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30 Sentences With "perambulations"

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

The structure of his mental perambulations also seems to have changed.
With his gaunt cheekbones and haunted eyes, the actor adds a yearning quality to Jake's restless perambulations.
Music is in the streets in Warsaw's center and I heard plenty of it during my downtown perambulations.
These are all real places, and websites like Thrillist and Eater have even made guides based on Dev's perambulations.
The PT's staunchest allies—trade unions and social movements—can disrupt normal life in a way that the opposition's Sunday-afternoon perambulations do not.
In our many perambulations through the halls of museums, who hasn't wanted to give paintings we pass by a little touch-up in a spontaneous act of yellowism?
I think this is a segment ripe for what Apple is planning for TV. Millennials are cutting the cord because they are comfortable with the perambulations of what's needed to do it.
The Times's delegation to the winter tours (perambulations known as "convention walk-throughs") usually consists of editors and managers who are tasked with deploying our team in July, reporting to the politics editor and the newsroom's administration.
Wearing blue when there is blue all over the runways, or florals, or what have you makes me feel like I've drunk too much of the Kool-Aid handed out during my twice-yearly perambulations to the shows.
Except it was not so much the inner workings of the White House—although it would often be reported as such—but the perambulations of the president's mind, which changed direction almost as fast as he could express himself.
So far HK Urbex has released more than three dozen videos documenting their perambulations through derelict prisons, tenements, cinemas, hospitals, casinos, police stations, bomb shelters, subway tunnels, a shipwreck and other sites across Hong Kong and elsewhere in Asia.
That collective experience that we shared when we sat in the same room to watch the Game of Thrones finale or, before that, Lost's ultimately regrettable but thrilling perambulations, is present here in Death Stranding, as it has been for other games before it.
Thus, he transformed the Isle of Manhattan into the Isle of Serendip: He traced the perambulations of feral cats, cataloged shoeshine purveyors, tracked down statistics related to the bathrooms at Yankee Stadium and discovered a colony of ants at the top of the Empire State Building.
On an odometer basis, my perambulations around the hearthrug by rocking chair are infinitely more dangerous than an astronaut's wildest rides through space.
Parish officers have the right to enter private property in carrying it out and also use the rates to cover expenses properly incurred (including refreshments, but not music, etc.). Perambulations must be at least three years apart.
Mooallem lives with his family on Bainbridge Island, near Seattle, Washington. His podcast The Walking Podcast chronicles Mooallem's perambulations on the island. It was named one of 2019's Best Podcasts by the The A.V. Club and New York Magazine's Vulture.com.
The frontage illustration that was issued on the first magazine edition reads "The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club – containing a faithful record of the perambulations, perils, travels, adventures and Sporting Transactions of the corresponding members. Edited by 'Boz'. With Illustrations". Seymour isn't even mentioned as a named contributor.
While completing an artist residency in San Augustine, Mexico, Okano walked the same road every day to and from her studio, and collected materials along the route (including seed pods, flowers, and grasses, as well as bits of trash). She combined the scavenged materials into a series of mixed-media sculptures that serve as records of her location and daily perambulations.
Gathering Wool by Henry Herbert La Thangue Woolgathering is a practice similar to gleaning, but for wool. The practice, now obsolete, was of collecting bits of wool that had gotten caught on bushes and fences or fallen on the ground as sheep passed by. The meandering perambulations of a woolgatherer give rise to idiomatic sense of the word as meaning aimless wandering of the mind.
His perambulations, which took over a month, featured in a "Journal" of 14,000 words written on his return, a revised monograph of which was edited in 1997 by his great-granddaughter Jennifer Stephens, and published by The Stephens Collection in Finchley. The doctor makes acute observations on his travels through the daily life and society of England in the reign of George IV, before the advent of the railways.
Aiyanar images installed in villages are usually gigantic and they are identical with the Bhuta like iconography of Sastha given in Subrabheda Agama. In rural areas, Aiyanar is often represented with an escort, usually composed of the god's vassals, sometimes comprising demons. Consistent with this practice, terracotta horses are usually placed outside the temple. These are given up to the god as steeds for his night time perambulations.
For a couple of years, Pram performed and recorded without a long- term record deal. Their first release during this period was a 1995 self- released cassette compilation of early demos and live recordings called Perambulations. The band's next EP, Music for Your Movies, was released on November 1996 through Stereolab's label Duophonic Records. It was followed by the vinyl-only "Omnichord/Sixty Years of Telephony" single on the small independent label Wurlitzer Jukebox Records.
Another non-album single, "The Last Astronaut", was released in 1997 on the Kooky label. Also in 1997, the band expanded and reissued their debut EP Gash as a full-length album on the æ label, adding five tracks from Perambulations and doubling the length. Pram's lineup changed several times during this period. A theremin player known only as "The Colonel" joined the band in 1996, bringing his own home-made theremin with him.
"Romford: Perambulations", The Buildings of England: London 5 East, by Nikolaus Pevsner, pp. 196–197. Halfway through construction it was decided by the planners to relocate the town's church back to Market Place. The last services were held at the old church in Market Place in 1849 before it was demolished. Blore's chapel in Main Road remained and continued as a burial ground, hence the current collection of 19 headstones at the back of the park.
67Priscilla Wakefield, Perambulations in London (London: Darton, Harvey and Darton, 1814), Letter XXIV, p. 345 The Fortune was erected as the second half of a substantial realignment of London's chief acting companies. In 1597, the Lord Chamberlain's Men had left, or rather been ejected, from The Theatre; they abandoned Shoreditch and in 1599 constructed a new theatre, the Globe, in Southwark. The Admiral's Men, then playing in the nearby and aging Rose Theatre, suddenly faced stiff competition for Bankside audiences.
It appears he is still going for his daily perambulations, "out, on, round, back, in"Beckett, S., From An Abandoned Work, Six Residua, Beckett Short No 5, p 20 as he puts it. And he is still in poor health. His throat, which has bothered him for as long as he can remember, still troubles him and he has developed earache. He regards himself now as a "mild" person and yet for some reason the violence of old erupts and he begins lashing about with his stick and cursing.
Dibden Purlieu was in the parish of Dibden, referred to in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Deepdene, "dene" being an Anglo-Saxon word for valley.Dibden, Old Hampshire Gazetteer Purlieu is a Norman-French word meaning "the outskirts of a forest" – a place free from forest laws. In this particular case Dibden Purlieu was land removed from the New Forest in the 14th century when the forest boundaries were established by perambulations about 1300.Dibden Purlieu, Old Hampshire Gazetteer In practice the king retained or claimed, certain rights in the area, and the activities of the royal foresters in enforcing forest law there were a matter of great resentment.
Between 1963 and 1976 Honeywill worked as stage designer in Adelaide. She designed Eureka Stockade for the University of Adelaide Theatre Guild and the 1976 production of Jumpers,Tasmanian Arts Guide both Adelaide Fringe Festival productions. In 1974 she joined the founding committee for the Come Out Festival, part of the Adelaide Festival of Arts. Between 1974 and 1981 she created and directed six large-scale, multidisciplinary works. Pageant (1977)Come Out 77 PIC-A-PAK no 421 - Educational Technology Centre, South Australia, 1977 and Perambulations Games (1979)Come Out 79 program - Adelaide Festival of Arts were televised by ABC TV. Her production, The Arts Circus (1979), was critically acclaimed.
In 1645 Bagwell had published The Distressed Merchant, and Prisoners Comfort in Distress, a piece of doggerel, which was caricatured in Wil Bagnal's Ghost, or the Merry Devill of Gadmunton in his Perambulations of the Prisons of London, by Edmund Gayton, 1655, and in Will Bagnalls Ballet, in Wit Restored, 1658. Bagwell also published another short poem, entitled An Affectionate Expostulation for the Pious Employment both of Wit and Wealth. In 1652 there was published, by order of Oliver Cromwell, A Full Discovery of a Foul Concealment, or a True Narrative of the Proceedings and Transactions of the Committee for the Accompts of the Commonwealth of England with William Bagwell and John Brockedon, accomptants, Discoverers and Plaintiff's against the Committee of Hartford, the Treasurer and Paymaster there in the year 1643; but this William Bagwell may be another person.
Guillot offers tasty descriptions for each of the 310 streets of Paris of the time, small scenes in few words, used like brush strokes to show the sellers of wheat and cloth, the butchers, tailors, armourers and goldsmiths, and even the prostitutes and footpads. Some of these streets have disappeared but most of them have not, even if in 700 years some of them have changed in name or appearance, or part of their original span has been amputated. In the history of literature, the perambulations of Guillot, who takes his readers into the streets of the great Parisian labyrinth, foreshadow the genre of the Parisian urban stroll, which reached its apogee in the 19th century in the writings of Gérard de Nerval such as Nuits d'octobre (October Nights) and Mémoires d'un Parisen (Memoirs of a Parisian), as well as in Charles Baudelaire's Fleurs du mal and Spleen de Paris (Petits poèmes en prose).

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