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118 Sentences With "most dear"

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

How some of the most dear characters were just not there anymore.
But on the economic issues he holds most dear, Sanders seems less flexible.
But it was the 133 victory, he said, that he holds most dear.
Writers often worry that their art risks whatever is most dear to them.
It's that time of year again, the time to honor that which we hold most dear.
Yes, we are still friends and my friendships are one of the things I hold most dear.
The holidays are a time for us to appreciate and celebrate that which we hold most dear.
But also it is a collective obstruction of what the right says it holds most dear — the Constitution.
"We're a free museum, and making the institution accessible is the value we hold most dear," Ms. Feldman said.
We're barely a month into 2020, and there have already been too many contenders for its most dear-god moment.
I am moved to find that to many she is a reflection of what we hold most dear — kindness, generosity, charity and humility.
Disco and house—two of the genres most dear to Chelsea—were considered "low class" for a long time because of white patriarchy.
Maybe that was the reasoning behind JetBlue's newest contest, which asks people to give up that which they hold most dear: Their Instagram photos.
"Places of worship are sanctuaries, safe places, places to be vulnerable, places to pray and express with others what is most dear to our hearts."
The further we delve, the more obvious it becomes that the things Krewella travels with highlight the values they hold most dear — memories, mindfulness, and music.
Thank you, Messier than Most Dear Messier than Most, There is a common phrase, Fake it till you make it, which I have mixed feelings about.
So I'm with Andy that the thing that we hold most dear, the most strategic threat to the United States, is our belief in ourselves, right?
Is my hypothesis correct that there's not more about Apple because it doesn't violate most of the principles that are most dear to you in the book?
That brings us to security, which is definitely a major concern when you're storing the relationships in the cloud that are most dear and private to you.
As winter nears, Lake Suwa provides an intimate reminder of damage wrought by climate change – and its ability to erase the very things people hold most dear.
Not with bombs or guns, but with a sophisticated well-funded cyberattack and information warfare directed by President Vladimir Putin designed to undermine the values we hold most dear.
How Carla confesses a terrible secret about David, and how this terrible secret comes to threaten Amanda's own safety, and the safety of the person she holds most dear: Nina.
The debate brought this issue to the fore because the presidential debate is a ritual linked to one of the political processes we hold most dear: the right to vote.
Adam says that Noah still doesn't understand the game, and he won't be truly free until he's free of all emotion — until he's ready to sacrifice those he holds most dear.
ALOK VAID-MENON: I am constantly devastated by the fact that the things that are most dear to us are often the things we are not supposed to talk about in public.
"This bill is really about protecting what we hold most dear, our lives and the lives of our loved ones," Inslee said in signing the bill at the state capital in Olympia.
Or a White House in disarray and a President who desperately fears an investigation into his campaign's contact with Russia -- something that could undermine that which is most dear to him, his presidency?
With some help from NBC News, we recently came across a example of our ideal modern day fairytale, and it involves a man and the food he holds most dear, Wendy's chicken nuggets.
Whether or not another title is at hand, it is important for the Fighting Irish that they at least remain in the hunt — and do so without devaluing what the university holds most dear.
The paper, led by researchers at Emory University in Atlanta, was designed to tease out which morals parents who were hesitant about vaccines held most dear when making personal decisions, including about vaccinating their kids.
While Maeve is straying from her lone wolf programming and going out of her way to help her fellow hosts, Dolores is going full survival of the fittest on the people she holds most dear.
"If you wanted to be helpful, NYT Edit Board," David Frum, a conservative columnist for The Atlantic, wrote in a Twitter message, "you'd denounce John Kasich as a threat to all you hold most dear."
So the items we choose to carry with us as we speed through our busy days and nights are like the distilled essence of us — the real us — and they are the things we hold most dear.
To stop the SPD from bolting, Merkel must deliver on those points in the coalition deal that are most dear to the Social Democrats: healthcare reform, and investment in education to meet the challenges of the digital age.
" On the other hand, when something as small as the breaking of a favorite bowl occurs, her agitation is equally severe because it means that "everything that is most dear to you will eventually be taken from you.
Rating: Bala Pat could have served simple hammock or sitting on the beach realness but he's come to show that he'd rather lift rocks with no oxygen than lose at the thing most dear to him—summer vacations.
Each of the 50 tasks must be documented with a photo or video and sent to the administrator with whom the player is in contact, who would emotionally blackmail the player by threatening to harm the people they hold most dear.
What many of us have witnessed this fire season does feel alive, like a monstrous gathering force threatening to devour what we hold most dear on a continent that will grow only hotter, drier and more flammable as global temperatures rise.
But it set an example of what is required of us if we are to honor our deepest values in times of crisis, even when silence would better serve our personal interests or the communities and causes we hold most dear.
Many members of Tocqueville's class thought that democratisation was both an accident and a mistake—an accident because cleverer management of the old regime could have prevented the revolution in 1789, and a mistake because democracy destroyed everything they held most dear.
At least for the past 15 years or so he has explicitly linked his metaphysical beliefs to some of the causes he holds most dear, including opposition to abortion in virtually all circumstances, firm backing for Israel and opposition to a Palestinian state.
Returning to Massachusetts, he rented a small egg-shaped house—one with few right angles, in an apparent effort to throw shake himself up and reconnect with the intuitive style of music-making that he's long held most dear—the Pet Sounds mindset.
After his retirement, Cardinal Danneels spent his time with friends and acquaintances, praying and reading literature, "what he held most dear to his heart," said Cardinal Jozef De Kesel, his successor as archbishop of Mechelen-Bruxelles, in a statement announcing his death.
"What we are saying is that we are not going to spend billions of dollars and line the pockets of businesses that engage in work that goes against the values that we hold most dear," San Francisco City Supervisor Hillary Ronen said in a San Francisco Chronicle report.
That they appear irrelevant to American historians, aberrant to contemporary evangelicals, and abhorrent to the average consumerist is a signature of the victory capitalism has achieved over the American religious imagination, and a sign of how far American Christians have strayed from the values their Messiah held most dear.
In a photo Kardashian posted to Instagram Thursday, she and Disick, 35, starred alongside Penelope, Mason and their youngest child — son Reign Aston, 4 next month — where she expressed her gratitude to be able to share the holiday with all (well, most) of those she holds most dear.
Instead, as Dr. King's "Letter From Birmingham Jail" helps reveal, Kierkegaard used this story to demonstrate how, to those with a more limited moral imagination, actions which are deeply ethical can often appear as the greatest of crimes — as if we were willing to sacrifice that which is most dear.
Alex is a long-time writer, editor and analyst who fully rejoined TechCrunch recently to write prolifically on topics including but definitely not limited to a daily finance column for Extra Crunch about the $100m ARR club, unicorn IPOs, business models, investing trends and other topics that are most dear to our startup audience.
"The state of Israel is my country and my home, and I have given it what is most dear to me, and I continue, and I will continue, to serve it with love," he said, before adding: "The nationality law is a mark of Cain on the forehead of everyone who votes for it."
Amirjan is the most dear and dearest place for me. This is all reflected in my creative work.
Her brother wrote a brief but apparently heartfelt epitaph:. Thou wast to me, both far and near, A mother, sister, a friend most dear.
Elizabeth Fisher Read Elizabeth Fisher Read (1872 – December 13, 1943) was a scholar and Women's Suffrage activist, and one of Eleanor Roosevelt's most dear friends.
My most dear wife Judith. My dear sisters Mistress Elizabeth Crossing, Mistress Dorothy Lowring [i.e., Lovering] and my nephew Master John Martin. My father in law John Gurdon Esq.
Sells, Michael A.. Early Islamic Mysticism: Sufi, Koran, Mi'raj, Poetic and Theological Writings. Mahwah, New Jersey: Paulist Press, 1996. Print. His caliph and most dear disciple was Abu Bakr Shibli.
In this land most dear we gained our freedom, Generation upon generation blessed to be born here, Here our sea sighs, here our fields blossom, Here our cities ring out, here Riga resounds.
Gentefied follows the story of "three Mexican-American cousins and their struggle to chase the American Dream, even while that same dream threatens the things they hold most dear: their neighborhood, their immigrant grandfather and the family taco shop".
Edith and her husband were allegedly pro-Fascist,Lord Queenborough, "World Plan in Action", English Review, August 1935.Lord Queenborough, "All that we hold most dear", Saturday Review, September 19, 1936.Simon Haxey, England's Money Lords. Tory M.P., p. 131.
One of the projects most dear to Piero, Was American Youth (Giovani In America), a documentary about everything that made America "America", which was produced by RAI TV and shown in 5 European countries. Unfortunately it never aired in the United States.
Sheridan and his soldiers: > "Never did deeper emotions of joy overcome me. Thank God, those most dear to > me and the city as well are safe." General Philip H. Sheridan, who saved Chicago 3 times. Once during the Great Fire in Oct.
First they lose the TARDIS... then they lose that which they hold most dear. And that's only the start of their troubles. In the capital, Predora City, they will learn the truth of what it means to be a Voord. And that truth is horrifying.
The rejoinder would be that the US can prioritize those rights it holds most dear in its interaction with other states, and that IRFA is a means to help other nations secure freedoms to which they have already committed themselves, but may not in fact uphold.
" Jackson's response, when his turn came, was, "Our Federal Union: It must be preserved." To those attending, the effect was dramatic. Calhoun responded with his own toast, in a play on Webster's closing remarks in the earlier debate, "The Union. Next to our liberty, the most dear.
Eusebius of Caesaria wrote for Crispus that he is "an Imperator most dear to God and in all regards comparable to his father." Crispus was the most likely choice for an heir to the throne at the time. His siblings Constantine II, Constantius II and Constans were far too young and knew very little about the tasks of an emperor. However, Crispus would never assume the throne.
Xavier also befriends a new boy, Alex Murray and this friendship helps Xavier begin to change his ideas about what it means to be a man. The tension between Xavier and his friends begins to isolate him and when he betrays Nuala out of weakness, and a tragedy befalls Alex Murray, he is faced with difficult decisions about who he is and what he holds most dear.
Wentworth sent them a long reply expressing regret at their reaction but noting that "if Mr. Asquith will not receive deputation they will pummel him again". In January 1910, Lady Constance Bulwer-Lytton was imprisoned and forcibly fed at Walton Gaol. In response, Howey broke the gaol governor's windows so that she too would be jailed in support of Lytton. Lytton in turn called Howey the "most dear one of our members".
2017:- From July 2017 Nand Kishore Yadav is serving Bihar as Road Construction Minister in the newly formed BJP-JDU alliance government. Among his many achievements, the project he holds most dear is his role as Road Construction Minister. It is at this post that he spearheads the transformation of Bihar. New better roads mean faster connectivity, better rule of law, easy flow of commerce....all essential ingredients for creating a NUTAN BIHAR.
The most beautiful period of my youth I spent in this magnificent part of the Serbian country, on the southern junction of three frontiers, in events and circumstances which can only be imagined for a young man who had longings and affection for story-telling.... I do not know if my stories are better than others but they certainly carry the spirit of what was most dear in my life – the spirit of youth. Serbian poetic circle.
Diomedes replied "Goddess, I know you truly and will not hide anything from you. I am following your instructions and retreating for I know that Ares is fighting among the Trojans". Athena answered "Diomedes most dear to my heart, do not fear this immortal or any other god for I will protect you." Throwing Sthenelus out of the chariot and mounting it herself, the goddess (who invented the chariot and taught humans to drive it) drove straight at Ares.
Sharp was thought to be the minority party's choice for Speaker of the House for the 1826 session. By enticing Beauchamp to murder Sharp, the Old Court could remove a political enemy. Sharp's widow Eliza appeared to believe this notion. In an 1826 letter in the New Court Argus of Western America, she referred to Darby as "the chief instigator of the foul murder which has deprived me of all my heart held most dear on earth".
He had lost everything – home, family, and all that he held most dear – except one precious possession – the Golden Arrow, in rough wood, which he was determined to take away with him. After passing through many adventures he reached Great Britain. Nothing arrived except one brave worn-out Polish soldier and his Golden Arrow. He sought out a Scout whom he knew, and by whom he had been taught his Scouting in the old days at Gilwell Park.
Qianlong, who had truly fallen for her, was shattered and instantly branded her out of favor. Yingluo in term, teamed up with the Empress Dowager, who's own relationship with Qianlong was put to the test through the Empress's schemes. The two women once most dear to Qianlong went into self-imposed exile. A few years later, another threat in the form newcomer Concubine Shun, a beautiful and cunning woman, called Yingluo back to the Forbidden City.
Kajeel's husband Garyl stands as the empire's last chance against its oldest foe. Cursed long ago for unspeakable crimes, Garyl's decades-long search for redemption may be reaching its end. But first he must set aside his grief and meet the Dragon head on – a battle that he knows he will ultimately lose. The two Shadowslayers must reach beyond the borders of life and death, past and present, and ultimately must sacrifice that which is most dear to them in order to succeed.
In order to qualify to take over the farm that came with the office, he married the widow of the former priest, Karen Andersdatter Hoff. She had one son, Hans Hansen Hellested, whom Syv adopted as his own. Together they had three daughters, Ide, Vibeke and Anna Kirstine, the last of whom married her father's successor as priest in Hellested, Rudolf Moth Bagger. In 1699, Syv became a widower and noted in his journal "[today] died my most dear and virtuous wife Karen Andersdatter Hoff".
Because of his accident, Finny learns that he will never again be able to compete in sports, which are most dear to him. Finny's "accident" inspires Gene to think more like his friend in order to become a better person, free of envy. The remainder of the story revolves around Gene's attempts to come to grips with who he is, why he shook the branch, and how he will proceed. Gene feels so guilty that he eventually tells Finny that he caused the fall.
Muhammad was a son of the Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik and one of his slave women (umm walad). According to the historian Shiv Rai Chowdhry, Muhammad and his brother al-Hajjaj were named by Abd al-Malik because their names "were the most dear" to the caliph's staunchly loyal governor of Iraq al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf (d. 714). Muhammad lived in Tiberias, the capital of Jund al-Urdunn (the military district of Jordan, e.g. modern-day northwestern Jordan, northern Israel and southern Lebanon).
Perot was a hawk on the Vietnam War, an advocate for U.S. servicemen held as prisoner of war and a supporter of their families. During the war, he aided soldiers by providing supplies and holding rallies for those returning home. In public affairs, he led the Texas War on Drugs Committee in 1979 at the behest of Republican Governor Bill Clements, and was put in charge of the Select Committee on Public Education in 1983 by Democratic Governor Mark White. Perot's most dear political effort involved the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue.
It has been alleged that she then penned one final letter to Henry, her "most dear lord and husband":Sharon Turner, The History of England from the Earliest Period to the Death of Elizabeth (Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green,1828) The authenticity of the letter itself has been questioned, but not Catherine's attitude in its wording, which has been reported with variations in different sources.Giles Tremlett 2010 in Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII's Spanish Queen p. 422. Catherine died at Kimbolton Castle on 1536. The following day, news of her death reached the king.
Guth was educated at University of Madison, Wisconsin, graduating in sociology. She obtained a Master of Fine Arts degree at New York University. She first came to international attention for her work at the Whitney Biennial in 2008, which the New York Times described as "sweet, New Agey expansiveness that is atypical for this year's hermetic, uningratiating show". Her installation, entitled "Ties of Protection and Safe Keeping" asked visitors to record what was most dear to them on scraps of cloth, which were then woven into the sculpture.
Blair's attempts to guide the royal family through the controversy are met with resistance, the Queen describing them as a surrender to public hysteria. He is encouraged by the private secretaries of the Prince of Wales and the Queen, albeit through veiled advice, to continue with his attempts to change the attitude of the royal family. The Queen comes to realise that the world has changed during her reign, and Blair begins to understand that Diana had rejected everything the Queen still holds most dear. The Queen decides to end discussion about the issue.
The last stanza of Lieutenant Clifford W. Henry's poem follows: > If "out of luck" at duty's call In glorious action I should fall At God's > behest, May those I hold most dear and best Know I have stood the acid test > Should I "go West."Harvard Alumni Association, Harvard Alumni Bulletin, May > 8, 1919, Vol. 21, No. 31, p. 645. Henry repeatedly advanced in front of the platoon he commanded, drawing machine-gun fire so that the German nests could be located and wiped out by his men.
At the end of this story arc the licensing goddess approved her first-class exam to which Urd surprisingly declined. She explained to Peorth that a first class goddess' prime directive is to protect and bless all things. However, Urd wishes to selectively protect what is most dear to her (this is followed by a page with Urd drawn enveloping her sisters with her black and white wings). She also concluded that there can be use in a Goddess that can lie, which is forbidden to first class goddesses.
Paradise and the Peri, in German Das Paradies und die Peri, is a secular oratorio for soloists, choir, and orchestra by Robert Schumann. Completed in 1843, the work was published as Schumann's Op. 50. The work is based on a German translation (by Schumann and his friend Emil Flechsig) of a tale from Lalla-Rookh by Thomas Moore. The peri, a creature from Persian mythology, is the focus of the story, having been expelled from Paradise and trying to regain entrance by giving the gift that is most dear to heaven.
Britain and France: the impossible, indispensable relationship , The Economist, 1 Dec 2011 France and Britain are often still referred to as "historic rivals"Economies of Britain and France have more similarities than differences, The Guardian, 5 January 2014 or with emphasis on the perceived ever-lasting competition that still opposes the two countries."The two countries are forever comparing one against the other.[...]", Britain-France ties: How cordial is the entente?, BBC News, 30 January 2014 French author José-Alain Fralon characterised the relationship between the countries by describing the British as "our most dear enemies".
While Regine, would later enter into a conventional bourgeois marriage, she would always exist as an existential form in the writings of Soren. As a founder of Christian existentialism, Kierkegaard needs to sacrifice the love which is most dear to him the altar of the Cross. It is from this rejection of the conventional bourgeois life, and the comfortable happiness and fulfillment it offer, that Lukacs sees as the origin of Kierkegaard's existential angst. Lukacs recognized in this dilemma, the tragedy of his own rejection of 'life' with Irma Seidler, in preference for work over life.
New York: John Lane Company. 1920. p. 96. The term peri appears in the early Oriental tale Vathek, by William Thomas Beckford, written in French in 1782. In Thomas Moore's poem Paradise and the Peri, part of his Lalla-Rookh, a peri gains entrance to heaven after three attempts at giving an angel the gift most dear to God. The first attempt is "The last libation Liberty draws/From the heart that bleeds and breaks in her cause", to wit, a drop of blood from a young soldier killed for an attempt on the life of Mahmud of Ghazni.
He called her his "most dear mother" and in September 1546 wrote to her: "I received so many benefits from you that my mind can hardly grasp them." Other children were brought to play with Edward, including the granddaughter of Edward's chamberlain, Sir William Sidney, who in adulthood recalled the prince as "a marvellous sweet child, of very mild and generous condition". Edward was educated with sons of nobles, "appointed to attend upon him" in what was a form of miniature court. Among these, Barnaby Fitzpatrick, son of an Irish peer, became a close and lasting friend.
Pro aris et focis ("for hearth and home") and Pro Deo et patria ("for God and country") are two Latin phrases used as the motto of many families, military regiments and educational institutions. Pro aris et focis literally translates "for altars and hearths", but is used by ancient authors to express attachment to all that was most dear and is more idiomatically translated "for hearth and home", since the Latin term aris generally refers to the altars of the spirits of the house (the Lares) and is often used as a synecdoche for the family home.
Six years after socialite Ursula Stanhope left civilization to marry George of the Jungle, George finds himself hard-pressed to fulfill the roles of jungle king, father, and husband. George's stress level increases when the "Mean Lion" challenges him for leadership of the jungle, and when Ursula's mother Beatrice teams up with Ursula's ex-fiancé, Lyle, in a plot to forcibly take away all that George holds most dear. To do this, Beatrice invites Ursula, George, and George Junior to visit Las Vegas, which they accept. Throughout the visit, Beatrice and some of Ursula's fellow socialites try constantly to convince Ursula that George is unworthy of her affection.
The teachers were leading musicians and composers of the period. The revolutionary Committee of Public Safety (Comité de salut public) instructed the new music school to concentrate on the composition of "civic songs, music for national festivals, theater pieces, military music, all types of music which will inspire in Republicans the sentiments and memories most dear to the Revolution." In 1792, the revolutionary government, the National Convention, decided to create a larger and more ambitious school of music, which would teach all instruments and genres of music. It was named the Conservatoire national de musique, using the name "Conservatory", an Italian Renaissance institution much praised by Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
The dominant > feature of this sentiment, apart from the thought that the christological > interpretations in non-Jewish translations are out of place in a Jewish > Bible, is and was that the Jew cannot afford to have his Bible translation > prepared for him by others. He cannot have it as a gift, even as he cannot > borrow his soul from others. If a new country and a new language > metamorphose him into a new man, the duty of this new man is to prepare a > new garb and a new method of expression for what is most sacred and most > dear to him. The translation is based on the Hebrew Masoretic text.
Doubleday) Adversary in the House (1947) is a biographical novel based on the life of prominent socialist Eugene V. Debs and of his wife Kate, who was opposed to socialism.Kate Debs seemed to have been so hostile to Debs's socialist activities - it threatened her sense of middle-class respectability - that novelist Irving Stone was led to call her, in the title of his fictional portrayal of the life of Debs, the Adversary in the House. (Daniel Bell, Marxian Socialism in the United States, footnote on page 88) The book is Irving Stone's portrayal of Eugene V. Debs's "tempestuous relationship with a wife who rejects the very values he holds most dear".
When Shirley begins to sob about her father loving her other sister more, Lucho assures Shirley that she is the daughter most dear to him, a fact that Grace overhears, breaking her heart. When Shirley and Jhonny are kicked out momentarily from the house while everyone inside fights, Nicolas catches Shirley's eye, and she falls madly in love with him. She has no idea that Nicolas was Grace's ex-boyfriend, but when she does find out, she doesn't let that stop her. She does everything she can to make him love her back, without noticing that Nicolas is uncomfortable with her smothering affection for him.
The recently widowed Emily Nankeen Worcester and General Edwin Deelah intend to marry each other, feigning love, but each is secretly interested in the other's purportedly valuable collection of "rare" china, which they plan to sell upon marriage. Mrs. Worcester is in her morning room anticipating a visit from General Deelah. She recounts how she came to own the single but highly valuable item in her china collection ("A Friend Most Dear"), the sole remaining saucer from Julius Caesar's favorite tea service, appraised at ten thousand pounds. General Deelah arrives, and, after some shy conversation and gentle flirting, the conversation turns to their china collections. Mrs.
Colours The team's colours, since foundatuon, are red and yellow, just as the whole city The most used uniform in the eighty years of history of the Aquile is the solid red one, with the yellow V collar with red shorts and socks with yellow edges. Those pairings have accompanied the Calabrians in the golden years of the Serie A and therefore are the most dear to the Catanzaro environment. Equally used was the vertical striped yellow and red shirt with red shorts and socks with yellow edges, especially in the post-failure years of 2006. Most rarely Catanzaro has used a shirt with yellow and red horizontal stripes.
English Version St. Francis our school most dear, May it prosper and advance Towards ever greater heights and greater glory, Its fame spread all around. Let us keep its honour bright, Untainted may it shine, Together we will always help, To love and lend a helping hand, Our motto we'll uphold. Ever faithful ever true we’ll be to you, Our Convent school, In this lovely land below the wind, We may be near we may be far, But in our hearts, there'll always be The true spirit of a Franciscan. Malay Version Kami warga St Francis, Menjunjung taat setia, Jujur dan berdisiplin di sekolah yang tercinta.
Lacus Curtius may have been regarded with some veneration by ancient Romans. The most popular story (~362 BCE), and also the one Livy deemed most likely, was of a myth glorifying the nation: Rome was endangered when a great chasm opened on the Forum. An oracle told the people that they were to throw into the chasm "that what constituted the greatest strength of the Roman people," and that if they did the Roman nation would last forever. After dropping many things into the ravine without result, a young horseman named Marcus Curtius (again a member of the Curtia gens) saved the city by realizing that it was youth that the Romans held most dear.
' The Speaker contrasts those who are fortunate (whether by the astrological influence of real "stars", or the social influence of their superiors, metaphorical "stars") with himself who, favored with no such public recognition, nevertheless can revel ("joy" is used as a verb) in what he holds most dear. ' These seeming fortunates display their "pride" (i.e. self-esteem, or finery) like an opening marigold, but only so long as their prince ("sun") favors them. (Elizabethans knew the marigold as a flower that opened in the presence, and closed in the absence, of the sun.) ' Similarly, even a warrior renowned for "a thousand victories" may be stripped of his honor and forgotten after a single defeat.
In an obituary written by her Phyllis Sanderson, her successor, Widdows was described as "an ardent feminist and willingly sacrificed her own career as a chemist for the cause most dear to her heart, the training of women doctors at Hunter Street, the only training ground in Medicine open to women in England at that time" (p. 161) She authored and co-authored at least 12 research papers, with her research focusing around the composition and secretion of human milk (see publications). This Includes two publications with other signatories on the Letter of 19, Margaret Seward and Ida Smedley Maclean. Reverse of the above photo of the Chemistry school staff and students c.
Tuvalu for the Almighty Are the words we hold most dear For as people or as leaders Of Tuvalu we all share In the knowledge that God Ever rules in heav’n above, And that we in this land Are united in His love. We build on a sure foundation When we trust in God’s great law “Tuvalu for the Almighty” Be our song for evermore! Let us trust our lives henceforward To the King to whom we pray, With our eyes fixed firmly on Him He is showing us the way. “May we reign with Him in glory” Be our song for evermore, for His almighty power Is our strength from shore to shore.
The Encyclical of the Eastern Patriarchs was a letter issued in May 1848 by the four eastern patriarchs of the Eastern Orthodox Church, who met at Council in Constantinople. It was addressed to all Eastern Orthodox Christians, as a response against pope Pius IX's Epistle to the Easterners, issued in January (1848). The encyclical was solemnly addressed to "All the Bishops Everywhere, Beloved in the Holy Ghost, Our Venerable, Most Dear Brethren; and to their Most Pious Clergy; and to All the Genuine Orthodox Sons of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church." The encyclical explicitly denounces the Filioque clause added by Rome to the Nicene Creed as a heresy, censures the papacy for missionizing among Eastern Orthodox Christians, and repudiates Ultramontanism (papal supremacy).
The story is told from the perspective of Vandyck "Van" Jennings, a sociology student who, along with two friends, Terry O. Nicholson and Jeff Margrave, forms an expedition party to explore an area of uncharted land rumored to be home to a society consisting entirely of women. The three friends do not entirely believe the rumors because they are unable to think of a way how human reproduction could occur without males. The men speculate about what a society of women would be like, each guessing differently based on the stereotype of women which he holds most dear: Jeff regarding women as things to be served and protected; Terry viewing them as things to be conquered and won.Clute and Nicholls 1995, p. 496.
Anglo, p. 283, see also the whole chapter Gentillet held, quite wrongly according to Sydney Anglo, that Machiavelli's "books [were] held most dear and precious by our Italian and Italionized courtiers" (in the words of his first English translation, Anti-Machiavel: A Discourse Upon the Means of Well Governing), and so (in Anglo's paraphrase) "at the root of France's present degradation, which has culminated not only in the St Bartholomew massacre but the glee of its perverted admirers".Anglo, p. 286 In fact there is little trace of Machiavelli in French writings before the massacre, and not very much after, until Gentillet's own book, but this concept was seized upon by many contemporaries, and played a crucial part in setting the long-lasting popular concept of Machiavellianism.
Receive, my dearest Horatia, the > affectionate parental blessing of your Father, NELSON AND BRONTE. William Owen, after 1807) Horatia Nelson, circa 1815 In his letter to Emma the same day, he wrote "I will take care that my name shall ever be most dear to you and Horatia, both of whom I love as much as my own life." One of Nelson's last wishes was that Horatia should take the name Nelson, leaving her £200 a year in his will and adding : :"I leave to the beneficence of my country my adopted (sic) daughter Horatia Nelson Thompson, and I desire she will use in future the name of Nelson only.""Lord Nelson's Letters and Dispatches", review, from Tait's Edinburgh Magazine, XIII (1846) p.
283, see also the whole chapter Gentillet held, quite wrongly according to Sydney Anglo, that Machiavelli's "books [were] held most dear and precious by our Italian and Italionized courtiers" (in the words of his first English translation), and so (in Anglo's paraphrase) "at the root of France's present degradation, which has culminated not only in the St Bartholemew massacre but the glee of its perverted admirers".Anglo, p. 286 In fact there is little trace of Machiavelli in French writings before the massacre, and not very much after, until Gentillet's own book, but this concept was seized upon by many contemporaries, and played a crucial part in setting the long-lasting popular concept of Machiavellianism.Anglo, Chapters 10 and 11; p.
At the same time, he worked in a research laboratory in the humanities, the , and the Laborde psychiatric clinic, headed by Félix Guattari and Jean Oury. At this point in his life, Michel Rostain was able to devote himself to one of the things that was most dear to him with writing, music, and to do it his job. Thus, he founded a lyrical and musical theater company in 1978, and took over the direction of the of Quimper in 1995, while continuing to make musical stagings As director of lyrical and musical theater, Michel Rostain was director of the , scène nationale of Quimper from 1995 to 2008. For more than thirty years, he brought to the scene operas and contemporary lyrical creations.
229 In his October 17, 1893, letter Leo Tolstoy wrote to Grigorovich: "You are a man most dear to me, especially due to the unforgettable effect your first two novels have had upon me… How enraptured and touched was I, the 16 year old boy, as I've read Anton Goremyka for the first time to marvel at this unbelievable revelation, that one could write about muzhik, our nurturer and, if I may say so, spiritual teacher, not as of a landscape's detail, but as of a real man, and to write with love, respect and even some trepidation."The Complete L.N.Tolstoy, Goslitizdat, Moscow, 1953. Vol. LXI, p.409 Alexander Hertzen remembered how Anton Goremyka had awakened in him deep patriotic feelings and made him look closer at the life of common people in Russia.
Image of the original text. Council of Florence (XVII Ecumenical), Session 6 — 6 July 1439 [Definition of the holy ecumenical synod of Florence, presided by Pope Eugenius IV] Eugenius, bishop, servant of the servants of God, for an everlasting record. With the agreement of our most dear son John Palaeologus, illustrious emperor of the Romaioi [note: the Latin text renders the term Basileus Romaion as "Imperator Romeorum" rather than "Imperator Romanorum", which was the correct Latin form for "Emperor of the Romans" used however by westerners to describe the Holy Roman Emperor and not the Eastern Roman Emperor], of the deputies of our venerable brothers the patriarchs and of other representatives of the eastern church, to the following. Let the heavens be glad and let the earth rejoice.
The Siret River, which runs across Moldavia The fourth and final chapter of Childhood Memories opens with Creangă's depiction of his own doubts at having to leave Humulești for the more distant Iași: "A bear will not dance of its own accord." The narrator uses this as a pretext to describe the things most dear to him in Humulești: the landscape ("the smooth-flowing crystal-clear Ozana, wherein the Neamț Citadel has sadly been mirroring its face for so many centuries!"), his family and companions, and the local customs related to partying and dancing. His plans about staying home or becoming a monk are shattered by his mother Smaranda, who angrily invokes her ancestors' reputation in persuading him to leave for Socola and make a name for himself as a married priest.
In 1913, under the direction of the literary historian Franz Muncker, Pfeiffer completed a dissertation on the 16th-century Augsburg Meistersinger and translator of Homer and Ovid, Johann Spreng, entitled Der Augsburger Meistersinger und Homerübersetzer Johannes Spreng, a revised version of which was published as a monograph in 1919.Bühler (1980) 404; Vogt (2001) 323 He dedicated his dissertation as an uxori carissimae sacrum, Latin for (roughly) "a gift of devotion to a wife most dear"--namely, Lili (née Beer), a painter from Hungary whom he had married earlier in 1913. In 1968 Pfeiffer would repeat this dedication in the first volume of History of Classical Scholarship, closing the preface with: > My first publication in 1914This date refers to the initial private > publication of his unrevised 1913 dissertation. bears the dedication "Uxori > carissimae sacrum".
Mikuni has a great influence over both the Japanese Government and the whole of Japan's finance market and aims to own Tokyo's Financial District. Born into a wealthy family, Mikuni was a rebel who wanted to be a musician; as his band broke up, Mikuni became a personal assistant to his father. When the elder Mikuni's corporation started to crumble as a result of the financial crisis, he chose to save it, denying his terminally ill daughter Takako the funds she needed to undergo a medical procedure unavailable in Japan. Swearing vengeance on his father after Takako fell into a coma, Mikuni bought out his father's company with the money he earned from his first victory in the Financial District to take away the thing his father held most dear.
I would not subscribe entirely to that view, although I believe that, in establishing a link between England and Ireland, fundamental mistakes were made at the start which are taking many centuries to resolve ... [T]here is no doubt that the joint declaration marks a sea change in contemporary Irish politics. The opportunity it affords for all who hold both the Province and Ireland as a whole most dear they will ignore at their peril.' In a debate entitled 'Pylons in the Vale of York' of March 1995, he pointed to new problems regarding public-private finance, landowners and compulsory purchase: 'there could come a time, and it will surely come, when the pylon-builders' purse runs out and compulsory purchase arrives. Surely, there then arises a more potent conflict of interest-the invocation of public power in order to provide private profit.
The Book of Mormon concludes with a cataclysmic war between the Nephites and Lamanites. The final prophet of the Book of Mormon, a Nephite named Moroni, laments that his people have participated in sexual violence, torture, and cannibalism: > And notwithstanding this great abomination of the Lamanites, it doth not > exceed that of our people in Moriantum. For behold, many of the daughters of > the Lamanites have they taken prisoners; and after depriving them of that > which was most dear and precious above all things, which is chastity and > virtue—And after they had done this thing, they did murder them in a most > cruel manner, torturing their bodies even unto death; and after they have > done this, they devour their flesh like unto wild beasts, because of the > hardness of their hearts; and they do it for a token of bravery.Moroni > 9:9–10.
The original 17 manors, all in Cornwall, are known as the antiqua maneria. Those outside Cornwall given to the duchy at its creation are known as the forinseca maneria (foreign manors), with estates incorporated later becoming known as the annexata maneria. The first duke ordered a survey called "The Caption of Seisin of the Duchy of Cornwall" in May 1337 to determine the extent of duchy holdings of Cornish land including manors, castles and knights' fees, profits from the stannary courts and shrievalty of Cornwall, and other revenues. A subsequent charter of Henry IV to Prince Henry stated: > We have made and created Henry our most dear first-begotten Son, Prince of > Wales, Duke of Cornwall and Earl of Chester, and have given and granted, and > by our Charter have confirmed to him the said Principality, Duchy, and > Earldom, that he may preside there, and by presiding, may direct and defend > the said parts.
2011 and survives with a lengthy Latin inscription recording Schaw's intellectual skills and achievements.RCAHMS Inventory Fife: David Stevenson, Origins of Freemasonry (1988) The tomb inscription remains the most valuable source of biographic information, and was composed by Alexander Seton, translated it reads: > This humble structure of stones covers a man of excellent skill, notable > probity, singular integrity of life, adorned with the greatest of virtues – > William Schaw, Master of the King's Works, President of the Sacred > Ceremonies, and the Queen's Chamberlain. He died 18th April, 1602. Among the > living he dwelt fifty-two years; he had travelled in France and many other > Kingdoms, for the improvement of his mind; he wanted no liberal training; > was most skilful in architecture; was early recommended to great persons for > the singular gifts of his mind; and was not only unwearied and indefatigable > in labours and business, but constantly active and vigorous, and was most > dear to every good man who knew him.
In 1892 New England, Rufus Sinclair suffers from catalepsy and lives in fear of being pronounced dead and buried alive. To prevent this, he leaves detailed instructions to the family and his staff, but when he is found, his greedy family—eager to claim their inheritance—have him quickly interred. Rufus leaves specific instructions on how to be buried, which are violated and the family lawyer, while reading the will, lets them know they will die from what they fear most: Bruce will have his face disfigured; the widow Abigail will die by fire; asthmatic and alcoholic son Philip will suffocate; Philip's frustrated wife Vivian will drown; faithful manservant Seth will "join me in my tomb"; and all-around- nice-guy nephew James will lose that which is most dear to him, his pretty wife Deborah. Abigail reveals she left a diamond brooch on Rufus's coffin, Bruce, needing the money, and family maid and lover Lettie recover it, though Bruce is perturbed to find it on the floor.
The hymn as printed in Songs of Praise (1925) consisted only of the two verses of the 1918 version, credited "Words: Cecil Spring-Rice, 1918; Music: Thaxted", as follows:Songs of Praise (1925), no. 188; c.f. oremus.org (online transcription) I vow to thee, my country, all earthly things above, Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love; The love that asks no questions, the love that stands the test, That lays upon the altar the dearest and the best; The love that never falters, the love that pays the price, The love that makes undaunted the final sacrifice. And there's another country, I've heard of long ago, Most dear to them that love her, most great to them that know; We may not count her armies, we may not see her King; Her fortress is a faithful heart, her pride is suffering; And soul by soul and silently her shining bounds increase,The mention of "increasing bounds" recalls a similar phrase in Land of Hope and Glory, written two decades earlier - but there the reference is to the mundane bounds of the British Empire.
His support for the Royalists during the Civil War caused the destruction of Arwenack House by the Parliamentarians during their 5-month siege of Pendennis Castle in 1646. It was never rebuilt again on the former grand scale. He obtained a grant to hold markets at Smithwick, next to Arwenack, which became the nucleus of the town of Falmouth, for the establishment of which new town in 1661 he received a royal charter from King Charles II, following the Restoration of the Monarchy. The document refers to Sir Peter Killigrew as "our beloved and faithful subject" and states that it is given "in consideration of the good, faithful, and acceptable services, by him the said Peter as well to Us, as to our most dear Father, the Lord Charles, late king of England (of glorious memory)" He received licence to transfer of the customs house from Penryn to Falmouth and established a new parish (separate from St Budock's) for his new town served by a new church dedicated to "King Charles the Martyr", the executed Charles I, in which he was buried in 1668.
Mural monument to Lucy Fortescue (died 1767), 2nd wife and widow of Hugh Fortescue (died 1719), father by his 1st wife Bridget Boscawen of Hugh Fortescue, 1st Baron Fortescue and 1st Earl Clinton (1696–1751), and by his 2nd wife, the subject of the monument, of Matthew Fortescue, 2nd Baron Fortescue (1719–1785), father of Hugh Fortescue, 1st Earl Fortescue (1753–1841) On the west wall of the south aisle chapel is a mural monument inscribed thus: > "To the memory of Lucy Fortescue daughter of Matthew Ford Aylmer of the > Kingdom of Ireland and widow of Hugh Fortescue of Filleigh in the county of > Devon, Esq. She retired for the latter part of her life to her jointure > house at Ebrington in Gloucestershire where she passed her time in the > continual exercise of all the social virtues which can enoble a private > life: Hospitality, Charity, Unbounded Benevolence; and died as she had lived > with calm resignation and humble but confident hopes in the mercy of God > through Jesus Christ her Redeemer; on the seventeenth day of February 1767 > and in the 80th year of her age. To his most dear and most honoured parent, > Matthew Lord Fortescue raised this stone".

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