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93 Sentences With "read again"

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

There are few books I will more avidly not read again.
Young children should read, then they should write, write and read again.
PATCHWORK OF BOOKS I hop into bed at 11 and read again.
One by an author I used to like, and tried to read again.
You just need to read, and not understand, and read again, and not understand.
His speech is slowly coming back, but he still hasn't learned to read again.
It contained texts from her late father she assumed she would never read again.
I read again at night before falling asleep, but nighttime reading is for fun.
And we read, again and again, that Iranian cultural heritage is really world heritage.
The entire book is a masterpiece, and one I already am planning to read again.
I thought that I would be happy, and I would be able to read again.
I hope it endures as a piece of history to be read again and again.
All these books are soothing and lovely enough to read again, and again, and again.
But after a few weeks, I sent another follow up, and the email was read again.
Following the election of Donald Trump as American president, the funeral rites are being read again.
And after many years of living exclusively with his own books, he has started to read again.
A middle-aged guy in a "Make America Read Again" T-shirt examined containers of ice cream.
There are so many sentences I had to read again because they were so true and beautiful.
The device had contained text messages from her late father that she assumed she would never read again.
Almost by chance, I read again about a hero whose story had not come to mind for years.
The books that really begged to be read, or read again, stood out a little more on the shelf.
He pawed through a crushed magazine and readagain — how Mike Tyson's Punch-Out was coming soon for Famicom.
My read, again: Uber just settled the giant class-action lawsuit that threatened to derail the company's entire business model.
I started to read again — not only Daniel Tiger, but Henri Bergson and Toni Morrison — and eventually I began to write.
It's also not quite a cure—the patients in the trial could read again, but their vision was still not fully restored.
His sentences come out in paragraphs, with a winding intricacy that often makes sense only when transcribed, read once, then read again.
" And I went back home, and read again, and I came back the day after, and I said, "Because it's not possible.
It's a tale of joyous revenge for misunderstood book nerds across the land that is a delight to read again and again.
Their performances have stayed with me, like a novel you may never read again but pack with you every time you move.
The ''Make America Read Again'' hats in the gift section of the Strand now sit on the racks like deflated party balloons.
Roald Dahl's "Danny the Champion of the World" was the first little novel I read that I then read again and reread.
Then I eat a bowl of Frosted Flakes with 1% whole milk, take my shot, and settle in for a few hours to read again.
And of Wuthering Heights I can only say that it is a staggering literary accomplishment that I would be quite happy to never read again.
" Make sure to read, reread and then read again Sabrina Tavernise's amazing report from western Arkansas, a story of vandalism and forgiveness, "The Two Americans.
Dear Self, tuck this away to read again whenever you need to know it again — and promise me, you'll laugh and sing and dance a bit today?
She had several brilliant insights into Jimmy Carter (the subject of my upcoming biography) and pressed me to send her several early chapters she wanted to read again.
But there are steps along the way that are worded in a way that caused me to read, re-read, and read again before I guessed what was required.
Book swaps occurred via a complex (and never written down) system, and everyone held a mental tally of which stories they'd already read, and what they were happy to read again.
Patients who participated in the trial also described, in interviews and in testimony to a panel of FDA advisers, seeing snowflakes for the first time or being able to read again.
We don't know how this shelter gets food, or if anyone will ever read again, or if Rick has a despotic streak, as all leaders of safe havens do in teen dystopias.
But more importantly, read again three years later, the documents shed the light on a case that in many ways shares many similarities with the recent fight between the FBI and Apple.
You choose what kind of story to read, you set the pace, you pick which parts to skim or skip (or read again), and you use your imagination to picture exactly what's happening.
Then there are the piles, which are arranged in three categories: shelve, donate, and books I will never read again and don't really want but which are inscribed to me by the author.
She politely defended the Hermione 2020 merch, which is sometimes more popular than the store's Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Michelle Obama, and "Make America Read Again" lines, but sometimes not, depending on the week.
The idea is that the barcode is reflected on the pupil, so it can be read again later to ensure that nobody has been able to tamper with the image that was uploaded. Clever!
When she stands before the Council and reads from the Bible, she expects that at best she'll convince them to allow women to read again, and at worst she'll get a slap on the wrist.
They reminded you that no matter what happened, you are okay as you went through every single email you'd sworn never to read again and strung them together into an escalating narrative of power and its abuses.
When the reading for the N.B.A. finally ended, and I was able to read again for pleasure, the first thing I picked up was a book-length essay by José Carlos Agüero, called "Los Rendidos" ("The Surrendered").
You will encounter passages of perfectly fine journalistic prose that is taut with the urgency of breaking news—some of which, inevitably, you read once and, after some hours of searching the chronological sequence, might read again.
The three discrete parts that make up ATOMIC can be readagain like movements in music — as an emotional journey of conflict and resolution, one that embraces the duality of "atomic," the ultimate destroyer and life-giver.
On Wednesday morning, the rest of the world blinked their collective eyes, rubbed them repeatedly and then read and re-read (and re-read again) the news coming out of our United States: we'd somehow elected Donald Trump to the country's highest office.
I sincerely hope that every newly bought copy of "1984" is read through and through, and, as my mother admonished, read again and again, because that novel shows us that what is at stake right now is nothing short of the legitimacy, confidence and honesty of our republic.
Carroll relates her experience as an advice columnist where she would read again and again about other women's hideous men, such as "the man who thinks 30 seconds of foreplay is 'enough,' the man who cheats on his wife, the man who passes women over for promotion"—the list goes on.
"The difficult thing was to find a story that could hold sociopolitical meaning for the parents and the kids and blend it all together into a book that a 5-year-old wants to read again and again," said Mr. Alexie, whose book "War Dances" won the 2010 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction.
Yet Miao's artistic journey is solitary, and increasingly it is looking like the fleece he seeks is as elusive as the original, best represented by the final scene in this piece, which forced viewers to avert their eyes even as the artist was left vulnerable, shouldering a burning pile of pages that will never be read again.
Richard Aellen is an American author of novels and plays. In 2006, his Farmers of Men won the Stanley Drama Award. His most recent play, NOBODY, was performed at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival in Montgomery, Alabama, in 2008 and was read again there, in a revised version, in May 2009.
So precious could love letters be that even already read ones would even be brought into battle and read again for solace during a break in the action. Others would defer, compartmentalizing their feelings and leaving a letter folded away where it would cause no pain.John Masters, The Road Past Mandalay (London 1973) p. 164 and p.
YMCA Wanakita encourages returning campers to bond with the newcomers and share their experiences. A longhouse near the camp's entrance maintains a board with the name of every camper who has ever attended. At the beginning of each session, the general manager reads "The YMCA Wanakita Charter". At the end of the session, it is read again to help campers decide whether they lived up to it.
Herbert Thorndike (1598–1672) was Canon of Westminster Abbey. He was also an influential theologian and writer in the Anglican Church who was well respected during the reigns of King Charles I and, after the Restoration, King Charles II. His work had little influence, however, and it was not until the Oxford Movement of the 19th century that he came to be widely read again.
Frederick Douglass stood up to speak in favor of women's right to vote. At the afternoon session, the eleven resolutions were read again, and each one was voted on individually. The only one that was materially questioned was the ninth, the one Stanton had added regarding women's right to vote. It read: Those who opposed this resolution argued that its presence would cause the other, more rational resolutions to lose support.
1,000 actors replied to the callouts for each role, but only 75 were called in to read for the casting director. Those who received a callback read again in front of Crane, Kauffman and their production partner Kevin S. Bright. At the end of March, the potential actors had been reduced to three or four for each part; they read for Les Moonves, president of Warner Bros. Television. David Schwimmer was first to be cast.
Forster delivered the letter to her at Malvern himself, and eventually told her the truth. The letter read: > Devonshire Terrace, April 15, 1851 > > My Dearest Kate, > > Now observe, you must read this letter very slowly and carefully. If you > have hurried on thus far without quite understanding (apprehending some bad > news) I rely on your turning back and read again. > > Little Dora, without being in the least pain, is suddenly stricken ill.
It is in this stage that children will develop a vocabulary of words that is between 2,500 and 5,000 words. Children's vocabularies continue to grow as they enter elementary school, since they will continue to learn new words at a rate of about seven words per day. This shows that at this stage in reading the best piece of advice is to just practice, practice, practice or read, read more, and read again.
On 11 January 1940, after just a few days in Berlin-Ploetzensee Prison, he was escorted to the place of execution. After the court decision was read again, Rudolf Redlinghofer, with his hands tied behind his back, was laid on the guillotine and beheaded. The Reichs War Court notified the Military Conscription Office in Krems of his execution on 12 January. For his wife, Agnes, and their 2-year-old daughter began a very difficult time.
Once a bill has been enrolled, it is sent back to the house of origin, where it must be read again (unless this reading is dispensed with by a two-thirds vote), and signed by the presiding officer in the presence of the members. The bill is then sent to the other house where the presiding officer in the presence of all the members of that house also signs it. The bill is then ready for transmittal to the governor.
It gets its name from King Cole, legendary British father of the Roman Empress Helena, the mother of the Emperor Constantine. As Professor of Poetry, Fox advocated poetry which is intelligible to readers, and gives enough pleasure to be read again. He was one of the first members of the "Inklings", a literary group which also included C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien. In his 1945 Plato for Pleasure, he tried to introduce the general public to Plato.
Taking the complete disappearance of the tragic ending from the stage as a sign that "the public [had] decided", he added: > And if my sensations could add anything to the general suffrage, I might > relate that I was many years ago so shocked by Cordelia's death that I know > not whether I ever endured to read again the last scenes of the play till I > undertook to revise them as an editor.Samuel Johnson on Shakespeare, p. > 222-223. Others were less enthusiastic about the alterations.
Christ Church, Oxford, photographed in 2004 Oxford in 1924 featured an avant-garde aesthetic movement in which personalities such as Harold Acton, Brian Howard, Cyril Connolly and, a little later, W. H. Auden were leading lights. Driberg was soon immersed in a world of art, politics, poetry and parties: "There was just no time for any academic work", he wrote later.Wheen (2001), pp. 36–38 With Auden, he discovered T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land, which they read again and again, "with growing awe".
He also took her to the wooden area, but she wasn't sure if he was telling the truth. She explained inconsistencies in her previous versions with the claim that she had been threatened. P. G.'s mother testified that Carcaño had murdered Del Castillo but had no part in the body disposal, and explained her daughter's inconsistencies due to being both afraid and in love with Carcaño. The early witness statement by P. G.'s grandmother, who had died before the trial proper started, was read again.
Bedard's first novel, A Darker Magic (1987), is about an old teacher (Miss Potts) who discovers a handbill for a magic show which reminds her of the death of a friend from her childhood which she blames on the magic show. With the help of a student (Emily), they are able to prevent the show from happening. Dale Gale calls the work "rich in language and riveting in tone: it brims with a sense of foreboding that is sustained throughout" and a "well- crafted eerie novel that demands to be read again".Gale, David.
Poets and Storytellers: A Book of Critical Essays. Macmillan. US interest in Forster and appreciation for him were spurred by Lionel Trilling's E. M. Forster: A Study, which called him "the only living novelist who can be read again and again and who, after each reading, gives me what few writers can give us after our first days of novel-reading, the sensation of having learned something." Criticism of his works has included comment on unlikely pairings of characters who marry or get engaged, and the lack of realistic depiction of sexual attraction.
Sladen also read original audio stories on CD for The Sarah Jane Adventures, which were released in November 2007: The Glittering Storm and The Thirteenth Stone. This was the first time that BBC Audiobooks had commissioned new content for exclusive release on audio. Further pairs of audio stories were released every year until 2010, all read again by Sladen. Sladen later returned to Doctor Who in the show's fourth series in the concluding episodes "The Stolen Earth" and "Journey's End" and was credited in the title sequence of both episodes.
One book reviewer described it as "a companion every serious songwriter should read, and read again, and keep handy for referral". In 2007, he released a live album of his show, Live and at Large (2007), which was recorded in the United Kingdom. The album included personal stories and anecdotes about Richard Harris, Waylon Jennings, Harry Nilsson, Glen Campbell, Art Garfunkel, Frank Sinatra, and Rosemary Clooney. Webb appears in the 2008 documentary The Wrecking Crew providing thoughtful and descriptive insights into the world of California session musicians in the 1960s.
Read was again called to national service in 1786 when he represented Delaware at the Annapolis Convention. Because so few states were represented, this meeting produced only a report calling for a broader convention to be held in Philadelphia the next year. At what became the Constitutional Convention, Read again represented Delaware. Quoting from Wright & Morris in their Soldier-Statesmen of the Constitution, > Read immediately argued for a new national government under a new > Constitution, saying 'to amend the Articles was simply putting old cloth on > a new garment.
The Great American Novel (1973) by Philip Roth features a character named "Gil Gamesh", who is the star pitcher of a fictional 1930s baseball team called the "Patriot League". Starting in the late twentieth century, the Epic of Gilgamesh began to be read again in Iraq. Saddam Hussein, the former President of Iraq, had a lifelong fascination with Gilgamesh. Hussein's first novel Zabibah and the King (2000) is an allegory for the Gulf War set in ancient Assyria that blends elements of the Epic of Gilgamesh and the One Thousand and One Nights.
Oroonoko is now the most studied of Aphra Behn's novels, but it was not immediately successful in her own lifetime. It sold well, but the adaptation for the stage by Thomas Southerne (see below) made the story as popular as it became. Soon after her death, the novel began to be read again, and from that time onward the factual claims made by the novel's narrator, and the factuality of the whole plot of the novel, have been accepted and questioned with greater and lesser credulity. Because Mrs.
Blanchard was the inventor of two separate and distinct systems of stenography, the first of which he published under the title of A Complete System of Shorthand.A Complete System of Shorthand, being an improvement upon all the authors whose systems have yet been made public; is easy to be attained, and may be read again at any distance of time with the greatest certainty; it being properly adapted to the Latin tongue, and all sorts of technical terms, will make it extremely useful for law, physic, or divinity, Lond. 1779, 16 pp. and two plates.
A vertical scale fastened to the table indicates the number of whole turns of the screw and serves as an index for reading the divisions on the head. A contact-lever, delicate level or electric contact arrangement may be attached to the spherometer in order to indicate the moment of touching more precisely than is possible by the sense of touch. To measure the radius of a sphere—e.g. the curvature of a lens—the spherometer is leveled and read, then placed on the sphere, adjusted until the four points exert equal pressure, and read again.
Srbljanović was born on 15 October 1970 in Stockholm as a daughter of a member of the Yugoslav embassy diplomatic staff. In 2010, she made a speech at the Akademietheater in Vienna, where she described her father as an emigrant, but this information is more than questionable in view of a member and political representative of an embassy. The wrong indication of Belgrade as the place of birth was obviously made public by herself at the beginning of her career. This false information is to be read again and again in some online biographies on her person.
The story follows Motosu Urano, a book-loving post- secondary student and soon-to-be librarian who ends up crushed to death beneath a pile of books during an earthquake. With her dying breath, she wishes to be reincarnated in a world where she can read books forever. Urano awakens in the body of a weak, five-year-old girl named Myne in a world where books are scarce and only available to elites. Myne, retaining her memories from her previous life, decides to create and print her own books so that she can read again.
He even got his enemy, Cassius Severus, to declare that if they wanted to destroy the works of Titus Labienus, they would have to burn him alive as well because he knew them by heart. Two emperors later, Caligula began reversing some of the damage Augustus caused when he was in power. He permitted the works of Titus Labienus, along with a couple other authors’ works (including Cassius Severus), to be hunted down and read again, claiming that it was in his own best interest to have all events recorded for future reference.Anthony A. Barrett, Caligula: The Corruption of Power, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1990) 66-67.
In compiler theory, dead code elimination (also known as DCE, dead code removal, dead code stripping, or dead code strip) is a compiler optimization to remove code which does not affect the program results. Removing such code has several benefits: it shrinks program size, an important consideration in some contexts, and it allows the running program to avoid executing irrelevant operations, which reduces its running time. It can also enable further optimizations by simplifying program structure. Dead code includes code that can never be executed (unreachable code), and code that only affects dead variables (written to, but never read again), that is, irrelevant to the program.
Feminism in the United States, Canada and a number of countries in western Europe has been divided into three waves by feminist scholars: first, second and third-wave feminism. Recent (early 2010s) research suggests there may be a fourth wave characterized, in part, by new media platforms. The women's movement became more popular in May 1968 when women began to read again, more widely, the book The Second Sex, written in 1949 by a defender of women's rights, Simone de Beauvoir (and translated into English for the first time in 1953; later translation 2009). De Beauvoir's writing explained why it was difficult for talented women to become successful.
Its first move was the Reduction of Interest Bill, which was intended to default on payments of overseas debts to British bondholders in an attempt to negotiate the interest rate. The Legislative Council prevented passage on 26 March 1931 by resolving that the bill be read again in six months time. Lang again asked for additional members to force his legislation through. Game, aware of the weight of opinion in the MacDonald Government in London, the Scullin Government in Canberra, and Sydney against the Lang administration's financial policies, refused. On 28 March the Federal Labor Party expelled the New South Wales Labor Party for its opposition to the financial policy of the Federal government.
The Metaphysical poets went out of favour in the 18th century but began to be read again in the Victorian era. Donne's reputation was finally fully restored by the approbation of T. S. Eliot in the early 20th century. Influenced by continental Baroque, and taking as his subject matter both Christian mysticism and eroticism, Donne's metaphysical poetry uses unconventional or "unpoetic" figures, such as a compass or a mosquito, to reach surprise effects. For example, in "Valediction: Forbidding Mourning", one of Donne's Songs and Sonnets, the points of a compass represent two lovers, the woman who is home, waiting, being the centre, the farther point being her lover sailing away from her.
Native Studies Review writes that Braiding Sweetgrass is a "book to savour and to read again and again." Heather Sullivan writes in the "Journal of Germanic Studies" that "one occasionally encounters a text like an earthquake: it shakes one’s fundamental assumptions with a massive shift that, in comparison, renders mere epiphanies bloodless: Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass is one of these kinds of books.” Sue O'Brian in "Library Journal" wrote "Kimmerer writes of investigating the natural world with her students and her efforts to protect and restore plants, animals, and land. A trained scientist who never loses sight of her Native heritage, she speaks of approaching nature with gratitude and giving back in return for what we receive.
On 22 July 1943, as part of Task Group 16.22, she took part in a heavy bombardment of Kiska. Between 12 and 15 August 1943, Abner Read again shelled Kiska in support of Operation Cottage, in which U.S. and Canadian forces landed on Kiska. On 17 August 1943, the American and Canadian forces discovered that Japan had removed its forces from the island prior to the Allied invasion. The damage report of the attack that sunk USS Abner Read Abner Read had been conducting an antisubmarine patrol off Kiska for two days without any sign of the enemy, steaming in a figure-eight pattern, when, while making 5 knots, she was shaken by an explosion aft at 0150 on 18 August.
Emmanuel Owoade Adeleke Adejobi succeeded Ollunowo Ositelu as the Head of the Church of the Lord (Aladura) on 7 May 1967. During the Mount Tabborrar Festival on 22 August 1945, Ollunowo Ositelu read a message he claimed to have received from God on 18 August 1945: "Adeleke Adejobi is the Gbolahan (Torch Bearer) of the Church of the Lord Aladura". Ollunowo Ositelu also promoted and appointed Adeleke Adejobi prophet and apostle on the Mount on the same day, and pronounced that Adeleke Adejobi would be his successor. In January 1966, presiding over the first International Churches Assembly at Ogere, Ollunowo Ositelu read again in his address his vision of 18 August 1945 in which he said God told him that Adeleke Adejobi was to be his successor.
Abner Read held shakedown along the California coast into April 1943 and then got underway with Task Group (TG) 51.2, bound for the Aleutian Islands. She assumed patrol duties on 4 May 1943 and, on 11 May 1943, shelled targets on Japanese-occupied Attu Island, supporting soldiers of the United States Army's 7th Division who invaded that island. Abner Read again bombarded Attu on 16 May 1943 before returning to San Diego, California, which she reached on 31 May 1943. USS Abner Read lost most of her stern After two weeks in drydock at San Francisco, Abner Read got underway on 14 June 1943 for Adak, Territory of Alaska, in the Aleutian Islands. Upon her arrival there, she joined Task Force (TF) 16 and, soon thereafter, began patrolling the waters around Japanese-occupied Kiska Island in the Aleutians.
Various edited abstracts (known as "extraits") of the Testament were printed and circulated, condensing the multi-volume original manuscript and sometimes adding material that was not written by Meslier. Abstracts were popular because of the length and convoluted style of the original. Voltaire often mentions Meslier (referring to him as "a good priest") in his correspondence, in which he tells his daughter to "read and read again" Meslier's only work, and says that "every honest man should have Meslier's Testament in his pocket." However, he also described Meslier as writing "in the style of a carriage-horse". Voltaire published his own expurgated version as Extraits des sentiments de Jean Meslier (first edition, 1762). Voltaire's edition changed the thrust of Meslier's arguments (or drew on other Extraits which did this)See Wade (1933) for a discussion of the different versions and Extraits of the manuscript of the Testament.
Her tragedy, The Royal Mischief, was criticised for its resemblance to 1670s heroic tragedy. Almyna, her dramatic adaptation of The Arabian Nights Entertainments also found itself entangled in controversy by Anne Bracegirldle's retirement from the stage and the high cost of the production. Manley was also an avid supporter and defender of the first fully- fledged it-narrative in English, Charles Gildon's The Golden Spy (1709).Wu, Jingyue, ‘ “Nobilitas sola est atq; unica Virtus”: Spying and the Politics of Virtue in The Golden Spy; or, A Political Journal of the British Nights Entertainments (1709)’, Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 40.2 (2017), p.237-253 doi: 10.1111/1754-0208.12412 The revision of her fame and status as an author began in the early decades of the 18th century and led to manifest defamations in the 19th and early 20th centuries: she became seen as a scandalous female author who, some critics audaciously asserted, did not deserve to be ever read again.
The mythology of the Borgia ring was changed from the first film, in which young Wilby read the inscription on the ring once and then was the victim of random transformations which could only be stopped if he performed a heroic deed. In this sequel, he simply turned into a dog whenever the ring's inscription was read aloud, and the spell would generally last from five to ten minutes. In the television movie The Return of the Shaggy Dog (1987), which takes place between the events of the original film and this sequel, the mythology changes once again: now, once the inscription is read, Wilby is trapped in dog form until it is read again. The 2006 remake with Tim Allen eschewed the situation and characters of the three initial films (and also a 1994 television remake which returned the mythology of the original 1959 film) and opted instead for a science fiction device of a man being bitten by a viral dog that infected him with a serum that affected his DNA.
The potency of these tales can be gauged from the following statement by the poet Robert Burns, writing some three centuries after they were first related. > The two first books I ever read in private, and which gave me more pleasure > than any two books I ever read again, were The Life of Hannibal and The > History of Sir William Wallace [a modernised version of Blind Harry by > William Hamilton of Gilbertfield]. Hannibal gave my young ideas such a turn > that I used to strut in raptures up and down after the recruiting drum and > bagpipe, and wish myself tall enough that I could be a soldier; while the > story of Wallace poured a Scottish prejudice into my veins which will boil > along there till the flood-gates of life shut in eternal rest.letter to Dr. > John Moore, dated 2 August 1787, quoted in M. Lindsay, Robert Burns, London > and New York 1979 The Battle of Stirling Bridge is depicted in the 1995 film Braveheart, but it bears little resemblance to the real battle, there being no bridge (due mainly to the difficulty of filming around the bridge itself) and tactics resembling the Battle of Bannockburn.

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