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"plentifully" Definitions
  1. in large amounts or numbers

116 Sentences With "plentifully"

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

O'Shea swears plentifully, and his conversation was peppered with amplifying expletives.
Instead, you can tweak their properties with bone charms, which are scattered plentifully around levels.
They grow best and most plentifully with rainy summers, dry winters, and moderate temperatures year-round.
Marigolds are still heaped on his images, the more plentifully by those who hate his truth-telling spirit.
You mean we've been sleeping on a dandruff solution that's been plentifully stocked in our bathrooms this whole time?
Another bonus: Atlantic Spanish mackerel is a sustainable option, plentifully found on the East Coast of the United States.
Documented decay of the state oil company PDVSA means Venezuela's main fountain of wealth won't flow plentifully any time soon.
Shows like Girls and Broad City exist plentifully on cable networks without being the "white version" of any other show.
Very rarely, the Content Gods bless us so plentifully that the sheer overabundance of stuff-we-gotta-watch becomes downright overwhelming.
There is more to the region's cuisine than garlic and tomatoes, which were plentifully larded between the entree's four mushy fillets.
Back in the Victorian era, they were swimming so plentifully in the Thames that they became a poor man's hearty meal.
But thanks to beloved brands like O.P.I, Essie, and Sally Hansen stocked plentifully at most drugstores, Instagram-worthy nails are, well, at our fingertips.
Opposite the "Bus" screen print is a wall plastered with gorgeous, pulsating rock posters — 75 by about 30 graphic designers, most plentifully Victor Moscoso.
Also interesting is that the site uses words unique to or used plentifully by an artist to determine words that are "central" to certain rappers.
Researchers also have access to more information with more plentifully available data, meaning more people can learn new things in the AI field more quickly and efficiently.
The film follows a chronological, biographic format, with Dorfman recounting her life and career, plentifully illustrated by her extensive archive and sprinkled with excerpts of vintage interviews.
This decision keeps the images from becoming sterile museum pieces and reminds the reader that the stories were mass-produced, plentifully available propaganda in their era of origin.
"Every mesquite tree tastes different, so you have to walk around tasting them all," says chef Rocky Barnette about the southwestern plant that grows plentifully in Marfa, Tex.
" A week later, "Meredith" from Staten Island — strongly supported by other readers and The Times itself — urged "Tormented" to "sprinkle powdered borax plentifully around 'where they most do congregate.
They were plentifully and freely available at my college student health center and served up in a candy bowl at the entrance of the frat house I briefly lived in.
It was important, he explained, to eat well, to exercise plentifully, to have good friends, to be organized and to live in an environment that suits your temperament and character.
If I feel a dark cloud coming, I try to make sure to exercise plentifully, eat well, spend as much time outside under a wide sky as possible, and talk.
The current structure suggests the market will be plentifully supplied through the northern hemisphere's summer and autumn before shifting to a shortage with the onset of winter and introduction from Jan.
Fund managers are betting the introduction of sanctions on Iran will result in a shortage of seaborne crude on international markets even while the landlocked U.S. inland market remains plentifully supplied.
Arizona: Prickly Pear Gelato At Tortilla Flat General StoreThe prickly pear cactus grows plentifully across the desert, and once late summer hits, its bulbous, purple-hued ends are ripe for the picking.
But on Thursday, moments after the release of the special counsel's full — if not plentifully redacted — report detailing Russian interference in the 2016 election, the outrage seemed to have momentarily left the building.
The tree species being used in the wellness world is called bursera graveolens, which grows all over the Americas including Mexico, Peru, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Galápagos Islands and plentifully in mainland Ecuador.
Crumbling refinery profits, first in Asia and now also in Europe and the United States, as a result of rising feedstock prices and plentifully available fuel products, point to lower crude orders going forward.
But we're not doing that for a whole host of reasons, including: Natural gas is plentifully available, often times the cheapest electricity option and a source for things not easily created with renewables (like chemicals).
If, on the other hand, the White House and Saudi Arabia manage to keep the market plentifully supplied even as sanctions go into effect, Brent spot prices and calendar spreads are likely to come under renewed pressure.
From wide-ranging sources that include military intelligence, pre-modern architecture, diasporic histories, and documentary evidence, these artists borrow plentifully from cultural memory to destabilize embedded notions of power in works that span photography, sculpture, performance, and film.
That movie glorified fraternity life, and it changed the nature of college life in America as a whole, because suddenly students thought the college experience was supposed to be filled with debauchery—and alcohol, of course, was supposed to be flowing plentifully.
Plentifully victualed, one could stand a siege here, and perhaps did in the gamey Middle Ages.
Poplar trees grew plentifully. Fotur is inhabited by Wakhi people. The population of the village (2003) is 436.
Moreover, that grain unsown grows there plentifully is not a fabulous fancy, but is based on trustworthy accounts of the Danes.
Then, he drew together a great heap of crisp shavings and slathers, plentifully besprinkling it with what remained in the can.
Kindle Edition. The Hatha Yoga Pradipika states that this Pranayama should be performed plentifully, for it breaks the three psychic knots and awakens Kundalini quickly.
Allan Cunningham believed that the work was "plentifully seasoned with verse".Bentley 2003 qtd. p. 140 Henry Crabb Robinson believed the work to be obscure.Bentley 2003 p.
The blueberries ripen in late summer, offering hikers a plentifully available food source. In 1989, Hurricane Hugo damaged over 300 miles of the Appalachian Trail in Virginia.Curtis, Wayne (June 1990). "Hugo and the trial".
They fly in conditions of security > and comfort. They have room to move about. They include both sexes. They are > plentifully supplied with alcoholic stimulants... and the purely statistical > chances of abnormal behaviour are obviously greatly increased.
Forests in which a large number of elephants lived surrounded Paralakhemundi. Hence, ivory was plentifully available in Paralakhemundi. Sri. Radha Krushna Maharana and his son Sri. Purnachandra Maharana, Surendra Maharana and Bhaskara Maharana were experts in the field of ivory works during the British period.
The hillsides are terraced, mostly worked by hand, and planted with wheat, quinoa, potatoes, and other vegetables. Livestock, including sheep, also graze the slopes. Amantani is known as the "Island of the Kantuta", after the national flower of Peru and Bolivia, which grows plentifully on the island.
Northeast is a hub of different genres of music. Each community has its own rich heritage of folk music. Talented musicians and singers are plentifully found in this part of the country. The Assamese singer-composer Bhupen Hazarika achieved national and international fame with his remarkable creations.
The most common map elements in SubSpace are prizes, or "greens" (for their green color). Prizes allow players to upgrade their ships and gain special weapons or abilities. While prizes are generally plentifully scattered throughout the map, the upgrades or abilities they award are randomly selected by the zone.
It has not been demonstrated empirically that T. recurvata is capable of dispersal through animal-mediated vectors, such as epizoochory or endozoochory. Mature seeds have no apparent adhesive on the exterior, and very little nutrient supply to support sprouting, but, like many other epiphyte seeds, they are borne plentifully and are armed with fine, straight hairs that could well adhere to wet or clinging surfaces, such as rough bark, which would provide enough time for the seedlings to anchor themselves with their roots.Schimper, A.F.W.: Die epiphytische Vegetation Amerikas. Jena 1888 In fact, as shown in the accompanying photograph, they even grow plentifully on fences and telephone wires, together with occasional other species.
Jičín Airport () is a public aerodrome with civil traffic. It is situated approximately southwest of Jičín, a town in the Hradec Králové Region of the Czech Republic, at the border of Bohemian Paradise. The airport is plentifully used for sport flying and sightseeing flights above Prachov Rocks eventually the Giant Mountains.
A. drummondii is a hardy plant that can live in a range of different climates. It flourishes in dry, light soil as well as moderately wet soils. While it grows the most plentifully on grasslands, it can also survive in oak and pine forests. It tends to collect on hillsides when present.
Plant Resources of Tropical Africa 1: Medicinal Plants. page 507. The plant flowers plentifully in racemes of bright yellow flowers, with some flowers also occurring in leaf axils. The flower raceme has open flowers on the lower part with unopened buds at the tip covered in stark brownish green or black bracts.
The butterflies occur from June till August everywhere in the plains and hills, but usually singly, in certain years more plentifully. They rest on the outer twigs of oak-bushes with the wings always closed, but sometimes flutter high up about the crowns of old oaks.Seitz, A. Seitz, A. ed. Band 1: Abt.
Reproductive surgery is using surgery in the field of reproductive medicine. It can be used for contraception, e.g. in vasectomy, wherein the vasa deferentia of a man are severed, but is also used plentifully in assisted reproductive technology. A reproductive surgeon is an obstetrician- gynecologist or urologist who specializes in reproductive surgery.
Manqo Qhapaq and Mama Oqllu were viewed as the "principal couple." The couple were able to rally the Tambos as an ally to the Incas. Qhapaq and Oqllu organized the Tambos into kin groups, called ayllu. The pair continued to seek out a land capable of plentifully supporting them and the Tambos people.
The Balor tales involving the magic cow were also being told plentifully elsewhere, particularly "South of Ulster". Morris stated he had collected "remnants" in Farney, Monaghan c. 1900, and that these versions connected Balor and the cow Glasgaivlen with places as far afield as "south Monaghan to Rockabill Island off the coast of Dublin".
Ferula gummosa, from which galbanum comes. Galbanum flowers, Kurdistan mountains, Hewraman. Galbanum is an aromatic gum resin and a product of certain umbelliferous Persian plant species in the genus Ferula, chiefly Ferula gummosa (synonym F. galbaniflua) and Ferula rubricaulis. Galbanum- yielding plants grow plentifully on the slopes of the mountain ranges of northern Iran.
Havlíčkův Brod Airport () is a public aerodrome and no public international airport with civil traffic. It is situated approximately southwest of Havlíčkův Brod, a town in the Vysočina Region of the Czech Republic, at the border of Bohemian-Moravian Highlands. The airport is plentifully used for sport flying and sightseeing flights above the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands.
Dawson County is known for its dryland grain, coal mines and gas and oil wells. There are 522 current farms and ranches, and 296 commercial businesses. Lying in the heart of the western third of the Fort Union region, Dawson County is plentifully supplied with lignite coal. Local natural gas has supplied Glendive since at least 1920.
Rain is plentiful from December to July so corn, plantains, bananas, cassava, various tubers and red rice (unirrigated) grow plentifully. Fish is the main source of protein. Sufficient potable water on Babar Island is provided by year round springs and shallow wells. Coconut oil is important for consumption while the oily meat called copra, is sold.
Root-knot nematodes can be a problem, especially if crops are not rotated. As a nitrogen-fixing legume, fertilization can exclude nitrogen three weeks after germination. The blossom produces nectar plentifully, and large areas can be a source of honey. Because the bloom attracts a variety of pollinators, care must be taken in the application of insecticides to avoid label violations.
Sandford and his wife then began holding meetings in rural Maine—at the beginning with virtually no congregations and no financial support. But Sandford continued to preach.Nelson, 59-63. Eventually he achieved some success among people in the coastal hill regions of Maine, and contributions now came in plentifully, although Sandford did not solicit money or even pass a collection plate.
One influential retelling of this was the fantasy work of Evangeline Walton.Michael Moorcock, Wizardry & Wild Romance: A Study of Epic Fantasy p 101 The Irish Ulster Cycle and Fenian Cycle have also been plentifully mined for fantasy. Its greatest influence was, however, indirect. Celtic folklore and mythology provided a major source for the Arthurian cycle of chivalric romance: the Matter of Britain.
A direction for Adventurers With small stock to get two for one, and good land freely : And for Gentleman, and all Servants, Labourers, and Artificers to live plentifully, And the true Description of the healthiest, pleasantest and richest plantation of New Albion in North Virginia. (London, s.n., 1641). The state of Delaware was originally part of the William Penn's Pennsylvania colony.
Flowering Prunus dulcis var. amara, the bitter almond tree The Bitter Almond (Prunus dulcis var. amara), despite growing plentifully around the Algarve region, was never commonly harvested or consumed. This was due not only to its remarkably bitter flavour, but also to the high concentration of cyanide in its drupes, which can cause severe or even lethal effects if ingested in large amounts.
Later it was invaded by the Kadambas & Traikutas followed by the Delhi Sultanate, Marathas and Peshwas majorly. In the seventeenth century it was a great village, very populous and plentifully stored with all provisions. The nearby Gowalkot was the trade center being the major harbour over Vashishthi River. The Paag area in town was named so because it was mainly used for war horse stables.
2, p. 1772. In contrast, the Zabbaleen recycle up to 80 percent of all the MSW that they collect. The foreign companies collected the trash from garbage bins placed at central collection points on the streets. However, many inhabitants of Cairo preferred the door-to-door garbage pick-up done by the Zabbaleen, especially because the bins were not plentifully located or located in inconvenient places.
This was officially opened to the public as Deptford Park on 7 June 1897.Dedication to the public of Deptford Park by Dr. W.J. Collins, 7 June 1897, London County Council. His country seat at Wotton House was damaged by fire and substantially rebuilt by him in the 1870s. His monogram (initials) appears over the front door in stone, and plentifully over the external decorations of the house.
There are a few scattered scrubwoods (Commidendrum rugosum), teaplants (Frankenia portulacifolia) and salad plant (Hypertelis acida), threatened endemics which may have grown more plentifully in the area in the past, before the introduction of exotic herbivores.Lambdon, Phil. (2012). Flowering plants and ferns of St Helena. Pisces Publications, Newbury UK. Much of the eastern end of Dry Gut has now been filled in to provide a base for the airport runway.
The village lies at the foot of a steep rocky mountain wall (Monte di Mezzocorona) that shields it from the cold northern winds. This particular conformation has resulted in a milder climate than that of the surrounding areas, allowing the vine to grow plentifully in this region. Its territory is crossed by two water streams, the Adige River and the Noce River. The Teroldego grape variety is native to this area.
It is part of the Provo-Orem, Utah Metropolitan Statistical Area. While there is a "Rocky Ridge" and a "Rocky Ridge Canyon" in northeastern Juab County (both located east of the city of Nephi, approximately south‑southeast of the community), the town was named for "the rocks, in a bountiful array of types and colors, strewn plentifully across the surrounding ridges separating Juab and Utah counties," according to the town website.
According to Shoghi Effendi, in Baháʼí Faith, the maintenance of a high standard of moral conduct is not to be associated or confused with any form of asceticism, or of excessive and bigoted puritanism. The standard inculcated by Bahá’u’lláh seeks, under no circumstances, to deny anyone the legitimate right and privilege to derive the fullest advantage and benefit from the manifold joys, beauties, and pleasures with which the world has been so plentifully enriched by an All-Loving Creator.
This took for form of an 80-page booklet: the main section of 14 pages featured 16 songs, the words mainly written about Australian birds and set to the music of well-known British folk songs. Twenty five pages of bird poems followed, and the rest was given over to articles about birds and Gould League matters. The book is plentifully illustrated with photographs and two colour plates of paintings by Neville W. Cayley (fantails and whistlers).
Straightway there was thunder and a great rain, which > eventually fell for 5 days, and plentifully bedewed the Empire. Hereupon the > peasantry throughout the Empire cried with one voice: "Banzei" and said "an > Emperor of exceeding virtue". Banzei was later revived as banzai (Kana: ばんざい) after the Meiji Restoration. Banzai as a formal ritual was established in the promulgation of the Meiji Constitution in 1889 when university students shouted banzai in front of the Emperor's carriage.
Now virtually nobody believed in price controls any longer. Because the black market was plentifully supplied, the idea took hold that price controls equaled scarcity and that free trade, therefore, would bring back abundance. It was generally supposed by the free trade minded Physiocrat economists within France that prices would at first rise but that then they would fall as a result of competition. This illusion, however, was to be shattered in the winter of 1794–1795.
Irradiating the natural stable isotope of aluminium with alpha particles (i.e. helium nuclei) resulted in an unstable isotope of phosphorus: 27Al + 4He → 30P + 1n. This discovery is formally known as positron emission or beta decay, where a proton in the radioactive nucleus changes to a neutron and releases a positron and an electron neutrino. By then, the application of radioactive materials for use in medicine was growing and this discovery allowed radioactive materials to be created quickly, cheaply, and plentifully.
In southern Italy, however, Norman artwork survives plentifully in forms strongly influenced by its Greek, Lombard, and Arab forebears. Of the royal regalia preserved in Palermo, the crown is Byzantine in style and the coronation cloak is of Arab craftsmanship with Arabic inscriptions. Many churches preserve sculptured fonts, capitals, and more importantly mosaics, which were common in Norman Italy and drew heavily on the Greek heritage. Lombard Salerno was a centre of ivorywork in the 11th century and this continued under Norman domination.
McMurdo Sound, frozen over. Mackintosh and Hayward set out on 8 May 1916 from Hut Point (A), intending to walk across the ice to Cape Evans (B). They disappeared in the area marked C. Helped by a diet of seal—plentifully available around Hut Point—the party slowly recovered. Mackintosh was anxious that as soon as possible they make the final stage of the return journey—the across the frozen surface of McMurdo Sound to the base at Cape Evans.
An early Rex-type cat from Germany was Kater Munk, a cat of the family of one Erna Schneider, that was born 1930 or 1931 in a village near then-Königsberg, German Reich (today's Kaliningrad, Russia). Munk was the son of a mahogany Angora cat and a Russian Blue. There were one (some sources say two) other curly cat(s) in the litter which was castrated early. Munk spread his genes plentifully among the village's cat population till his death in 1944 or 1945.
Egil missed the wedding on account of illness, and joined Thorir's men on an errand in Atloy, where he was slighted by the king's steward Bard (Bárðr), and wound up killing him. When Bard received Egil's party, he would only serve curd (skyr) to drink, pretending ale had run out. But later that night when king and queen arrived for the feast to the dísir, ale was served plentifully. Egil relentlessly jibed Bard about the deceit with sarcastic poetry, and his unquenchable thirst embarrassed the host.
Vehicles rolled on a "relay" basis, moving mostly at night to avoid American air power, and the trail was plentifully supplied by jungle-like camouflage at all times. Way stations were generally within one day's travel from each other. Trucks arriving at a station were unloaded, and the cargo shifted to new trucks, which carried out the next segment of the journey. Having plenty of both time and manpower, this "relay" method economized on wear and tear upon the valuable trucks, and maximized hiding opportunities from prowling US aircraft.
However, he reported to his superiors in England that, "a report was spread that at Montreal that letters of importance had been received from the General Congress," and that town meetings were being held, "breathing that same spirit, so plentifully gone forth through the neighbouring Provinces."Coffin, p. 483 These town meetings, seemingly dominated by English-speakers, ended without the election of delegates to the Continental Congress. In early 1775, Boston's Committee of Correspondence sent John Brown into Quebec to gather intelligence, gauge sentiment, and agitate for rebellion in that province.
In his Godefridus section, Digby defined chivalry: :Chivalry is only a name for that general spirit or state of mind which disposes men to heroic actions, and keeps them conversant with all that is beautiful and sublime in the intellectual and moral world. The Broad-Stone is plentifully supplied with examples from medieval literature, even the most obscure accounts.Mark Girouard, The Return to Camelot, , p. 63 Even his admirers often found his appreciation of the Middle Ages excessive, in that he refused to see any fault in them.
The film was released on 22 July 1954 with length of 5175 metres and with run time of 186 minutes. It emerged as the top grosser of the year. Tamil magazine Ananda Vikatan in its review dated 12 September 1954 mentioned that film "has several amazing moments which increase the heartbeats of the audience... Various fight scenes, dances and comedy scenes make the film a mass entertainer". The Indian Express wrote "Obviously with an eye on the box office the picture has been plentifully interspersed with fist and sword fights and fencing displays, etc".
His stay in Italy formed his style, and he brought back to England a storehouse of material, on which he drew plentifully during the remainder of his life, his productions being mainly representations of Italian scenery.Dictionary of National Biography 1885–1900. When in Italy he was patronised by Lord Clive, and on his return to England by Lord Suffolk, John Penn of Stoke, and others. His compositions were noted for their elegance rather than for grandeur, and were pleasing enough to enable him to secure sufficient patronage and commissions for his pictures, most of which he exhibited at the Royal Academy.
Spread of disease in this way is enhanced by the extended time during which a tick remains attached, during which time the mobile host can be carried long distances, or in the case of bird hosts, across the sea. The infective agents can be present not only in the adult tick, but also in the eggs produced plentifully by the females. Many tick species have extended their ranges as a result of the movements of people, their pets, and livestock. With increasing participation in outdoor activities such as wilderness hikes, more people and their dogs may find themselves exposed to attack.
Currently, the palila can be found only on the upper slopes of Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii. Palila live from about MASL. The population density of the bird increases in areas where māmane (Sophora chrysophylla) grows more plentifully, and the birds do not appear to venture far from māmane stands. Essentially, this means that the species is confined – and may always have been so – to the area above the moist forest belt at around . Palila are found in less than 10 percent of their historical range; they were found at elevations down to as late as the 19th century.
Originally printed in Fynes Moryson's Itinerary, year 1903 page 193 (edited by Charles Hughes). It is believed that in this volume, it is the first time that "Merry Christmas" is found in print: > ...so suddenly as his wife and eldest son were taken, and himself hardly > escaped at a backe window, and naked, into the woods, where he kept a cold > Christmas, while my Lord hued plentifully in his house, with such provisions > as were made, for him and his Bonnaghs and kerne to keepe a merry > Christmas."When what to my wondering eyes...", Smart Art Press, 1997, Pages > 54–55.
Taylor the Water-Poet visited Lady Lilias and her husband at Ballachastell in 1618 and was much pleased with her, and he records that she was, both inwardly and outwardly, plentifully endowed with the gifts of grace and nature.John Taylor, 'Pennilesse Pilgrimage', All the Workes of John Taylor, the Water Poet (London, 1630), p. 137. He makes no mention of any poetical works. Lady Lilias was a reader, and had, for these days, a good if not very varied collection of books, is proved by two lists of her own library given under her own hand.
One is assured, and it is taken in this island for granted, that, however many individuals make up one of these associations, there is but a single male. I have not been able to verify this fact. I should only say that these sedentary animals become fat; that at the beginning of the colony, numerous poorly off and unfastidious people, taught no doubt by the Malacasses, provided themselves plentifully with this fat for preparing their food. I have seen the time when a bat-tree (it is thus that one used to call the retreats of our rougettes) was a real find.
The ear bones were retrieved to make drinking vessels and the ribs were sometimes used as the frames for gunyahs or huts.Gibbs, p.22. Europeans were aware that whales were to be found off the coast of Australia from at least 1699, when the British maritime explorer, naturalist and buccaneer William Dampier (1652-1715) sailed along the coast of Western Australia, where he reported, "the sea is plentifully stocked with the largest whales that I ever saw."William Dampier, "A voyage to New-Holland and, &c;, in the year 1699, Vol III," third edition, 1729, London, James Knapton, p.106.
After Disraeli's death the praise came more plentifully. Edmund Gosse took the view that Disraeli had been writing with tongue in cheek, calling it "Unquestionably the greatest of his literary works – the superb ironic romance of Lothair"; the historian J. A. Froude thought it "A work immeasurably superior to anything of the kind which he had hitherto produced", because more purely a work of art than the politically engaged Coningsby and Sybil; and the Liberal politician George W. E. Russell judged it Disraeli's masterpiece, as being "A profound study of spiritual and political forces at a supremely important moment in the history of modern Europe".
Both floor and ceiling are plentifully > perforated for ventilation purposes...both buildings are very old...the > brick magazine measures 31' by 21', and is a thoroughly sound building...a > 7' G.I. fence surrounds the three magazines. The Moores were evicted from the magazine keeper's cottage at the end of March 1921, and it was transferred to the Railway Department. In August 1921 tenders were invited for the purchase and removal of the magazine buildings and iron fencing and in September the tenders of LJ Macpherson (£5 for the brick magazine) and MJ Griffin (£94 7s 3d for the fence and the two iron magazines) were accepted.
Evidence of Indigenous occupation within Limeburners Creek National Park has been extrapolated through archaeological excavation of sites, revealing artefacts dating back 5000–6000 years ago. Such sites and artefacts evidencing the historical occupation of the Birpai and Dunghutti Aboriginal people include a stone quarry, grooves in sandstone used which were used to grind and sharpen tools, shell middens and burial sites. NPWS NSW are actively trying to preserve the integrity of these sites, particularly from vandalism due to improper use of 4WD tracks. The local Aboriginal people are thought to have sourced their food from the land and sea, with shellfish, mussels and pipis found plentifully throughout the park.
Greek tragedy, from which Racine borrowed so plentifully, tended to assume that humanity was under the control of gods indifferent to its sufferings and aspirations. In the Œdipus Tyrannus Sophocles's hero becomes gradually aware of the terrible fact that, however hard his family has tried to avert the oracular prophecy, he has nevertheless killed his father and married his mother and must now pay the penalty for these unwitting crimes. The same awareness of a cruel fate that leads innocent men and women into sin and demands retribution of the equally innocent children, pervades La Thébaïde, a play that itself deals with the legend of Œdipus.
Batina Region The Arabian humpback whales off Dhofar Desert shrub and desert grass, common to southern Arabia, are found in Oman, but vegetation is sparse in the interior plateau, which is largely gravel desert. The greater monsoon rainfall in Dhofar and the mountains makes the growth there more luxuriant during summer; coconut palms grow plentifully on the coastal plains of Dhofar and frankincense is produced in the hills, with abundant oleander and varieties of acacia. The Al Hajar Mountains are a distinct ecoregion, the highest points in eastern Arabia with wildlife including the Arabian tahr. Indigenous mammals include the leopard, hyena, fox, wolf, hare, oryx and ibex.
Individual Society members must have been prospering during these years, too. It was during the 1830s that the French observer Chevalier made this comment about the American mechanic and tradesmen: "He dresses like a member of Congress, and his women- folk dress the same as those of a wealthy New York merchant. His house is warm, neat, and comfortable; his table almost as plentifully provided as that of the wealthiest fellow-citizen." In 1878, the General Society opened an Apprentices' Library at its headquarters "on Sixteenth-street, near Union- square" to house its collection of 60,000 books, mostly "practical works in serviceable bindings" of use to its 8,000 members.
Changes made to Local Government Ordinances in response to this encouraged the use of brick for building, although the costs involved meant that brick were mainly used for commercial and public buildings. The development of the brick manufacturing industry, given the wide availability of timber in Queensland, has been faced with obstacles. A group of Brisbane builders and architects, led by Aleck Anderson, a former Clerk of Works, and also an experienced builder, formed Brisbane Brick and Builders Supply Company Ltd in 1911 to obtain good quality bricks, which were then not plentifully available in Brisbane. The Company based its design on the Hoffman method of brickmaking.
13 September 2013 About the year 669, after serving as abbot Amatus was chosen bishop of Sens, in the Valais. He was an accomplished pastor, and here he was abled to distribute alms more plentifully among the poor. He had governed his diocese almost five years, when certain calumnies were spread about him. It was said that he had spoken negatively concerning the Mayor of the Palace, Ebroin. Despite the fact that no synod had been assembled to hear him, no sentence of deposition issued out, nor had he been charged with any crime, King Theuderic III banished him to Saint Fursey’s monastery at Péronne, where Ultan, the abbot, received him with all respect.
Iotated E is found in some of the very oldest examples of Cyrillic writing, such as the tenth-century Mostich inscription or the Codex Suprasliensis, whereas in others, such as the Enina Apostle or Undol'skij Fragments, it is not present at all. It is plentifully attested in medieval manuscripts of both South Slavonic and East Slavonic provenance, co-existing with , which fulfils the same function. Orthographic practice nevertheless varies: some manuscripts use all three characters, some and , some and , and some only . Among the Eastern Slavs fell into disuse after the end of the fourteenth century, and it is not therefore represented in printed books from this area, or in modern Church Slavonic.
It is a pretty south country-looking village, much such as > used to exist in the old days of posting and coaching. A hall house > converted into an hotel, and the dependents located in the neighbouring > cottages. Gretna Hall stands a little apart from the village on the rise of > what an Englishman would call a gentle eminence, and a Scotchman a dead > flat, and is approached by an avenue of stately trees, while others are > plentifully dotted about, one on the east side, bearing a board with the > name of the house, the host and high-priest, "Mr. Linton". There is an air > of quiet retirement about it that eminently qualifies it for its holy and > hospitable purpose.
He threw off entirely the grandiose air of an English aristocrat, and assimilated himself to the conditions of his new life. A photograph of himself, taken on one the bridges he was erecting, shows him with a slouched hat and moleskin trousers, and under the picture, in his own handwriting, is written, "Ned, the Pile Driver." There appears to have been a stress in his money matters which stopped his contracting career and he became an ordinary day labourer, but he again emerged from that state into affluence. Money flowed in plentifully, and he then sought out as a confidential man, Mr. Adolphus Dunn, of Malvern, and through him the greater part of his future business was contracted.
The word "Brazil" likely comes from the Portuguese word for brazilwood, a tree that once grew plentifully along the Brazilian coast. In Portuguese, brazilwood is called pau-brasil, with the word brasil commonly given the etymology "red like an ember", formed from brasa ("ember") and the suffix -il (from -iculum or -ilium). As brazilwood produces a deep red dye, it was highly valued by the European textile industry and was the earliest commercially exploited product from Brazil. Throughout the 16th century, massive amounts of brazilwood were harvested by indigenous peoples (mostly Tupi) along the Brazilian coast, who sold the timber to European traders (mostly Portuguese, but also French) in return for assorted European consumer goods.
In 1806, Cardinal Caprara caused considerable consternation and offense when he authorized the publication of the Catechism of the French Empire. Among other things, Lesson 7 of Part I of the document mentioned Napoleon I by name and urged the faithful to do their duty to him, "firstly, because God... plentifully bestowing gifts upon our Emperor, whether for peace or for war, has made him the minister of his power, and his image upon earth.... He has become the anointed of the Lord by the consecration he has received from the Sovereign Pontiff, head of the universal church." Frank McLynn, Napoleon: A Biography (Great Britain: Jonathan Cape 1997; paper ed. New York: Arcade Pub. Co. 2001), pp. 352-353.
The winged everlasting often grows in disturbed environments such as on roadsides and agricultural land, and sometimes on riverbanks where the seeds have been carried from disturbed areas. Records of this species in natural habitats are from eucalypt forests in plateau and rocky cliffs in northern New South Wales, from river banks in the upper Snowy River in Victoria, from the Northern Tablelands and North West Slopes of New South Wales and from south-east Queensland. Robert Brown found it "growing plentifully near the shores of Port Hunter (or the Coal River) in New South Wales" in 1804. The species is naturalised in South Australia, The Australian Capital Territory and Tasmania, and in places outside its natural distribution in New South Wales.
Fairhead, pp. 48–50 No such cargo was available, but Morrell was persuaded by the American consul, George Hubbell, that a potentially profitable enterprise would be to collect sea cucumbers (otherwise known as "Bêche-du-mer"), plentifully available in the islands now known as Micronesia. These could then be taken to China where they were much prized. Chapter 12, line 32 Abby Jane Morrell Hubbell would not permit Antarctic to sail with Abby on board; possibly he had designs on her.Fairhead, pp. 50–52 Morrell sailed from Manila without her, and initially had little luck in finding sea cucumbers in any quantity. Eventually Antarctic reached the Carteret Islands, a small atoll which now forms part of Papua New Guinea, and found sea cucumbers in abundance.
It is the only Catawba Island Township statewide. The township's website claims that it was named for the variety of grapes that grew plentifully there, Catawba Island Township Historical Information however, another source claims that it is named for the Catawba tribe, who live in the Carolinas. Catawba Orientation Although currently not an actual 'island', it is presently a peninsula. But in prehistoric times, the Portage River is thought to have flowed into Lake Erie at the 'West Harbor' (near East Harbor State Park) — and this old channel of the river (which was also denoted on 19th-century maps) formerly made Catawba into a true island; but all that currently remains of most of the old riverbed, is an insignificant ditch.
Boletus edulis grows in some areas where it is not believed to be indigenous. It is often found underneath oak and silver birch in Hagley Park in central Christchurch, New Zealand, where it is likely to have been introduced, probably on the roots of container-grown beech, birch, and oak in the mid-19th century—around the time exotic trees began to be planted in the Christchurch area. Similarly, it has been collected in Adelaide Hills region of Australia in association with three species of introduced trees. It has been growing plentifully in association with pine forests in the southern KwaZulu-Natal Midlands in South Africa for more than 50 years and is believed to have been introduced with the import of pine trees.
This became the founding text of the subsequent tradition known as "hypno-analysis" or "regression hypnotherapy". However, Freud gradually abandoned hypnotism in favour of psychoanalysis, emphasising free association and interpretation of the unconscious. Struggling with the great expense of time that psychoanalysis required, Freud later suggested that it might be combined with hypnotic suggestion to hasten the outcome of treatment, but that this would probably weaken the outcome: "It is very probable, too, that the application of our therapy to numbers will compel us to alloy the pure gold of analysis plentifully with the copper of direct [hypnotic] suggestion."S. Freud, Lines of Advance in Psychoanalytic Therapy, 1919 Only a handful of Freud's followers, however, were sufficiently qualified in hypnosis to attempt the synthesis.
Maleinos lavishly provided for the needs of both the imperial retinue as well as the entire army from his own resources. Basil was greatly impressed and alarmed by this display of a subject's wealth and power; he took Maleinos with him to Constantinople as a virtual hostage, and in January 996, he issued a new law against the unlawful appropriation of communal village lands by the land-holding aristocracy, the so-called dynatoi ("powerful ones"), in a bid to reduce their power. Confined henceforth to the capital, Maleinos was well catered for, but, in the words of the chronicler John Skylitzes, "supplying him plentifully with everything he needed, Basil detained Eustathios as if he were nourishing a wild beast in a cage". After his death, his estates and fortune were confiscated by the emperor.
Though organic cotton is considered a more sustainable choice for fabric, as it uses fewer pesticides and chemical fertilizers, it remains less than 1% global cotton production. Hurdles to growth include cost of hand labor for hand weeding, reduced yields in comparison to conventional cotton and absence of fiber commitments from brands to farmers before planting seed. The up front financial risks and costs are therefore shouldered by the farmers, many of whom struggle to compete with economies of scale of corporate farms. Though some designers have marketed bamboo fiber, as an alternative to conventional cotton, citing that it absorbs greenhouse gases during its life cycle and grows quickly and plentifully without pesticides, the conversion of bamboo fiber to fabric is the same as rayon and is highly toxic.
Cheap, plentifully available as galena and easily workable, lead has many of the ideal characteristics, but on its own it lacks the necessary hardness and does not make castings with sharp details because molten lead shrinks and sags when it cools to a solid. After much experimentation it was found that adding pewterer's tin, obtained from cassiterite, improved the ability of the cast type to withstand the wear and tear of the printing process, making it tougher but not more brittle. Despite patiently trying different proportions of both metals, solving the second part of the type metal problem proved very difficult without the addition of yet a third metal, antimony. Alchemists had shown that when stibnite, an antimony sulfide ore, was heated with scrap iron, metallic antimony was produced.
He raised funds to pay for American- built Harley-Davidson motorcycles that were then plentifully available second- hand, and persuaded workers to make the sidecars free of charge with the results being sent out to Spain. Pyke also assisted in arranging for the manufacture of mattresses for the Spanish government, for the collection of redundant horse-drawn ploughs for Spanish farmers, and bundles of hand-tools for use by labourers. He published aggressive propaganda brochures pointing out that British workers were not to consider their contributions a form of charity while Spanish people were fighting and dying for their fellow workers. To answer a shortage of bandages and dressings in Spain, he suggested that sun-dried peat moss sewn into muslin bags could be used as a substitute for cotton dressings.
Robert Service, A History of Modern Russia, from Nicholas II to Putin p 281 It was termed the "Great Patriotic War" and stories presented it as a fight of ordinary people's heroism.Richard Overy, Why the Allies Won, p 291 While the term "motherland" was used, it was used to mean the Soviet Union, and while Russian heroes were revived, Soviet heroes were used plentifully as well.Richard Overy, The Dictators: Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Russia, p559-60 Appeals were made that the home of other nationalities were also the homes of their own.Robert Service, A History of Modern Russia, from Nicholas II to Putin p 283 Many Soviet citizens found treatment of soldiers who fell into enemy hands as "traitors to the Motherland" as suitable for their own grim determination, and "not a step back" inspired soldiers to fight with self-sacrifice and heroism.
Judith, Ch 10: "3 There she removed the sackcloth she was wearing and taking off her widow's dress, she washed all over, anointed herself plentifully with perfumes, dressed her hair, wrapped a turban round it and put on the robe of joy she used to wear when her husband Manasseh was alive. 4 She put sandals on her feet, put on her necklaces, bracelets, rings, earrings and all her jewellery, and made herself beautiful enough to beguile the eye of any man who saw her." The murky background at the left includes a fitting at the top, between the two women's heads, which is described as a lock by Panofsky, though it might be a hinge also.Neginsky, 96 This marks the vertical edge of a zone with a slightly different tint, perhaps showing the transition from a door to a wall.
Jebel Fatnassa was defended by the Italian XXI Corps with troops of the 80th Infantry Division La Spezia, the 101st Motorised Division Trieste and the German 164th Leichte Afrika Division. The Fatanassa feature was taken and the 4th 6th Rajputana Rifles advanced as far as the plain behind the hills nearly beyond, taking The 4th Indian Division was not able to exploit the success further, because the British X Corps was held up by German counter-attacks. The 50th (Northumbrian) Division met determined resistance from Italian marines, well dug in at Wadi Akarit and plentifully supplied with automatic weapons and grenades but the British pressed forward, despite high casualties among the 6th Battalion, Green Howards; two senior officers, six senior NCOs and junior officers and 118 other ranks were killed. The Green Howards took Point 85 and held it against counter-attacks.
Another account appears in a biography by William Rawley, Bacon's personal secretary and chaplain: > He died on the ninth day of April in the year 1626, in the early morning of > the day then celebrated for our Savior's resurrection, in the sixty-sixth > year of his age, at the Earl of Arundel's house in Highgate, near London, to > which place he casually repaired about a week before; God so ordaining that > he should die there of a gentle fever, accidentally accompanied with a great > cold, whereby the defluxion of rheum fell so plentifully upon his breast, > that he died by suffocation. He was buried in St Michael's church in St Albans. At the news of his death, over 30 great minds collected together their eulogies of him, which were then later published in Latin. This important volume consists of 32 eulogies originally published in Latin shortly after Bacon's funeral in 1626.
Of the three (sources this paper is based), he is the most discursive in his narration, the most piquant in his anecdotes, the most amusing in his simplicity. As he traveled for no one particular aim, but to see and to hear, there are few Indian topics, on which he does not give us something. Natural productions, the beasts and the birds, manners, Hindu theology, state maxims, the causes of Portuguese supremacy and degradation, anecdotes of the camp, the convent, and the Harem, accidents by water and land, complaints of personal inconvenience, and remarks on the tendency of Eastern despotism, are scattered plentifully throughout a narrative, which owes very much to the author's own liveliness and observation, but occasionally something, we are compelled to say, to the labours of others who had gone before. His plagiarism is, however, confined to specifications of caste or creed.
"When we were about ten yards away we had reached the top of the slit trench and we killed any of the survivors," recalled British infantryman Bill Cheall, who had just seen his section leader shot down by a San Marco Marine. "It was no time for pussy footing, we were intoxicated with rage and had to kill them to pay for our fallen pal." March 1944. Sub-lieutenant of 3rd Regiment San Marco of Italian Social Republic The Italian Marines, well dug-in and plentifully supplied with automatic weapons and grenades, fought well, and casualties among the 6th Green Howards were severe; two senior officers, six senior NCO's and junior officers and one hundred and eighteen other ranks killed. German General Hans-Jürgen von Arnim later said of the San Marco Marines fighting abilities in Tunisia in 1943, that they were "the best soldiers I ever commanded".Il percorso dei "Leoni di San Marco" Following the Italian surrender in 1943, many San Marco marines fought for the Allies against the Germans, however the 4th (Caorle) Battalion fought for the Axis until the end of the war.
James Morgan dammed the creek and built a grist mill and miller's house on the north side of the Perkiomen Peninsula in 1749. He built the country seat "Mill Grove" in 1762. In a February 28, 1771 advertisement in The Pennsylvania Gazette, he announced the upcoming auction of two adjacent properties, Fatland Farm and Mill Grove Farm: > To be sold at public venue on the 4th day of March, upon the premises, if > not sold before at private sale, by the subscriber, in Providence township, > Philadelphia county, two valuable plantations, one of which consisting of > 300 acres (Fatland farm), bounding near a mile on the Schuylkill river, > whereas a good shad fishery; it also bounds the lands of Henry Pawling, > Esq., and extends along the same to the Perkiomen; there are about 150 acres > cleared, 20 whereof are good watered meadow and a great quantity more may be > made; the woodland well timbered and the whole well watered, with the > conveniency of watering every field on the plantation; there is a good stone > dwelling house, brew house, with a large frame barn, three good bearing > apple orchards, with a large peach orchard bearing plentifully.

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