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46 Sentences With "must needs"

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

Go you to France or Flanders, To any German province, Spain or Portugal, Nay, anywhere that not adheres to England: Why, you must needs be strangers.
I must needs try my new-fledged pinions in sonnet, elogy, and madrigal.
Moreover, as he further bethought him, Agesilaus must needs be wroth with him for his deceit.
But since I have won every sesterce he owns I must needs pay for his board.
Then he must needs sit bare-arsed on his jordan, hand scooping sweat from his brow, and void much black nastiness. His torchecul was yet another discarded page of his play.
A farmer, bent on doubling the profits from his land, Proceeded to set his soil a two-harvest demand. Too intent thus on profit, harm himself he must needs: Instead of corn, he now reaps corn cockle and weeds.
He answered me, Bisogna sapere > adulare la natura.One must needs know how to coax nature; . Lok was secretly reporting the results of the assays to Sir Francis Walsingham, who had Sir Edward Dyer analyse a sample of the ore. Dyer found no gold, confirming Walsingham in his view that Agnello's results were 'but an alchemist matter'.
Tresham claimed to have questioned Catesby on the morality of the plot, asking if it was spiritually "damnable". Catesby replied that it was not, at which point Tresham highlighted the danger that all Catholics would face should the plot succeed. Catesby replied, "The necessity of the Catholics" was such that "it must needs be done". He wanted two things from Tresham: £2,000, and the use of Rushton Hall; Catesby received neither.
"Whoever therefore claims to be zealous of truth, of happiness, of wisdom or knowledge, aye even of the faith, must needs become a lover of books."de Bury, p. 29 3\. What we are to think of the price in the buying of books Nullam videlicet debere caristiam hominem impedire ab emptione lobrorum In chapter 3, de Bury argues that the value of a book is beyond what it costs to produce it.
The applicable definition was from Hyde v. Hyde (1866) a polygamy case where Lord Penzance stated: > What, then, is the nature of this institution as understood in > Christendom?...If it be of common acceptance and existence, it must needs > have some pervading identity and universal basis. I conceive that marriage, > as understood in Christendom, may for this purpose be defined as the > voluntary union for life of one man and one woman, to the exclusion of all > others.
The stilly murmur of the distant Sea Tells us of silence. And that simplest Lute, Plac'd length-ways in the clasping casement, hark! How by the desultory breeze caress'd, Like some coy maid half yielding to her lover, It pours such sweet upbraiding, as must needs Tempt to repeat the wrong! [...] —"Eolian Harp" (lines 1–17)Coleridge 1921 pp. 100-102 Coleridge began work on The Eolian Harp in August 1795 during his engagement to Sara Fricker.
Hoffman, pp. 79–80 In 1716, Hart discovered that Carroll was planning to travel to England to lobby Calvert's officials for restoration of office-holding rights for Catholics, something Hart vehemently opposed. Hart described Carroll as: > a professed Papist, and the first fomentor of our late Disturbances, who > having acquired a large estate in the Province by the offices he formerly > employed, and his practice in Law...must needs add the Ambition of Rule to > his former Felicity.Andrews, p.
Catesby's answer, "The necessity of the Catholics [was such that] it must needs be done", in Fraser's opinion demonstrates his unwavering view on the matter, held at least since his first meeting with Thomas Wintour early in 1604. The final conspirator to be brought in was Everard Digby, on 21 October, at Harrowden. Catesby confided in Digby during a delayed Feast of Saint Luke. Like Rookwood, Digby was young and wealthy, and possessed a stable of horses.
In Lydia and Phrygia there are twenty stations within a distance Of 94½ parasangs. On leaving Phrygia the Halys has to be crossed; and here are gates through which you must needs pass ere you can traverse the stream. A strong force guards this post. When you have made the passage, and are come into Cappadocia, 28 stations and 104 parasangs bring you to the borders of Cilicia, where the road passes through two sets of gates, at each of which there is a guard posted.
Mutian was deeply influenced by Neoplatonic mysticism, and wrote in a letter to a friend: :There is but one god and one goddess, but many are their powers and names: Jupiter, Sol, Apollo, Moses, Christus, Luna, Ceres, Proserpina, Tellus, Maria. But have a care in speaking these things. They should be hidden in silence as are the Eleusinian mysteries; sacred things must needs be wrapped in fable and enigma. ...You, since Jupiter, the Best and Greatest God, is propitious to you, may despise lesser gods in silence.
On its publication, The Well at the World's End was praised by H. G. Wells, who compared the book to Malory and admired its writing style: "all the workmanship of the book is stout oaken stuff, that must needs endure and preserve the memory of one of the stoutest, cleanest lives that has been lived in these latter days".Harold Bloom (editor), "William Morris" in Classic Fantasy Writers. Chelsea House Publishers, 1994 , p. 153. Although the novel is relatively obscure by today's standards, it has had a significant influence on many notable fantasy authors.
Keller described the core of her belief in these words: > But in Swedenborg's teaching it [Divine Providence] is shown to be the > government of God's Love and Wisdom and the creation of uses. Since His Life > cannot be less in one being than another, or His Love manifested less fully > in one thing than another, His Providence must needs be universal ... He has > provided religion of some kind everywhere, and it does not matter to what > race or creed anyone belongs if he is faithful to his ideals of right > living.
Richard Whalley, who died at the old hall in Screveton in 1583, had been elected to Parliament four times in the troubled Tudor period. His three successive wives bore him a total of 25 children. A fine monument to him in the parish church bears an inscription: :Behold his Wives were number three: :Two of them died in right good fame: :The Third this Tomb erected she, :For him who well deserv'd the same. :Both for his life and Godly end, :Which all that knows must needs commend: :And they that knows not, yet may see, :A worthy Whalleye loe was he.
Baldner was a prosperous former fisherman, town councillor and self-taught naturalist who, like the Englishmen, only wrote about what he saw. Frederick Slare FRS made a translation of the German text into English, later added to Willughby's copy after his death. Ray claimed in his preface to the Ornithology: "For my part, I must needs acknowledge that I have received much light and information from the Work of this poor man, and have been thereby inabled to clear many difficulties, and rectifie some mistakes in Gesner.", although in practice few of Baldner's insights were incorporated into the text.Birkhead (2018) p. 101.
Here Erasmus complains of the doctrines and morals of the Reformers: > You declaim bitterly against the luxury of priests, the ambition of bishops, > the tyranny of the Roman Pontiff, and the babbling of the sophists; against > our prayers, fasts, and Masses; and you are not content to retrench the > abuses that may be in these things, but must needs abolish them entirely. > ... > Look around on this 'Evangelical' generation,"Circumspice populum istum > Euangelicum…" Latin text in Erasmus, Opera Omnia, (1706), vol. 10, 1578BC. > and observe whether amongst them less indulgence is given to luxury, lust, > or avarice, than amongst those whom you so detest.
The Netherlands never had collars but several Belgian, most of the Austrian and Prussian orders and several Portuguese orders had collars. In Portugal all the members of these orders of knighthood wore a collar but the collars of the Grand-crosses were more elaborate. In England, until the reign of Henry VIII, the Order of the Garter, most ancient of the great knightly orders, had no collar. But the Tudor king must needs match in all things with continental sovereigns, and the present collar of the Garter knights, with its golden knots and its buckled garters enclosing white roses set on red roses, has its origin in the Tudor age.
In the supplement to the Summa Theologiae, a disciple of Thomas Aquinas argued that the soul departs for heaven or hell immediately on death, "unless it be held back by some debt, for which its flight must needs be delayed until the soul is first of all cleansed."Summa Theologiae, Supplement, q. 69, art. 2 In 1336, Pope Benedict XII (1334–1342) issued the Bull Benedictus DeusBenedictus Deus confirming the teaching that souls receive immediately after death their reward or punishment, ending a controversy caused by his predecessor, Pope John XXII (1316–1334), who had personally held for a while that even pure souls would be delayed in enjoying the beatific vision.
The Waterhouse Ministry, before > they retired from office in July, 1863, had the satisfaction of hearing from > the Duke of Newcastle that their resolutions passed in Executive Council on > the undesirability of annexing the whole of Northern Australia to Queensland > had carried conviction to his mind. All that portion between the 129th and > 138th degrees of east longitude was to be handed over to the "temporary > guardianship" of South Australia. So ended the prologue to our Northern > Territory melodrama. The first act must needs open with a Ministerial > crisis, and in the transformation scene those who had opposed annexation > became its executive, while some of its official originators enrolled > themselves in the opposition.
The title by which it is designated on the bricks and slabs that form its buildings, I read doubtfully as Levekh, and I suspect this to be the original form of the name which appears as Calah in Genesis, and Halah in Kings and Chronicles, and which indeed, as the capital of Calachene, must needs have occupied some site in the Immediate vicinity.' Lastly, in 1853 (Journ. of Roy. Asiat. Soc. vol. xv. p. vi. et seq.), Colonel Rawlinson describes the remarkable cylinder before alluded to as found at Kilah Shirgat, which establishes that site to have been the most ancient capital of the Assyrian empire, and to have been called Assur as well as Nimrud and Nineveh Proper.
As "high priests", these men were higher in the priesthood hierarchy than the elders of the church. However, it was still unclear whether Smith and Cowdery's calling as apostles gave them superior authority than that of other high priests. On November 11, 1831, a revelation to Smith stated that "it must needs be that one be appointed of the high priesthood to preside over the Priesthood and he shall be called President of the high priesthood of the Church ... and again the duty of the President of the high priesthood is to preside over the whole church." (LDS Church edition) Smith was ordained to this position and sustained by the church on January 25, 1832, at a conference in Amherst, Ohio.
In early 458, Western Roman Emperor Majorian gathered a vast army formed by barbarian tribes, including Chunus, for the campaign against the Vandals. Sidonius Apollinaris recounts that "...around thee thronged thousands under diverse standards. Only one race denied thee obedience, a race who had lately, in a mood even more savage than their wont, withdrawn their untamed host from the Danube because they had lost their lords in warfare, and Tuldila stirred in that unruly multitude a mad lust for fight which they must needs pay dear". This account refers to the loss of Ellac and other chieftains, the Battle of Nedao was fought only few years before, and they withdrawn from the Danube, now occupied by former Germanic subjects.
Once Elizabeth woke she began to cry, and once reassured that she was safe admitted that she was afraid for her father, "who must needs be ruined and undone, if their matter should be supposed to be an imposture." She also admitted that although she had appeared to be asleep, she was in fact fully aware of the conversation going on around her. Initially only the Public Ledger reported on the case, but once it became known that noblemen had taken an interest and visited the ghost at Mr Bray's house on 14 January, the story began to appear in other newspapers. The St. James's Chronicle and the London Chronicle printed reports from 16 to 19 January (the latter the more sceptical of the two), and Lloyd's Evening Post from 18 to 20 January.
His moral philosophy remains influential, e.g., his contribution to the further evolved doctrine of the Just War, used to test whether or not a military action may be considered moral and ethical.E.g., Augustine, hearing that a wise man will not wage but just war, writes: > "As if the very rememberance (sic) that he is man ought not to procure his > greater sorrow in that he has cause of just wars, and must needs wage them, > which if they were not just, it were not for him to deal in, so that a wise > man should never have war. For it is the other men's wickedness that makes > his cause just that he ought to deplore, whether it produce wars or not." > The City of God (London: Dent 1945) at II: 243 (XIX,7).
Another packet arriv'd; she too was detain'd; and, before we sail'd, a fourth was expected. Ours was the first to be dispatch'd, as having been there longest. Passengers were engaged in all, and some extremely impatient to be gone, and the merchants uneasy about their letters, and the orders they had given for insurance (it being war time) for fall goods; but their anxiety avail'd nothing; his lordship's letters were not ready; and yet whoever waited on him found him always at his desk, pen in hand, and concluded he must needs write abundantly. :Going myself one morning to pay my respects, I found in his antechamber one Innis, a messenger of Philadelphia, who had come from thence express with a packet from Governor Denny for the general.
" "This new ordinance, whether constitutional or not, will do more to injure the white man then the colored man, because as I say, we colored people only rent the houses in the white districts which it has been found impossible to rent to white people. The landlords must needs to have their houses vacant hereafter -- unless they can compel the framers of the ordinance to fill them!" "As to the ordinance in question, it is my opinion as a lawyer that it is clearly unconstitutional, unjust and discriminating against the negro, although on its face it appears equally fair to white and black. But there never has been and there never will be any houses erected here in Baltimore exclusively for negro occupancy -- outside of some small hovels in the alleys.
Therefore, to get color pigmentation in the wine, the fermenting must needs to be in contact with the grape skins in order for the anthocyanins to be extracted. Hence, white wine can be made from red wine grapes in the same way that many white sparkling wines are made from the red wine grapes of Pinot noir and Pinot Meunier. The exception to this is the small class of grapes known as teinturiers, such as Alicante Bouschet, which have a small amount of anthocyanins in the pulp that produces pigmented juice.J. Robinson (ed) "The Oxford Companion to Wine" Third Edition pg 24 Oxford University Press 2006 There are several types of anthocyanins (as the glycoside) found in wine grapes which are responsible for the vast range of coloring from ruby red through to dark black found in wine grapes.
Club captain Charlie Brittain was quoted in the South Wales Echo, "We ought to do well, seeing that the present season opens as a sort of continuation of the glorious run we had last year [...] if we do no more than reproduce our old form it must needs be a great side that will stem our progress." The Times expressed a similar belief in the team's potential prior to the start of the campaign, stating that Cardiff possessed "undeniable all-round ability" and reported in the early stages of the season that the team were "at present considered to be as good a team as any in the First Division of the League". Tommy Brown and Willie Page who had both been signed at the start of the previous season were the only notable departures from the first team squad.
Mnemosyne is thought to have been given the distinction of "Titan" because memory was so important and basic to the oral culture of the Greeks that they deemed her one of the essential building blocks of civilization in their creation myth. Later, once written literature overtook the oral recitation of epics, Plato made reference in his Euthydemus to the older tradition of invoking Mnemosyne. The character Socrates prepares to recount a story and says "ὥστ᾽ ἔγωγε, καθάπερ οἱ (275d) ποιηταί, δέομαι ἀρχόμενος τῆς διηγήσεως Μούσας τε καὶ Μνημοσύνην ἐπικαλεῖσθαι." which translates to "Consequently, like the poets, I must needs begin my narrative with an invocation of the Muses and Memory" (emphasis added). Aristophanes also harked back to the tradition in his play Lysistrata when a drunken Spartan ambassador invokes her name while prancing around pretending to be a bard from times of yore.
However if the Soul has sunken into a state of ignorance....it will be unable to see God and will be hindered from attaining the blessings of Paradise." page 11 of Reijn 1995 however slowly must needs be & they will be judged on their progress."However, some people know and believe that the Revelation is true, others accept it on its own authority without questioning it; others yet again shun theological problems and are reluctant to even discuss them... The souls of all these people have fallen into a slumber of ignorance; only a good and compassionate friend can awaken them", page 14-15. "Only when their Souls have been cleansed and their understanding purified, and when their mental faculties have grown stronger, will the full answer to these questions be revealed to them..." pg 15. "He made man the measure of His creation.
And these fresh and delightful brooks, how slowly they slide away, > as, loath to leave the company of so many things united in perfection, and > with how sweet a murmur they lament their forced departure. Certainly, > certainly, cousin, it must needs be, that some goddess this desert belongs > unto, who is the soul of this soil, for neither is any less than a goddess > worthy to be shrined in such a heap of pleasures, nor any less than a > goddess could have made it so perfect a model of the heavenly dwellings. Friedrich August von Kaulbach's In Arcadia Though depicted as contemporary, this pastoral form is often connected with the Golden Age. It may be suggested that its inhabitants have merely continued to live as persons did in the Golden Age, and all other nations have less pleasant lives because they have allowed themselves to depart from original simplicity.
For all natural things can be reduced to one principle which is > nature; and all voluntary things can be reduced to one principle which is > human reason, or will. Therefore there is no need to suppose God's > existence. In turn, Aquinas answers this with the quinque viae, and addresses the particular objection above with the following answer: > Since nature works for a determinate end under the direction of a higher > agent, whatever is done by nature must needs be traced back to God, as to > its first cause. So also whatever is done voluntarily must also be traced > back to some higher cause other than human reason or will, since these can > change or fail; for all things that are changeable and capable of defect > must be traced back to an immovable and self-necessary first principle, as > was shown in the body of the Article.
Like Heller before him, Celan hoped for a word of explanation... but returned empty-handed. (Many members of Heller's family, as in the case of Celan's family, perished in Nazi concentration camps.) with its well-known topos of suffocation at what Celan calls Krudes (an instance of smuttiness). This turn of events must needs be adjudged a most unfortunate one, given that much of Heller's best thought can be viewed as a continuation in one sense or another of Heidegger's preoccupation with Being; certainly Heidegger's Sein und Zeit, in its original edition, was a prized possession and remained part of Heller's personal library to his last day (surviving the substantial paring down of his collection upon his moving into a retirement home in the final stages of his life). It is possible, and indeed probable, that if the outcome of his meeting with Heidegger, which might have taken place c.
But Constantinus — for it must needs be that evil befall him — > always lightly evaded the charge and taunted the wronged man. But on one > occasion Presidius met Belisarius riding on horseback in the forum, and he > laid hold of the horse's bridle, and crying out with a loud voice asked > whether the laws of the emperor said that, whenever anyone fleeing from the > barbarians comes to them as a suppliant, they should rob him by violence of > whatever he may chance to have in his hands. And though many men gathered > about and commanded him with threats to let go his hold of the bridle, he > did not let go until at last Belisarius promised to give him the daggers. On > the following day, therefore, Belisarius called Constantinus and many of the > commanders to an apartment in the palace, and after going over what had > happened on the previous day urged him even at that late time to restore the > daggers.
El-Ghusein wrote much of what he witnessed in his book Martyred Armenia which provides an eyewitness account of the massacres and exposes its systematic nature. The account was originally published in Arabic in 1916 under the title "Massacres in Armenia" but was changed to Martyred Armenia under its English translation. In the foreword of the book, El-Ghusein states, "The war must needs come to an end after a while, and it will then be plain to readers of this book that all I have written is the truth, and that it contains only a small part of the atrocities committed by the Turks against the hapless Armenian people." He wrote of the massacres and their opposition to Islamic principles as follows: The mistreatment of the Armenians in the name of Islam distressed him greatly, and he expressed concern about how his faith was being used to justify the brutality: He is buried in El Sharaeh, a village in Ottoman Syria.
" If we shall suppose that American slavery is one of those > offenses which, in the providence of God, must needs come, but which, having > continued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He > gives to both North and South this terrible war as the woe due to those by > whom the offense came, shall we discern therein any departure from those > divine attributes which the believers in a living God always ascribe to Him? > Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may > speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth > piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall > be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by > another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still > it must be said "the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous > altogether.Lincoln, Abraham.
Even before seats in the House of Commons were greatly valued, the Irish bishops had interested themselves in the municipal corporations and in municipal politics. In 1680 John Vesey, archbishop of Tuam, wrote to Ormonde to present Alderman Thomas Cartwright, the newly elected mayor of Galway, "as a person very well qualified for that trust, on account of his conformity to the Church, and consequently his loyalty to the King." "And indeed," added the archbishop, "I must needs say, with much comfort, for the few English Protestants there incorporated, that they seem to be very well principled, all very uniform in their public devotions, and manageable on any occasion readily for his Majesty's service." After the 1688–91 Revolution the bishops continued their interest in municipal politics with a view to Parliamentary influence; and in the eighteenth century bishops were frequently of the great borough-owning families, and were often borough managers on their own account.
The Church does not, however, enjoin belief in any extra- Scriptural miracle as an article of faith or as necessary for salvation. St. Thomas Aquinas, a prominent Doctor of the Church, divided miracles into three types in his Summa contra Gentiles: > These works that are done by God outside the usual order assigned to things > are wont to be called miracles: because we are astonished (admiramur) at a > thing when we see an effect without knowing the cause. And since at times > one and the same cause is known to some and unknown to others, it happens > that of several who see an effect, some are astonished and some not: thus an > astronomer is not astonished when he sees an eclipse of the sun, for he > knows the cause; whereas one who is ignorant of this science must needs > wonder, since he knows not the cause. Wherefore it is wonderful to the > latter but not to the former.
Caroline Ticknor, 1910, p.22-23) contains the complete letter to the poet Nora Perry dated 2 January 1859, in which he says “The city of Wayland… is shrined in my memory as a far-off mystical Eden where the women were lovely and spirituelle, and the men were jolly and brave; where I used to haunt the rooms of the Athenæum, made holy by the presence of the royal dead; where I used to pay furtive visits to Forbes’ forbidden mysteries (peace to its ashes!), where I used to eat Hasheesh and dream dreams.” And a classmate recalls that after reading Ludlow’s book, Hay “must needs experiment with hasheesh a little, and see if it was such a marvelous stimulant to the imagination as Fitzhugh Ludlow affirmed. ‘The night when Johnny Hay took hasheesh’ marked an epoch for the dwellers in Hope College.”Thayer, William Roscoe The Life and Letters of John Hay v.
Sir John had also been Recorder of Bristol, Attorney-General and Chief Baron of the Exchequer. According to William Roper's Life of Sir Thomas More, when Lord Chancellor Thomas Audley was challenged by More as to the sufficiency of the indictment under which he was condemned at his trial for treason on July 1, 1535, the Chancellor (who, according to Roper, wished to avoid all the blame for More's condemnation being imputed to himself) consulted with Fitzjames, "who, like a wise man answered, 'My Lords all, by St. Julian,' (that was ever his oath) 'I must needs confess that if the act of parliament be not unlawful, then is the indictment in my conscience not insufficient,' whereupon the Lord Chancellor said to the rest of the Lords, 'Lo, my Lords, lo! you hear what my Lord Chief Justice saith,' and so immediately gave judgment against him." Later in that same month, when the King's chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, wanted to halt the export of coin he decided to consult Fitzjames on whether a proclamation could be used for this.
For example in , the Book of Mormon prophet Jacob says an angel informed him that the name of the Messiah would be Christ: > Wherefore, as I said unto you, it must needs be expedient that Christ—for in > the last night the angel spake unto me that this should be his name—should > come among the Jews () The word "Messiah" is used in the text before this point, but from this point on the word "Christ" is used almost exclusively. Richard Packham argues that the Greek word "Christ" in the Book of Mormon challenges the authenticity of the work since Joseph Smith clearly stated that, "There was no Greek or Latin upon the plates from which I, through the grace of the Lord, translated the Book of Mormon." The Foundation for Apologetic Information & Research states that the word "Christ" is the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew word "Messiah" and that Smith simply chose the more familiar Greek word to translate the word that appeared in the language of the plates. Hugh Nibley postulated that the word "Messiah" could have been derived from Arabic rather than Hebrew,Hugh Nibley, Since Cumorah, pp.
He that is born in thy house, and he that is bought with thy money, must needs be circumcised: and my covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant. With Abraham multiple promised lands were given to his innumerable descendants (Gen 15:18-21; 17:1-9, 19; 22:15-18; 26:2-4, 24; 28; 35:9-13; Gal 3; Abr 2:6-11), with special 'gathering' and leadership roles assigned to the descendants of Joseph and his son Ephraim (Gen 48 and 50; Deut 33:17; 1 Chron 5:1-2; Psalm 80:2; Isaiah 11:13; Jer 31:6, 9; Ezek 37:15-19; Zech 10:6-12), and circumcision marking them as a peculiar people set apart (Gen 17:10-13). In Genesis chapters 12–17 three covenants can be distinguished based on the differing Jahwist, Elohist and Priestly sources.Michael D. Coogan, A Brief Introduction to the Old Testament, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 62–68 In Genesis 12 and 15, God grants Abraham land and a multitude of descendants but does not place any stipulations (meaning it was unconditional) on Abraham for the covenant's fulfillment.

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