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24 Sentences With "intrepidly"

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

I led us out, intrepidly, to the cold streets of Sunset Park.
These are Turner's "potential nations" moving intrepidly toward maturity at long last.
By intrepidly going where the nerds go, brands hope to get some credibility.
I intrepidly entered "craven" and had to undo some other bad entries because of it.
My position is and was: Women travel alone, intrepidly, have for centuries, it's normal, get over it, next!
Afterwards, Chelsea heads off to check out a sculpture garden, and Kayleigh intrepidly plunks into the driver's seat for a zip along the Wall with Gabija.
We know that Broadway ends in the sea if your walking tour heads south toward the Battery (Carl Sandburg called the street a "tall-walled river of rush and play"), but what about if, like we did, you intrepidly walk north?
And while the history of representing bodies in photography — particularly nude ones — is fraught, Mr. Sepuya charges intrepidly into the mire, offering what feel like new, smart conclusions on how to represent power or vulnerability, as well as the unwavering desire to look at such images.
Our old haunts are mostly gone, though as I passed the motley art-cafe, Booze Cooperativa, I was heartened to see the eccentric proprietor and septuagenarian local cult figure, Nikos Louvros, still holding his position out front, intrepidly smoking and drinking in the noon day sun.
Howard married writer Cheryl Alley (born 1953) on June 7, 1975.Cheryl Howard Crew: To the Pier, Intrepidly, The New York Times, 24 April 2005 They have four children: daughters Bryce Dallas Howard (born 1981), twins Jocelyn Carlyle and Paige Howard (born 1985), and son Reed Cross (born 1987).
Patrick Vinton Kirch, The Lapita Peoples: Ancestors of the Oceanic World They intrepidly stormed through the region, rapidly colonizing and pushing east. They brought with them new plant and animal species, as well as a distinct pottery design. Today these people are named the Lapita, after the location in New Caledonia where they were first noticed archaeologically.
While three other horses (Awesome Slew, Gun Runner, Nyquist) were on the outside, all of them were less than a length apart from each other. With a furlong to go, Awesome Slew and Nyquist began to fall back and were out of contention for winning. Gun Runner charged on the far outside while Connect fought back intrepidly. At the wire, Connect was the winner by half a length.
When the position was retaken, over 70 enemy dead were > counted in the area he had so intrepidly defended. Sergeant Handrich's > sustained personal bravery, consummate courage, and gallant self-sacrifice > reflect untold glory upon himself and the heroic traditions of the military > service. The 25th Infantry Division Association states that the 5th Infantry Regimental Combat Team was attached to the 25th Infantry Division at the time of this action.25th Infantry Division Association, 25th Infantry Division Medal of Honor Recipients.
Later, dressed as a Turkoman, he intrepidly explored in a hostile country the route from Khiva to Igdy on the old riverbed of the Oxus. In 1875, he was given an important command in the expedition against the Khanate of Kokand under General Konstantin Petrovich von Kaufman, showing great capacity in the action of Makram, where he outmanoeuvered a greatly superior force and captured 58 guns, and in a brilliant night attack during the retreat from Andijan, when he routed a large force with a handful of cavalry.
Rex was a dog who received the Dickin Medal in April, 1945 from the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals for bravery in service during the Second World War in England. This MAP Civil Defence rescue dog performed "outstanding good work" finding casualties in burning buildings. Rex intrepidly worked in a harsh environment of "smouldering debris, thick smoke, intense heat and jets of water" using a rare combination of determination and intelligence to follow scents to those who were trapped. The Dickin Medal is often referred to as the animal metaphorical equivalent of the Victoria Cross.
The school now has a staff of 200, including 139 teachers, among whom are 63 Senior Teachers (5 Teachers of Special Classification included) and 47 first-Rank teachers, The school puts into practice quality education in an all - round way, vigorously promotes modernizations in education, carries forward its fine tradition to cultivate people, intrepidly brings forth new ideas and strengthens researches on education. As a result, steady progress has been made in the quality of education. The school was credited as Model Unit in Moral Education in Jiangsu Province. Every year more than 100 awards were won in mathematics, physics, chemistry, computer, composition and other contests at or above provincial levels.
Acquinsicke is a very significant example of late 18th century, early Federal architecture. Remarkably enough, only a few examples of domestic architectural farms survive in this region that illustrate as well as Acquinsicke the transitional phase between entirely vernacular building traditions and those buildings whose overall designs and carpentry were obviously influenced by outside sources. In this sense, Acquinsicke's full two-story height, one-room-deep design, finished (and heated!) attic chambers, and intrepidly corbelled and plaster banded chimney stacks are of specific note. Viewed independently, each of these details is unique in a late 18th- century architectural context: Together, they establish Acquinsicke as entirely matchless.
Nansouty's cuirassiers charging at the Battle of Friedland on 14 June 1807 Arriving with his corps at Friedland on 13 June after nightfall, Lannes found the position already occupied by Russian forces. Very early on 14 June, Lannes intrepidly attacked with an almost symbolic force (between 11,000 and 13,500 men) against the might of a massed enemy army of 85,000. His goal was to prevent the enemy from crossing the Alle and to give Napoleon enough time to arrive with the remainder of his forces. Nansouty's division arrived on the field of battle at Friedland after the first engagements and was directed towards the strategic village of Heinrichsdorf.
After the capture of the harbour of Smyrna on 28 October 1344, Henry established his headquarters there and began restoring the fortifications. Belatedly, on 1 February, Pope Clement congratulated Henry on the victory and on his "virtuously, constantly and intrepidly" leading. He warned about the difficulty of raising funds for the continuance of the crusade, but left the decision on how to proceed to Henry, since the latter, he said, had been taught "in the school of experience". One of the last actions of the patriarch before his death was to lead, with Zaccaria, a fleet of twelve galleys on a successful foray to captured supplies.
The term chromatic began to approach its modern usage in the 16th century. For instance Orlando Lasso's Prophetiae Sibyllarum opens with a prologue proclaiming, "these chromatic songs,Rendered by many as Carmina chromatico, though this is incorrect Latin; the title is given as Carmina chromatica (which is plural of Latin carmen chromaticum) in New Grove Online. The entire passage is relevant to present points in this article: heard in modulation, are those in which the mysteries of the Sibyls are sung, intrepidly," which here takes its modern meaning referring to the frequent change of key and use of chromatic intervals in the work. (The Prophetiae belonged to an experimental musical movement of the time, called musica reservata).
Furious crossfire from > enemy snipers and machineguns finally pinned down Private First Class James > after making his way forward approximately 200 yards across open terrain. > Lying in an exposed position for more than an hour, Private First Class > James intrepidly observed the enemy's positions which were given away by the > fire Private first class James was daringly drawing upon himself. Then, with > utter indifference to his personal safety, in a storm of enemy small arms > fire, Private First Class James made his way back more than 300 yards across > open terrain under enemy observation to his platoon positions, and gave a > full, detailed report on the enemy disposition. The unit worked out a new > plan on maneuver based on Private First Class James' information.
In addition an earlier migration of the Lasakau clan had also journeyed from Nakauvadra to Wainibuka with the Rokotuibau and on to Kubuna at Tai ko Bau with the Butoni and Levuka clans. The seafaring exploits of Bau's sea warriors, recounted through the lineage of the Lasakau Nabou sub-clan of Mataqalikira and in particular the two chiefly households of Nacokula and Nadrakuta reflected the Machiavellian and martial mores of the times. Through the chiefs of these two households, Bau's fortunes were intrepidly pursued by the Vunivalu Tui Kaba. Ratu Pope Seniloli the Vunivalu of Bau (1883–1936), in his sworn statement at the Native Lands Commission in 1933 for the Village of Lasakau asserted, Ai tokatoka ka liu ko Nacokula.
Led by Ensign Mackay, the Sutherland men came down from the hills near Golspie, attacking into the gap between the rebel officers and their soldiers. Most of the Jacobite officers were captured; many of the men were killed, and the rest were driven onto the beach, where several were drowned trying to swim Loch Fleet. Most of Cromartie's men were either killed or taken prisoner and thus denied the Prince much needed reinforcements. An account of the Battle of Littleferry was written by Angus Mackay in The Book of Mackay: > A few days before Culloden, Cromartie got orders to rejoin the Prince at > Inverness with all his forces, but as he was marching towards the Little > Ferry, Ensign John Mackay with a handful of men intrepidly attacked him.
Towards the end of his architectural education he worked as an intern with Turkish modernist architect Cengiz Bektaş from 1981 to 1983 who was also based in Kuzguncuk, Istanbul, and later started a practice Mimarlik Hizmetleri Ltd from 1990-1994 with the architect Nevzat Sayın whom he had met during his time at the office of Bektaş. He was active in the milieu of architects and archaeologists in Bektaş's circle which prompted him to explore Central Anatolia in detail including Cappadoccia. Later he would go further east, intrepidly hitchhiking on his own through Turkey to the Iranian regions of Khorasan and Isfahan on the Silk Road ending up in Samerkand in Uzbekistan. The end of his student days was marked by his internship on the restoration project of the Uzbek Sufi Lodge in Üsküdar, Istanbul, where he worked closely with the traditional carpenter craftsman, Eyup usta, on the complete reconstruction of the historical timber Ottoman building financed in part by the Turkish-American businessman, Ahmet Ertegün.

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