of riches must be in want of viral fame.
But will they ever make it there when so many of our resources are allocated to those in want as opposed to those in need?
Or maybe it's that a single man or woman must be in want of something that makes them feel like they are bettering the world.
But what stands out is a straightforward and familiar story: A small-town girl arrives in New York City in want of a new life.
"He received tenants who just come in, want to work and want to work in this country, make a life for themselves," Mr. Farfan said.
Dr. Schulman says that 95 percent of the people that come in want to have their operation Snapchatted so they can watch and follow along after.
Notebook It is a truth universally acknowledged that an Indian-American in possession of gubernatorial dreams must be in want of a name like Nikki or Bobby.
"If Donald Trump and Moon Jae-in (want to talk to North Korea), the last avenue of approach that they should use is via Beijing," he said.
Books of The Times It is a truth universally acknowledged that many a writer in want of a good romantic comedy plot has turned to Jane Austen.
It is a truth universally acknowledged — or it was, for a while — that New Yorkers in possession of a good fortune must be in want of antiques.
Here are the five most important moves to make right after you move in: Want to make sure you get your security deposit back when you move out?
It is a truth universally acknowledged — or at least, much discussed on social media — that a woman who works in an office is in want of a sweater.
Firms that missed the boat on China or, like Amazon and Facebook, were simply not allowed in, want to be sure that they do not miss out this time.
And all at once, Branca, then 25, was left not only as baseball's most famous loser but in want of another answer to that same desperate question: Why me?
IT IS a truth universally acknowledged, or at least widely accepted in South Sudan, that a man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of many wives.
As of the moment as an Instagram feed, "Crazy Rich Asians" revisits Jane Austen's timeless universal truth about a man in possession of a fortune being in want of a wife.
Afterward, if you're still in want of a full meal, go around the corner to Oda, a family-run restaurant in an Ottoman-era building that was once a private house.
On a recent melancholy evening, two young women—one in want of a job, the other disappointed in a man—took an elevator to the twenty-sixth floor of the Beekman Tower.
The new crackdown in this political cycle shows again, as Jonathan Swift perceived, "Nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches as to conceive how others can be in want."
I love this category of home cooking, as strapped for time as I currently am, but still in want of something good to eat, and as few dishes to do as possible.
SO WE'RE SEEING A BIG UPTICK AS PEOPLE COME IN, WANT TO EXPERIENCE THE LIVE -- SORKIN: WHEN DO YOU THINK THE BIG SPORTING RIGHTS GET ACQUIRED BY THE HULUs, THE AMAZONS, THE APPLES?
We find ourselves in want of a good slice of bread when the plate is almost clear, so that we can swipe up all the remnants of olive oil and herbs and ricotta.
CreditCreditJulien Mignot for The New York Times Lately it is starting to seem a truth universally acknowledged that any fashion brand in possession of a good story must be in want of a documentary.
In a way, all writing is essay writing, an endless attempt at finding beauty in horror, nobility in want — an effort to punish, reward and love all things human that naturally resist punishments, rewards and love.
"We hope to be the organization that links communities in rural villages who are in want of a machine with access and ways to get the machine," producer and Oakwood High School English teacher Melissa Berton says.
W.W. Norton; 416 pages; $29.95 IF A SINGLE man in possession of a large fortune must be in want of a wife, that is nothing to how a regent in possession of a large debt tends to feel.
Again: If a lesser-known TV show or a network in want of recognition hopes to make its presence known in the industry, its best bet is to hit up the 90 members of the HFPA for a Golden Globe.
If we're trying to do something that really captures what a billion people in want in all the countries around the world, in all the different languages, it's hard to imagine we could sit down and figure out what people should hear about.
What about 22013's "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies" — an edition of Austen's classic with "all-new scenes of bone-crunching zombie mayhem" that begins, "It is a truth universally acknowledged that a zombie in possession of brains must be in want of more brains"?
" During the debate on Rule of Naturalization before the House of Representatives in Feb 1790, James Madison stated: "Those who acquire the rights of citizenship, without adding to the strength or wealth of the community are not the people we are in want of.
Rejecting his contemporary Jean Jacques Rousseau's fully contrary position (that "the privileged few... gorge themselves with superfluities, while the starving multitude are in want of the bare necessities of life"), Smith foresaw in capitalism not just a rising productivity, but also the necessary foundations for an enduring political liberty.
Drawing parallels betweens Britney Spears and Jane Eyre, Lana Del Rey and gaslighting, as well as moments from her own life, Cote — who is a Victorian scholar — illustrates the myriad ways in which women — even so many years after Elizabeth Bennett was in want of a good husband — are still expected to live small, contained lives.
Why it matters: Without Ban, all the other likely candidates, including frontrunner Moon Jae-in, want to have closer ties with North Korea and China rather than maintaining close relations with the U.S. Meanwhile: Trump talked with the acting President on Monday, where he "reiterated our ironclad commitment to defend the R.O.K." And Defense Secretary Mattis has an upcoming trip to the country.
In the proceedings of the first annual meeting of the National Association for the Study of Epilepsy and the Care and Treatment of Epileptics, in Washington in May of 1901, a philanthropist listed only by the name I.F. Mack wondered how many such "hopeless, helpless, unfortunate creatures" there must have been in the United States, all in want of internment in residential colonies for their kind.
While both the résumé and the curriculum vitae existed before then and were frequently asked for in want ads as early as the late 1940s in some professional fields, something appears to have changed in their role starting in the late 1970s and early 1980s—around the time when many service-oriented fields first gained prominence—in which the résumé, particularly in North America, turned into a de facto requirement when applying for most new jobs.
As they did so, they set fire to the "Frigate Alerte", of "16 guns" and "in want of repairs".
Later, Hickey described Pourvoyeuse as "Almost tumbling to pieces, and in want of every kind of stores."Spencer (1913-25), Vol. 3, p. 111.
There are records of him traveling the rural areas and ministering to the Ukrainians who were very much in want of their Eastern rite as late as the 1930s.
Though successful as a pastor and a "very holy man", Carroll found Beschter in "want of a better education in the Society", as with many of the other foreign Jesuit missionaries in America.
They do all that they can to > set my mistress against me. Dear Husband you are not the trouble I see these > last two years. It has been like a troubled dream to me. It is said that the > Master is in want of monney.
Alumni Spotlight: The Candidate. Taft Bulletin. The Taft School. Summer 2004. p.5Navarro, Mireya, (2003-5-6), Smile, You're on Candidate Camera: With an Insider's Eye, a Film Skewers Harlem Politics, The New York TimesFor Defeated Incumbents, Shock and an Interest in Want Ads.
A thematic statement, as with the opening line of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice ("It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife."), can also serve to hook the reader's attention.
Greed has poisoned men's souls, has barricaded the world with hate, > has goose-stepped us into misery and bloodshed. We have developed speed, but > we have shut ourselves in. Machinery that gives abundance has left us in > want. Our knowledge has made us cynical, our cleverness hard and unkind.
"The people were without food and no game could be found..." makes an Omaha myth certain.Fletcher, Alice C. and F. La Flesche (1992): The Omaha Tribe. Lincoln and London, p. 148. A fur trader noted how some Sioux Indians were in want of meat at one time in 1804.
Finney was born in Latchford, Warrington. In his interview with MacNeill, Finney describes his background: "My family were never wealthy but never in want". His paternal grandfather was a schoolmaster, and his father was an accountant in the steel industry. David was the eldest child; he had no sisters.
Civillico is a philanthropist. He founded the non-profit organization Win-Win Entertainment, which matches charity organizations in want of amusement with entertainers wanting to give their time. Non-profit organizations find it difficult to have good entertainment at their fundraising events. They are stymied by the prohibitive cost of recruiting good entertainers.
Though very strict in religious observances he was fond of luxury, and of extravagant habits, and continually in want of money. Both Fletcher and some of his council were in the habit of receiving valuable gifts—amounting to blackmail—from the different pirate ships.Roosevelt, Theodore: New York, VII. The Growth of the Colonial Seaport.
If two or three riders came to a village, the monk said, everyone fled, for fear that they were robbers. Trade therefore came to a standstill, and those in want had no way to get supplies. Those travelling with money to purchase food would be robbed or killed along the way. The barons said that there was no God.
Their flotilla went as far as Dame-Marie, which they plundered and set on fire. Soulouque, now self-proclaimed as Emperor Faustin I, decided to start a new campaign against them. In 1855, he again invaded the territory of the Dominican Republic. But owing to insufficient preparation, the army was soon in want of victuals and ammunition.
On the day he was eventually killed, Santiago Nasar had a dream about birds that his mother mistakenly took as an omen of good health. Six months before, a handsome, young foreigner arrives to the town. His name is Bayardo San Román. Little is known about him except that he is very rich and in want of a wife.
These sometimes risky speculations continuously caused rifts among the more conservative brothers and their extended family. Humanitarian Activities Simon was also active in the wider social and political movements. In October 1850, he joined with 12 other young men to form San Francisco’s Eureka Benevolent Society. They provided funds and help with those who might be in want.
In Berlin, a young woman named Else is a gorgeous trickster. Her high fashion clothes and perfectly ornamented makeup make her deserving to be peering over diamond cases while batting her eyes in want at the jeweler. She is caught lying and after professing it was the first time, that she needed the money. Even when she meets Albert.
These figures also suggest that the total market in 2012 was RMB72 billion (USD$11.6 billion). Over 80% of China's infant formula market is dominated by international brands. After Nestle's 2012 acquisition of Wyeth, Nestle was reported to have 14.4% of the Chinese market and Mead Johnson 14%.Wyeth estimate, reported in Want China Times 2012-05-03.
Vittoria left Port Jackson on 24 February 1829 bound for Batavia. Vittoria, late Smith, master, put into Mauritius on 25 November 1829. On her way from Manila to London she had an encounter in which Malays had killed her master, second mate, boatswain, carpenter, and part of the crew. She was in want of a foremast and extensive repairs.
In autumn 1871, Cope began prospecting farther west to the fossil fields of Kansas. Leidy and Marsh had been to the region earlier, and Cope employed one of Marsh's guides, Benjamin Mudge, who was in want of a job.Osborn, 159–160. Cope's companion Charles Sternberg described the lack of water and good food available to Cope and his helpers on these expeditions.
St Swithun's most notable monuments are wall-mounted ones in the chancel commemorating John Doyley (died 1593) and his wife, Elizabeth Poole (died 1621) and Richard Harrington (died 1712). The Poole monument has strapwork and Tuscan columns but is significantly mutilated and in want of restoration. A turret clock for St Swithun's was made late in the 17th century. Its original dial had only an hour hand.
For instance, they provided a granite memorial commemorating all the Yanconians who served in the armed forces during WWII. The School Council working bees also assisted in the development of new sporting fields to the north of the Principals Residence. In 1971 the school was finally provided with a library building which it had been in want of at least since the early 1960s.
The Return of Sarasvati: Four Hindi Poets. Oxford University Press. pp. 105–106. His father served as the manager of a local tea garden, and was also a landholder, so Pant was never in want financially growing up. He grew up in the same village and always cherished a love for the beauty and flavor of rural India, which is evident in all his major works.
In 1957, Romania legalized abortion, but in 1966, after a decline in the national birthrate, Nicolae Ceauşescu approved Decree 770, which criminalized abortion and encouraged childbirth. As a result of this decree, women in want of abortion turned to illegal procedures that caused the deaths of over 9,000 women and left unwanted children abandoned in orphanages. Abortion remained illegal until 1989, when the decree was overturned.Kligman, Gail.
A large quantity of baggage, food, plate, and money fell into the hands of the Kings men thus placing a difficult situation for Parma's men already in want of provisions. Parma was in a hopeless situation - to cross the river was the only means of retreat; and although Mayenne, and the most experienced officers in the army, pronounced it impracticable, Parma resolved to attempt a retreat.
Shawangunk became associated with the ridge during the 18th century. In the original Lenape, the word is tri-syllabic, Sha-wan-gun, although in an occasional 18th-century deed it is written with a fourth syllable.Ulster County archives The correct pronunciation approximates sha (short a) - wan (as in want) - goon (as in book).Susan B. Wick - Clove Valley Leni Lenape' historian and medicine woman.
At Trincomalee the memorist William Hickey met Trommelin. Later, Hickey described Pourvoyeuse as "Almost tumbling to pieces, and in want of every kind of stores." The British: Lawson considered pursuing Pourvoyeuse but decided that doing so might take too long. As it was late in the sailing season, if the British vessels lost their passage to China there was no friendly port where they could winter.
Viewing the carnage, Shafter began to waver in his determination to defeat the Spanish at Santiago. He knew his troops' position was tenuous, but again had little intelligence on the hardships of the Spanish inside beleaguered Santiago. Shafter felt the Navy was doing little to relieve the pressure on his forces. Supplies could not be delivered to the front, leaving his men in want of necessities, particularly food rations.
From 13 to 15 August blizzards and heavy snows swept through inland Otago from the Taieri Plains to the lakes. On 14 August about 40 miners were said to have been buried in an avalanche at Separation Creek in the Serpentine Gully. The party that went to investigate found them alive, but in want of provisions. All areas were isolated as the roads had become impassible and impossible to find.
Wherever there is suffering in the body, wherever members of it > are in want or oppressed, we, because we have received the same body and are > part of it, must be directly involved. We cannot opt out or say to a brother > or sister: "I do not need you. I will not help you." David Leigh, SJ, in > "Toward a Sacrament of the World," in Spirituality Today, vol.
At The Wigwam he would could have fresh air, good food, rest and home comforts. Chief Flying Hawk died at Pine Ridge, South Dakota, December 24, 1931, at the age of 77 in want. He had written that during the previous winter of 1930-31 his little band was saved from starvation only through contributions from Gutzon Borglum and the American Red Cross. Sadly, it was rumored that Chief Flying Hawk died of starvation.
Also, when one of your letters reached me, I was in want of some of the necessaries of life, owing to a heavy loss which I sustained in endeavoring to assist some persons. ... It is good for me to have been afflicted. I have more peace of mind than I have possessed at any time since leaving college. My hair, which had begun to turn gray, is now as black as formerly.
Mahler wrote of Rott > a musician of genius ... who died unrecognized and in want on the very > threshold of his career. ... What music has lost in him cannot be estimated. > Such is the height to which his genius soars in ... [his] Symphony [in E > major], which he wrote as 20-year-old youth and makes him ... the Founder of > the New Symphony as I see it. To be sure, what he wanted is not quite what > he achieved.
From the beginning, the Lutheran Home at Germantown was also supposed to be an asylum for the aged and infirm. The asylum was to be open to "adult members of the Lutheran Church in want through old age, accident, or disease." The first inmate of the asylum was Sister Margaret Kaufflet, who arrived May 10, 1860. She would not only be a resident of the home but also an invaluable presence for other residents as time went on.
At the beginning of the 1780s there was an outbreak of smallpox in the Western Canada, the Northern Great Plains which severely affected the villages and the population reduced drastically in size by about 70-80%.Hodge, A. R. ""In Want of Nourishment for to Keep Them Alive": Climate Fluctuations, Bison Scarcity, and the Smallpox Epidemic of 1780-82 on the Northern Great Plains." Environmental History 17, no. 2 (2012): 365-403. doi:10.1093/envhis/emr153.
February 1707] in poor circumstances, and all his family were beggars.' Breval, in want and with his character ruined, enlisted in despair as a volunteer in our army in Flanders, where he soon rose to be an ensign. Here what Nichols calls 'his exquisite pencil and genteel behaviour,' as well as his skill in acquiring languages, attracted the attention of Marlborough. The general appointed him captain, and sent him on diplomatic missions to various German courts, which he accomplished very creditably.
A vain man, instead of following his profession, he assumed the rank of a baron in Paris, maintaining a suite of servants. When he was under the greatest pressure from a large debt, he would pretend illness, seclude himself, and work industriously. In order to prove that he was not in want of money, he gave away some of his best pictures to persons of high rank. This extravagance did not last long, and in 1672, he was obliged to return to Utrecht.
January 14, 1884, the commanding officer at Camp Poplar River reported the Indians at Poplar River Agency in want of food and those at Wolf Point still more destitute. March 13, 1884, at Camp Poplar River, one set of officers quarters and one building, used as offices of the commanding officer, the adjutant, and the telegraph operator, were destroyed by fire. June 16, 1884, Companies B and F, Eleventh Infantry, left Camp Poplar River, Mont., for Fort Abraham Lincoln, Dak.
Wu Tingju (吳廷舉, c. 1460 – 1526) was a Ming official who, as Administration Commissioner (governor) of Guangdong, was an early advocate of trade openness during the reign of Emperor Zhengde. Historian Timothy Brook wrote that Wu's policy positions illustrate the inaccuracy of the "truth universally acknowledged that the Chinese state was historically hostile to foreign trade and that, if the Chinese were in want of anything, it was the freedom of trade." Not much is known of Wu Tingju's biography.
The third holding belonged to Thomas de Otterington in 1300. Before 1657, the "way over Purgatory by Thief Hole was in want of repair". Purgatory, another part of the parish, east of the A168 road was the location of a messuage and farm that belonged to the see of Durham in 1739, and after 1803, a toll bar on the Yarm to Thirsk turnpike road. In Victorian times a domestic weaving industry flourished in the village but agriculture was the main occupation.
Let each > farmer keep at least as much oats on hand to carry himself and his family > through in case of necessity till next years harvest.’ He said that Irish people should stay out of the war not of their making, and to raise plenty of crops to be kept at home to feed the many native people in want. His motion was ignored. His speech was reported in the local papers and the following morning the RIC visited Bishop Coyne at his residence in St. Mary's.
Though successful for the moment, the Rao's conduct had estranged all his servants, and from this time his authority was no longer acknowledged. Mandvi under Ramji Khavas, Anjar under Meghji Seth, and Mundra, Lakhpat, and several other towns under other leaders became indepen independent. The Miyanas, gathering in large bodies, entrenched themselves at Baliari, and, sallying out, plundered on every side. The Rao, in want of funds, laid hands on the wealth amassed by his favourites Muhammad Syed and Sidi Masud, and banished them both from Bhuj.
The site is now submerged under the reservoir.Web site of Historic Environment Scotland; Henderland, Site Name Megget, Old Church canmore.org.uk/site/217827 retrieved June 2016 This was built, not at the expense of the heritors of the parish (the usual practice), but with money raised by the parish combined with the aid of the resident farmers, who assisted in collecting materials. It had a slate roof and seats and was maintained by voluntary contribution, although by the 1830s it was in want of repair.
If the mother took naps during the day the tlamatlquiticitl warned that the child would be born with unusually large eyelids. Lifting heavy objects was also associated with damaging the fetus. The tlamatlquiticitl also told others that the expectant mother should not be in want of anything, all her desires should be fulfilled quickly otherwise the child would suffer. Not only did the tlamatlquiticitl provide this advice but she also attended and took over household duties for the expectant mother towards the end of the pregnancy.
They kicked off their Belgian tour in their home-town Antwerp and played in major concert halls, including Ancienne Belgique in Brussels and Vooruit in Ghent. They also performed in The Dublin Castle (16 May 2011) and The Bowery (24 November 2011) in London, in l'International (24 May 2011) in Paris and The Netherlands. Other singles released from the album are "In Want of Something" and "The World Is Gonna End Tonight". "The World Is Gonna End Tonight" topped the Belgian chart, De Afrekening, for three weeks.
In August 1801 Hatfield arrived at Keswick, Cumberland, in a carriage, and impersonated Alexander Augustus Hope, M.P. He spent his time in excursions, and on a visit to Grasmere became acquainted with a Liverpool gentleman named Crump, whose name and credit he then employed when in want of money. By franking letters in his assumed name he silenced suspicion. An intrigue with a lady of fortune came to nothing. But the reputation of Mary Robinson, the "Buttermere Beauty", led him to visit the Fish Inn, Buttermere, where her father was landlord.
Modern publications generally use just the first half of the letter, he finds, in which Perkins was more "careful" in writing. Hager notes that Perkins's penmanship, such as the use of the long s ("ſ"), suggests that she was taught to write by an older person who was formally educated. Structurally, the letter's first ten lines explain what has happened and what Perkins would like to happen. At the start of the letter, she corrected some grammatical errors (adding the word on before Monday and adding the letter n in want) and was more "deliberate".
His plight brought sympathy and admiration from his contemporaries. Montaigne wrote "it was deplorable that a man who had done such good service as Castellio should have fallen upon evil days" and added that "many persons would unquestionably have been glad to help Castellio had they known soon enough that he was in want." History indicates that many perhaps were afraid to help Castellio for fear of reprisals from Geneva. Castellio's existence ranged from begging and digging ditches for food to proof-reading for the Basel printshop of Johannes Oporinus.
The biblical connotations of the rhetorical opening point us towards Blake's assertion that a country whose children live in want cannot be described as truly "rich". With the apparent contradiction of two climatic opposites existing simultaneously within the one geopolitical unit, we are offered a metaphor for England's man-made "two nations". Blake wrote during the Industrial Revolution, whose pioneers congratulated themselves upon their vigorous increases in output. The poet argues that until increases in production are linked to more equitable distribution, England will always be a land of barren winter.
Ye yourselves know that these hands ministered unto my necessities, and to them that were with me. # Luke 15:14-16: And when he had spent all, there arose a mighty famine in that country; and he began to be in want. And he went and joined himself to one of the citizens of that country; and he sent him into his fields to feed swine. And he would fain have filled his belly with the husks that the swine did eat: and no man gave unto him.
Ebadi said while in London in late November 2009 that her Nobel Peace Prize medal and diploma had been taken from their bank box alongside her Légion d'honneur and a ring she had received from Germany's association of journalists. She said they had been taken by the Revolutionary Court approximately three weeks previously.Iran Confiscates Shirin Ebadi’s Nobel Peace Medal in Want of Tax Liability Ebadi also said her bank account was frozen by authorities. Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs Jonas Gahr Støre expressed his "shock and disbelief" at the incident.
In this movie, a tribal village wants to hire a Kumki elephant to chase away wild elephants which enter the village every harvest season. The mahout, who is in want of money, takes his temple- trained elephant to do this job, in the vain hope that wild elephants won't come in. But wild elephants start attacking the village on the harvest day. The temple-trained elephant gets into musth and thus fights with the wild elephants, kills the most notorious among the herd, and dies from injuries sustained during the fight.
Beyzaie was born in Tehran, to a poet, anthologist and biographer father and a housewife mother. Zokā'i Beyzāie made a living through a legal occupation and was able to attend to his literary interests reasonably. The young Bahram did not seem very interested in his family legacy, being poetry, which was pursued by his father, uncles and cousins. In high school, the Dar'ol-Fonoun,For an illustrated report on Dar'ol-Fonoun see: Hamid-Reza Hosseini, Dar'ol-Fonoun in want of Love ("Dar'ol-Fonoun dar hasrat-e eshq"), in Persian, Jadid Online, September 22, 2008, .
The opening line of the novel famously announces: "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife." This sets marriage as a motif and a problem in the novel. Readers are poised to question whether or not these single men need a wife, or if the need is dictated by the "neighbourhood" families and their daughters who require a "good fortune". Marriage is a complex social activity that takes political economy and economy generally, into account.
When they reached the territory of the Byzantine Empire, they recklessly pillaged the countryside in want of food and provisions until the Byzantine emperor Alexios I, possibly under force of arms, escorted them to a camp outside Constantinople. This did not satisfy them for long, as they forced their way inside the city where they pillaged the Blachernae palace, even killing Alexios' pet lion. In order to limit any further damage, the Lombards were quickly ferried across the Bosporus and made their camp at Nicomedia, to wait for additional Crusading reinforcements.
Supposedly McGirt passed the remaining years of his life peacefully in her company, his identity carefully concealed. Part of this time was passed under the protection of his nephews, Zachary and James Cantey, in Camden. The Georgia historian Lucian Lamar Knight agrees that McGirt was ill and retired to Sumter District in South Carolina, where he soon died, while Joseph Johnson also gives the story that Daniel McGirt ended his checkered career at the home of Col. James, in misery but not in want, and that his widow long survived him.
Collaborations included Leonard Cohen in Recent Songs (1979) after touring with him on his live concerts, resulting in Cohen Live album in 1994 and The Smokey Life Tour recorded in 1979. He played oud in Cohen's 1988 album I'm Your Man. In 1992, he collaborated with British singer Robert Palmer in the latter's album Ridin' High, where he played oud and dumbek in "Want You More". In 1997, he recorded with Mexican singer Luis Miguel in the latter's album playing mandolin in Romances and in 1994 with Plácido Domingo in De Mi Alma Latina and in 1999 in Por Amor.
Confessionale generale, 1500 The Montes Pietatius were charitable institutions of credit that lent money at low rates of interest, or without interest at all, upon the security of objects left in pawn, with a view to protecting persons in want from usurers. As Christians were forbidden to practice usury, i.e., taking loans on interest, it created a sort of monopoly of the credit business to the Jews. However, the so-called "Coarsini" (named after the town of Cavour in Piedmont), and the Lombards, who were a kind of travelling bankers, often charge interest much greater than Jewish lenders.
Very few, if any of them, are in want. > Those who are suffering most keenly, and who have lost most, either of their > children by death or their possessions by fire and sword, such as those > reconcentrated women in the camps, have the most conspicuous patience, and > never express a wish that their men should be the ones to give way. It must > be fought out now, they think, to the bitter end. It is a very costly > business upon which England has embarked, and even at such a cost hardly the > barest necessities can be provided, and no comforts.
On May 21, 1782, White was present with General Anthony Wayne in the movement before Savannah; and, on the evacuation of that place, returned to Charleston, South Carolina, where he became security for the debts of the officers and men of his regiments, who were in want of almost all the necessaries of life. These debts he was subsequently obliged to pay at enormous sacrifices of his own property, and, on returning to the North at the close of the war, his financial ruin was completed by entering into speculation at the persuasion of military friends.
In 1886 she was appointed matron of The Infants' Home Ashfield, a refuge for unmarried mothers and their children. During her time she oversaw building works to provide an isolation ward for mothers and children whom were suffering from contagious disease and illness, a dedicated playroom for the children and an onsite laundry. During 1893-1894 with a banking crisis in Australia and diminishing grants from government it was believed The Infants' Home would have to close. Taplin did not want to see the children in want of a home, so she offered to work for free during this time of hardship.
I Lan Foods headquarters In 1962, Want Want began operations in the name of I Lan Foods Industrial Company Limited () in Yilan County, Taiwan, which manufactured canned agricultural products. It was founded by Tsai Eng-meng's father, Jonathan Shuai Qiang Ng. In 1983, it collaborated with Iwatsuka Confectionery Company Limited, one of the top three Japanese rice cracker makers, to develop a rice cracker market in Taiwan. In return, Iwatsuka obtained 5% of the common stock of the company. In 2009, Iwatsuka's share in Want Want was valued at about , nearly three times as much as Iwatsuka's own market value of .
Y Fuwch Frech (Welsh: literally the speckled/brindled cow) is a cow in Welsh folklore. She was described by Elias Owen as the "Freckled Cow". In his essay on folklore, written originally for the national eisteddfod of 1887 and subsequently republished, he recorded a story from Denbighshire of a cow which was said to give milk to "any one ... in want of milk" until a witch milked the cow dry. The cow then left, plunging into a lake near Cerrig-y-drudion, and leading her two children, long-horned oxen (which are themselves the subject of other legends), after her.
A report published in 1889 indicated that over 50,000 pupils in London alone were attending school "in want of food". Other social studies, such as Charles Booth's Life and Labour of the People of London, 1899-1903 and Seebohm Rowntree's Poverty: A Study of Town Life in York, 1901, found that nearly a third of the population and cities studied were living in poverty. The 1904 Report into Physical Deterioration followed the large rejection of men from service in the Boer War, as they were malnourished. The Bill became law over the objection of the House of Lords.
Perhaps the most famous example of irony in Austen is the opening line of Pride and Prejudice: "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife." At first glance, the sentence is straightforward and plausible, but the plot of the novel contradicts it: it is women without fortunes who need husbands and seek them out. By the end of the novel, the truth of the statement is acknowledged only by a single character, Mrs. Bennet, a mother seeking husbands for her daughters.
Nicolas Poussin, The Death of Sapphira Ananias and his wife Sapphira were, according to the Acts of the Apostles chapter 5, members of the early Christian church in Jerusalem. The account records their sudden deaths after lying about money. Acts chapter closes by stating that the first followers of Jesus did not consider their possessions to be their own but rather held in common, in order to use what they had on behalf of those in want. As told at the beginning of Acts chapter Ananias and Sapphira sold their land but secretly withheld a portion of the proceeds.
Other sources discredit this idea. An authoritative paper titled "The Odyssey of Thomas Muir" by Marjorie Masson and J. F. Jameson examines the escape of Muir from the convict settlement at Sydney. Otter, commanded by Captain Dorr, was fitted out at Boston, and despatched to Sydney, where she anchored on 25 January 1796. Captain Dorr and a few of his crew landed at the very spot where Mr. Muir was located (the vicinity of Jeffrey Street in the modern suburb of Kirribilli), under the pretence that they were proceeding to China and were in want of fresh water.
The emperor having performed what Stilicho had promised, they applied themselves to public business." "For Stilicho was desirous of proceeding to the east to undertake the management of the affairs of Theodosius, the son of Arcadius, who was very young, and in want of a guardian. Honorius himself was also inclined to undertake the same journey, with a design to secure the dominions of that emperor. But Stilicho, being displeased at that, and laying before the emperor a calculation of the immense sum of money it would require to defray the expence of such an expedition, deterred him from the enterprise.
In the peace treaty of Roskilde, Denmark was obliged to supply the Swedish army with provisions until May 1658, but soon thereafter the army would need to be moved. The Swedish king knew that the army would not be able to be supplied in Sweden for long, and disbanding it was not desirable with the Poles eager to revenge the 1655 invasion of Poland. Sweden was not in want of enemies to attack: campaigns in Livonia and Estonia were considered, but were rejected due to supply problems. The Swedish King maintained that his main goal was to invade Royal Prussia, but he also wanted to punish Frederick William of Brandenburg-Prussia.
Baptiste was a former Assassin and voodoo leader, who posed as the deceased François Mackandal and operated in the Bayou surrounding New Orleans. Secretly working for the "Company Man" with Rafael Joaquín de Ferrer, Baptiste aspired to become a formal member of the Templar Order. He was also a personal enemy of the Mentor of the Louisianan Assassins, Agaté. Sometime in 1765, "Mackandal" had amassed a small following, though he sent a letter to one of his acolytes stating that he was "in want of nothing but more men to join his ranks" of his cult for a "sacred ceremony" on the Eve of Saint John.
Lin pledged that nothing would divert him from his mission, "If the traffic in opium were not stopped a few decades from now we shall not only be without soldiers to resist the enemy, but also in want of silver to provide an army." Lin banned the sale of opium and demanded that all supplies of the drug be surrendered to the Chinese authorities. He also closed the Pearl River Channel, trapping British traders in Canton. As well as seizing opium stockpiles in warehouses and the thirteen factories, Chinese troops boarded British ships in the Pearl River and South China Sea before destroying the opium on board.
43 Gerrard Street John Dryden (1631–1700) lived for a while at 43 Gerrard Street, which is commemorated by a blue plaque.Flikr image of blue plaque Another plaque, on number 9, marks the meeting of Samuel Johnson and Joshua Reynolds at the Turk's Head Tavern to found The Club, a dining club, in 1764. In fiction, Charles Dickens sets the home of Mr Jaggers, the lawyer in Great Expectations, in "a house on the south side of that street. Rather a stately house of its kind, but dolefully in want of painting, and with dirty windows [and with ...] a stone hall... a dark brown staircase ... dark brown rooms... panelled walls".
Gedi appears to be a corruption of Ghritaghadya winch is found in two inscriptions : one near Rav, dated 1271 (Samvat 1323), where it is mentioned as a large district under Maldev, a Viceroy of Arjundev king of Anhilwad Patan; and the other in the inscription on the Malan well). This name would seem to mean the land, ghadya or padya, of butter, ghrit or ghee. The legend is that a merchant of Anhilwad in want of clarified butter, ghee stole it by magic from Malav's warehouse, and afterwards offered the value. This Malav refused as the stolen butter had been replaced by means of Malav's magic ring.
Problematic, if not pathological, behavior may arise if conditions for starting and continuing such a "drama of life" are insufficiently met. One of those conditions, the main one, is what Helwig calls "resistance": the resistance the physical and social environment offer to one's aims. If it is too much acting will be blocked, if it is too small action will be short-lived and be in want of intensity and impact. Helwig characterizes his approach both as dramaturgical (1958) and behavioristic (1964), the latter because overt behavior is seen as the primary phenomenon, to be explained from the interaction action-environment instead of hypothetical inner forces and features.
Prior to the first summit, Asia lacked a regional security framework like Europe. Earlier in 1996, US Defence Secretary William Perry and Thai Defence Minister Chavalit Yongchaiyudh each proposed separate initiatives to gather their counterparts in Asia but came to nothing. The only Track One multilateral Asian security forum was the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), which was found to be unwieldy since it focused on confidence-building and at worst, little more than a talkshop. In addition, the ARF was led by foreign ministers, leaving defence diplomacy and security cooperation in the region somewhat in want for a mechanism for defence ministers to interact.
Ananias and Sapphira on the Brescia Casket, late 4th century (middle register, centre and right) Acts chapter closes by stating that the first followers of Jesus did not consider their possessions to be their own but rather held in common, in order to use what they had on behalf of those in want. For example, Barnabas, a Levite from Cyprus, sold a plot of land and donated the proceeds to the apostles. As told at the beginning of Acts chapter Ananias and Sapphira, following Barnabas' example, also sold their land but secretly withheld a portion of the proceeds. Ananias presented his donation to Peter.
Martin was educated at the Portsmouth naval academy and privately by Dr Pemberton. He was appointed a Captain in the Royal NavyThe royal navy: a history from the earliest times to the present and served in American and West Indian waters in the Seven Years' War. He married in 1761 and after the conclusion of the peace treaties in early 1763 they lived at Bishopstown near Cork where he had a leasehold farm. Considered by his father to be 'self-diffident' and in 'want of that assurance so necessary to push his way to preferment' he was given the goad of being let survive with some difficulty on limited resources from prize money and his father's marriage settlement.
District Map of Pratapgarh, Rajasthan, India Well known for pure gold and glass-inlay handmade unique jewelry called "Thewa", Pratapgarh, as the 33rd district of Rajasthan, came into existence on 26 January 2008, comprising five Tehsils/ sub-divisions, Pratapgarh, Chhotee Sadri, Dhariyawad, Arnod and Peepalkhoont. The district is dotted with good number of ancient and historical sites, but in want of a detailed study either by the Archaeological Survey of India or by the Department of Archaeology and Museums, Government of Rajasthan, there are no 'protected monuments' as such. A few important still unexplored archaeological and historical sites include Avleshwara, Ghotaavarshika (Ghotarsi), Sidheriya, Gandharvpur (Gandher) Jaanagarh, Veerpur and many others. Sita Mata sanctuary houses pre-historic rock engravings.
Persson made her film debut as the lead in Mac Ahlberg's Danish-Swedish erotic film Jeg - en kvinde (1965) which became the surprise box-office hit I, a Woman (1966) for Radley Metzger in the United States. She appeared in the German film Das Rasthaus der grausamen Puppen (1967) and in Mission Stardust (1967), and then Metzger hired Persson for a title character in his 1968 French film Therese and Isabelle about a lesbian sexual affair between two schoolgirls. She later appeared in the 1970 horror film Cry of the Banshee, and in 1971 in Want So Much To Believe. Persson performed in roles on two Swedish television series and then left acting.
Late Spring and Early Summer are startlingly different. In the second, Noriko takes advantage of a conversational opening [about marriage] to overturn the entire plot... she accepts a man [as husband] she has known for a long time—a widower with a child." In contrast, "what happens [in Late Spring] at deeper levels is angry, passionate and—wrong, we feel, because the father and the daughter are forced to do something neither one of them wants to do, and the result will be resentment and unhappiness." Ebert goes on, "It is universally believed, just as in a Jane Austen novel, that a woman of a certain age is in want of a husband.
At that time, there were seven thousand Persian prisoners who were captured by the Romans and held in Amida. Filled with the compassion at the sight of these men perishing from hunger and misery, Acacius resolved to help them. He assembled his clergy and addressed them in this manner: > Our God, my brethren, needs neither dishes nor cups; for He neither eats nor > drinks, nor is in want of anything. Since then, by the liberality of its > faithful members the Church possesses many vessels both of gold and silver, > it behooves us to sell them, that by the money thus raised, we may be able > to redeem the prisoners and also supply them with food.
The Silent Voice tells the story of Montgomery Starr, an amateur musician of means, who becomes embittered after the loss of his hearing and the discovery that his young wife married him out of a sense of duty and that her true love was his nephew Bobby. Feeling dejected, Starr retreats to the roof of his mansion where, with the aid of binoculars, he spends his time watching people in a nearby park. An accomplished lip reader, Starr soon realizes that others were as unhappy as he and that he had the means to help some of those in want. To this end, Starr employs his valet to deliver the necessary aid.
For there was not a person who did not bring ransom for the captives and deposit it in the sanctuary according to the measure of his possessions. And there were some who even exceeded their proportionate amount in so doing. For the harlots took off all the adornment which they wore on their persons, and threw it down there, and any farmer who was in want of plate or of money, but who had an ass or a sheep, brought this to the sanctuary with great zeal. So there was collected an exceedingly great amount of gold and silver and money in other forms, but not a bit of it was given for ransom.
"Application for FM Broadcast Station License", Federal Communications Commission, Retrieved March 5, 2010"Application Search Details", Federal Communications Commission, Retrieved March 5, 2010 The call sign WPBK stands for "People's Bank of Kentucky" stemming from a unique naming rights sponsorship arrangement with a local bank."About WPBK FM", WPBK Website, Retrieved March 5, 2010 All programing is locally originated and oriented to residents of Lincoln County and the surrounding communities. Programming mainstays are the "Jammin' with Jayme" morning show, an eclectic mix running from DJ banner to in-studio interviews with local personalities and newsmakers; "General Store", a call-in want-to-buy or sell bulletin board show; "The Higher Road Home" weekday late afternoons; and extensive coverage of local school and youth recreational league sports.
Using the pseudonym 'Alison Laydee' – a play on Austen's original nom de plume "A Lady" – Lassman sent out the opening chapters of Pride and Prejudice, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion to several major publishers and literary agents, with different titles but only minor changes to the text, such as character names and locations. The resultant article discussed how all but one of the publishers and agents failed to recognise her works, including Penguin Books and J. K. Rowling's publisher Bloomsbury, with the vast majority rejecting the attempt to gain a publishing deal. This was also despite Pride and Prejudice opening line "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife" was left intact.
I gave the Feuille a few articles he was absolutely in want of. Fifty Sioux of the Feuille band (The Leaf or Wabasha) with forty-five Renards left this place at two o'clock singing the war song and at six about sixteen puants arrived from above, debarked at the upper end of the village, and walked down to the lower end singing the war-song, then immediately embarked and went off. Wrote a note to Capt Grignon to prepare himself to go off express to Mackinaw to-morrow at ten o'clock. Monday August 29 — Finished the dispatches at ten and Capt Grignon being detained in expectation of Mr Antoine Brisbois arriving from below, did not set off till four in the afternoon.
Although the city was founded in the 16th century, there is evidence of habitation in the area by the Chango people as early as 7,000 BC. During colonial times, Iquique was part of the Viceroyalty of Peru as much of South America was at the time, and remained part of Peruvian territory until the end of the 19th century. Iquique's early development was due in large part to the discovery of mineral riches, particularly the presence of large deposits of sodium nitrate in the Atacama Desert (then part of Peruvian territory). In July 1835, Charles Darwin, during his voyage on the Beagle, traveled to Iquique and described it as a town "very much in want of everyday necessities, such as water and firewood". These necessities had to be brought in from considerable distances.
That hundred men, let us suppose, to earn > a pound a week each. This is not the case in the iron-works; but no matter, > we can illustrate our meaning by one sum as well as by another. These men > lay out weekly the whole of the hundred pounds in victuals, drink, clothing, > bedding, fuel, and house-rent. Now, the master finding the profits of his > trade fall off very much, and being at the same time in want of money to pay > the hundred pounds weekly, and perceiving that these hundred pounds are > carried away at once, and given to shopkeepers of various descriptions; to > butchers, bakers, drapers, hatters, shoemakers, and the rest; and knowing > that, on an average, these shopkeepers must all have a profit of thirty per > cent.
While in Ireland, he overextended himself in borrowing due to his occasional gambling, but in his defence stated that "I have often known what it was to be in want of money, but I have never got helplessly into debt". On 23 January 1788, he transferred into the 41st Regiment of Foot, then again on 25 June 1789, still a lieutenant, he transferred to the 12th (Prince of Wales's) Regiment of (Light) Dragoons and, according to military historian Richard Holmes, he also dipped a reluctant toe into politics.Holmes (2002). p. 22. Shortly before the general election of 1789, he went to the rotten borough of Trim to speak against the granting of the title "Freeman" of Dublin to the parliamentary leader of the Irish Patriot Party, Henry Grattan.Holmes (2002). p. 23.
Coat of Arms of the Humiliati Order Its origin is obscure. According to some chroniclers, certain noblemen of Lombardy, taken prisoner by the Emperor Henry V (1081–1125) following a rebellion in the area, were taken as captives to Germany and after suffering the miseries of exile for some time, they assumed a penitential garb of grey and gave themselves up to works of charity and mortification, whereupon the emperor, after receiving their pledges of future loyalty, permitted their return to Lombardy. At this time they were often called "Barettini", from their beret-shaped head-dress. Their acquaintance with the German woollen manufactures enabled them to introduce improved methods into Italy, thus giving a great impetus to the industry, supplying the poor with employment and distributing their gains among those in want.
When Rabindranath Tagore saw young Gopinath's performance in early thirties he wrote an appreciation on the dancer: "Mr Gopinath is a real artist and I am sure there are not many who could rightfully take their stand by his side either in India or abroad. He brought to my mind glimpses of the great past when dancing was one of the most treasured arts in India and not as today, a mere device of whetting up the jaded appetite of the idle rich. His presence in our midst was a great lesson and now that dancing is again coming into vogue amongst us, his style should give us a correct lead, for in want of it, we are yet groping in the dark." He was awarded the Veera Srumkhala from, Chithira Thirunal Balarama Varma the King of Travancore.
After describing what a miracle should be (both according to the popular conception and the theology of Christianity, Kardec argues (with the Spirits on his side) that such a thing does not and cannot exist: :"...considering that God does not do anything for fancy, we are inclined to the following opinion: As miracles are not necessary for the glory of God, nothing in the Universe ever goes against the laws of nature. God does not work miracles because, as His laws are perfect, He has no reason to derogate or suspend them. If facts are found that we cannot understand, it is just because we are in want of the knowledge necessary to understand them." Regarding miraculous cures, Kardec wisely states that these, if frequent enough, would have been a hindrance to the development of mankind.
They have been called Whigs — a term which, it is well known, has often been applied to the zealous friends of civil or religious liberty. Cameronians — from the Rev. Richard Cameron, who fell at Airsmoss, in Kyle, on the 20th of July, 1680, by the sword of his bloody persecutors, while he, and a number of his followers, being suddenly and furiously attacked, were nobly defending their lives and religious liberties. Mountain-men — on account of their adhering to the same cause with those who supported and countenanced the faithful preaching of the Gospel on the mountains and moors of Scotland during the persecution ; and because they themselves, in want of better conveniency, have often been obliged, even since the revolution, to administer ordinances in the open fields, though this is not so much the case now as it once was.
From the outset, although they had formerly been hated enemies, large- scale direct trade took place between the two countries because both were able to offer something the other wanted. Germany lacked the natural resources Soviet Union had in abundance, whereas Soviet Union was at that time still a relatively backward country in want of the latest technology. By the end of October 1939 the Soviets were sending large quantities of oil and grain in return for war materials such as fighter aircraft and machine tools for manufacturing in a deal valued at 150 million Reichmarks a year. The Germans maintained an aggressive strategy at sea in order to press home their own blockade of the Allies. Lloyd's List showed that by the end of 1939 they had sunk 249 ships by U-boat, air attack, or by mines.
Here also he erected schools for boys and girls, and a special school for infants; but finding that many children could not attend in consequence of being in want of suitable apparel, he set up a school of a lower grade, which was practically the first ragged school opened in the metropolis. In connection with the district he founded a provident society, assisted in the commencement of a shoeblack brigade, with a refuge and an industrial home for the boys, and co-operated with others in the work of building the Whitechapel Foundation Commercial School. He was the originator of a local association for the promotion, health, and comfort of the industrial classes, and also of the Church of England Young Men's Society, the first association of young men for religious purposes and mutual improvement which was seen in Whitechapel.
Pope Pius XII replied to attacks and persecutions in China with the following words: > In our own time there are countries in the Far East, which are being purpled > with martyrs' blood. We have learned that many of the faithful and also > nuns, missionaries, native priests and even Bishops have been driven from > their homes, despoiled of their possessions and languish in want as exiles > or have been arrested, thrown into prison or into concentration camps, or > sometimes cruelly done to death, because they were devoutly attached to > their faith. > Our heart is overwhelmed with grief when We think of the hardships, > suffering and death of these our beloved children. Not only do We love them > with a fatherly love, but We reverence them with a fatherly veneration, > since We are fully aware that their high sense of duty is sometimes crowned > with martyrdom.
As part of his investigations of powered flight, George Cayley was concerned about the low power-to-weight ratio of steam engines, complaining that "the steam engine has hither proved too weighty and cumbrous for most purposes of locomotion." He took up development of a new engine design starting in 1807, and quickly settled on a gunpowder engines as the preferred solution, noting "Being in want of a simple & light first mover on a small scale for the purpose of some preparatory experiments on aerial navigation, I constructed one in which the force of gunpowder & the heat evolved by its explosion, acting upon a quantity of common air, was employed." His notebooks show a design of considerable improvement over those of Huygens and similar. In Cayley's design, two cylinders were arranged one over the other, the lower acting as a combustion chamber, and the upper containing a piston.
Vladimir Lenin, speaking of religion in Novaya Zhizn in 1905,Novaya Zhizn No. 28, December 3, 1905, as quoted in Marxists Internet Archive alluded to Marx's earlier comments (emphasis added): > Those who toil and live in want all their lives are taught by religion to be > submissive and patient while here on earth, and to take comfort in the hope > of a heavenly reward. But those who live by the labour of others are taught > by religion to practise charity while on earth, thus offering them a very > cheap way of justifying their entire existence as exploiters and selling > them at a moderate price tickets to well-being in heaven. Religion is opium > for the people. Religion is a sort of spiritual booze, in which the slaves > of capital drown their human image, their demand for a life more or less > worthy of man.
The work contains hundreds of omens in a hundred and five sections covering a calendar of twelve thirty-day months. The first sixty six sections of Iqqur Ipuš ordered by activity concern those of daily human life, such as “If a man digs a well, … in the month of Ajar, then he will be in want of grain…”, “If a child is born in the month of Abu, that child will be despondent”, while the last third of the text concerns natural phenomena, such as metereological events, like thunder: "When Adad hurls his voice". Like the series Enuma Anu Enlil, it contains many astrological omens, such as those concerning earthquakes and the rising of Venus, but its relationship with this prominent work is otherwise uncertain. The Assyrian royal hemerology, “Fruit, Lord of the month”, excerpts several of its omina, but with a man replaced by a king and a house by a palace.
O'Donnell then set out with a small number of his forces to hire them; and he left another large party of them with Maguire to assist him, and he ordered them to remain blockading the castle. When the Lord Justice, Sir William Fitzwilliam, had received intelligence that the warders of Enniskillen were in want of stores and provisions, he ordered a great number of the men of Meath, and of the gentlemen of the Reillys and the Binghams of Connaught, under the conduct of George Oge Bingham, to convey provisions to Enniskillen. These chieftains, having afterwards met together, went to Cavan, O'Reilly's town, for provisions; and they proceeded through Fermanagh, keeping Lough Erne on the right, until they arrived within about four miles of the town. When Maguire (Hugh) received intelligence that these forces were marching towards the town with the aforesaid provisions, he set out with his own forces and the forces left him by O'Donnell, together with Cormac, the son of the Baron, i.e.
But when the early Carlovingians, especially Charles Martel, habitually gave abbeys and churches to their companions in arms, and when bishops nominated by royal favour ceased to reside habitually at their sees, there arose a kind of division and opposition between the prelate, abbot, or bishop and the community of monks or clerics, who were on more than one occasion left in want by greedy or negligent superiors. The remedy for this was the institution of mensæ. To secure what was necessary to the community, the beneficiary was compelled to reserve for its use a sufficient portion of the property of the church or monastery. Thus the superior's administration was made lighter for him, while he could enjoy in peace and quiet the balance of the property reserved for his own proper use (indominicatum); on the other hand the community gained, besides material security, a renovation of religious life, since material privation was inevitably a cause of relaxation of discipline.
O'Donnell then set out with a > small number of his forces to hire them; and he left another large party of > them with Maguire to assist him, and he ordered them to remain blockading > the castle. When the Lord Justice, Sir William Fitzwilliam, had received > intelligence that the warders of Enniskillen were in want of stores and > provisions, he ordered a great number of the men of Meath [Kingdom of Mide], > and of the gentlemen of the Reillys and the Binghams of Connaught, under the > conduct of George Oge Bingham, to convey provisions to Enniskillen. These > chieftains, having afterwards met together, went to Cavan, O'Reilly's town, > for provisions; and they proceeded through Fermanagh, keeping Lough Erne on > the right, until they arrived within about four miles of the town. When > Maguire (Hugh) received intelligence that these forces were marching towards > the town with the aforesaid provisions, he set out with his own forces and > the forces left him by O'Donnell, together with Cormac, the son of the > Baron, i.e.
On the pyramid it is declared in Egyptian writing how much was spent on radishes and onions and leeks for the workmen, and if I remember correctly what the interpreter said while reading this inscription for me, a sum of 1600 silver talents was spent. Kheops moreover came to such a pitch of evilness, that being in want of money he sent his own daughter to a brothel and ordered her to obtain from those who came a certain amount of money (how much it was they did not tell me). But she not only obtained the sum that was appointed by her father, but she also formed a design for herself privately to leave behind her a memorial: She requested each man who came in to her to give her one stone for her building project. And of these stones, they told me, the pyramid was built which stands in front of the great pyramid in the middle of the three, each side being 150 feet in length.
All this had prompted the "raising of another Regiment to consist of one thousand men" to defend Dantzig and the ordering of "the Wet Trenches round the City to be open'd and made free of Ice, which is already done, so the Inhabitants are not now afraid of any sudden surprise." By May the Russians were camped about 19 miles (30 km) to the south of Danzig and, having been denied access to enter the city, were "in want of many things, necessary for an Army marching out of their own Dominions". The first part of 1759 saw several defeats of the Prussians, and France was planning to invade Britain. In September 1759 Corry was in Hamburg reporting the victory of the Anglo-German army under Prince Ferdinand, the Prussian field marshal, over 60,000 French troops, at the Battle of Minden, "I take the liberty to acquaint your Lordship that the Battle agained by Prince Ferdinand the beginning of last Month, has been of vast detriment to the French Army, I having met on my way hither from Amsterdam, at least one thousand Deserters".
The Celtic expansion in Europe (in grey), 6th-3rd century B.C. Leonnorius was one of the leaders of the Celts in their invasion of Macedonia and the adjoining countries. When the main body under Brennus marched southwards into Macedonia and Greece (279 BC), Leonnorius and Lutarius led a detachment, twenty-thousand strong, into Thrace, where they ravaged the country to the shores of the Hellespont, compelled the city of Byzantium to pay them tribute, and made themselves masters of Lysimachia. The rich Asiatic shores of the Hellespont afforded them a tempting prospect; and while Leonnorius returned to Byzantium, in order to compel the inhabitants of that city to give him the means of transporting his troops to Asia, Lutarius contrived to capture a few vessels, with which he conveyed all the force remaining under his command across the Hellespont. While Leonnorius was still before Byzantium, Nicomedes, king of Bithynia, being in want of support in his war with his brother Zipoetes II and the Seleucid king, Antiochus I Soter, agreed to take him and his troops, as well as those of Lutarius, into his pay, and furnished them with the means of passing over into Asia (278 BC).
The vices which lead to death and "destroy the soul" (Barnabas 20:1) are the following: idolatry, over-confidence, the arrogance of power, hypocrisy, double-heartedness, adultery, murder, rapine [i.e., plundering], haughtiness, transgression, deceit, malice, self-sufficiency, poisoning, magic, avarice, want of the fear of God. [In this way, too,] are those who persecute the good, those who hate truth, those who love falsehood, those who know not the reward of righteousness, those who cleave not to that which is good, those who attend not with just judgment to the widow and orphan, those who watch not to the fear of God, [but incline] to wickedness, from whom meekness and patience are far off; persons who love vanity, follow after a reward, pity not the needy, labor not in aid of him who is overcome with toil; who are prone to evil-speaking, who know not Him that made them, who are murderers of children, destroyers of the workmanship of God; who turn away him that is in want, who oppress the afflicted, who are advocates of the rich, who are unjust judges of the poor, and who are in every respect transgressors.
Aspland at this juncture was offered a share in a trade. He knew a prosperous dealer in artists' colours in St. Martin's Lane, London, whose daughter, Sara Middleton, he afterwards married; and taking a part in his future father-in-law's business in the week, he devoted his Sundays to preaching for any London preacher in want of sudden help. Amongst the pulpits thus opened to him was that of the General Baptists (otherwise Unitarians) in Worship Street, City; the pastor of this church, the Rev. John Evans, recommended him to the General Baptists at Newport, Isle of Wight, then unprovided with a minister; Aspland visited them 17 April 1801, and was requested to remain. His marriage followed in May; he became secretary to the South Unitarian Society in 1803; he published a sermon, entitled ‘Divine Judgments,’ in 1804; and he left Newport February 1805 to take charge of a larger congregation at Norton, Derbyshire. Passing through London on his way there, however, he was invited to be minister at the Gravel Pit chapel, Hackney; and going to Derbyshire to be honourably released from his engagement there, he returned to Hackney for 7 July 1805, taking possession on that day of a pulpit which he retained for forty years.

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