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20 Sentences With "readiest"

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

The beggar in the dark blue cap is readiest to smile.
Alarmingly, the camp readiest to answer that call is a Labour Party marching ever further and more confidently to the left.
Even in transition, where he's readiest to do damage, Winslow has mostly been limited to background emoting on the poster dunks of his teammates.
Currently U.S. regional allies provide the readiest options to pressure Iran, given uncertainties about America's willingness to remain engaged in the Middle East beyond defeating ISIS.
But the countries who can least afford it, notably Italy whose debt is already equivalent to roughly 130% of GDP, may be the ones who are readiest to splurge.
" Justice Neil Gorsuch He is among those appearing readiest to challenge past decisions, expressing his views in a colloquial style, as when earlier session he declared a lawyer was, "slicing the baloney a little too thinly," and at another point implored, "let's just spot me that.
I make use of it, under protest, as the readiest means of making myself understood, in the absence of a more appropriate term. If the art is ever developed to the extent I believe to be within its legitimate limits, it will achieve for itself a name worthy of its position. Until it does so, it is idle to attempt to exalt it in the world’s estimation, by giving it a high-sounding title.
141 the petition hoped, "That this Nation of England, with the inhabitants of the Netherlands, shall be the first and the readiest to transport Israel's sons and daughters on their ships to the land promised to their forefathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob for an everlasting inheritance." Retrieved on 20 March 2018. Their de facto toleration in England was informally achieved by 1655 to 1656 and was not rolled back after the Restoration.
For Congolese, mining is the readiest source of income, because the work is consistently available, even if only for a dollar a day. The work can be laborious; miners can walk for days into the forest to reach the ore, scratch it from the earth with hand tools and pan it. About 90% of young men in Congo do this. Research found that many Congolese leave farming because they need money quickly and cannot wait for crops to grow.
He had now formed a deep attachment to Julia, a beautiful daughter of Charles Heathcote Tatham, the architect, and when her father revoked the consent he had at first given to their union, the young couple ran away, journeyed to Scotland by coach in the deep snow of a severe winter, and were married according to Scottish law at Gretna Green in January 1831. This act proved the turning-point of Richmond's career, and determined him to adopt portraiture as the readiest means of earning a living.
True to nature it might be, but audiences > accustomed to theatrical types verging on the border-land of caricature > would (so managers thought) be hardly likely to accept a mere photograph of > human life. It was the old tale of actors' portraits "Penny plain and > tuppence coloured." The coloured articles had the readiest sale in the > shops, ergo they could not be made too florid in the theatres. Miss Wilton, > however, having in common with Sothern estimated Society at its true worth, > declared that danger was better than dullness, selected her supporters, and > under the now delighted author's superintendence, commenced rehearsals.
Milton begins The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates by paraphrasing the words of Sallust to describe the nature of tyranny:Dzelzainis 2003 p. 306 > Hence is it that Tyrants are not oft offended, nor stand much in doubt of > bad men, as being all naturally servile; but in whom vertue and true worth > most is eminent, them they feare in earnest, as by right thir Maisters, > against them lies all thir hatred and suspicion. Consequentlie neither doe > bad men hate Tyrants, but have been alwayes readiest with the falsifi'd > names of Loyalty, and Obedience, to colour over thir base compliances.Milton > 1962 p.
In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved June 20, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online The earliest English poetical treatise on Angling by John Dennys, said to have been a fishing companion of Shakespeare, was published in 1613, The Secrets of Angling. Footnotes of the work, written by Dennys' editor, William Lawson, make the first mention of the phrase to 'cast a fly': "The trout gives the most gentlemanly and readiest sport of all, if you fish with an artificial fly, a line twice your rod's length of three hairs' thickness... and if you have learnt the cast of the fly." Izaak Walton's Compleat Angler, published in 1653 helped popularize fly fishing as a sport.
Like many other young domi nobiles Sertorius moved to Rome in his mid-to-late teens trying to make it big as an orator and jurist.Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the struggle for Spain, pp 2-3. He made enough of an "impression" on the young Cicero to merit a special mention in a later treatise on oratory: ::Of all the totally illiterate and crude orators, well, actually ranters, I ever knew – and I might as well add 'completely coarse and rustic' – the roughest and readiest were Q. Sertorius ...Cicero, Brutus, 180. After his undistinguished career in Rome as a jurist and an orator, he entered the military.
At minimum the sign indicates that individuals employing Cypro-Minoan script handled the vessel from which the handle derived. Combined with petrographic analysis of the clay employed in manufacturing the amphora—pointing to an origin in or within the vicinity of Akko—the readiest reconstruction from the evidence must be that the vessel (and any companions) was manufactured in the Akko region before shipping, either to such redistribution points as Tell Abu Hawam or Tel Nami, or (more likely) to Cyprus itself (perhaps via one of these ports), where it was likely emptied of its original contents—certainly marked—before being shipped back to the Levant (now probably containing Cypriot product) and achieving final deposition at Aphek.
Sullivan was recognized as one of the strongest, readiest and most successful jury lawyers in New York, and he was admired and revered by both bench and bar. His kindness, candor and fairness, even during the heat of a trial, were always the subject of remark. Judge Bookstaver, of New York, in speaking of him, said: "He was always welcomed by the court in any case in which he appeared, because it was felt that his learning, ability and absolute truthfulness would assist the court in the trial of any question of law and fact with which it had to deal." He was noted for seeking opportunities for helping and encouraging younger lawyers.
In the early 600s Christians in Ireland and Britain became aware of the divergence in dating between them and those in Europe. The first clash came in 602 when a synod of French bishops opposed the practices of the monasteries established by St Columbanus; Columbanus appealed to the pope but received no answer and finally moved from their jurisdiction. It was a primary concern for St Augustine and his mission, although Oswald's flight to Dál Riata and eventual restoration to his throne meant that Celtic practice was introduced to Northumbria until the 664 synod in Whitby. The groups furthest away from the Gregorian mission were generally the readiest to acknowledge the superiority of the new tables: the bishops of southern Ireland adopted the continental system at the Synod of Mag Léne (); the Council of Birr saw the northern Irish bishops follow suit.
77-78 Mustapha describes how: > "unknown to these people themselves, their government is a pure > unadulterated LOGOCRACY or government of words. The whole nation does every > thing viva voce, or, by word of mouth, and in this manner is one of the most > military nations in existence [...] In a logocracy thou well knowest there > is little or no occasion for fire arms, or any such destructive weapons. > Every offensive or defensive measure is enforced by wordy battle, and paper > war; he who has the longest tongue or readiest quill, is sure to gain the > victory—will carry horrour [sic], abuse, and ink shed into the very trenches > of the enemy, and without mercy or remorse, put men, women, and children to > the point of the—pen!"Joseph Dennie, John Elihu Hall, The Port Folio, The > Editor and Asbury Dickens, 1807, p.
Sir Thomas Burnett was one of the tribunal established to sit on 2 April in Greyfriars Church there and on following days, to force 'malignants' to subscribe to the Covenant under pain of confiscation of their goods. Viscount Aboyne's part of the Covenanting army then encamped at Muchalls and ransacked Burnett's property, despite his protestations. Further Covenanters arrived at Aberdeen in 1644 under the Earl of Argyll and the Earl Marischal, and during that occupation a Committee of the Estates for Northern Business met there, to which a petition was presented by Lord Fraser, Sir Thomas Burnett of Leys, Patrick Leslie the Provost, and others, complaining of their losses by the quartering of troops and seeking redress from the first and readiest effects of the 'malignants' which come to hand. Later that year, Montrose, raised to a Marquess and now opposed to the Covenant, marched north to suppress opposition to the King's cause.
The earliest English poetical treatise on Angling by John Dennys, said to have been a fishing companion of Shakespeare, was published in 1613, The Secrets of Angling. Footnotes of the work, written by Dennys' editor, William Lawson, make the first mention of the phrase to 'cast a fly': "The trout gives the most gentlemanly and readiest sport of all, if you fish with an artificial fly, a line twice your rod's length of three hairs' thickness... and if you have learnt the cast of the fly." The art of fly fishing took a great leap forward after the English Civil War, where a newly found interest in the activity left its mark on the many books and treatises that were written on the subject at the time. The renowned officer in the Parliamentary army, Robert Venables, published in 1662 The Experienced Angler, or Angling improved, being a general discourse of angling, imparting many of the aptest ways and choicest experiments for the taking of most sorts of fish in pond or river.

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