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28 Sentences With "ladled out"

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

In his remarks, Johnson ladled out his famously effusive flattery.
In 2016 the government ladled out another vast dollop of money.
Later, she ladled out fabada bean salad sprinkled with homegrown rosemary and chili oil.
A soldier was serving stale bread and watery lentil soup, ladled out from a cavernous pot.
There's also one that uses sujeonggwa, the sweet cinnamon punch ladled out at the end of Korean meals.
Along the way, a bunch of financial advice is ladled out — most of which is questionable at best.
Two young women rosy from the cold ordered hot cider spiked with applejack, ladled out from a gargantuan soup kettle.
But surprises, ladled out by an active imagination working in an Indian mode, have been scarce since Tabla closed in 2010.
The 42-tweet thread, shared on Twitter, is chilling and suspenseful — a modern day ghost story ladled out piece by piece on social media.
Lavish doesn't have to mean old-school, black-tie events at New York institutions, with caviar ladled out with gold spoons by men in white.
Ben LeBlanc, whose satisfying soups are ladled out at Good Stock, his cafe in the West Village and Urbanspace Vanderbilt market stand, is now selling them online.
In fashion, where hysteria is the dominant mode of expression and praise is often ladled out in heaps rather than spoonfuls, coronations can be instantaneous, new gods and icons minted every season.
The tour of Russia's battle for hearts and minds — and ears — in Syria began in a tent mess, where a line of cheery middle-aged women ladled out kasha and tushonka, the Russian form of Spam.
In 1920, when Robert H. Goddard outlined how a rocket might reach the moon, The Times wrote that he seemed "to lack the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools" and argued, incorrectly, that thrust was not possible in a vacuum.
In 1920, when Robert H. Goddard, above, outlined how a rocket might reach the moon, The Times wrote that he seemed "to lack the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools" and argued, incorrectly, that thrust was not possible in a vacuum.
In 1920, when Robert H. Goddard, above, outlined how a rocket might reach the moon, The New York Times wrote that he seemed "to lack the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools" and argued, incorrectly, that thrust was not possible in a vacuum.
The 15-foot dining room table, a cranberry-hued seamless expanse at which one recent night white-gloved servers ladled out Santarelli's specialty, spaghetti all'amatriciana, came from an ancient site in Egypt; Santarelli traveled for a day (by car, foot and camel) to reach the small town where it originated.
The Expo's hallways are a riotous blur of stimulation: the smell of the vegan Indian food being ladled out in the café area, the fringe and animal prints and excellent jewelry of the attendees (I eyed a woman in a peacock-patterned sequin coat and a gold lamé scarf so long and so enviously she caught me, and did the same thing again with a woman in the ladies' room wearing a broad gold Isis-style bird neckplate), the whiffs of incense and essential oils, the glint of the precious gems and crystals and flapping banners advertising the bigger name speakers can all be a lot to take in.
The clear wine inside the yongsu is ladled out to make cheongju.
Unpressed tofu are so soft that they are directly ladled out for serving or sold with its gelling container.
The early school room was about 20 feet square with a huge fireplace in the front. Later heat was supplied by an iron wood stove. Two privies were out back, one for the boys and one for the girls. Drinking water was ladled out of a wooden pail.
The onions are cut in half and sliced thinly to give curved sections, the lettuce and sorrel minced, in what a modern recipe would term en chiffonade. The root vegetables are briefly sauteed, then all are simmered in stock and the julienne is ladled out over a slice of bread.
The farms had been in the Smith family for four generations. Smith delivered milk by horse and cart in the Woolton area. The raw milk he provided was stored in a large churn and was ladled out into the bottles and receptacles of customers. When other girls were thinking of marriage, Mimi Stanley talked of challenges and adventures.
Meat is coated with egg white or starch in order to contain the juices. When the food is cooked it is poured and ladled out of the wok. The wok must then be quickly rinsed to prevent food residues from charring and burning to the wok bottom because of residual heat. A larger amount of cooking fat with a high smoke point, such as refined plant oils, is often used in bao.
The krater was discovered buried, as a funerary urn for a Thessalian aristocrat whose name is engraved on the vase: Astiouneios, son of Anaxagoras, from Larissa. Kraters (mixing bowls) were vessels used for mixing undiluted wine with water and probably various spices as well, the drink then being ladled out to fellow banqueters at ritual or festive celebrations. When excavated, the Derveni krater contained 1968.31 g of burnt bones that belonged to a man aged 35–50 and to a younger woman.
The sergeant of marines poured the ration under direction of the chief steward, who announced the number of drinking men present in each petty officer's mess. The rest of the rum was mixed in a tub with two parts water, becoming the grog provided to the ratings. At noon, the boatswain's mate piped "Muster for Rum", and the cooks from each mess presented with tin buckets. The sergeant of marines ladled out the authorised number of tots (half-pints) supervised by the petty officer of the day.
The article pressed further on Goddard's proposal to launch rockets beyond the atmosphere: > [A]fter the rocket quits our air and really starts on its longer journey, > its flight would be neither accelerated nor maintained by the explosion of > the charges it then might have left. To claim that it would be is to deny a > fundamental law of dynamics, and only Dr. Einstein and his chosen dozen, so > few and fit, are licensed to do that. ... Of course, [Goddard] only seems to > lack the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools. The basis of that criticism was the then-common belief that thrust was produced by the rocket exhaust pushing against the atmosphere; Goddard realized that Newton's third law (reaction) was the actual principle.
Stránský married Marie Doxrud (1881–1954), a soprano from Norway, in 1912. During his tenure with the Philharmonic, Stránský received praise for his interpretations of Franz Liszt and Richard Strauss by the prominent critic Henry T. Finck of the New York Evening Post. However, Daniel Gregory Mason expressed his dissatisfaction with what he referred to as "the Wagnerian, Lisztian and Tschaikowskian pap ladled out to us by ... Stransky of the Phihamonic Society", and went as far as to call the conductor "a total musical incompetent". In an even more biting critique published in H. L. Mencken's American Mercury Magazine, critic D. W. Sinclair wrote Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York Mahler scholar Henry-Louis de La Grange has characterized Stránský as a "conscientious but uninspiring" leader, who allowed the high performing levels achieved by Mahler to fall.

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