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20 Sentences With "lucky chance"

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

By lucky chance they inherit a house in Vineland from Willa's aunt; unfortunately, the place is a wreck.
By a lucky chance, as soon as they got to the main road there was a taxi nosing through the slush.
Musk and his supporters are doing their best to promote a "post-modern/post-union" view of Tesla as an entirely different sort of workplace where workers will be disposed to set aside the traditional Norma Rae vision of fighting the bosses, in favor of their lucky chance to play a part in bringing about a post-carbon vehicular universe.
In June 1979, Kennedy was one of three stewards who scratched Come Lucky Chance from the $100,000 Canadian Oaks after the horse had thrown its rider prior to the race. Infuriated by the ruling was the horse's owner, 84-year-old Conn Smythe.
However, of all the crimes, there were two very important ones. "Who Killed Tim Sir's Wife?" had two possible suspects, however, the murderer turns out to be a nurse who accidentally poisoned her. This causes Tim's heart to break, but it is a lucky chance for him to fall in love with Siu-Yau. "Where is Tim Sir" was the last and most important mystery.
The 2009 festival saw the introduction of the new Butserquests. This was a series of shows across East Hampshire looking for the best local bands to play on the main stage at Butserfest. Over 70 local bands registered an interest in playing the festival this year with only a few getting the lucky chance, but other bands were able to play on the ButserQuest Stage who did not win.
Cambridge UP, 2003. pg. 39. which, in 1998, the National Theatre selected as a representative play of the 1980s in its NT2000 list of “One Hundred Plays of the Century” In 1984 Wright directed the WPT’s opening production, Aphra Behn's 1686 play The Lucky Chance. The cast included Harriet Walter, Alan Rickman, Pam Ferris, Kathryn Pogson and Denis Lawson. Design was by Jenny Tiramani and music composed by Ilona Sekacz.
On March 2, 1921, Frost wrote to Struve, offering him a position at Yerkes. Given his situation in Turkey, it was a lucky chance that Struve received that letter. On March 11, Struve sent a reply, thanking Frost for the offer and accepting it. The letter was formally written in English but with German grammar, revealing the poor English proficiency of Struve (when they later met in US, they spoke in German).
"Our favourite playwright returns to the city stage". Retrieved 13 January 2013. During the Clements period the programme included a variety of work, ranging from classics such as Death of a Salesman, Aphra Behn's Lucky Chance and Shakespeare's Richard III, to contemporary drama such as Our Boys, The Rise and Fall of Little Voice and Children of a Lesser God, and newly commissioned work such as Tess of the d'Urbervilles, Passion Killers and Blood Money.
Lucky Chance is a 1994 Telugu-language comedy film, produced by C. Sarath Babu under the Sri Madhav Arts banner and directed by Siva Nageswara Rao. It stars Rajendra Prasad, Kanchan in the lead roles and music composed by Sri. The film was inspired by the 1954 classic movie Chakrapani, which itself was based on Malladi Venkata Krishna Murthy's novel Vitamin M. The film was recorded as a Hit at the box office.
Hall's new book kept the snappy dialogue of the previous work, but paired it with a romantic plot, tacked on at the last minute when Edwardes managed to engage the popular Marie Tempest, and a role was quickly written in for her. This lucky chance set up the formula for a series of successes for the Edwardes-Hall-Jones-Greenbank team at Daly's Theatre.Kurt Gänzl, The Encyclopedia of The Musical Theatre, Blackwell, Oxford (1994) vol. I, pp.
Throughout the 1980s and the early 1990s, WPT worked predominantly at the Royal Court Theatre, London. The first WPT production was a revival of Aphra Behn's "The Lucky Chance", performed at The Royal Court Theatre in 1984, starring Alan Rickman and Harriet Walter. In 1993 WPT began to mount work in one of London's most beautiful, derelict, industrial buildings in the East End, the Wapping Hydraulic Power Station. WPT purchased the building from London Development Agency and invested 4 million pounds in converting it into and arts centre.
Venus and Adonis is an opera in three acts and a prologue by the English Baroque composer John Blow, composed in about 1683. It was written for the court of King Charles II at either London or Windsor. It is considered by some to be either a semi-opera or a masque, but The New Grove names it as the earliest known English opera. The author of the libretto was surmised to have been Aphra Behn due to the feminist nature of the text, and that she later worked with Blow on the play The Lucky Chance.
When the case was tried, > he objected to the introduction of any testimony, upon the ground that the > information did not charge any offense against the laws of Oklahoma. Every > conceivable objection was offered to each question asked every witness in > the case. Counsel for appellant was evidently fishing with a grabhook and > seining with a dragnet, hoping that by some lucky chance he might catch onto > an unforeseen and unknown error, and thereby secure the reversal of a > conviction. In some states this practice may be beneficial, but it has > directly the opposite effect in this state.
As described in a film magazine, Mary Ellen (Gish) lives in a very small and unprogressive village, her entertainment being to watch the New York City train that passes through each day. A lucky chance gives her a card of introduction to a New York theatrical producer, and she goes to the city, innocently engaging as an entertainer at the Coster Cabaret, which is the headquarters of Willie the Weasel (Gerrard) and his band. The Weasel seeks to obtain the fortune recently inherited by Bob Fairacres (Graves), also of Mary Ellen's village, though she does not know it. The Weasel forces Mary Ellen to aid him by throwing suspicion of robbery on her.
In 1993, for the 300-year anniversary of the Oper Leipzig, Ursula Cain got honorary member of the Oper Leipzig. The former artist director Udo Zimmermann congratulated the "dream-ballerina" ("Traum-Ballerina") to her 60th birthday: Maybe it was due to this combination of Wigman and Gsovsky, connected to the place Leipzig, where those two important figures worked together, which realized the lucky chance, that you became the embodiment of the classical lyrical ballerina. In any case, it could have only been you, because you have been one of the few ones, who had everything about in, in that time.– Oper Leipzig In March 2008 the international dance-magazine "Ballettanz" named Ursula Cain as Grande dame of the dance in Leipzig.
Celestina, is can be noted, is not an ascetic or a prig; she herself pursues pleasure, but in a moderate way that is in keeping with the mores of her society and class. Aretina is to be faulted, and needs to be reformed, because she goes too far. The play also has a more purely comic third-level plot, involving the character Master Frederick, who descends from scholarship to drunkenness; and it contains the comic features typical of Shirleian comedy, like the clownish suitors Littleworth and Kickshaw (a "kickshaw" is a trinket, a flashy object of little intrinsic value), plus Madame Decoy the bawd, Sir William Scentlove the worthless dandy, and Haircut the barber. Aphra Behn would later borrow plot elements from Shirley's play for her own The Lucky Chance (1686).
As Liu Mengmei continued his pilgrimage, he happened upon the Temple of the Many-jewelled, where upon lucky chance arrived the Imperial Inspector Miao Shunbin. Acting upon this opportunity unhesitatingly, Mengmei presented himself to the inspector's attendants, requesting an audience with their lord upon verifying a history of tantamount scholarship. As this request had been granted and the two individuals respectively greeted one another, Mengmei began examining the pearls and jewels beneath Miao's jurisdiction with heightened interest; and intent on further investigating the sourcing of this treasury, he was driven to ask what great distances had been traveled to gather such material. Furthering this, Mengmei romanticized the situation by attributing the pearls and jewels as insensate without being able to present happiness; they can neither be used to feed the hungry nor cloth the naked.
In the Best Ten rankings, the single debuted at number 5 and remained in yearly rankings at number 37. Their third single in the 1985, "Lucky Chance wo Mou Ichido" is also as one their biggest hit - debuted at number 3 on Oricon Single Weekly Rankings and remained number 50 on Yearly rankings, while in Best Ten Rankings it debuted at number 1 on and remained in the yearly rankings at number 13. The song gave the band's first appearance on the end of the year special Kouhaku Uta Gassen. The single won the Best Ballad Song Award at the 1986's FNS Kayousai. The fourth single of the 1985, Kuusou Kiss reprised role to be used as an theme song to the second season of the japanese television drama Maido Osawagaseshimasu.
They included: Beaugard's Father in Otway's The Atheist, Rogero in Thomas Southerne's The Disappointment, Sir Paul Squelch in Richard Brome's Northern Lass, Crack in Crowne's Sir Courtly Nice, Trappolin in Nahum Tate's Duke and No Duke, Security in Tate's Cuckold's Haven, an adaptation of Eastward Hoe, Scaramouch in William Mountfort's Dr. Faustus, Sir Feeble Fainwou'd in Behn's Lucky Chance, Scaramouch in her Emperor of the Moon, Sir William Belfond in Shadwell's The Squire of Alsatia, Justice Grub in Fool's Preferment, altered by D'Urfey from Fletcher's The Noble Gentleman, Lord Stately in Crowne's English Friar, Mustapha in Dryden's Don Sebastian, Mercury in Dryden's Amphitryon, Abbé in Mountfort's Sir Anthony Love, Tope in Shadwell's Scowrers, Sir Thomas Reveller in Mountfort's ', Lady Addleplot in D'Urfey's Love for Money, Van Grin in D'Urfey's Marriage-Hater Match'd, and Major-general Blunt in Shadwell's Volunteers. John Genest believed Leigh was the original Aldo in Dryden's Limberham. Leigh died of fever in December 1692, in the same season as James Nokes, and these deaths, combined with the murder of William Mountfort, greatly weakened the company.

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