Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"on all hands" Antonyms

16 Sentences With "on all hands"

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

The feature is available on all hands-free Alexa-enabled devices, like the Echo, Echo Dot and Echo Spot.
And all the while maledictory shouts and cries are heard on all hands.
They raise the alarm, believing that some Welsh thief is after their belongings. The ostler rouses the other guests, but the poet, hunted for on all hands, manages with the help of fervent prayer to reach his own bed undiscovered. He ends by asking God's forgiveness.
Originally, colonization "had been pushed with diligence and paraded as the cure for the evils of slavery, and its benevolence was assumed on all hands. Everybody of consequence belonged to it." The following summary is from April 1834: The colonization movement "originated abolitionism", by arousing the free blacks and other opponents of slavery.
Twain observed that the company were "educated men, men moving in good society.... It was 'Sir Roger', always 'Sir Roger' on all hands, no one withheld the title".Twain, pp. 74–75 Altogether, Hawkins called 215 witnesses, including numbers from France, Melipilla, Australia and Wapping, who testified either that the Claimant was not Roger Tichborne or that he was Arthur Orton.
"He was admitted on all hands to be facile Princeps of the Sacred College."Frederick Rolfe, Chronicles of the House of Borgia, p. 356. Benedict XIV appointed him Governor of Benevento. In 1770 he was made secretary of the Congregation de Propaganda Fide, an office of which he took advantage to acquire antiquities by the help of the missionaries—a help which proved always forthcoming.
R. B. McDowell and John A. Woods (eds.), The Correspondence of Edmund Burke. Volume IX: Part One May 1796-July 1797. Part Two: Additional and Undated Letters (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1970), p. 193. Burke replied that "As it is on all hands allowed that you were the most able advocate for the cause which you supported, your sacrifice to truth and mature reflexion, adds much to your glory".
With this conclusion Sir E. M. Thompson agrees. On the other hand, Mr. Gairdner suggests that an explanation of the defects of the later portion may be found in the circumstance that in 1394–1400 Walsingham was absent from St. Albans as prior of Wymundham. The Ypodigma Neustriæ, which is admitted on all hands to be by Walsingham, also contains a considerable number of inaccuracies, and these may possibly have crept both into this work and the latter part of the Historia Anglicana owing to the approach of old age.
Described as the "sister song" to Aquarius lead single "2 On", "All Hands on Deck" also garnered comparisons to Cassie's "Long Way 2 Go" (2006), Ying Yang Twins' "Whistle While You Twurk" (2000), and the works of DJ Mustard. While Azalea's verse was noted to recall her single "Fancy" (2014). The song's lyrical content was noted to combine a dance instructional with the subject of caustic post-break-up stunting, namely in the lyric, "Kiss the old me goodbye / She's dead and gone". It portrays a scenario of a woman retaining her confidence and embracing her love life after a break-up.
At the time of his death The Times observed "that it is acknowledged on all hands that in him the Dominion has lost one of the ablest men that it has yet produced." In 1872 Grant married Jessie Lawson, who was the granddaughter of the first president of the Bank of Nova Scotia, William Lawson.scotiabank.com: "Scotiabank Timeline by Year - 1671-1833" Among their descendants was their grandson, the philosopher George Parkin Grant; their great-grandson, Michael Ignatieff, served as leader of the Official Opposition during his term as leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. Grant Hall, a prominent clock tower and meeting hall at Queen's, is named in his honour.
The concept for "the Little Major" was born late in 1962 while Reese was en route to a tournament in the Canary Islands with Boris Schapiro. First with Schapiro and then with Jeremy Flint, Reese created the bidding system as "an Awful Warning of what might happen if every country playing international championships were to arrive with its own wholly artificial system". That project was soon overtaken by events and the system "was found in itself to be extremely interesting". SBN 7091 0003 5 Reese promulgated three general principles:Reese, Terence (August 1969), Seven-stone weakling, Bridge Magazine, page 96 & following #Aggressive openings on all hands that are ill-equipped for competition.
HotNewHipHop's Trevor Smith wrote that Azalea's verse "bolstered" the song and that its airplay would benefit from it as a result. Similarly, Maurice Bobb of MTV News called Azalea's verse "catchy," and said that the single had "the sonic fuel to really set the charts on fire" and match the success of "2 On". Fuse's Jeff Benjamin wrote that Azalea's braggadocio meshed well with Tinashe's empowering lyrics on "All Hands on Deck," and concluded that the track became one of 2015's "first awesome girl-power anthems" and was "in prime position to become a hit". The New York Times writer Jon Caramanica described "All Hands on Deck" as a "high- quality copy" of "2 On" and one of the album's "knowing ploys".
The early Iron Age forms of Scandinavia show no traces of Roman influence, though these become abundant toward the middle of the period. The duration of the Iron Age is variously estimated according to how its commencement is placed nearer to or farther from the opening years of the Christian era; but it is agreed on all hands that the last division of the Iron Age of Scandinavia, the Viking Period, is to be taken as from 700 to 1000 AD, when paganism in those lands was superseded by Christianity. The Iron Age north of about the Rhine, beyond the Celts and then the Romans, is divided into two eras: the Pre-Roman Iron Age and the Roman Iron Age. In Scandinavia, further periods followed up to 1100: the Migration Period, the Vendel Period and the Viking Age.
According to The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art in 1857, her Hungarian travelogue compares favourably with her earlier books on various cultures, exhibiting "deeper research; its statistics are peculiarly accurate, and it is on all hands admitted to be one of the best books of travel submitted to the public." The magazine also noted the usefulness of Pardoe's The Hungarian Castle (1842), which consists of three volumes of Hungarian folklore, "filling up a very little known page in the legendary history of Europe". In 1858, J. Cordy Jeaffreson stated in Novels and Novelists that Pardoe had been "favourably circumstanced for the development of her intellect," for "delicate health at an early part of her life secured her the quiet retirement necessary for meditation and study, and her extended travels have supplied her susceptible mind and retentive memory with the best possible materials for thought." Joseph Johnson included Pardoe in his work Clever Girls of Our Time: And How They Became Famous Women (1862).
The Lord Deputy informed Mountnorris that he would appeal to the king against the sentence, and added, rather tactlessly: "I would rather lose my hand than you should lose your head." In England the sentence was condemned on all hands; in letters to friends, Wentworth attempted to justify it in the cause of discipline, and even at his trial he spoke of it as in no way reflecting upon himself. The only real justification for Wentworth's conduct, however, lies in the fact that he had obviously no desire to see the sentence executed; he felt it necessary, as he confessed two years later, to remove Mountnorris from office, and this was the most effective means he could take. Hume attempts to extenuate Strafford's conduct, but Hallam condemns the vindictive bitterness he here exhibited in strong terms; and although Mr. S. R. Gardiner has shown that law was technically on Wentworth's side, and his intention was merely to terrify Mountnorris, Hallam's verdict seems substantially just.
A trained lawyer quick to form and to formulate his > conclusions, his unfailing sincerity and the zeal with which he strove to > reduce, as far as might be, the law's delays, were recognized on all hands; > and with the leaders of the Bar he was on the best of terms. Sir John > Stanley's crowning achievement had been the extraction from a somewhat > reluctant Government of an undertaking to construct a new High Court > building. > Last month he had the pleasure of laying the foundation stone of the new > building, whose erection will for ever lay the spectre of a transfer of the > Court to Lucknow, which has for long haunted the imagination of the Hallabad > [sic] Bar and public. Many a good cause will have reason before long to feel > the loss of Sir John and Lady Stanley; but today it is for a host of private > friends to realise the loss they are sustaining in the departure of the > high-minded lady and gentleman who have so worthily played their Indian > part.

No results under this filter, show 16 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.