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100 Sentences With "mutterings"

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

But why couldn't they let Durst's mutterings play as recorded?
Similar mutterings about Chinese immigrants can be heard in Europe.
There were other such exhortations, along with plenty of mutterings.
THE mutterings of discontent are growing louder in Nigeria's street markets.
There were you-go-girl mutterings when Foosiya divorced Asad in absentia.
Mr Guaidó is now facing open mutterings of doubt in Caracas about his leadership.
Their sounds grow louder as I get closer, grunts and mutterings and indignant squawks.
It would be bad enough if they were just the mutterings of a rogue judge.
There are occasional mutterings of separatism in Zulia, in western Venezuela, and in Argentine Patagonia.
In London, this will often earn you a dirty look and mutterings from your waiter.
Usually when two celebrities break up, there's a chorus of boos and mutterings that love is dead.
" Everyone was excited; there was screaming, clapping of hands, stomping and loud mutterings of incomprehensible sounds. "Amen!
Staffers turned their attention to Ryan, and the once-whispered mutterings between aides became more audible chatter.
With it, come the inevitable the social media mutterings of those not-too-chuffed with the whole affair.
The book's spine had yet to be creased; its margins yet to be filled with the mutterings of professors.
Galarraga's post-punk mutterings continue on the upcoming record, as they characteristically erupt into hardcore verses on a dime.
There were mutterings at the event, and wild cries on Twitter, of disappointment (there were plenty of platitudes as well).
His many munificent mutterings include: the Shadowy Shades of the Seraphim, the Seven Rings of Raggadorr and — who can forget?
Its latest announcement is an earpiece that interacts with your phone to inject the sweet mutterings of an AI straight into your skull.
White racial resentment has become a parody of itself, the barely coherent mutterings of men who can't stand that the world is changing.
Murray exhibited great emotion, too, with fist pumps and yells after successful shots, and angry growls and self-directed mutterings after bad ones.
Officials worry that some Chinese may not be in a mood for celebration as the economy slows and mutterings grow about Mr Xi's leadership.
But it was the solstice, I explained to myself, pagan mutterings, and whatever disturbance I felt was just a failure to understand the place.
There were cagey mutterings about Easter eggs and other elements that might reward close attention and rewinding, and about a possible real-world component.
Well, although there's no way of tracking the day-to-day mutterings of delayed commuters, there is one thing that can be monitored — Twitter complaints.
The sinister ambience of space disco and Greem's undecipherable mutterings, filtered through vocoders from late-80s acid house, amass in alien realms of demonic techno.
Obviously, ADT had something in mind when they commissioned this research, and the culmination of this investigation will make your passive-aggressive mutterings seem benign.
Because Jeff Goldblum is not straightforwardly handsome, explaining his sexiness is something that throws normally articulate people into a tailspin of je ne sais quoi mutterings.
There are even mutterings in Washington about launching a formal investigation into India's unfair trade practices—the same step that initiated America's trade war with China.
But some say his mutterings picked up on a live microphone and broadcast in the HBO documentary made it sound like Durst was changing his tune.
Pressured by French mutterings about Belgian bungling, they also had to deny that a law banning house searches after bedtime had allowed their quarry to flee.
But mutterings among current Senate leaders about "process" and the need for "consultation" are a sure tell that McCain's name won't replace Russell's any time soon (NPR).
There's Doris's dowager-dumpster wardrobe and topsy-turvy Staten Island house, along with her mutterings and facial contortions, which seem one tic away from a medical diagnosis.
There have already been mutterings about a primary challenge in 2020, and though no such candidate has yet emerged, patience among some Democrats is clearly wearing thin.
Despite Tyrion's mutterings from his vantage point across the field, the Kingslayer grabs his spear and lunges at Daenerys, only to come face to face with the dragon.
But he actually came across as an introverted, understated sort: slightly weary at answering questions, and making grumpy mutterings about his electricity bill being affected by my visit.
The scowl on Rafael Nadal's face and his low mutterings directed toward his coaches in the stands were the first indications on Friday night that something was wrong.
The 15th Amendment has just been ratified, granting the vote to all qualified men "without regard to race or color," and the air is full of dank mutterings.
Instead of pious statements about poverty, or portentous mutterings on the importance of American leadership, Mr Sharma sees the world from the ruthless and restless perspective of an investor.
To Iowa evangelicals, he didn't want to get shut out completely so he started spouting "Judeo-Christian" mutterings to signal to that group that he could speak their language.
Excuses have abounded, including market timing and sentiment, readily available private cash and mutterings about how the market doesn't understand new technology business models, like software as a service (SaaS).
Murray is well-known for his midmatch mutterings — his looks of anguish, his self-deprecating explosions after mistakes and his audible complaints directed toward his coaching staff in the stands.
I'm talking about extended musical scenes like the opening sequence of "Sweeney," with its screeching factory whistle, its busy ballad, its turbulent Thames-side mutterings, its comedy charm and yearning regret.
The book, available on Amazon, is a weighty tome, clocking in at 400 pages and containing the mutterings of, among others, Louis C.K., Chris Rock, Martha Stewart, Bill Gates and Buzz Aldrin.
There are also mutterings of a larger Google Home "Max" speaker, which, according to 23to5Google, should have a more "premium" design and stereo sound, but information on it has been far less forthcoming.
Group stage moaning seems to happen every two years: if it's not lamentation over the lack of goals or getting worked up about vuvuzelas, it's inconsequential mutterings about the aerodynamics of the Jabulani.
His election to the No. 2 job in November was met in the state Capitol with cartoon-level jaw drops and more-profane mutterings that Mr. Pence was the luckiest guy in the country.
Sure, I'd heard some mutterings about antiperspirants being linked to breast cancer, but I figured that you can barely visit an amusement park these days without someone telling you that roller coasters give you tumors.
But hey, at least we kept it relatively civil and restricted our anger at Moss to Twitter (which he probably doesn't read) and angry Monday morning mutterings to Sandra in accounts (which he definitely can't hear).
Amidst apologies about bad public transport (and mutterings of late nights and sore heads this morning), I can't help but think that Marti's description of Australian wine could apply just as easily to its producers, too.
In addition to election uncertainty, mutterings late last week suggesting that the tax regime may be headed for further adverse changes are likely to further shrink potential buyers' enthusiasm to jump into the market in coming weeks.
By Sunday, the third and final day of Shepton Mallet, exhibitors outnumbered visitors and mutterings of "it's been terrible" and complaints about the poor sales could be overheard above the clutter of unsold porcelain and glass ornaments.
Going to an actual game, trudging in and then out, watching from a weird angle, the walk back to the station with all the grim mutterings of loss, or the quiet that'll-do joy of a routine win?
" Volume one of "The American People" was, if you'll allow me to quote my original review, "a grand diva of a book, a wheezing jukebox of filthy jokes, political hit jobs, killing gossip, love songs and fluky mutterings.
Plus, there are still rumors of Starfield, a sci-fi open-universe RPG that might appear, along with mutterings of a new mobile game a la Fallout Shelter How to watch: Watch Bethesda's live stream on Twitch or YouTube.
Many had hoped that the right mutterings from the Federal Reserve as part of Wednesday's decision on interest rates could offer a lifeline to a market rally that began in the economic wreckage of the financial crisis in March 2009.
Given the Justice Department's longstanding policy and the view of many legal scholars that a sitting president cannot be indicted, Mr. Giuliani is exercising his lawyerly skills in the court of public opinion to ward against the mutterings of impeachment.
It would be fair to criticize the site as an echo chamber: a place where almost everyone agrees that online misogyny is rampant and congratulates themselves for knowing so, taking what pleasure they can in laughing at their enemies' latest mutterings.
In another era, Mr. Cassidy, a little-known power broker in New York City politics, might have made a few phone calls and gotten the matter to go away with no more noise than the mutterings of a few insiders.
I was surprised by how animated it all felt; you can hear the mutterings of pro-segregation agitators, out of earshot in tiny word balloons, see the spray of the blood and the water cannons, smell the cigarettes of the furiously smoking reporters.
"I've dined out on that for the last year or so," he told his listeners at the Y. And the tale, of course, inoculates him against loud mutterings from other audiences, who do not wish to be compared to the benighted Germans.
After we released another set of Nixon White Tapes, which included among other things some outrageous anti-Semitic and otherwise prejudiced mutterings, one of these volunteers asked me whether the rumors were true; had I personally falsified these tapes in Washington to make "the President" look bad?
Doris's wardrobe, mutterings and facial contortions scream too much, Manohla Dargis wrote in The Times, "and together they announce that you're in for an ingratiatingly cutesy slog about a lovable kook — except that the movie and Doris aren't easy to love, which is partly why they work."
And while Richard Nixon was an ally of Joseph McCarthy at the beginning of his career, and in private was given to all sorts of dark mutterings about plots against him by hidden enemies, he was much more restrained in his public persona as vice-president and president.
Sports of The Times Is this how the tail end of the career of one of the two or three greatest basketball players of all time should play out, to be stuck inside that Doge's Palace of dark mutterings and betrayals and shivs inserted in ribs that is the Los Angeles Lakers?
He made it a point to identify all of them, receiving, while he did so, scowls and mutterings, and reciprocating with cocky bullyings and threatenings.
Though of high station, one must be kind and forgiving. Using force to make people submit doesn't make their hearts submit. Only using reason to make people submit will cause there to be no mutterings.
It was reported that she had "dangerously pacifist ideas".Habermann, Ursel (Hrsg.): Briefe nach Bremen 1945-1955, Dülmen-Hiddingsel 1988. p.188 Once more, mutterings surfaced that Oelfken was an "enemy of the state". Less than a week after the article appeared, her publisher dropped her.
Immediately I dropped my eyes, > wondering why I was so keenly watched by the strange woman. The man ceased > his mutterings, and then a third bell was tapped. Everyone picked up his > knife and fork and began eating. I began crying instead, for by this time I > was afraid to venture anything more.
Derry, pp. 145–8; Appendix B. Enraging Churchill by refusing to commit his troops to 'the sheer bloody murder' of an 'arctic Gallipoli', Mackesy was recalled home and, amidst Churchillian mutterings about his 'feebleness and downright cowardice', was spared a court martial but never held command again.Derry, pp. 149–59, 196–201.
Fabian refused to believe that the Avengers are disbanding and was convinced that new heroes must take their place. He spent his time salvaging Sentinel technology left behind from Onslaught's attack. During his work, he lost some weight and grew a beard. He ran into Edwin Jarvis on the streets and alarmed him by his mutterings and appearance.
This was the first by-election the Conservatives fought under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher, who abandoned a precedent that party leaders did not campaign in by-elections, by personally canvassing in support of Bottomley. Writing in The Glasgow Herald political correspondent John Warden stated that the victory would boost Mrs Thatcher by silencing against "mutterings about her leadership" for at least a few months.
His quirkiness, strange body movements and frequent gibberish mutterings have become his trademark. Kramer was originally envisioned as a recluse who never left his apartment except to visit Jerry. This is why he is conspicuously absent from the season two episode "The Chinese Restaurant," which takes place entirely outside of the building. However, in season three Kramer starts to join Jerry, Elaine, and George in various scenes outside of the building.
However, as bad as 2000 might have been, the 2001 season was even worse. In a shocking season, crueled by injury, older players falling away, and general mutterings of dissatisfaction, the club finished 14th. En route, they won only five matches for the entire year, all against other bottom four sides. Judge was sacked after the season, to be replaced in turn by former premiership captain John Worsfold.
"In the process, we gained a veritable 'canine Harpo Marx,'" Mendelson later wrote. Melendez suggested he provide gibberish for Snoopy's mutterings, and simply speed up the tape to prevent viewers from knowing. There are no adult characters in the strip or in this special. Later specials would introduce an offscreen teacher; her lines are eschewed for the sound of a trombone as the team behind the specials found it humorous.
The Focus of Life, The Mutterings of AOS is a comprehensive treatise written and illustrated by Austin Osman Spare on key occult concepts he introduced in his previous writings. The book first published in 1921 by the Morland Press and edited by Fredrick Carter with an introduction by Francis Marsden. The book contains 11 full page illustrations. The first edition was quarter vellum with buckram sides, lettered in gold on the spine "The Focus of Life".
Following the victory of Britain and its allies, Spare had moved into a small flat at 8 Gilbert Place in Bloomsbury, Central London, where he lived alone; although they never gained a divorce, Spare had separated from his wife Eily, who had begun a relationship with another man.Baker 2011. p. 123. Focusing on the writing and illustration of a new book, 1921 saw the publication of The Focus of Life The Mutterings of AOS by Morland Press.
But support from England could not prevent the charges against Bingham being read before the council in early November. No witnesses appeared against him (although there were mutterings that they were too fearful to come to Dublin); his own witnesses underwent examination on the 28th. His full acquittal was proclaimed on 5 December. Bingham returned to Connacht, where the Lord Deputy had gathered his forces at Galway with an invitation to the rebels to submit by 12 January 1590.
He used hidden pencils and other "foreign objects" to cut open his opponent's faces. Often, the tactic backfired and the opponent got The Sheik's pencil, leading to the extensive scarring on Farhat's forehead. The other illegal move was his fireball that he threw into his opponents' faces, sometimes burning their face severely (he had pieces of paper soaked in lighter fluid which he quick lit with a cigarette lighter hidden in his trunks). He didn't speak on camera, apart from incomprehensible mutterings.
In labelling Papal discourse as the "mutterings of some papists in corners", Swinnerton discredits all speech or writing that lacks royal approval and takes place, so to speak, "in blind alleys".Pardue (2012), p. 10n45. His Mustre, a "far superior" work to the Litel treatise, is a preface to his translation of the Gesta Romanae ecclesiae contra Hildebrandum of Cardinal Beno of Santi Martino e Silvestro. Beno was one of the cardinals who abandoned Pope Gregory VII in 1084 in favour of the Antipope Clement III.
Ferrari's long-wheelbase chassis, making its Grand Prix debut, was dismissed by Schumacher after he tried it during the Friday practice sessions. Back in his old car, he spun off on his first lap during first practice on Saturday, and then suffered an engine failure early in second practice. There were also various mutterings that the Ferraris were off the pace as McLaren had threatened to protest about the Italian team's new braking system, and some were sure it had been removed to the team's obvious detriment.
Rustie's first instrument was guitar and he bought his first decks at age 15. He is associated with the subgenre of aquacrunk, a genre described as an experimental offshoot of hip hop that emphasizes slowed down, low-slung beats, with lashings of electronic mutterings and morphing basslines. He believes his work conveys movement and fluidity, and that his creative process is an "immersive world" wrapped up in sound, rhythm, and color. Rustie's long- time interest in video games has influenced his approach to electronic composition.
The city of his birth, Chicago, and the city of much of his later life, New York, greatly influenced the composer. This is evident in the unpredictable rhythms and syncopation found in many of his works. Bazelon describes his music as having "the rebellious mutterings, cross-rhythms, and nervous tension and energy of the city" and "the alerations of mood, color and dramatic flair are a direct expression of the constant changes of pace, the rhythmic beat of life in the big metropolis". His music rarely has easily recognizable melodies.
Jégado's trial began on December 6, 1851 but, due to French laws of permissible evidence and statute of limitations, she was accused only of three murders, three attempted murders and 11 thefts. At least one later case appears to have been dropped since it involved a child and police were reluctant to upset the parents by an exhumation. Jégado's behaviour in court was erratic, changing from humble mutterings to loud pious shouting and occasional violent outbursts against her accusers. She consistently denied she even knew what arsenic was, despite evidence to the contrary.
General Silfversparre, commander of the Stockholm garrison, was alerted to the possibility of disturbances but may himself have been a member of the court party that opposed von Fersen. The procession proceeded slowly through the Hornsgatan and Södermalm Square, and was met with threats and insults as soon as it entered the city. Von Fersen, with a violent effort, flung back one of the assailants who grasped him and shook himself free of the others who were pressing round. There was a momentary lull, and the curses shrank from shouts to mutterings.
His ideas for reconfiguring the relationship between the army and the state failed to convince the wider political establishment. As he persisted, others from the military found practical objections to his proposals, while in general terms, an attack on the status quo came to be presented as an attack on the aging king. There were mutterings that he was spreading republican ideas. Tscherning, finding himself on the receiving end of a royal rebuke, offered to retire; but the king refused to accept his retirement, preferring to find a more subtle way to cool the debate.
Patter is a prepared and practiced speech that is designed to produce a desired response from its audience. Examples of occupations with a patter might include the auctioneer, salesperson, dance caller, magician, or comedian. The term may have been a colloquial shortening of "Pater Noster", or the Lord's Prayer, and may have referred to the practice of mouthing or mumbling prayers quickly and mechanically. From this, it became a slang word for the secret and equally incomprehensible mutterings of a cant language used by beggars, thieves, gypsies, etc.
Peter Bayliss (27 June 1922 - 29 July 2002) was an English actor. Bayliss was born in Kingston upon Thames and trained at the Italia Conti Academy and the John Gielgud Company. More than six feet tall, with a voice to match, he supplemented it with a barrage of wheezings, croakings, mutterings and, as the opera singer in Frontiers of Farce (Old Vic, 1977), garglings.the guardian bayliss obituary guardian obituaries In 1956 he appeared on stage in "The Matchmaker" at the Royale Theatre in New York and in 1960 he appeared in "Ross" at the Royal Haymarket Theatre in London.
Aquacrunk was pioneered by Glasgow artist Rustie, and features slowed down, low-slung beats influenced by Southern hip-hop with electronic mutterings and morphing basslines. It is influenced as much by early Rephlex and Underground Resistance releases by crunk artists like Lil Jon or Young Buck. Purple sound emerged in Bristol in late 2008 out of the splintering dubstep scene and took inspiration from wonky, which it is sometimes considered a part of. It incorporates synth funk from the 1980s and G-funk production from the ’90s into dubstep, while also introducing many aspects of grime and chiptune (several prominent purple sound artists cite video game music as a large influence).
Fleischer cartoons differed highly from their counterparts at Walt Disney Productions and Warner Bros. Cartoons. The Popeye series, like other cartoons produced by the Fleischers, had an urban feel (the Fleischers operated in New York, specifically on Broadway a few blocks from Times Square), its manageable variations on a simple theme (Popeye loses Olive to bully Bluto and must eat his spinach and defeat him), and the characters' "under-the-breath" mutterings. The voices for Fleischer cartoons produced during the early and mid-1930s were recorded after the animation was completed. The actors, Mercer in particular, would therefore improvise lines that were not on the storyboards or prepared for the lip-sync (generally word- play and clever puns).
While most Greeks considered their own culture superior to all others (the word barbarian is derived from mutterings that sounded to Greek ears like "bar-bar"), Alexander was unique in promoting a campaign to win the hearts and minds of the Persians. He adopted Persian customs of clothing and otherwise encouraged his men to go native by adopting local wives and learning their mannerisms. Of note is that he radically departed from earlier Greek attempts at colonisation, characterised by the murder and enslavement of the local inhabitants and the settling of Greek citizens from the polis. Roman universalism was characterised by cultural and religious tolerance and a focus on civil efficiency and the rule of law.
Walt holds many prejudices towards Asians because of his experience in the Korean War, and more recently because of the success of Japanese automakers (which is somewhat responsible for the struggle of Ford and other US marques, leading to the decimation of the auto industry in Michigan) and his dislike of rice burners (in contrast to traditional American muscle cars). He frequently calls the Asians in his community gooks, though his usage of the slur appears to be less insulting as the film progresses. Todd McCarthy of Variety said that Walt's "racist mutterings, which employ every imaginable epithet for Asians, are blunt and nasty, but Eastwood grunts them out in an over-the-top way that provokes laughs, and his targets are no less sparing of him."McCarthy, Todd.
Waterford was occupied by Mountjoy in 1603 during the Nine Years War (Ireland) a rebellion led by Hugh O'Neill, ostensibly in the cause of Irish freedom and the Catholic religion. Despite their own adherence to Catholicism, the townspeople largely sided with the English government forces. However, upon the coronation of James VI of Scotland as king of England in 1603, the citizens participated in an uprising that was common to the coastal cities of Munster and refused entry to Mountjoy, the king's Lord Deputy of Ireland, who had just secured the surrender of Hugh O'Neill. The motivation for Waterford's defiance lay in the people's demand for freedom of religion – they were led by Catholic priests and re-consecrated several churches in the city – although there were also mutterings about the nationality of the new king.
Los Angeles Times writer Jonathan Gold viewed it as "far more consistent" than the duo's Paid in Full, calling Eric B. "a master of chill, understated beats" and complimenting Rakim for weaving "a laid-back web of words, his whiskey-smooth tenor less noisy but more intense than the machine-gun mutterings you hear booming from beat boxes, his keen rhymes all the more devastating for being near-whispered where lesser rappers would shout". In his review for The Village Voice, Robert Christgau found the duo's sampling as an improvement from their previous work's "Brownian motion" and complimented Rakim's "ever-increasing words-per-minute ratio—the man loves language like a young Bob D". Peter Watrous of The New York Times commended Eric B.'s mixes and described him as "a minimalist virtuoso".Watrous, Peter (September 9, 1988). Review: Follow the Leader.
In this series, there is not much spoken dialogue at all, even from the human characters; simple grunts, bleats, barks, growls, pointing, sighs, mutterings, words, and similar wordless inflections and other animal sounds are all used to indicate each character's moods and motives. There are also no readable words in any episode, although "Bitzer" can be seen on a dog bowl, and—in series four--"Mossy Bottom Farm" on a gate, in the original English-language title sequence. All other signage, such as on a pizza box or a bus stop, is replaced by an illegible scrawl and a picture. Shaun the Sheep's first appearance was in Wallace & Gromit's third short feature, the Academy Award winning A Close Shave, as the youngest member of a flock of sheep Wallace and Gromit work to save from being turned into dog food.
His only true attachment is to his filthy dog. The dog is a dirty, smelly body detested by the housekeeper who wants him and his owner out, but it's precisely this indubitable physical reality of him that makes him indispensable; without it, there's no real life in his life, and therewith no ideas, no literature that means anything. On the Mountain is a special kind of prose: relieved of its function as a carrier of common information, it presents itself as some such medium as poetry, music, painting, sculpture. The seemingly random notes of this book, its disjunct, diffuse mutterings are the vehicle for a dramatic conflict between an embattled life force intent upon self-creation, self-definition, saying "All this is only a preparation for becoming me," and its equally determined opposition, threatening to make nonsense of all that.
This version is highly regarded amongst television ghost story adaptations, and described by Mark Duguid of the British Film Institute as "A masterpiece of economical horror that remains every bit as chilling as the day it was first broadcast."Mark Duguid, Whistle and I'll Come to You on the British Film Institute website A BBC Press Release for its repeat showing in 1969 stated that it was an "unconventional adaptation...remarkable, both for its uncanny sense of period and atmosphere, and for the quality of the actors' performances."Helen Wheatley, Gothic Television Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2006. . 42. The performance of Michael Hordern is especially acclaimed, with his hushed mutterings and repetition of other characters' dialogue, coupled with a discernible lack of social skills, turning the professor from an academic caricature into a more rounded character, described by horror aficionado David Kerekes as "especially daring for its day".
Fitzmaurice still refused to come in, and Perrot issued him with a challenge to single combat, which the rebel declined with the comment, "For if I should kill Sir John Perrot the Queen of England can send another president into this province; but if he do kill me there is none other to succeed me or to command as I do". Perrot's challenge provoked mutterings from the more level-headed servants of the Crown, and his reputation for rash judgment was confirmed when he was ambushed by the rebels, who outnumbered his force ten to one, only to be relieved when the rebels mistook a small cavalry company for the advance party of a larger Crown force. But in 1572, after a second and successful siege of the rebel stronghold of Castlemaine, he was vindicated on Fitzmaurice's submission. During his presidency Perrot authorised over 800 hangings, most of them by martial law.
Since 2005, Beck has toured American cities twice a year, presenting a one-man stage show. His stage productions are a mix of stand-up comedy and inspirational speaking. In a critique of his live act, Salon Magazine's Steve Almond describes Beck as a "wildly imaginative performer, a man who weds the operatic impulses of the demagogue to the grim mutterings of the conspiracy theorist".Almond, Steve (September 12, 2009), "Glenn Beck is the Future of Literary Fiction" , Salon Magazine A show from the Beck `08 Unelectable Tour was shown in around 350 movie theaters around the country. The finale of 2009's Common Sense Comedy Tour was simulcast in over 440 theaters. The events have drawn 200,000 fans in recent years. (cover) In March 2003, Beck ran a series of rallies, which he called Glenn Beck's Rally for America, in support of troops deployed for the upcoming Iraq War. On July 4, 2007, Beck served as host of the 2007 Toyota Tundra "Stadium of Fire" in Provo, Utah.
In the sixth reading (, aliyah), God instructed Moses to put Aaron's staff before the Ark of the Covenant to be kept as a lesson to rebels to end their mutterings against God.. But the Israelites cried to Moses, "We are doomed to perish!". God spoke to Aaron and said that he and his dynasty would be responsible for the Tent of Meeting and the priesthood and accountable for anything which went wrong in the performance of their priestly duties. God assigned the Levites to Aaron to aid in the performance of these duties.. God prohibited any outsider from intruding on the priests as they discharged the duties connected with the Shrine, on pain of death.. And God gave Aaron and the priests all the sacred donations and first fruits as a perquisite for all time for them and their families to eat.. God gave them olive oil, wine, grain.. The priestly covenant was described as a "covenant of salt",. but God also told Aaron that the priests would have no territorial share among the Israelites, as God was their portion and their share..

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