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62 Sentences With "larking"

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

Now, if you hear a term like 'larking' and you want to know what it is—obviously, 'larking' probably isn't in the Urban Dictionary with that definition—but you can certainly look up 'titty-fucking' there and learn what it means.
Larking about in the city has not been an option for Thompson until recently.
And Hollis's troupe, in which God is played by a mellifluous blowhard named Larking, has good reason to doubt him.
Evidently, the game's makers have never watched Top Gun, and they assume guys absolutely hate beach volleyball and larking about by swimming pools.
Six years later, during a brief thaw in the cold war, he found himself training in Houston with Americans, larking around in a Stetson like a cowboy.
They do spend a lot of time noisily larking about on photo apps today, but Shi Yan, the class organiser, explains that the lessons are fulfilling important needs.
Larking (Thomas Jay Ryan) doesn't make much of a distinction between God and Lechery; when Gregory, the dim set designer, is dragooned to play Sloth, you can hardly hear him behind his mask.
Here's the two of them larking about in a ground and pound experiment: But equally as a John Danaher protégée, Tonon also trains day in and day out just a short drive from Matt Serra and Ray Longo's operation.
Yet four years ago, teenager Keshorn Walcott shocked the world by claiming gold at London 212 in a discipline he'd only picked up—by accident—three years earlier while larking about with friends at the back of a school playing field.
How to square the grown man, a wartime hero who later informally adopted a neighbor's child when he saw he was being abused, with the boy who could so violently murder his mother, then go larking off to a cricket match?
After that, he reeled off four consecutive wins over Dustin Jacoby, Nick Catone, Luiz Cane and Nick Ring before dropping four consecutive losses to Ronaldo "Jacare" Souza, Lorenz Larking, Bruno Santos and Rafael Natal – the latter of which saw him get cut from the UFC once again.
What could be more captivating than a vision of your future in which you are no longer weighed down by school, but instead spend most of your time larking around with close friends in an enormous apartment, while Brad Pitt, Bruce Willis, Julia Roberts and Reese Witherspoon flit in and out of your lives?
That ambition, and the chances of success for the talks, have been dented by the antics of Barry McElduff, a Sinn Fein MP. On January 5th, the anniversary of a massacre in 1976 of ten Protestant civilians by the IRA near the village of Kingsmill, Mr McElduff posted a video of himself larking about in a supermarket with a loaf of Kingsmill bread on his head.
The son of Richard James Larking (1868-1908),Deaths: Larking, The Argus, (Tuesday, 29 December 1908), p.1. and Ethel Maude Larking (1863-1952), née Peterson,Deaths: Larking, The Argus, (Saturday, 9 February 1952), p.18. Ronald Guy Larking was born in East St Kilda on 9 September 1890.Births: Larking, The Age, (Monday, 15 September 1890), p.1. In 1913, he was engaged to Hetty Matthes Alkermande.
John Larking, c. 1860-1880. Father or brother? Lambert Blackwell Larking (2 February 1797 – 2 August 1868) was an English clergyman, writer and antiquarian.
Deaths: Larking, The Argus, (Friday, 19 April 1918), p.1.Fallen Officers: Captain Ronald Guy Larking, M.C., R.E., The (London) Times, No.41762, (Friday, 12 April 1918), p.4, col.E.
Larking was a founder member of the Kent Archaeological Society in 1857, and served as its honorary secretary until 1860, when he was elected vice-president. Larking died of ill health on 2 August 1868 at Ryarsh Vicarage.
Ronald Guy Larking (9 September 1890 – 1 April 1918) was an Australian rules footballer who played with University in the Victorian Football League.
John Larking took the mill 1n 1806, it being then rated at £131. Larking went into partnership with John Morrice by 1816 and Morrice was recorded as being at the mill from 1817-21. He was succeeded by William Blunden, who was working at Upper Mill in 1819, followed by Robert Tassell c.1823. The mill underwent considerable development between 1840 and 1860.
John Larking took the mill 1n 1806, it being then rated at £131. Larking went into partnership with John Morrice by 1816 and Morrice was recorded as at the mill from 1817-21. He was succeeded by William Blunden, who was working at Upper Mill in 1819, followed by Robert Tassell c.1823. The mill underwent considerable development between 1840 and 1860.
It all begins with a short film of five little girls larking about in a bedroom, dreaming not of ponies but of fame and sleb babyfathers.
For many years Larking collaborated with the Revd Thomas Streatfeild (1777–1848), in the collection and compilation of materials for a new history of the county of Kent and, when Streatfeild died in 1848 the materials were left in Larking's hands. However, ill health constricted Larking to concentrating all his energy on his clerical duties, allowing him little time to devote to the project. Nevertheless, Larking was able to complete another project very dear to him during his lifetime. A lithographic edition of the Kent section of Domesday Book, in facsimile, with transcription, translation, notes, and appendix by him, was completed shortly before his death, when it was in process of being printed.
Larking was born in Clare House, East Malling, Kent, the eldest son of John Larking, High Sheriff of Kent, by Dorothy, daughter of Sir Charles Style, baronet (died 1774), of Wateringbury. He was educated at Eton and Brasenose College, Oxford. He was a Freemason, and whilst at Oxford he became one of the founders (in 1818) of the Apollo University Lodge. In 1830, aged 33, he became vicar of Ryarsh, near Maidstone.
In 1792 Clement and George Taylor were granted a patent for the use of chlorine for bleaching rags for use in paper manufacture. James Whatman claimed that he was able to prove that several trials had already been made, including by Mr. Larking, who owned Lower Mill at that time. In 1816, John Larking and John Morrice were in partnership at both Upper and Lower Mills, the partnership being dissolved on 8 October of that year, John Morrice taking both mills. Robert Tassell took both mills by 1821, making both brown and white papers.
Based in Newport Beach, California, Smith worked as a photographer. He photographed covers and articles for the Los Angeles Times Home magazine. He and his wife also wrote for the Sea Larking column in the Daily Pilot and Bay Window for the Balboa Bay Club, a private yacht club.
Gunhild Maria Larking (born 13 January 1936) is a retired Swedish high jumper. She competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics, 1954 European Athletics Championships and 1956 Summer Olympics and placed ninth in 1952 and fourth in 1954 and 1956. She won five consecutive national titles from 1952 to 1956.
TQ 697 576 In 1792 Clement and George Taylor were granted a patent for the use of chlorine for bleaching rags for use in paper manufacture. James Whatman claimed that he was able to prove that several trials had already been made, including by Mr. Larking, who owned Lower Mill at that time. In 1816, John Larking and John Morrice were in partnership at both Upper and Lower Mills, the partnership being dissolved on 8 October of that year, John Morrice taking both mills. Robert Tassell took both mills by 1821, making both brown and white papers. He went into partnership with Henry Smith in 1838 and by 1844 they owned all three paper mills.
After working within the confines of a traditional rock band dynamic in Scattered Trees, On An On incorporated electronic elements into their songwriting for Give In. They utilised "all of these really old drum machines that Dave Newfeld had" and live drummer Tony Nesbitt-Larking was brought in to record on the album.
Swindon 1920s During World War I there are no written records of Fred C. Palmer, but he did produce postcards of war- wounded Belgians recuperating in Canterbury and Herne Bay, of a possible 1914 recruitment rally and of soldiers larking about.See :File:FCP Canterbury 006.jpg, :File:FCP Herne Bay 007.jpg, :File:FCP Herne Bay 008.
The men continue to do their best to entertain Masao by larking about for a few more days. Before they are to return to Tokyo, Masao dreams about them appearing over the Milky Way. In the morning, the bikers say goodbye to them and leave the camp. Masao and Kikujiro get a lift in the poet's car to Tokyo.
The Tenth Sentiment was awarded a prize of excellence at the 14th Japan Media Arts Festival which described it as an "attractive work" which avoids the "cliché interactive art works that tend to depend too much on technology", and described by art critic for The Japan Times, Matthew Larking, as "arguably the most attractive work" of the exhibit.
Other travellers include Charters and Caldicot, English gentlemen returning to Britain for the test match, and "Todhunter", an English diplomat "larking about" with his mistress, and Dr Egon Hartz. When she wakes up, Miss Froy has vanished. Her fellow travellers, including a German baroness, deny seeing Miss Froy and declare that she never existed. Amanda begins to doubt her own mental condition.
L.J. Larking, 'Additional note on the window in Ightham church', in Miscellanea, Archaeologia Cantiana V (1863), at p. 324. Following the death of Alice's father Lora remarried to James de Pecham or Peckham of Yaldham manor, Wrotham,N.H. Nicolas, De Controversia in Curia Militari inter Ricardum Le Scrope et Robertum Grosvenor milites, 2 vols (Privately printed, 1832), II, pp. 435-36 (Internet Archive).
Walker replies that that is strategy and tactics. Wilson and Mainwaring are given their tickets by an attractive bus conductress who Mainwaring takes a fancy to. When Walker, Pike and Jones start larking about then singing the ribald song "Roll Me Over In The Clover" Mainwaring stops them and apologises to the bus conductress. She is grateful and says he is "very gallant".
At one point he worked as a powder monkey in the South Australian desertS. Troeth and J. Larking, "Top of the Turks", Herald Sun, 18 Feb 1992, p.12 Griffiths showed early entrepreneurial flair. In the early 1970s, while working in a shipyard, he raffled his first pay cheque, selling tickets to workmates and earning well above the value of his wage.
The UPR process is not closely covered by New Zealand media. Media coverage of human rights issues is centred on specific issues relevant to current events which were covered in UPR recommendations to NZ. This is similar to global trends in reporting of UPR in mainstream media.Charlesworth, H and Larking, E. (eds) (2015). Human Rights and the Universal Periodic Review.
Plaque for the sculpture in San Francisco Double L Excentric Gyratory is a sculpture by American artist George Rickey. There are three editions. One is installed at the intersection of Larking and Fulton streets, outside the Main Library, in San Francisco's Civic Center, in the U.S. state of California. Another is part of the Auckland Art Gallery's International Art Collection.
Population is the second studio album by Canadian indie rock band The Most Serene Republic. It was recorded and mixed by Ryan Mills, Mike Kuehn and Ryan Lenssen at Sleepytown Sound in Toronto. The album was released on October 2, 2007 through Arts & Crafts. This is the first album to feature the band's new rhythm section of Tony Nesbitt-Larking and Simon Lukasewich.
The video shows Madness as car mechanics larking about in their workshop, and in their normal suits driving around in their "Maddiemobile" - a white 1959 model Morris Minor. The members of fellow ska/pop group Fun Boy Three make a brief appearance, trying (and failing) to hitch a ride to their home town of Coventry, which the A45 mentioned in the song passes through.
A scholarship, the Ronald Guy Larking Exhibition was established in his name in 1919.School Speech Days: Melbourne Grammar School, The Argus, (Friday, 28 November 1919), p.8. It was awarded annually, and limited to the sons of soldiers, aged between 14½ and 17 years, who intended to study at Melbourne Grammar as a boarding student. It was tenable for their entire time at the school.
On 6 April 1837, the 3rd Marquess of Waterford and his hunting party went on a "spree" through the streets of Melton, causing much damage. This event was recorded in the London Examiner. Henry Alken's pictures A Spree at Melton Mowbray and Larking at the Grantham Tollgate are said to illustrate the event. They appeared also in a play called The Meltonians at The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1838.
Scarvell was born in 1904 in Christchurch, the daughter of John Larking Scarvell (eldest son of Henry Ramsay Scarvell) and Lucy Mary Scarvell (née Malthus, eldest daughter of Charles E.D. Malthus). Scarvell socialised with artist Olivia Spencer Bower during her youth. Scarvell studied towards a Diploma of Fine Arts at the Canterbury College School of Art, graduating in May 1933. After Scarvell's family fell on tough times, her and her sister Mary were forced to work.
Having completed Cornwall, James requested permission to photozincograph the rest of Domesday. Despite his claim that the public sale of the bound and engraved copies could cover the entire cost of the photozincography of the counties, the Lords of the Treasury wished to consult the Master of the Rolls regarding the comparison of James’s photozincographic reproductions with a rival process employed by Rev. Lambert Larking of Kent.E. Hallam, Domesday Book: Through Nine Centuries, (London: Guild Publishing, 1986), p.
Ightham Mote, much developed by Richard Haute in the 15th century The first wife of Nicholas was Alice Cawne, the widow of Richard Charlys (Charles) and daughter of Sir Thomas Cawne (or Couen), M.P. (d. 1374),'The Cawnes – our earliest known owners', The National Trust, Ightham Mote webpage.(L.J. Larking), 'Will of Sir Thomas Cawne, Kt.', in Miscellanea, Archaeologia Cantiana IV (1861), at pp. 221-25. This is from a Surrenden MS. and his wife Lora, daughter of Sir Thomas Moraunt of Chevening.
In 2015, the Wurzels teamed up with the Farm Safety Foundation with a rewrite of their classic, Combine Harvester, focussing on Farm Safety. The song was accompanied by a light- hearted video produced by students from Moreton Morrell College, drawing attention to the various dangers on the farm. In February 2016, the band performed at Camden Market in London. The day after, the BBC released never before seen footage of the band from 1967 with Adge Cutler larking around in Bristol City Centre.
Like many of Smith's poems, "Not Waving but Drowning" is short, consisting of only twelve lines. The narrative takes place from a third-person perspective and describes the circumstances surrounding the "dead man" described in line one. In line five the poem suggests that the man who has died "always loved larking," which causes his distress signals to be discounted. The image that Smith attached to the poem shows the form of a girl from the waist up with her wet hair hanging over her face.
While still a Melbourne Grammar student, he played one senior match for University in the Victorian Football League (VFL) competition, against Fitzroy, on 4 September 1909, the last game of the 1909 home-and-away season, in which Fitzroy, 9.6 (80), drew with University, 8.12 (60).Holmesby & Main (2014), p.501. Larking played at full-forward, replacing the injured Albert Hartkopf;Hard Work at Fitzroy, The Argus, (Monday, 6 September 1909), p.5; Football Notes: Other League Games, The Australasian, (Saturday, 11 September 1909), p.23.
Associating the site with the druids of Britain's Iron Age, Poste's suggestion was that the name "Coldrum" derived from the linguistically Celtic "Gael-Dun", and that Belgic chiefs were interred there. He further reported that in both 1804 and 1825, skulls had been found at the site. In 1844, an antiquarian named Thomas Wright published a note on the Coldrum Stones and other Medway Megaliths in The Archaeological Journal. Wright had been alerted to their existence by a local vicar, the Reverend Lambert B. Larking, and proceeded to visit them with him.
Elizabeth was the wife of Dr. Edward V. Colbert, a graduate of the Albany Academy and the Albany Medical College who was a coroners physician for several years. She was the mother of two sons, with whom she spent one month every summer hunting, fishing and “larking” in the Adirondacks. She was a member of St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Daughters of Rebecca and the Order of the Eastern Star. After an attack of influenza that left her bedridden for four months, Colbert died in Albany, New York on July 13, 1929.
Very little is known of Byrne's early life beyond the fact that he was born in Ireland in 1806. His first fight, in 1825, was a loss to Mike Larking; it lasted 138 rounds spread over two and a half hours—despite the fact that at this time a round could vary in length, and usually only ended when a man was knocked down. His second fight was a draw against Jack Manning in 1826, earning Byrne £100. Next was Byrne's first match against the Scottish boxer Alexander McKay, which Byrne won easily in five rounds, earning him a further £100.
The site was excavated circa 1845 by a local vicar, the Reverend Lambert Larking, who allegedly found some evidence of ceramics; it has also been asserted, although not proven, that he discovered human bones at the site. When Thomas Wright explored it c.1850, he was aided by a local man who enthusiastically believed that a crock of gold would be buried there, something that Leslie Grinsell deemed to be part of local folklore. Edwin Dunkin produced a plan of the site in 1871, with a more accurate plan being created by Augustus Pitt-Rivers in 1878.
Kodama started working in ferrofluid with her project “ Protrude, Flow” in 2000, created in collaboration with Minako Takeno." "Protrude, Flow" was exhibited at the SIGGRAPH 2001 Art Gallery, the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles, and the Mood River exhibition held at the Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus. In 2010 Kodama exhibited “Morpho Tower” and “Breathing Chaos” at Cyber Arts Japan, a media art exhibition hosted by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. Matthew Larking described her work as "Sachiko Kodama's small yet powerful piece "Morpho Tower" displays a seemingly organic life form, which is actually ferrofluid dynamically sculpted by electromagnets.
He asked his mother to provide a false alibi, because he did not want his wife to know he had been "larking about" with girls. Although he was considered as a suspect, Hall was not charged with the murder as there was no evidence linking him to the crime. At an inquest later that year he was called as one of 53 witnesses to give evidence, asking his solicitor to put him in the witness box: "Though he may not be an angel, he wants the finger of suspicion which has been levelled at him removed". A jury subsequently recorded a verdict of "murder by some person or persons unknown".
Faussett succeeded Lambert Larking as editor of the large history of Kent begun by Thomas Streatfeild; but the ill-health from which he suffered from about 1866 till his death prevented his continuing the work. From about 1873 he was hardly ever able to hold a pen. In spite of this, Faussett, living in his pleasant house in the cathedral precincts, was a man of habitual cheerfulness, and composed hundreds of clever squibs and epigrams in Latin and English. Specimens of these and several of his graceful Latin hymns are printed in the Memorials of T. G. Faussett, published in 1878 (two editions) by the Rev.
They were the first band signed by Arts & Crafts that was not related to Broken Social Scene in any way or form. After touring the album extensively with the likes of Metric, Stars and Broken Social Scene, the band recorded what ultimately became the Phages EP, that was first made available when the band supported The Strokes on their Canadian tour of 2006. In 2006 longtime drummer Adam Nimmo left the band, replaced by Tony Nesbitt-Larking. Tony appeared on Population and toured with the band throughout 2008. TMSR spent much of 2007 prepping their second album Population, which was released by Arts & Crafts on October 2, 2007 to generally positive reviews. In 2007 Jewett and Lenssen appeared on MTV Canada to promote the release of Population.
In February 1981 the Orpington & District bus company collapsed due to financial difficulties, and the Tillingbourne Bus Company based in West Surrey took over their operations, setting up Tillingbourne (Metropolitan) Limited.Companies House extract company no 1567824 Tillingbourne (Metropolitan) Limited In July 1983, Metrobus Limited was formed when two directors, Gary Wood and Peter Larking, purchased the subsidiary. The newly formed company acquired the former Orpington & District garage at Green Street Green, Orpington, along with six employees and six vehicles. Three routes were operated by Metrobus at the time it was set up: 353 (Croydon to Orpington via Coombe Road, weekday peak hours only), 355 (Croydon to Forestdale, weekday peak hours only) and 357 (Croydon to Orpington via Forestdale, Monday-Saturday, all day).
To achieve this, workmen removed two of the sarsens from the revetment kerb and placed them in the corner of the wood to the south of the monument. In the early 1840s, the Reverend Beale Post conducted investigations into the Medway Megaliths, writing them up in a manuscript that was left unpublished; this included Addington Long Barrow and Chestnuts Long Barrow, which he collectively labelled the "Addington Circles". Thomas Wright recorded that in 1845 a local parson, the Reverend Lambert Blackwell Larking, dug into a chamber at Addington, discovering "fragments of rude pottery". From the context in which Wright wrote, it seems that Addington Long Barrow is referred to, although it remains possible that Chestnuts was the barrow in question.
Saul began her journalism career working for The Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, Mississippi, covering the state government and the state legislature. In 1980, Saul, fellow reporter Patrick Larking, and photographers Laura Lynn Fistler and Tom Hayes earned The Clarion-Ledger the Silver Gavel Award from the American Bar Association for their feature article on jail conditions in Mississippi. In 1981, Saul and W. Stevens Ricks received the George Polk Award for Regional Reporting for their article "Mississippi Gulf Coast: Wide Open and Wicked." While working for The Plain Dealer, Saul, Mary Anne Sharkey, and W. Steve Ricks wrote a multi-part series in 1985 titled "A Law Unto Himself" that exposed the corrupt practices of Ohio Supreme Court Justice Frank Celebrezze.
It records that the Hospitallers of St Ive had a dwelling house with a garden, dovecote and watermill and gives prices of food and grain: Lambert B. Larking, ed. (with introduction by John Mitchell Kemble), The Knights Hospitallers in England: Being the Report of Prior Philip de Thame to the Grand Master Elyan de Villanova for A.D. 1338, Camden Society 1st series 65 (London: Camden Society, 1857), pp. 15–16. Following the Dissolution of the Monasteries the manor of Trebeigh was granted by Queen Elizabeth I in 1573 to Henry Wilbye and George Blyke, from whom it was acquired by John Wrey, who made it his family's chief seat until his descendants inherited Tawstock in Devon from the Bourchiers in 1654.Vivian, (ed.), Heralds' Visitations of Devon, 1895, p.
In 1857, the antiquarian J. M. Kemble excavated at the site with the help of the Reverend Larking, providing a report of their findings to the Central Committee of the British Archaeological Association. Describing the monument as a stone circle, they asserted that they discovered Anglo-Saxon pottery at the site, and noted that as well as being called the Coldrum Stones, the monument also had the name of the Adscombe Stones, which Kemble believed originated with the Old English word for funeral pile, ad. In August 1863, members of the Archaeological Institute—which was holding its week-long meeting in Rochester—visited the site, guided by the antiquary Charles Roach Smith. That year, the monument was described in a copy of Gentleman's Magazine by Yorkshire antiquary Charles Moore Jessop, who believed it to be a "Celtic" stone circle.
155 Larking (a local antiquarian) had employed an artist to assist the reproduction of the county of Kent using the lithographic process - a much more expensive means of reproduction than photozincography. However, in order to secure this permission over Larking's process James had to provide the Treasury with evidence of public interest and a guarantee of low-cost production. Thomas Letts of Letts Son & Co. Limited, London distributed a circular nationally bearing a foreword from James encouraging subscription, and by late October more than fifty subscribers to each county had been amassed. On 28 November 1861 Burtt returned to Southampton once more with Domesday for the aforementioned counties’ photozincographing, and by December James had secured permission from the Treasury to copy the remainder of Great Domesday – but he was explicitly forbidden from reproducing Kent, in defence of Larking’s lithograph.
BBC Radio 5 used the medium wave frequencies previously used to transmit BBC Radio 2 from 23 November 1978 to 14 August 1990. It owed its existence to the broadcasting policy of the Conservative government of the time, who wished the BBC to end its longstanding practice of simulcasting its services on both AM and FM frequencies. A number of programmes, which were previously broadcast as opt-outs on one frequency only, would otherwise have been left without a home. The station officially launched at 9.00am on 27 August 1990, with five-year-old boy Andrew Kelly uttering the words: Prior to this, the new station's frequencies broadcast a long sequence of programming trails linked by Jon Briggs (one of the station's launch presenting team) and pre-recorded sketches from comedians Trevor Neal and Simon Hickson (consisting of the two larking about in the studio amid the strains of "Sailing By", and Trevor suddenly being cut off while he was reading his so-called "Ode to Radio 5").

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