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51 Sentences With "somehow or other"

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

But all times are somehow or other the wrong time.
Somehow or other, the clutter just enhances the sense of coziness.
What seems certain is that, somehow or other, he evaded surveillance in Tokyo.
Because, hey, they've got to get the things into customers' hands somehow or other.
In fact, in all of his plays the animal is pretty prominent, somehow or other.
Now, somehow or other the politicians try to convey to us that this suspicion is misplaced.
What it came down to, per Arty, was that somehow or other he found himself with another dependent.
Somehow or other, back in the 70s... I mean, it was heartbreaking doing our last gig at Aberdare.
"There's a misconception about guardianship, that somehow or other you become that person's alter ego," Mr. Barbuti said.
Somehow or other, our ancestors came through that chaos, but before the invention of agriculture people travelled light.
And somehow or other this will turn out to be another deep-state conspiracy, probably orchestrated by George Soros.
Somehow or other, the argument goes, Westminster would stop a prime minister who is bent on leaving without a deal.
Somehow or other, it always ends up being about the men, their struggles and second chances, our feelings for and about them.
And it's certainly possible to have a ton of great statistics that somehow or other fail to capture what really matters to people.
"The human population of the world is growing and is occupying more space, and it has got to be accommodated somehow or other," Philip said.
And somehow or other, Western societies will have to accommodate both impulses, without slipping into a permanent state of cultural war or as a Muslim would say, fitna.
Yet he's determined to snatch food from the mouths of the truly desperate, because he's sure that somehow or other they're getting away with something, having it too easy.
He passed several ash barrels on his way, but somehow or other some one always seemed to be gazing in his direction when he approached one, and once or twice he saw a watchful policeman.
"When they could have been 4-4 and gotten rid of a messy case, they somehow or other struggled to keep the case alive," Stevens told the audience at the event that was covered by C-SPAN.
Somehow or other, well-established Canadians who have become disillusioned with religion, and with the behavioural norms that religion tries to impose, will have to co-exist with newcomers for whom the flame of faith burns bright.
Johnson told the BBC on Tuesday: "Somehow or other, we&aposve got to stop the Iranians acquiring a nuclear weapon," adding that if the current deal doesn&apost work then the world would need a new one.
Johnson yesterday told the BBC that world leaders should be open to a new deal in order to stop Tehran developing a nuclear weapon: "Somehow or other, we&aposve got to stop the Iranians acquiring a nuclear weapon," he said.
ELISABETH VINCENTELLI WE ALL MAKE MISTAKES Somehow or other, John Krasinski played a big part of the opening night of "Dry Powder" at the Public Theater with the flaps of his power-suit jacket tucked into the back of his pants.
"The government hasn't realised that just having the capacity market isn't going to do the job...(it) is going to have to put more money on the table somehow or other to get those gas plants built," UKERC director Jim Watson said.
I committed to memory a curtain lecture for my brother, though somehow or other it escaped me and was never delivered.
" On March 2, 1918, he made his last entry: "This fighting we are doing now is the real thing. A man gets to be quite a fatalist in this game. If somehow or other they get me -— all well and good. If not —- still better.
Out of love for him, Mademoiselle de la Chaux abandons all — her honor, her fortune, her family — to be with Gardeil. Somehow or other, they live happily. Gardeil, a translator by trade, works until he is no longer able. His wife helps him by learning Greek, Hebrew and other languages.
Danby left London, declaring that he would never live there again, and that the Academy, instead of aiding him, had, somehow or other, used him badly. For a decade he lived on the Lake of Geneva in Switzerland, becoming a Bohemian with boat-building fancies, painting only now and then.
End of 1960s and beginning of 1970s was a period of political turmoil. The left movement in the fold of CPI(ML) rose to its peak ushering in deaths and murders in a devastating measure. The Bangladesh liberation war of 1971 also created great commotion. All creative persons were somehow or other affected by these incidents.
Somehow or other he took the blame for it, you know, as he would. I remember that vividly.” A year later what would become known as the “Bath Riots” occurred in connection with the required fumigations of immigrants. When a 17-year-old maid named Carmelita Torres refused to submit to the gasoline bath, others on the international trolley joined her.
On 9 October 1952, Senior Chief Waruhiu was shot and killed by Mau Mau gunmen. Baring had been on a tour of Central Province. It was cut short.Conveniently, Baring later remembered having been told by the chiefs that, "if you don't get Kenyatta and those all around him and shut them up somehow or other we are in a terrible, hopeless, position".
They are said never to intermarry with landlubbers, but > somehow or other their tongue has crept into many villages in the Chiklung > section. The Chinese say the Tanka speech sounds like that of the Americans. > It seems to have no tones. A hardy race, the Tanka are untouched by the > epidemics that visit our coast, perhaps because they live so much off land.
And I wrote. And I wrote. Finally—oh, after I'd torn > up any number of manuscripts—I sold a book… And somehow or other I began to > feel encouraged. In fact, after I'd sold three novels, I felt so brave I > gave up my advertising job. We sold the lamps and the easy chairs and most > of the books, and came blithely to New York.
For instance, a guitar: it sounds, respectively do we perceive it acoustically, if the strings are excited or the corpus is oscillated somehow or other. So the player expends energy and translates it into the instrument. The user and viewer of the cycleonium is to be made aware of that, in principle, musical instruments are nothing else than objects that only operate with a certain energy expenditure.
There you were willy nilly, and, somehow or other, the weather never pointed to set fair until all the provisions had been consumed, and to avoid semi-starvation it was necessary to go back to the mainland to replenish the larder.”Scilly and the Scillonians by JG Uren. UK Rare Books Club.(1907) Page 96. Tourism on Scilly started in earnest once the Cornwall Railway link from Penzance to London was completed in 1859.
On the subject of art itself, Diller has said that he "always had the feeling that art really develops through a kind of general activity. You can have your isolated geniuses, but it's always been somehow or other a product of a kind of ferment." Diller felt that artists, as a whole, were greatly under-appreciated in American society. He understood the struggles of being an artist in the early 20th century.
Julia, however, is engaged to Mauricio Doval, a successful businessman who hides his bloody business affairs behind his zealous defence of organic and natural products. Diego and Julia have a brief encounter; yet, due to various circumstances, they part company expecting to never meet again. Diego becomes a very close friend of Martina Mansur, a woman who lost her small son two years earlier and believes that, somehow or other, Mauricio is to blame for the death.
' There's a beat and then Harry leans across and says, 'Where did the flower go?' And in that line (which, by the way, was an ad-lib by Mr. Bakula) is the voice of the audience - 'Where did the flower go? I know it's a trick, I know it's not real magic, but where did the flower go?' - I wanted to lay into the texture of Swann's illusions, images which somehow or other recurred elsewhere in the narrative.
Now a staunch anti-Communist, he has confirmed that he saw clusters of flies crawling on ice.Méray, Tibor; On Burchett, Callistemon Publications, Kallista, Victoria, Australia; 2008; p. 51. Méray has argued the evidence was the result of an elaborate conspiracy: "Now somehow or other these flies must have been brought there ... the work must have been carried out by a large network covering the whole of North Korea."Méray, Tibor; On Burchett, Callistemon Publications, Kallista, Victoria, Australia; 2008; p. 252.
Contains a fascinating account of a journey to Malden Island during the guano-digging era. declaring that "...shade, coolness, refreshing fruit, pleasant sights and sounds: there are none. For those who live on the island, it is the scene of an exile which has to be endured somehow or other". She described Malden as containing "a little settlement fronted by a big wooden pier, and a desolate plain of low greyish-green herbage, relieved here and there by small bushes bearing insignificant yellow flowers".
As his biographer says, thousands found in his sermons "a living source of impulse, a practical direction of thought, a key to many of the problems of theology, and above all a path to spiritual freedom." Rabbi Duncan, however, said of him, "Robertson believed that Christ did something or other, which, somehow or other, had some connection or other with salvation."John Brentnall, Just a Talker: Sayings of John ('Rabbi') Duncan (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1997), 182. Robertson's closing years were full of sadness.
" Los Angeles Times, August 10, 1912, page I-14"South Angeles Is New Name: Citizens of Watts Tire of Quips and Jests at Expense of City and Will Rechristen Town," Los Angeles Times, January 17, 1913, page II-9 Another plan for a city name change surfaced in 1919, when the city trustees asked for suggestions. Mayor Towne said: "Watts has got a bad reputation in Southern California, somehow or other . . . a good many of us felt that the liquor element left a black mark upon the community's name. . . . Towns are something like people.
But John was doing The Last Elephant at the time." "I was off in Africa," Lithgow said. "You couldn't phone in and you couldn't get calls out, but somehow or other a faxed script arrived on my bed one night by a carrier caribou." Describing the acting in the film, Lithgow stated "The first time I saw James was in a student production of Jean-Paul Sartre's The Victors, when he was 19 years old, even back then, I'd heard an awful lot about him and his work process.
I would so like the > feeling that we generate on the air to reflect the reality of death in life: > most of the time it is a very quiet, private affair, generates little public > attention: we grieve and then somehow or other we just have to get on with > things. I suppose at the risk of sounding squirmingly precious, I would like > Victor to die with dignity. Salmon agreed not to broadcast the episode at Christmas. It was first transmitted on BBC One on 20 November 2000, forty minutes in length, rather than usual thirty.
What was conjecture with him, is now a realized > fact. But whether he fully comprehended the great truth upon which that rock > stood and stands, may be doubted. The prevailing ideas entertained by him > and most of the leading statesmen at the time of the formation of the old > Constitution were, that the enslavement of the African was in violation of > the laws of nature; that it was wrong in principle, socially, morally and > politically. It was an evil they knew not well how to deal with; but the > general opinion of the men of that day was, that, somehow or other, in the > order of Providence, the institution would be evanescent and pass away.
On the failure of his plans he retired to the country and awaited events. Whitelocke's career, however, had been marked by moderation and good sense throughout. The necessity of carrying on the government of the country somehow or other had been the chief motive of his adherence to Cromwell rather than any sympathy for a republic or a military dictatorship, and his advice to Cromwell to accept the title of King was doubtless tendered with the object of giving the administration greater stability and of protecting its adherents under the Statute of Henry VII. Nor had he shown himself unduly ambitious or self-seeking in the pursuit of office, and he had proved himself ready to sacrifice high place to the claims of professional honour and duty.
And testing the spark from his spark-plug at the same time as checking the petrol in his tank led to a predictable conflagration that Ogri at once recognised as Malcolm's handiwork from at least a mile away. Somehow or other, Malcolm manages to avoid permanent injury, whether self-inflicted or as a result of a beating from an infuriated Ogri, and Ogri, no matter what loss Malcolm's unexampled stupidity has occasioned him, invariably forgives the poor, useless article in time for the next strip, and Malcolm's cry of "Aargh! I don't wanna die!" will probably be heard for as long as the cartoon is drawn. In the animated cartoon "Ogri - Biker Hero", Malcolm is referred to as Ogri's cousin.
All the foreign journalists are confined to the capital of Ishmaelia, and they are not allowed to leave unless permission has been given by the Minister of Propaganda. The journalists stick together, drinking and trying to pass time, but they watch each other jealously for signs that someone may have a story to send home. However, Lord Hitchcock, the correspondent for the Daily Brute, is noticeably absent, and this sends the reporters on an insane quest into the desert in the hope of finding the sought-after 'scoop'. The story is full of bizarre characters: an insane Swedish diplomat who goes berserk when he drinks too much absinthe, the mysterious Mr. Baldwin (Herbert Lom), and a German woman who claims she somehow or other lost her husband.
During Goodson's time in Vienna Arthur Hinton, a fellow Royal Academian and London friend (with whom she had played in the Academy Orchestra), was studying in the city under Karl Navratil and the two spent much of their time together. Later Hinton went to Munich to study composition with Josef Rheinberger. When they both returned to London, Hinton became a regular visitor of the Conways, with whom Goodson lived as she sought to establish her career. The two married in 1903. She said of him: “I think Arthur Hinton must have mesmerized me into marrying him, for I had decided never, never to marry; everybody thought my career might be spoilt should I do so, but somehow or other our minds and hearts seemed to have been drawing ever nearer.
What is crucial for Badiou is that the structural form of the count-as-one, which makes multiplicities thinkable, implies (somehow or other) that the proper name of being does not belong to an element as such (an original 'one'), but rather the void set (written Ø), the set to which nothing (not even the void set itself) belongs. It may help to understand the concept 'count-as-one' if it is associated with the concept of 'terming': a multiple is not one, but it is referred to with 'multiple': one word. To count a set as one is to mention that set. How the being of terms such as 'multiple' does not contradict the non-being of the one can be understood by considering the multiple nature of terminology: for there to be a term without there also being a system of terminology, within which the difference between terms gives context and meaning to any one term, is impossible.
Melodrama is typically sensational and designed to appeal strongly to the emotions. No other author had such a profound influence on Dickens as William Shakespeare. Regarding Shakespeare as "the great master who knew everything", whose plays "were an unspeakable source of delight", Dickens had a lifelong affinity with the writer, which included seeing theatrical productions of his plays in London and putting on amateur dramatics with friends in his early years. In 1838 Dickens travelled to Stratford-upon- Avon and visited the house in which Shakespeare was born, leaving his autograph in the visitors book. Dickens would draw on this experience in his next work, Nicholas Nickleby (1838–39), expressing the strength of feeling experienced by visitors to Shakespeare’s birthplace: the character Mrs Wititterly states, "I don't know how it is, but after you've seen the place and written your name in the little book, somehow or other you seem to be inspired; it kindles up quite a fire within one." Dickens's Dream by Robert William Buss, portraying Dickens at his desk at Gads Hill Place surrounded by many of his characters Dickens’ writing style is marked by a profuse linguistic creativity.. Satire, flourishing in his gift for caricature, is his forte.

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