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175 Sentences With "resounded"

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

The crack of ball meeting bark resounded across the hole.
An echo resounded when my pen dropped to the floor.
Boos resounded on opening night, and donors made their displeasure known.
Yet other Gore-era echoes have resounded through this heady campaign season.
Laughter and applause resounded in the room as Winslet continued with her speech.
Never before has that old adage, 'Actions speak louder than words,' resounded louder.
Her voice—never the instrument she was famous for—resounded with untroubled confidence.
Mr Trump hails from the latter group, but his message resounded with the former.
It resounded not just through the Republican Party but but the Democratic one as well.
McMaine-Render drove seven students in the program's van, which resounded with cheerful non sequiturs.
The air resounded with the squeaks of frantic sweeping and the crack of colliding rocks.
But the talent and creativity of Mary Lou Williams (24-230) resounded at an early age.
When she spoke, her soft insistent voice resounded as if it were inside his own chest.
He said the airstrike Mr. Trump ordered on Syria resounded as a declaration of American strength.
While the overwhelming number of past decisions have had implications for Americans alone, others have resounded internationally.
He left as chants of "Melayu" resounded, a seeming insistence that he speak in the Malay language.
The darkness was nearly complete, but silence never set in: Creaks, thumps and splashes resounded through the night.
That image, of a society that is organized and empowered, resounded in the psyche of our generation now.
His death resounded in the community of people who seek urban altitudes for thrills, for curiosity, or for profit.
It would be wrong to leave the impression that the Bayerischer Hof Hotel resounded to bays for Trump's departure.
It was not immediately clear what caused the blast in the Baglar district, but the explosion resounded through the city.
BUFFALO — Once upon a time, N.H.L. origin stories resounded, like a slap shot in an empty arena, with familiar tropes.
Within Iran, the killing resounded as a breach of national sovereignty and evidence that the United States bore malevolent intent.
She's flattered by all of the attention and thrilled her Globes speech resounded with so many people around the country.
The cheering resounded from one end of the small capital to the other—made louder, perhaps, by all that metal.
"Hundreds of years ago, my kind was so plentiful that the Río Abajo Forest resounded with our voices," the parrot says.
Across the campus, an exhibition at the Williams College Museum of Art examines one of the regions where it resounded the most.
Chants of "Viva Fidel!" resounded as tens of thousands massed in Havana's Revolution Square on Tuesday evening to pay homage to Castro.
That "Butterfly" resounded in such a way is proof of how honestly it captured what it means to be black in America today.
"If it bleeds, it leads," he says, echoing a sour cry that has resounded from "Ace in the Hole" (1951) to "Nightcrawler" (2014).
On Weibo, China's version of Twitter, Bojack Horseman memes abound, largely thanks to the show's eponymous anti-hero who's resounded with China's millennial viewers.
But as the fire from the marksmanship training resounded in the distance, Mr. Amjed made clear that his immediate worry was no longer ISIS.
But when I agreed with him, while noting that $2 trillion of that debt resulted from Trump's 2017 tax cuts, the room resounded with catcalls.
The sound of bagpipes resounded through the neighborhood, and residents poked their heads out of their windows and assembled along the edges of the service.
But fears of a loud American prowling the globe should be laid to rest: Not a single "bam!" resounded in the two episodes I watched.
Here's what you need to know: • President Trump's threat to impose steep tariffs on steel and aluminum resounded around the world — with a metallic clang.
Mr. Le Moal told of a 1993 rally Mr. Chatillon organized for the student group in Paris that resounded with "Sieg Heils" and Nazi salutes.
Suddenly, loud smacking sounds resounded as the artist began to furiously pummel a 2,000-pound clay block that had been placed in the center of the room.
Inside the resort's rental center, Chinese characters were emblazoned on a "ski pickup" sign, and a cacophony of Hindi, Mandarin and English resounded among the jostling crowd.
"For Unto Us a Child Is Born" resounded through the house, as I reflected on not being a "Jew for Jesus" (except that I love Jesus' parables).
They and allies like Boris Johnson, the former mayor of London, call the European Union a meddling and alien force, a message that has resounded elsewhere, particularly France.
When this happened, I'd raise my hands to the ceiling, the loud chatter of my neurotic mind quieting as our collective voices resounded in love songs to Jesus.
The Democrats' message, however, has not resounded with voters, who gave Republicans control of the House in 22019 and have kept them there in the three cycles since then.
From the portals of one of the hotels absorbed by government departments darted the slight figure of a girl clerk, distractedly gesticulating while another stroke of Big Ben resounded.
I tightened my abdominal muscles to support deeper breaths and marveled at the sound that vibrated in my vocal cords and finally resounded in the chambers of my skull.
They resounded in the cloister below, where hundreds of Gucci staff and hired hands were readying the site for the fashion show, which was to take place at three.
But it is Bongo's commitment to saving Gabon's rainforests and their elephants that resounded best internationally, winning him a mention from Britain's Prince Charles in a 2014 anti-poaching speech.
Over the summer of 2013 the chant "everywhere is Taksim, everywhere is resistance" resounded in daily protests across Turkey, with many banging pots and pans at their windows every evening.
Slogans resounded on social media as a sort of digital chest-thumping: Hashtags such as #SurgicalStrike2 (a reference to a previous retaliatory strike in 2016), #IndiaStrikesBack #TerroristanPakistan, #IndiasRevenge circulated widely on Twitter.
For hours after the match, Mexico City resounded with the joyous cacophony of car horns, and euphoric fans turned public plazas into giant parties — waving Mexican flags, singing, chanting, spraying foam and drinking.
Many of the central themes of Sanders's year of stump speeches—expanding Social Security, rejecting trade deals that hurt workers, providing debt-free college, reclaiming our democracy from big money—resounded throughout Clinton's speech.
There is a logic to the work, and the part I read resounded with the baroque tone you might expect of a translation that will obey his other rule: It will use every word exactly once.
An inmate named Jesse Webster, serving a life sentence without parole for a nonviolent first offense, was poised to take a typing test, his fingers hovering over the keyboard — when his name resounded over the intercom.
NIZHNY NOVGOROD, Russia (Reuters) - Russian and Argentine chants resounded around the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium in the World Cup on Sunday as their fans appeared to outnumber those backing the teams on the pitch: Croatia and Denmark.
When Mr. Fuchs died on Tuesday at his home in Manhattan at 96, he was remembered for his voice, one that resounded at the first Jewish service to be broadcast from German soil since the rise of Hitler.
The chants of "four more years" that resounded from only one side of the House chamber on Tuesday night should ring as an alarm for all Americans who want their children to live in an even greater nation.
In 1971, Teodoro broke with the Venezuelan Communist Party and founded the Movement Toward Socialism, or M.A.S. Teodoro's dissidence resounded far beyond Venezuela: When he published a book criticizing the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, Pravda and Leonid Brezhnev denounced him.
But Hudson's palpably emotional signs, whose tenor ranged from bewilderment ("Southwest Where's Our Street") to pointed provocation ("Southwest Dead Faggot Street"), resounded like a chorus of voices shouting names into the void, searching for a place that was nowhere to be found.
"Abaporu" was made as a gift to Tarsila's second husband, the poet Oswaldo de Andrade, who was galvanized by its extra brazenly tropical modernism to write the "Manifesto of Anthropophagy," a call to cannibalize foreign influences; it resounded in Brazilian culture for decades.
His insurgent campaigns—he ran for president twice as a Republican and later for Ross Perot's Reform Party—hit many of the same themes that resounded in the most recent race: opposition to free trade and immigration, with strong appeals to white racial grievance.
SÃO PAULO, Brazil — Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil's new far-right president, stepped onto the international stage this week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, with a pitch that had resounded with voters back home: He was committed to eliminating entrenched corruption in his country.
Soon, chants of "Dee-fense!" resounded at Yankee Stadium as Modzelewski at left tackle, Jim Katcavage at left end, Andy Robustelli at right end — all in their first season as Giants — and Rosey Grier at right tackle formed the first N.F.L. defensive line to be celebrated as a unit.
His incendiary comments about minorities and the disabled, and proposals to bar Muslims from entering the United States or to force Mexico to pay for a wall on the southern border, have resounded so widely that half of all voters said they would be scared if he were elected president, according to the Times/CBS poll.
But to the fraternity of climbing enthusiasts around the world, he was a phenomenon whose exploits above clouds and tree lines at 10,000 to 20,000 feet resounded in mountaineering lore and journals: the achievements of an eccentric daredevil who took on the continent's last unclimbed peaks and uncharted routes, who probably took more risks than anyone in history.
In Italy on Wednesday, her sentences resounded over the loudspeakers of soccer stadiums, a response to the shock and disgust felt by the country's political, cultural and Jewish leaders after fans of Lazio, one of Rome's teams, had left stickers in a stadium with the image of Frank wearing the colors of a crosstown rival to mock that team's supporters.
The air resounded with the squallings of the quadrupedal multitude.
Through the halls resounded the cacophonous clangour of a cracked gong announcing dinner.
There rose a little smoke from the touchhole plate, but no shot resounded.
From Greenock to Glasgow resounded the clangour of hammers and the thunder of mechanism.
The resignation movement resounded particularly in provinces in which there were already splits in the ANC structure, such as the Western Cape.
The song resounded through the Milwaukee stadium. His teammates, who did not know about the idea of personal fight songs, showed interest and hummed its melody.
Cholent is the subject of a poem by Heinrich Heine. He writes (using the German word schalet for cholent), "Schalet, ray of light immortal! / Schalet, daughter of Elysium!" / So had Schiller's song resounded, / Had he ever tasted schalet.
I was gripped by great nervous > tension. I will remember this day until I die, as it was decisive for my > future. Thunderous jubilation resounded from quays, streets, windows and > rooftops. "That is how I want to return home some day," I thought to myself.
The court and people, equally enthusiastic, surged into St. Sophia. The vaults resounded with acclamations in praise of God, the emperor, St. Peter, and the Pope of Rome. Opponents, who had prophesied sedition and tumult, were signally disappointed. Never within memory had so vast a number communicated.
Because of Longfellow's strong abolitionist preaching the Church was controversial and grew in debt as some members felt offended. Longfellow resigned from his ministry in the Second Church in April 1860, yet his abolitionist preachings were resounded only a year later by the start of the American Civil War. Following Rev.
The first was "summer time" while the second was "winter time". Throughout the summer, the inhabitants were engaged in work in the fields (spring sowing, Orchards, corn, cotton). All the fields resounded with songs and joys as they always did the work with song. Carving, reaping, threshing, straw was later one of their main occupations.
The Maungaharuru Range is located 34 km from Napier in the New Zealand region of Hawke's Bay. The name means in the mountain that resounded in Te Reo Māori due to the bird population. Maungaharuru is the spiritual mountain of the hapū Ngati Kurumōkihi. They are the kaitiaki of Boundary Stream and the area.
But if they are determined to have different > music, it should in my opinion, be music from trombones and flutes, like > those that resounded in the Temple of Solomon.Foyer (Leipzig: 1898), in Max > Grunwald, Der Kampf um die Orgel in der Wiener Israelitischen > Kultusgemeinde. (Vienna: Verlag von Dr. Bloch's Volkenshrift, 1919), p. 17. > Cited in .
During his stay, it was discovered that Louis had cracked several vertebrae in Schmeling's back. Schmeling and his handlers complained after the bout that Louis' initial volley had included an illegal kidney punch, and even refused Louis' visitation at the hospital. The claim resounded hollowly in the media, however, and they eventually chose not to file a formal complaint.
The death of emperor Nicholas in 1855 led to a complete change. Herzen's writings, and the magazines he edited, were smuggled wholesale into Russia, and their words resounded throughout the country, and all over Europe. Their influence grew. The year 1855 gave Herzen reason to be optimistic; Alexander II had ascended the throne and reforms seemed possible.
There are no plans at this stage to seek a replacement for Tavares on bass. As of April 2012 the band announced they would start recording a new self-produced album. Infinito was released in November 1 via ITunes Store. The good reception amongst band fans resounded with the good critics, which praised the album for its ambitious sound.
FC Lokomotiv-Pamir is a Tajik football club based in Dushanbe originally founded in 1961 as Lokomotiv Dushanbe. After initially being disbanded in the early 1990s, Lokomotiv Dushanbe were revived in early 1999 before again being disbanded at the end of 2000. Lokomotiv Dushanbe were resounded again in 2008, before merging with Pamir in 2017 to become Lokomotiv-Pamir.
French Corral's current condition contradicts its prolific past. Having "resounded to the tread of the prospector," the town enjoyed both a placer boom and a hydraulic mining boom. The area existed as a successful mining region from 1849 well into the 1800s. Ravine mining began in the area in 1849, with surface diggings discovered around 1851.
It resounded so negatively, reaching the point that, in the preparation for the Cup, the boy could not stand the pressure and left, ashamed of being there. We played the Cup with one player less. They never gave me an official statement. Off the records, they told that, if they call up me, I would have to play.
It was a one-sided battle. He was already exhausted and it will not be long before he would fall. "Fool, you will become one of my family" resounded the opponent's voice, as the challenger crumbled to the floor and was turned into sand. The Fighting Instinct Tournament, or FIST, is a tournament as fierce as its name suggests.
Holoman 1989, pp. 36, 612. Berlioz told his friend Albert Du Boys that the dramatic movements (the Kyrie, the Crucifixus, the Et iterum venturus, the Domine salvum, and the Sanctus) had the greatest impact:Quoted and translated by Cairns 1999, p. 176. Berlioz played the tam-tam in the Et iterum venturus and struck it so hard, that the whole church resounded.
The call of Swami Vivekananda to renounce resounded within his pure heart. He ever thirsted for the darshan (meeting/s) of Saints and Sadhus (renunciate) visiting the metropolis. In June 1936, he disappeared from home. After a vigorous search by his parents, he was found in the secluded Ashram of a holy sage some miles from the sacred mountain shrine Tirupati.
Shortly afterward, they were surprised that the pursuing warriors began to turn away from them and head north. Three miles back, Captain Thomas McDougall, marching with the pack train, heard gunfire, "a dull sound that resounded through the hills".W. A Graham, The Reno Court of Inquiry: Abstract of the Official Record of the Proceeding. (Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 1995), pp 194-195.
He pushed it out of the way of another. Another fellow player he > raised to his feet. All the while the crowd resounded with shouts of Out of > bounds, Too far, Right beside him, Over his head, On the ground, Up in the > air, Too short, Pass it back in the scrum.' Galen, in "On Exercise with the Small Ball",P.
The Marangona The Marangona announced the sessions of the Great Council.Gattinoni, Il campanile di san Marco in Venezia, pp. 55 and 57–58 In the event that the council was to meet in the afternoon, the Trottiera first rang for 15 minutes, immediately after Third Hour. After midday, the Marangona resounded (4 series of 50 strokes followed by 5 of 25).
Tracy, p. 71 However parliament soon resounded with his praises; and, among other marks of respect, he was honoured with the freedom of the cities of Worcester and Gloucester, and of the borough of Tewkesbury.O'Byrne Very little is known of Carden's life beyond that he was once married and had a daughter, Jemima born c. 1800. She married the Rev R W H Biederman.
Almost synonymous to the song (phir means again in Hindi), the reel would be rewound and played many times to satisfy public demand. Theatres around the country were resounded with "once more" calls once the song ended. The reel had to be rewound and the song was screened again and again. Kismet made box office history for its time by running for 3½ years in one theatre.
General Ivan Lenković, leading 1,000 Uskoci, came in relief of the 1,500 Klis defenders. During the battle, Ivan Lenković and his men retreated after he was wounded in battle, and the fortress was lost to the Ottomans on 31 May. Nevertheless, this temporary relief resounded in Europe and among the local population. The Venetians fought for decades before they finally managed to re-take Klis.
The cartoon also demonstrated how the image of a chicken being beheaded still resounded in the minds of the Taiwanese people. In this way chicken-beheading rituals are used in an allegorical sense in modern Taiwan, mostly in the political sphere, and few chickens are actually beheaded. The honour and sincerity that has been historically attached to chicken-beheading rituals remains a potent force in Taiwanese society.
A similar myth, one in which the fish "Pisces" carry Aphrodite and her son out of danger, is resounded in Manilius' five volume poetic work Astronomica: "Venus ow'd her safety to their Shape." Another myth is that an egg fell into the Euphrates river. It was then rolled to the shore by fish. Doves sat on the egg until it hatched, out from which came Aphrodite.
This visit was the first time for Kunqu, this ancient form of theater, to go abroad as an independent group after the founding of People's Republic of China. It could be said that the ancient history of Kunqu performances opened a new chapter since that. The first repertoire was The Peony Pavilion. Zhang responded to a curtain call 15 times, and cheers resounded through the theater.
Bey Mustafa responded by bringing more than 10,000 soldiers under the fortress. General Ivan Lenković, leading 1,000 Uskoci, came in relief of the 1,500 Klis defenders. During the battle, Ivan Lenković and his men retreated after he was wounded in battle, and the fortress was lost to the Turks, on May 31. Nevertheless, this temporary relief resounded in Europe and among the local population.
The coordinator of this workshop, held at Otjiruze Guest Lodge, was Hercules Viljoen. The location of this workshop resounded so well with the artists that it was used again for the next two Tulipamwe workshops. This workshop brought out in its participants a wish to express their own social, political, moral, and religious beliefs. Eric Schnack, from Namibia, produced work depicting his disgust for game hunting.
His images appear similar to those of indigenous populations of North America and the Ancient Near East. If he found out one of his symbols was not original, he no longer used it. He wanted his art to have the same impact on all his viewers, striking a chord not because they had seen it before, but because it was so basic and elemental that it resounded within them.
Global recognition, within the user experience community, of this methodology resounded with the appearance of the 'extreme user' approach by August de los Reyes, a lead designer for the Xbox One. This occurred due to his recent wheelchair bound state, resulting in him creating a design for the video game console that could be accessed by the non-conventional user of the device, individuals who are wheelchair bound.
For All the People: Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation, Cooperative Movements, and Communalism in America is a non-fiction book by John Curl which "methodically and authoritatively traces the hidden history of cooperatives, cooperation and communalism in US history." "Cooperation, not competition, resounded as the dominant chord across the continent," Curl writes. Cooperatives were widespread throughout American history, with workers uniting cooperatively in a wide range of industries.
When the powerful explosion resounded, the entire city trembled. Three parts of the steel construction fell into the river. Cutting off the only link was instrumental in the defense of the city during the inaugural period of the war. Austro-Hungarians were now forced either to invade using boats or to try to secure a foothill on the Ada Ciganlija island, which they attempted during the Battles of Ada Ciganlija.
Henry Fox of the Church Mission Society, Mr. Bowden (SPG) of the Godavari Delta Mission, the Lutherans and Baptists. On Sundays the labour camps where Arthur Cotton supervised resounded with the singing of Christian Hymns, songs in various languages such as Telugu, Tamil, and Tribal dialects etc. Major Cotton himself spoke in many such meetings. He and his staff worked to set a personal example of service and Christian living to the new converts.
Shortly afterward, they were surprised that the pursuing warriors began to turn away from them and head north. Two miles back, McDougall, marching with the pack train, heard gunfire, "a dull sound that resounded through the hills".Graham, The Reno Court of Inquiry: Abstract, pp 194- 195. The troops with Benteen and Reno—even Lieutenant Edward Settle Godfrey, who was deaf in one ear—also heard it.Kenneth Hammer, Custer in '76, p. 70.
The applause for Mr. Carter, wheelchair bound but characteristically animated, resounded thunderously." Martin Bernheimer of the Financial Times similarly said the piece "emerges as a genial, economic rumination on percussive structures and strictures" and wrote, "Colin Currie and Eric Huebner, the soloists, trade snappy, tricky rhythmic impulses on a piano plus numerous tapping/stroking/banging devices. Supporting instruments add unpredictable commentary and echoes. As always, Carter ignores aesthetic concessions and stylistic compromises.
The terrible fight, then, ensued between the Goddess and the demons. The Sun was covered with their incessant hurling of arrows; and the shooters could not shoot accurately on account of the darkness that then prevailed. Then by the collision of the arrows of both the parties, the arrows caught fire and the battlefield again became filled with light. The quarters on all aides resounded with harsh bow sounds and nothing could be heard.
Mariani was born in New York City, where he was surrounded by opera music and performers throughout his childhood. In 1924, his father Adolph Mariani opened the Astirestaurant. Over the next 75 years it became a Greenwich Village landmark because, every night, the restaurant resounded with the sounds of Italian opera and song. The waiters would break into spontaneous arias, and many of the customers were stars of the theater and opera world.
Warrender was welcomed by a wave of thunderous stamping, and jumped onto a table to give a speech about friendship between the two nations. Three cheers were given for the German Navy, before Rear Admiral Mauwe climbed on the table to respond and call three cheers for the British. The room once again resounded to stamping approval. In the evening Warrender attended the official Imperial Yacht club dinner, now presided over by Prince Henry, in the Kaiser's absence.
However, the foundation went bankrupt before these plans were carried out. On 20 September 1991, local residents and preservationists opened the disused building to the press and the public. A general sense of dismay, which also resounded in the city council, led to the appointment of a commission of experts, which proposed to have the building restored under the guidance of an architect with expert knowledge of medieval construction and foundation. was appointed to lead the restoration.
Several of both parties get badly wounded…" News of the incident resounded all the way up to General Jackson's headquarters. On 2 December, Jackson, in his official report, provided the following account of the rowdy Irishmen. "... While the Thirty-third Regiment Virginia Volunteers was en route from Manassas to this place one of its companies (Company E) arrived in camp near here without any officer, in consequence of its first lieutenant (T.C. Fitzgerald) having absented himself without leave.
Glenn had tried to qualify for the Lakeside nine times before finding success in the 2008 BDO World Darts Championship. He has been described as a "geek" by the press but he is received warmly by the crowds. His catchphrase "Whazza!" on throwing the double has resounded across the Lakeside since he won his first match there. He beat Niels de Ruiter, the number sixteen seed, in the first round of the championship by three sets to one.
Knowing he did not want to practice architecture in rural Oregon, Backen moved to San Francisco, partly attracted by the 1960s culture. He landed a job at the prestigious firm Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons. William Wurster's practicality and attention to detail resounded with Backen and took much of it to heart, instilling much of it into his own design vocabulary. Following his time there, he worked briefly for Warren Callister and Romaldo Giurgola before starting his own practice.
A post office was established on April 4, 1889.Shirk, George H. (1966). Oklahoma Place Names, p. 94. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. In 1889 some fifty thousand potential settlers gathered at the edges of the Unassigned Lands in hopes of staking a claim to a plot. At noon on April 22, 1889, cannons resounded at a 2-million acre (8,100 km) section of Indian Territory, launching president Benjamin Harrison's "Hoss Race" or Land Run of 1889.
Socialist critic of Indonesian literature Bakri Siregar describes Dian yang Tak Kunjung Padam as having a sentimental, lyrical, romantic style, similar to that used by Haji Abdul Malik Karim Amrullah in Tenggelamnya Kapal van der Wijck (The Sinking of the van der Wijck). He notes that the novel uses numerous old Malay forms and idioms. Alisjahbana later wrote that he felt the novel still resounded with teenage sentimentality, although not as much as Tak Putus Dirundung Malang.
Professor James Kugel of Bar Ilan University wrote that the words of resounded in the ears of generations of Jews and Christians. Kugel taught that in a sense, all Jewish and Christian devotion — religious services, prayers, the study of Scripture, and dozens of other acts intended to carry out God's will — find at least part of their origin and inspiration in these words.James L. Kugel. How To Read the Bible: A Guide to Scripture, Then and Now, page 351.
A major exhibition of Gibran's work was shown at Boston's St. Botolph Club during September and October 2007. The curators of this retrospective As a Man/ Kahlil Gibran, selected forty-five examples, including paintings, musical instruments, sculpture, drawings, inventions, and books. With a stunning catalog, champagne toasts, and the violinist Joo-Mee Lee playing Gibran's violins, the opening reception resounded with applause. Stuart Denenberg read This Kahlil Gibran a praise poem honoring his friend of more than forty years.
It will be your destiny to bring joy and delight to many people and that is the greatest happiness one can achieve"'. :"Liszt told me this with great emotion; his voice trembled but you could feel what divine joy these simple words had given him. Never did Liszt – the human being – make a greater impression on me. The flamboyant man-of-the-world, the revered artist was gone; this great moment he had experienced in his childhood still resounded in his soul.
The area resounded to the noise and smoke of heavy industry for the next 400 years and gave rise to many pioneering industries. For instance, Whitebrook became famous for paper milling, when wallpaper became a fashionable way to decorate houses. At Redbrook, copper works were established by 1691, and a century later the village became one of the world's major tinplate manufacturing centres. This industry survived until the 1960s and was renowned for producing the thinnest, highest quality plate in the world.
Perhaps these dances originally represented actions, > such as wars and victories. There was one called the Emu dance, in which > each man extended his arm in a bent manner, like the neck of that bird. In > another dance, one man imitated the movements of a kangaroo grazing in the > woods, whilst a second crawled up, and pretended to spear him. When both > tribes mingled in the dance, the ground trembled with the heaviness of their > steps, and the air resounded with their wild cries.
The market served not just as a place for commerce, but as a stage for politic debates and religious homilies as well. In 1442 the words of St. Bernardino of Siena against gambling and usury resounded. In 1551 St. Ignatius of Loyola opened his first school of grammar and Christian doctrine, from which the Collegio Romano sourced, and held his first spiritual exercises. In 1713 Rosa Venerini opened the first Roman house of the Maestre Pie Venerini, the first women's public school in Italy.
View of Dwaraka The following description of Dvaraka during Krishna’s presence there appears in the Bhagavata Purana (Srimad-Bhagavatam; 10.69.1-12) in connection with the sage Narada’s visit. The City was filled with the sounds of birds and bees flying about the parks and pleasure gardens, while its lakes, crowded with blooming indivara, ambhoja, kahlara, kumuda, and utpala lotuses, resounded with the calls of swans and cranes. Dvaraka boasted 900,000 royal palaces, all constructed with crystal and silver and splendorously decorated with huge emeralds.
All the while the crowd resounded with shouts of Out of bounds, Too far, Right beside him, Over his head, On the ground, Up in the air, Too short, Pass it back in the scrum." Galen, in On Exercise with the Small Ball,P.N.Singer, "Galen: Selected Works" (1997), pages 299-304 describes Harpastum as: :"better than wrestling or running because it exercises every part of the body, takes up little time, and costs nothing."; it was "profitable training in strategy", and could be "played with varying degrees of strenuousness.
The Sangam poems also give a detailed account of the day-to-day routine of the inhabitants of Madurai during this period: Long before dawn, musicians tuned their lutes and practiced upon them, pastry cooks cleaned the floors of their shops and toddy sellers opened their taverns for early customers. Minstrels went around singing their morning blessings. At sunrise, conch shells boomed and big drums resounded in temples, monasteries and the palace of the king. Flower-sellers and vendors of fragrant powders, arecanuts and betel leaves strolled the streets.
Weil, influenced by her mother's beliefs, joined the Daughters of Zion in 1912. The founder of Daughters of Zion, Henrietta Szold, an American Zionist, was a friend of Weil's mother, and Szold's involvement with social work resounded with Weil's social progressivism. The Daughters of Zion would later change their name to Hadassah: The Women's Zionist Organization of America, and Weil would serve as president of her local and regional group for the organization. Weil's aunt, Sarah Weil, helped found the North Carolina Association of Jewish Women in 1921.
Birkhead (1921). The Marquis de Sade used a subgothic framework for some of his fiction, notably The Misfortunes of Virtue and Eugenie de Franval, though the Marquis himself never thought of his like this. Sade critiqued the genre in the preface of his Reflections on the novel (1800) stating that the Gothic is "the inevitable product of the revolutionary shock with which the whole of Europe resounded". Contemporary critics of the genre also noted the correlation between the French Revolutionary Terror and the "terrorist school" of writing represented by Radcliffe and Lewis.
Retrieved 22 April 2007.The Population of Rome by Whitney J. Oates. Originally published in Classical Philology. Vol. 29, No. 2 (April 1934), pp. 101–116. Retrieved 22 April 2007. The public spaces in Rome resounded with such a din of hooves and clatter of iron chariot wheels that Julius Caesar had once proposed a ban on chariot traffic during the day. Historical estimates show that around 20 percent of the population under jurisdiction of ancient Rome (25–40%, depending on the standards used, in Roman Italy)N.
Old Kadmos shore off his hoary hair, Harmonia cried aloud; the whole house resounded heavy booming with the noise of women wailing in concert. Autonoe along with Aristaios her husband went in search of the scattered remains of the dead. She saw her son, but knew him not; she beheld the shape of a dappled deer and saw no aspect of a man. Often she passed the bones of a fawn unrecognized, lying on the ground, and did not understand; for her boy was dead, and she looked to find him in human shape . . .
In England, John Wycliffe organized the Lollard Preacher Order (the "Poor Priests") to promote his views, many of which resounded with those held by the later Protestant Reformers. Monastic life in England came to an abrupt end with Dissolution of the Monasteries during the reign of King Henry VIII. The property and lands of the monasteries were confiscated and either retained by the King, sold to landowners, or given to loyal nobility. Monks and nuns were pensioned off and retired or some were forced to either flee for the continent or to abandon their vocations.
Police barely held as a barrier between the Protestants marching through Belfast's main streets and the irate Catholics who were massing at Castle Place. Continuous gunfire resounded throughout the city until a deluge of summer rain dispersed most of the crowd.alt=The mud that was dredged up to dig the Victoria Channel was made into an artificial island, called Queen's Island, near east Belfast. Robert Hixon, an engineer from Liverpool who managed the arms work on Cromac Street, decided to use his surplus of iron ore to make ships.
Post-1945 Stepney again underwent change as large numbers of refugees from war-torn Europe moved in. Shops began selling previously unheard of foods such as salami or artichokes and the flowers in often tiny front gardens were replaced by vegetables. Again, the number of children increased and second creek and the small number of spare allotments became their playgrounds, complete with re-enactments of battles fought far away. Houses changed colour, copying those found Greece and Italy and the streets resounded with voluble Italian, Greek and ironically - German.
As the fog started to dissipate, Edward saw the Lancastrian centre in disarray and sent in his reserves, hastening its collapse. Cries of Exeter's demise from a Yorkist axe resounded across the battlefield from the Lancastrian left, and amidst the confusion, Montagu was struck in his back and killed by either a Yorkist or one of Oxford's men. Late battle: as the fighting continued, the battle line rotated and Oxford returned to a line that was oriented mostly northeast to southwest. Witnessing his brother's death, Warwick knew the battle was lost.
When he asked who was against it, the crowd resounded with "No!" that made the hall ring. All claimed the US as their own, and wanted to gain their full civil rights there as citizens. After that meeting, Forten and the ministers strongly opposed the ACS, and Forten later converted William Lloyd Garrison, a younger white abolitionist from Boston, against the colonization schemes. Following the January meeting, Forten helped draft a Resolution of the sense of the public, which he and other leaders sent to the Pennsylvania congressional delegation.
There, upon seats constructed with loose stones, assembled, every Sunday, six or eight thousand persons, eager to hear the inspired words of their pastor. In summer they transferred their meetings to an old quarry, named Lecque, surrounded on all sides by immense rocks, and to be reached only by two narrow paths. The burning beams of the sun were excluded from it, and the faithful found themselves sheltered from heat and rain. It was in this sombre cavern that, for more than twenty years, Rabaut's voice resounded, preserving faith and hope in his hearers' hearts.
Gross credits his sound to the appreciation for gospel music that resounded through his parents' Baltimore home. Gross' father was pastor of his hometown church Mt. Zion C.O.G.I.C. up until his death February 1, 2007. After developing his interests in classical music at the Baltimore School for the Arts, Gross studied one semester at Howard University and four years at Berklee College of Music. He earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music Performance at Berklee College of Music, where he studied under professors Joe Viola and Bill Pierce.
This, of > course, implied that a mandate was coming from the Queen charging Mr. > Gladstone with the formation of his first Government. I said nothing, but > waited while the well-directed blows resounded in regular cadence. After a > few minutes the blows ceased and Mr. Gladstone, resting on the handle of his > axe, looked up, and with deep earnestness in his voice, and great intensity > in his face, exclaimed: My mission is to pacify Ireland. He then resumed his > task, and never said another word till the tree was down.
Tudor Parfitt writes, "the riots, which would have been quite inconceivable a short time before, were the first serious indication of dissatisfaction with British rule in the history of the colony". Looking at a few examples such as Aden, Libya, and Iraq it is clear that distaste for colonial rule and resentment over the Zionist movement resounded within Muslim communities in the Arab world. These sentiments led to several acts of violence against Jews throughout the Arab world. What resulted was fear and distrust within Jewish communities, prompting the emigration of hundreds of thousands to Israel.
The Church of Holy Trinity today The Church of Holy Trinity is a church in Mošovce. In the past, the gothic church had a tower, which was the dominant feature of its surroundings, and it belonged to the most monumental sacral buildings in Turiec. The tower, a significant dominant of the town, fulfilled several roles: The town and its surroundings resounded with the ringing of its four bells. The largest one – Obecný, was cast in 1704 and weighed 900 kg, the second one was called Odschod, the third one Median, and the fourth, which weighed 70 kg, bore the name of Umrláč.
The Violent Land (Portuguese: Terras do Sem Fim) is a Brazilian Modernist novel written by Jorge Amado in 1943 and published in English in 1945. It describes the battles to develop cacao plantations in the forests of the Bahia state of Brazil. Amado wrote that "No other of my books. . . is as dear to me as The Violent Land, in it lie my roots; it is from the blood from which I was created; it contains the gunfire that resounded during my early infancy", and suggested that the novel belongs to a distinct Brazilian "literature of cacao".
277 According to Richard Stites, he was important to the liberals of the 1820s: > Franco Venturi noted that the Commentary "resounded throughout the whole > period of the liberal revolutions, from the Spain of 1820 to the Russia of > 1825." An American historian wrote that "the Russian Decembrists, along with > numerous other liberals, Carbonari, and revolutionaries of the 1820s used > this Commentary as their political Bible." The Decembrist Mikhail Orlov > recalled that his circle considered it "the epitome of wisdom."Richard > Stites, The Four Horsemen: Riding to Liberty in Post-Napoleonic Europe > (Oxford University Press, 2014; ), p. 13.
Increase in woodland animals like elk and moose have also been observed, including interactions between moose and winter beaver food caches. Furthermore, beavers can affect the development and physiology of amphibians, it has been reported that larvae of wood frog Rana sylvatica resounded rapidly to changes in their environment induced by beavers. The richness and abundance of reptiles in old beaver ponds were significantly higher compared with new beaver ponds and un- impounded streams. Ponds create nursing ground for fish, increased fish habitat and habitat complexity, however there is concern of beaver's impact on migratory fish patterns.
On 23 September Mosiuoa Lekota announced that he had served the ANC with "divorce papers" and on 8 October announced that a national convention would be held to discuss the future of South African politics and the possible formation of a new political movement. Lekota's call resounded with many Mbeki supporters who started handing in their resignations to the ANC to join Lekota's movement. Notable resignations include those of former Gauteng premier Mbhazima Shilowa, former Western Cape minister of safety and security Leonard Ramatlakane and Mluleki George. Across the country many regular ANC members also handed in their resignations in public demonstrations, burning their ANC membership cards.
The manuscript can be regarded as an incitement of Christian resistance to Muslim rule in the south; the Christian eschatology predicting the fall of the godless kingdoms and the restoration of captive Israel resounded strongly with the Asturians, who by the time of Beatus had only recently gained enough strength to take a stand against Al-Andalus and claim the old Visigothic kingdom as their heritage.Schapiro p. 328. In the image of the rider and snake, the snake appears to be unharmed, indicating the rider to be unambiguously Islamic, and the image is an exhortation to Christians in Al-Andalus not to fear martyrdom.Werckmeister, p.103-105.
In The New York Times, Alex Kotlowitz called it "a remarkable feat of reporting." Writing in The New York Review of Books, Christopher Jencks predicted that the work will become "an ethnographic classic." The book continued to gain popularity following Goffman’s TED Talk, which has over 1 million views and has been widely circulated online. The TED Talk describes the consequences of incarceration and policing for marginalized young people, calling for an end to mass incarceration and highlighting the need for criminal justice reform in America. Goffman’s argument that "tough on crime" policing has done more harm than good has resounded with many advocates for reform on social media.Ted.
In an interview with Cinefantastique, writer Kenneth Biller said that he received a "lot of mail" regarding "Tuvix" and that Janeway's tough decisions in the episode generated a lot of discussion and really moved a lot of people. Director Cliff Bole felt the episode was "well-accepted", and both he and the producers liked it. Actor Tom Wright explained the episode's popularity saying it resounded with viewers because it had no outright moralizations or specific good and evil characters; the episode deals with a no-win scenario. Writer Thomas Richards concurred with Wright in agreeing that the episode's frank depiction without any judgments was a significant strength in its favor.
From 1942 to 1970 Kainen was curator of the Division of Graphic Arts at the Smithsonian's U. S. National Museum. Though jarred by the elementary state of Washington's then slow-paced art scene, Kainen found inspiration in the Victorian skyline and architecture that defined the buildings surrounding his studio in Dupont Circle. In the 1940s he was one of the first abstract artists working in the city, and produced abstract compositions of symbols and forms that resounded with both his physical surroundings and personal experiences. In 1949 Kainen's national loyalty was questioned and he was placed under investigation by the Civil Services loyalty board.
Xenophon's account of the exploit resounded through Greece, where, two generations later, some surmise, it may have inspired Philip of Macedon to believe that a lean and disciplined Hellene army might be relied upon to defeat a Persian army many times its size.Jason of Pherae's plans of a "panhellenic conquest of Persia" (following the Anabasis), which both Xenophon, in his Hellenica but also Isocrates, in his speech addressed directly to Phillip, recount, probably had an influence on the Macedonian king. Besides military history, the Anabasis has found use as a tool for the teaching of classical philosophy; the principles of statesmanship and politics exhibited by the army can be seen as exemplifying Socratic philosophy.
On October 26, 2018, MSU's board of directors voted to fully integrate the College of Law into the university, thereby converting it from a private to a public law school. Then-Dean Lawrence Ponoroff said, "Since the original affiliation in 1995, the relationship between the university and the law college has grown increasingly closer and, at each stage, resounded in benefits to both institutions." The full integration was undertaken in order to facilitate collaboration between the law school and other divisions of MSU, opening up development in core areas of curricular strength such as social justice; innovation and entrepreneurship; and business and regulatory law. The integration was finalized on August 17, 2020.
This was the "half-way house" for the line of stages, running > between New Mildorf and Poughkeepsie, and was well patronized by travelers > and drovers. Its upper room has often resounded to the tread of the "light > fantastic toe," and the loungers of the bar-room as often regaled with > travelers' stories, for which the hardy adventurous life of those early > times afforded abundant material. The Noxon house, built about the same > time, was erected by Benjamin Noxon; and a portion of the brick of which it > is constructed was manufactured on the farm on which it stands. It is > rapidly falling into decay, and will soon be numbered among the things that > were.
Signing with the Disques Vogue record label in 1965, Antoine released his first single "European Highway Number 4" (). In 1966 he released the EP Antoine's Fever Dreams () against the advice of his producer Christian Fechner and Vogue management. The record, with protest songs and exhibiting a garage band style in sharp contrast to the yé-yé style then in vogue, resounded with the less carefree and more militant spirit growing among French youth (this was two years before the May 1968 events in France). Along with figures such as Jacques Dutronc and Michel Polnareff (and to some degree Ronnie Bird and Herbert Leonard), Antoine thus led a new wave in French music.
" Kane wrote of the Igorot people, "there is a peace, a rhythm and an elemental strength in the life...which all the comforts and refinements of civilization can not replace...fifty years hence...there will be little left to remind the young Igorots of the days when the drums and ganzas of the head-hunting canyaos resounded throughout the land. In 1904, a group of Igorot people were brought to St. Louis, Missouri, United States for the St. Louis World's Fair. They constructed the Igorot Village in the Philippine Exposition section of the fair, which became one of the most popular exhibits. The poet T. S. Eliot, who was born and raised in St. Louis, visited and explored the Village.
Belladonna was formed on 14 February 2005 in Rome, Italy by Luana Caraffa and Dani Macchi after forming "a songwriting partnership". During the course of the following months Belladonna wrote and recorded many songs, eleven of which would become their first full album: Metaphysical Attraction. Within months of creating a MySpace account in 2005, Belladonna became the most played Italian band on MySpace next to Lacuna Coil. As Belladonna's celebrity status grew in 2006, they were interviewed by major media outlets such as GQ. Glamour magazine did a two-page photo spread on the band and their MySpace fame. In early 2007 National Italian television La7 resounded Belladonna's web popularity in a news story that described them as "the most listened to Italian band on MySpace".
In the Theogony Zeus and Typhon meet in cataclysmic conflict: > [Zeus] thundered hard and mightily: and the earth around resounded terribly > and the wide heaven above, and the sea and Ocean's streams and the nether > parts of the earth. Great Olympus reeled beneath the divine feet of the king > as he arose and earth groaned thereat. And through the two of them heat took > hold on the dark-blue sea, through the thunder and lightning, and through > the fire from the monster, and the scorching winds and blazing thunderbolt. > The whole earth seethed, and sky and sea: and the long waves raged along the > beaches round and about at the rush of the deathless gods: and there arose > an endless shaking.
In addition to his other vocations, he was the singing-master of the neighbourhood, and picked up many bright shillings by instructing the young folks in psalmody. It was a matter of no little vanity to him on Sundays, to take his station in front of the church gallery, with a band of chosen singers; where, in his own mind, he completely carried away the psalm from the parson. His voice resounded far above all the rest of the Congregation. The schoolmaster was a man of some importance in the female circle of a rural neighbourhood; being considered a kind of idle, gentleman- like personage, of vastly superior taste and accomplishments to the rough country swains, and, indeed, inferior in learning only to the parson.
In 2008, the ELA Soberano was adopted as the PPD's institutional position by governor Aníbal Acevedo Vilá, a transcental move for the movement that resounded beyond the re-election campaign. Despite being inherited by two conservative leaders, the soberanistas have continued to gain a stronghold within the PPD, seizing prominent positions including the mayorship of the Puerto Rican capital of San Juan. The exposition also led to the creation of other movements that supported the ideal, such as Alianza pro Libre Asociación Soberana (ALAS) and Movimiento Unión Soberanista (MUS). As of the Puerto Rican status referendum, 2012, sovereign free association is the option with the largest growth margin among all, experiencing a hundredfold (4,536 to 454,768) expansion in only 14 years.
Business Insider. Unit London has over 80,000+ followers across all social media platforms.@theunitlondon, Instagram In 2015, Unit London relocated to a 4,000 square foot gallery in Soho, London,Meet the 26-year-old entrepreneurs using Instagram to build an art empire from scratch. Business Insider. in keeping with the principle that "Unit London is a gallery, a collective, and a community, which believes in the promotion and showcasing of truly gifted artists, regardless of their profile, reputation, or background. It is upon this fundamental principle that the gallery was founded and its key message has resounded with collectors worldwide."About Us, Unit London Unit London has been named as one of the Top 5 Young Contemporary Galleries in London.
As president of the college, Pusey held the community's respect, and his vocal criticisms of McCarthy resounded loudly in the area. Pusey was a deeply religious man and a somewhat traditionalist scholar, and he was appalled by the student radicalism that raged in American universities in the late 1960s. He complained bitterly that "learning has almost ceased" in many universities because of the violent, revolutionary activities of a "small group of overeager young... who feel they have a special calling to redeem society." In April 1969, student activists occupied Harvard's University Hall (the building that housed most of the administrative offices) in protest over the presence of ROTC on campus at the height of the Vietnam War, and in response, Pusey summoned the police to arrest the demonstrators.
As such, the aftermath of Macmillan's speech brought not only great surprise but a feeling of betrayal and distrust by British Conservatives at the time. Lord Kilmuir, a member of Macmillan's Cabinet at the time of the speech went on to regard that: > Few utterances in recent history have had more grievous consequences...in > Kenya the settlers spoke bitterly of a betrayal, and the ministers of the > Federation approached the British government with equal suspicion (login > required) These feelings not only resounded with European settlers in the African colonies, but were shared by British conservatives who felt that Macmillan had misled British interests. This was illustrated through the speed and scale with which decolonisation occurred. Following this speech therefore, the UK Government felt pressure from within due to economic and political interests surrounding the colonies.
It was estimated that the GAA would make €0.5 million from the deal. The deal led to debate in Ireland, with many loyal fans being unable to watch some key games during the All-Ireland season. The debate was reignited, with Michael Duignan stating publicly on RTÉ: "The biggest disgrace of the weekend was on Saturday evening, that Waterford and Kilkenny (Round 2 hurling match) wasn't shown free-to-air in this country", a statement which resounded with many GAA fans across Ireland and gained much public sympathy, bringing further into question the continuation of the Sky GAA deal in the long term. On the other hand, the GAA was unlikely to receive the same amount of money from RTE as it got from Sky, especially given RTE's increasing emphasis on soccer.
Grave stone of Zia's grave His funeral was held on 19 August 1988 near Islamabad. As a 21-gun salute of light artillery resounded off the lush Margalla Hills, nearly one million mourners joined in chants of "Zia ul-Haq, you will live as long as the sun and moon remain above." His remains were laid to rest in a 4-by-10-foot dirt grave in front of the huge, modern Faisal Mosque that Zia had built as a symbol of Pakistani-Saudi friendship. The Faisal Mosque is named after the late Saudi Arabian king Faisal, and was partially constructed with Saudi funds Also in attendance was his successor President Ghulam Ishaq Khan, chiefs of staff of armed forces, chairman joint chiefs, and other high military and civil officials.
In its original conception, organum was never intended as polyphony in the modern sense; the added voice was intended as a reinforcement or harmonic enhancement of the plainchant at occasions of High Feasts of importance to further the splendour of the liturgy. The analogue evolution of sacred architecture and music is evident: during previous centuries monophonic Mass was celebrated in Abbatial churches, in the course of the 12th and 13th centuries the newly consecrated cathedrals resounded with ever more complex forms of polyphony. Exactly what developments took place where and when in the evolution of polyphony is not always clear, though some landmarks remain visible in the treatises. As in these instances, it is hard to evaluate the relative importance of treatises, whether they describe the 'actual' practice or a deviation of it.
She has inherent magical abilities and begins to study witchcraft; as the series progresses, Willow becomes more sure of herself and her magical powers become significant. Her dependence on magic becomes so consuming that it develops into a dark force that takes her on a redemptive journey in a major story arc when she becomes the sixth season's main villain, threatening to destroy the world in a fit of grief and rage. The Buffy series became extremely popular and earned a devoted fanbase; Willow's intelligence, shy nature, and vulnerability often resounded strongly with viewers in early seasons. Of the core characters, Willow changes the most, becoming a complex portrayal of a woman whose powers force her to seek balance between what is best for the people she loves and what she is capable of doing.
Wesleyan Methodists were also encouraged to neither to hire a barber on the Lord's Day, nor to employ one who conscientiously broke the Sabbath. Karen B. Westerfield Tucker, a United Methodist elder and theologian, writes that the Sampson Circuit of the Methodist Episcopal Church made a Sabbatarian resolution that "resounded throughout all spheres of Methodism": Similarly in 1921, the Methodist Episcopal Church, South heralded the Sunday Sabbath as a "day of worship, meditation and prayer". It proclaimed that the "tendency to commercialize the sabbath, making it a day of traffic, travel, business and pleasure is wrong and we want to sound a word of alarm and call our people to God's way of observance". As such, the Methodist Episcopal Church, South stated that it "oppose[s] the playing of baseball, golf, and like games on that day".
A maintenance worker attempted to restore the power, but was mauled as the alien's shrieks resounded throughout the room and a spray of fluid flew out into the audience hitting the guests' faces. After the spray of fluid, the guests felt their seats rumble and shake as the alien made its way swiftly through the crowd, during which time the guests also felt the "breath" of the alien on the back of their necks and drool dripping from its mouth. The power finally came back, and with assistance from the two X-S Tech technicians, the ravenous alien was ultimately driven back into the broken teleportation device, but overpowering the tube caused the alien to explode right before the tube closed. Guests were then released from their seats while the two technicians bid them goodbye and resumed their search for the misplaced Clench.
According to Simon Philo, Revolver announced the arrival of the "underground London" sound, supplanting that of Swinging London. Barry Miles describes the album as an "advertisement for the underground", and recalls that it resounded on the level of experimental jazz among members of the movement, including those who soon founded the UFO Club. He says it established rock 'n' roll as an art form and identifies its "trailblazing" quality as the impetus for Pink Floyd's The Piper at the Gates of Dawn and for Brian Wilson to complete the Beach Boys' "mini-symphony", "Good Vibrations". Citing composer and producer Virgil Moorefield's book The Producer as Composer, author Jay Hodgson highlights Revolver as a "dramatic turning point" in recording history through its dedication to studio exploration over the "performability" of the songs, as this and subsequent Beatles albums reshaped listeners' preconceptions of a pop recording.
In 1683 the Commonwealth scored its last major victory that resounded on the European scene, the relief of Vienna by king John III Sobieski. During the 18th century, European powers (most frequently consisting of Russia, Sweden, Prussia and Saxony) fought several wars for the control of the territories of the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, particularly during the Great Northern War. By the end of the 18th century a series of internal conflicts and wars with foreign enemies (the War of the Bar Confederation) led to the dissolution of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the partitioning of most of its dependent territories among other European powers. The final attempts to preserve independence of the Commonwealth, including the political reforms of the Great Sejm, eventually failed on the military front, with the Commonwealth defeats in the Polish–Russian War of 1792 and the Kościuszko Uprising of 1794, ultimately ending in Poland's final partition and the final dissolution of the remains of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
The lyrics were written by Josué Trocado (1882–1962) in 1916. In the first half of the 20th century, it was played by Orfeão Poveiro.[Inventário, Arquivos Privados – Arquivo do Orfeão Poveiro - Arquivo Municipal da Póvoa de Varzim Local historian Viriato Barbosa, in the Cultural Bulletin in 1971, stated that "Those who would live and those who guessed, dying like a swan singing, would not accomplish their mission proclaiming high and with good sound their faith, their love to the arts, and in good spirit and with singing excitement to the land were they flourished." and in the "yearly festival recitation in the night of September 9, 1916, and while the Garrett cloth was lifted, the volume of the sound of the voices of that dark assemblage of men, all known faces, all dressed in black, with white shirt fronts, resounded pathetically by the opening of the show with the hymn." Cities and municipalities cannot have anthems in Portugal.
Trefriw boasted a rock cannon, originally sited in the open on the hill overlooking Llanrwst, but today it is surrounded by the forest of Coed Creigiau. Comprising 13 holes, each about 80 cm apart,The Rock Cannon of Gwynedd, Griff R. Jones its use in 1863 was reported in the local paper where it is recorded that "Rock and metal cannons were fired in such profusion that about 8cwt of gunpowder was consumed."Carnarvon and Denbigh Herald, 14 March 1863 This was to celebrate the marriage of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales to Princess Alexandra of Denmark on 10 March 1863. It was also fired in 1872 following the marriage of Peter Lewis, a local timber merchant, to Miss Williams; the Llangollen Advertiser reported that “one of the grandest balls we have ever witnessed” was held at the Belle Vue Hotel, and "the firing of [rock] cannon resounded through the valley like thunder".
In May 1782 a feu de joie at West Point celebrated the birth of the Dauphin of France, and was witnessed by a Dr. Thacher. > The arbor was, in the evening, illuminated by a vast number of lights, > which, being arranged in regular and tasteful order, exhibited a scene vying > in brilliancy with the starry firmament. The officers having rejoined their > regiments, thirteen cannon were again fired as a prelude to the general feu- > de-joie, which immediately succeeded throughout the whole line of the army > on the surrounding hills, and being three times repeated, the mountains > resounded and echoed like tremendous peals of thunder, and the flashing from > thousands of firearms in the darkness of the evening, could be compared only > to the most vivid flashes of lightning from the clouds. The feu-de-joie was > immediately followed by three shouts of acclamation and benediction for the > Dauphin by the united voices of the whole army on all sides.
During the time Haydn lived at Eisenstadt or Esterháza, when his music resounded day and night in the castle and gardens of his Prince, why should not his own airs, or scraps at least of his own melodies, have stolen through the open windows and remained in the memories, first of the people whose duty it was to interpret them, and then of the scattered population of the surrounding country? The reverse-transmission theory would offer a rather different explanation for why Haydn's versions of the tunes resemble the folk versions more at the beginning than elsewhere - it would be the beginning that would most likely be well remembered by folk singers, and the later passages that, diverging most from folk style, would be most likely to be altered. Concerning the possibility of reverse transmission, it is conceivable that we have some testimony from Haydn himself. In his oratorio The Seasons, the composer depicted a rural plowman whistling a tune from his own "Surprise" Symphony.
Haile Selassie gave the "War" speech on October 4, 1963, calling for world peace at the 1963 U.N. General Assembly in New York City. This historical speech was spoken a few weeks after the Organization of African Unity (OAU) was founded in Ethiopian capital city Addis Ababa, where Haile Selassie chaired a summit meeting gathering almost every African head of state (The King of Morocco had declined the invitation). This U.N. speech resounded even louder as Haile Selassie had made a name for himself on the international scene in 1936, when he spoke at The League of Nations in Geneva. There, Haile Selassie warned the world that if the members of the League did not fulfill their obligation to militarily assist Ethiopia against the invasion by fascist Italy, the League would then cease to exist as a matter of fact and the rest of the member states were to suffer the same fate as his country.
The magnificence of early Christian basilicas reflected the patronage of the emperor and recalled his imperial palaces and reflected the royal associations of the basilica with the Hellenistic Kingdoms and even earlier monarchies like that of Pharaonic Egypt. Similarly, the name and association resounded with the Christian claims of the royalty of Christ – according to the Acts of the Apostles the earliest Christians had gathered at the royal Stoa of Solomon in Jerusalem to assert Jesus's royal heritage. For early Christians, the Bible supplied evidence that the First Temple and Solomon's palace were both hypostyle halls and somewhat resembled basilicas. Hypostyle synagogues, often built with apses in Palestine by the 6th century, share a common origin with the Christian basilicas in the civic basilicas and in the pre-Roman style of hypostyle halls in the Mediterranean Basin, particularly in Egypt, where pre-classical hypostyles continued to be built in the imperial period and were themselves converted into churches in the 6th century.
Budden makes a useful observation on the musical qualities of the original version: "all the devices that we associate with the term bel canto are sparingly used"Budden, p. 254 and he suggests that, at mid-century, "this amounted to a denial of Italy's national birthright" for an audience brought up on the conventions employed by Vincenzo Bellini or Gaetano Donizetti. In his "Introduction to the 1881 Score", James Hepokoski emphasizes that Budden's assertion appeared to be true, since the 1857 original "resounded with clear echoes of [Verdi's] earlier style" and that he employed the known techniques but, at the same time, moved away from them, so that: :the basic musical conventions of the Risorgimento (separate numbers with breaks for applause, multi-movement arias and duets with repetitive codas, cadenzas and repeated cabalettas, static concertato ensembles, and so on) were indeed present, if usually modified [so that] the musical discourse was characteristically terse, angular, and muscular.James Hepokoski, in Kahn, p.
This anxiety was brought to its > highest pitch by the cry of "Here come the geese." The shout resounded from > side to side; but amidst was a shriek from the shores; the bridge was > observed to give way; it lowered on one side; the chains snapped asunder, > one after another in momentary succession, and almost before the gaze of the > thronging multitude could be drawn from its object of worthless interest it > was riveted to the half sunken bridge--suspended on one side by its unbroken > chains—-cleared of all its occupants—-every one of whom were plunged into > the stream, and over them the waters were flowing as if unconscious of the > fearful tragedy which had momentarily occurred.Article from the Norwich > News, reprinted in the Bradford Observer, 8 May 1845 In February 1847 the Board agreed to pay Cory £26,000 to buy him out. A railway-owned bridge was to be provided as well as a replacement for his own bridge, and tolls would be charged to persons taking the Acle Road and not proceeding to or from the railway station.
By his pride and luxury the Christian religion was rendered odious > in the eyes of the Gentiles. His council chamber and his throne, the > splendour with which he appeared in public, the suppliant crowd who > solicited his attention, the multitude of letters and petitions to which he > dictated his answers, and the perpetual hurry of business in which he was > involved, were circumstances much better suited to the state of a civil > magistrate than to the humility of a primitive bishop. When he harangued his > people from the pulpit, Paul affected the figurative style and the > theatrical gestures of an Asiatic sophist, while the cathedral resounded > with the loudest and most extravagant acclamations in the praise of his > divine eloquence. Against those who resisted his power, or refused to > flatter his vanity, the prelate of Antioch was arrogant, rigid, and > inexorable; but he relaxed the discipline, and lavished the treasures of the > church on his dependent clergy, who were permitted to imitate their master > in the gratification of every sensual appetite.
Thus, the Corporation may be a manifestation of the copyholders of Highbury Manor (already mentioned). The establishment of property rights, even today, is an important and serious matter for those concerned, but in Stroud Green it seems that its undertaking was (occasionally) not without a funny side, as is apparent from an account of the following year's meeting: > On Monday last, according to annual Custom, the Mayor, and Aldermen of the > respectable Corporation of Stroud Green held their Court of Conservancy at > Stapleton Hall (the capital Mansion on what is humorously called their > Estate) near Mount Pleasant, where a sumptuous Repast was prepared for their > reception of their present Sheriffs. After Dinner several loyal Healths were > drank, and the Hall resounded with the names of Granby and Pitt. The whole > was conducted with all [reasonable] Decorum; but what contributed in a great > Measure to damp their Satisfaction was the lnebriety of his Worship's Sword- > Bearer, who having imbibed large Drenches of Claret and Hock, was rendered > unfit to scale the Gates and Stiles belonging to their Grounds, which, in a > formal Procession, they yearly Survey, and by tumbling over Neck and Heels, > unhappily lost the Insigne of his Office, viz.

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