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43 Sentences With "supped"

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

Raquel Welch and Walter Cronkite supped on duck, salmon and pizza.
Back in the day, people supped on groundhog stew and stretched the hides to make banjos.
I have drunk the legendary Vietnamese coffee and supped the sulphurous vegetable broth on the collapsing sofas.
Toadstools are eaten and blood is supped, but the procedures are neither particularly gory nor pornographically brutal.
And increased coordination between the D.N.C., the D.C.C.C. and the D.S.C.C. I supped on an alphabet soup.
Now, to be frank, this isn't the first time Toyota has gone racing with a supped-up Prius.
Clinton supped with Ralph Lauren at the Polo Bar as other diners, including Christie Brinkley, orbited her table.
A marching band played John Philip Sousa as guests boarded the plane, where 21988 passengers supped on cuisine from Maxim's in Paris.
Hours later, I supped on silky broth rich with fat and gelatin, kept lively by tart sauerkraut and the sweet, almost floral taste of caraway.
They supped on "consommé à la Victoria" or "crème de volaille à la Berchoux" before choosing "kingfish à la Richelieu" or fried smelts for their fish course.
Since Gerald Ford enriched himself with speaking fees and board memberships after leaving office, every former president but Jimmy Carter has supped often at the corporate table.
Several sizable parties of blondes supped on gravlax and Swedish meatballs, while a sound system played "I Wanna Sex You Up," by Color Me Badd, at a reasonable volume.
Many have supped at the chalice of rock 'n' roll, and more have succumbed than made it to the grand old age of 70, living the uncompromising lifestyle that goes with being Motörhead's Dionysian leader.
Democrats on the committee, facing a man many of them had served and supped with, tempered their push on Mr. Sessions's troublesome history on civil rights, and he seemed to escape their questioning relatively unscathed.
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Daniel Ricciardo is missing the taste of post-race champagne, whether supped from a sweaty boot or not, and has made a return to the Formula One podium with Renault his main aim for 2020.
I walked the Roman paths that were most familiar and dearest to me, lingered in the Roman piazzas that had given me pleasure before and supped not just on the classics but on one classic in particular: gricia.
LONDON — We've dined in Westeros and supped damn fine coffee in Twin Peaks, so it was perhaps inevitable someone would eventually combine two more of the capital city's obsessions — Star Wars and eating — in a handy pop-up experience.
Now let's talk zombies, there are a few different types: your basic climbing zombie, your money zombies which are orange, some supped up fuzzy zombies, and then there are these green guys jump around unexpectedly making them harder to hit.
A sommelier was on hand to pour wine over the dozens of attendees at the 11th "Beaujolais Nouveau Day" in Hakone, southwest of Tokyo, where adults supped and swam in the new, fruity offering and children toasted with grape juice.
They included Western governments that had kept up the pressure on the generals, campaigning dons from the Oxford high tables at which Ms Suu Kyi in happier days had supped, and foreign journalists who had smuggled liberal reading matter to Ms Suu Kyi during her bleakest years.
Though she did visit England and the West Coast, and supped with other modernists in New York, the adult Marianne faced a tough life in a series of tiny apartments, inseparable from a very needy Mary, and almost unable to voice her resentments except through extraordinarily indirect poems like the ones in her breakthrough book, "Observations" (1924).
If you've never read anything by Peter Ackroyd, imagine settling down in a pub, a proper pub, a pub that sells warm beer out of wooden kegs, a pub without music, a pub where you could probably smoke inside if the bloke behind the bar was in a good mood, a pub where the food options stretch to cheese and onion or prawn cocktail, the kind of pub that traps you in its glorious web for hours, days on end, the sort of pub that'll have you regretting every penny spent and every pint supped in every other pub you've ever frequented.
The house remained in the Galloway family until 1866. In 1771, a thirty-nine-year-old George Washington "dined and supped" at Tulip Hill twice. One of the young Galloway children is reputed to have ridden his horse up the central staircase.
Benbow received a letter from du Casse after the engagement: > Sir, > I had little hopes on Monday last but to have supped in your cabin: but it > pleased God to order it otherwise. I am thankful for it. As for those > cowardly captains who deserted you, hang them up, for by God they deserve > it. > Yours, > Du Casse.
He married in 1657, and died on 11 May 1684, while president, of pneumonia, and was buried in Christ Church, Newgate Street. His house was in the college in Warwick Lane. He was thought agreeable by Samuel Pepys, who often dined and supped with him. They walked together to view the ravages of the Great Fire of London of 1666.
At the coronation of the queen, 17 May 1590, Glamis received the honour of knighthood. The favour in which he was held at court since the queen's accession began to arouse the jealousy of the chancellor John Maitland, 1st Lord Maitland of Thirlestane. Maitland complained that he supped at Leith with the outlawed Earl of Bothwell in June 1591, and his hereditary enemy, Lord Spynie, was thereupon empowered to apprehend him.
For > it might happen that Antony would ask for supper immediately, and after a > little while, perhaps, would postpone it and call for a cup of wine, or > engage in conversation with some one. Wherefore," he said, "not one, but > many suppers are arranged; for the precise time is hard to hit." This tale, > then, Philotas used to tell; and he said also that as time went on he became > one of the medical attendants of Antony's oldest son, whom he had of Fulvia, > and that he usually supped with him at his house in company with the rest of > his comrades, when the young man did not sup with his father. Accordingly, > on one occasion, as a physician was making too bold and giving much > annoyance to them as they supped, Philotas stopped his mouth with some such > sophism as the: "To the patient who is somewhat feverish cold water must be > given; but everyone who has a fever is somewhat feverish; therefore to > everyone who has a fever cold water should be given.
On the following evening, Tandy recounts, "I was invited to sup… by Messrs. T…& D… in a house where Blackwell, Corbet and Morres supped also; we remained there until midnight, and at four o'clock went to our hotel."Letter written by Napper Tandy shortly before his death and published as an addendum to William Corbet's La Conduite de Sénat de Hamburg devoilée aux yeux de l'Europe, (1807). The initials stand for the names of Samuel Turner, and either Duckett or Durnin.
He enjoyed a high place in the personal favor of Alexander, becoming one of his hetairoi and most prominent courtiers during the Macedonian monarch's last days: he hosted the banquet where Alexander supped just before his final illness. Plutarch (Moralia, 65) accuses him of being among the shameless flatterers who drove Alexander to some of his most reprehensible actions. In later literature, e.g. the Alexander romance, he was considered a member of Antipater's conspiracy to poison Alexander, which took place during the banquet hosted at his house.
Founded in early 2005 in Dayton, Ohio by Seth Graham, Todd Osborn and Jeremiah Stikeleather. As a two guitar and bass trio Romance of Young Tigers was not able to find a drummer initially and optioned to forgo percussion in favor of loops to keep time. Stikeleather left to join Twelve Tribes after the release of the I Have Supped Full on Horrors EP and Gabe Mitchell and Aaron Smith joined for the recording of the Marie EP. The band disbanded in June 2009.
Paul with Marguerite on his arm, and Georges conducting Angèle, both adjourn after midnight to private dining rooms in a fashionable restaurant. The potential for confusion is enhanced by the presence in another private room of Hortense, the maid, also wearing a pink domino. She is escorted by Henri, a young lawyer, the nephew of Marguerite's formidable aunt, Madame Beaubuisson. When the three couples have supped, and the champagne has flowed freely, a series of "quiproquos" – mistaken identities – follows, in which there is a continual, rapid interchange of partners.
Pietro di Vinciolo goes from home to eat, and his wife brings a boy into the house to bear her company. Pietro returns, and she hides her lover under a hen-coop. Pietro explains that in the house of Ercolano, with whom he was to have supped, there was discovered a young man bestowed there by Ercolano's wife. The lady censures Ercolano's wife, but unluckily an ass treads on the fingers of the boy that is hidden under the hen-coop, so that he cries out in pain.
A glance over the long list shows that fifty-six of his slaves were mentioned by name. The following notice of General Jonathan Clark's death appeared in the Western Sun, published at Vincennes, December 14, 1811: "Another Revolutionary hero is gone--Died at his seat near Louisville, Kentucky, on Monday, the 25th ult. (November, 1811), General Jonathan Clark--He supped with his family on the 24th, retired at his accustomed hour to rest, and in the morning was found numbered with the dead." Sarah Hite was the younger by some eight years and survived him about that time.
From the 1820s enhanced and stronger varieties of porter known as "Extra Superior Porter" or "Double Stout" were developed in Dublin for the export trade to Britain.Zytophile notes on stout beer by Martyn Cornell; accessed 30 Sept 2014 By 1837 the young Benjamin Disraeli mentioned that he had: ".. supped at the Carlton.. off oysters, Guinness and broiled bones". In the background Arthur's brewery benefited hugely until the 1830s from the difference between the malt tax levied in Britain and Ireland, easing his higher-value exports to Britain, and so Arthur became more of a supporter of the union as it was in the 1830s, having been a supporter of Grattan's form of home rule in his youth.
Queen Elizabeth I supped with him there, in July 1561, "before my house was fully finished", Cecil recorded in his diary, calling the place "my rude new cottage." It was later inherited by his elder son, Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter, and was known as "Exeter House". A new Theobalds House, just off the main road north from London to Ware, was built between 1564 and 1585 by the order of Cecil, intending to build a mansion partly to demonstrate his increasingly dominant status at the Royal Court, and also to provide a palace fine enough to accommodate the Queen on her visits.Loades, D., The Cecils: Privilege and Power behind the throne, The National Archives, 2007. p124-5.
During Kett's Rebellion, he preached at the rebels' camp on Mousehold Hill near Norwich, without much effect, and later encouraged his secretary, Alexander Neville, to write his history of the rising. Parker's association with Protestantism advanced with the times, and he received higher promotion under John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland, than under the moderate Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset. At Cambridge, he was a friend of Martin Bucer and preached Bucer's funeral sermon in 1551. In 1552 he was promoted to the rich deanery of Lincoln, and in July 1553 he supped with Northumberland at Cambridge, when the duke marched north on his hopeless campaign against the accession of Mary Tudor.
The son of Phillip de Arbuthnott was Hugh Arbuthnott of that ilk who was implicated in the murder of John Melville of Glenbervie who was the sheriff of the Mearns in 1420. The traditional story is that sheriff Melville had made himself very unpopular with the local lairds by too strict an adherence to his jurisdiction. The Duke of Albany at the time was also Regent of Scotland while James I of Scotland was in captivity in England. The Duke is alleged to have become tired of endless complaints about Melville and exclaimed "sorrow gin that sheriff were sodden and supped in broo", which was taken by the disgruntled lairds as a signal to kill the sheriff.
However, the Scotsman, though he took the Englishman's money, reported the stratagem to Agnes, so she was ready for the English when they made entry. Although Salisbury was in the lead, one of his men pushed past him just at the moment when Agnes's men lowered the portcullis, separating him from the others. Agnes, of course, had meant to trap Salisbury, but she moved from stratagem to taunt, hollering at the earl, " Farewell, Montague, I intended that you should have supped with us, and assist us in defending the Castle against the English." At one point, having captured Agnes's brother, John Randolph, 3rd Earl of Moray, the English threw a rope around his neck and threatened to hang him if Agnes did not surrender the castle.
The position of dame d'honneur was given to Marie Gabrielle de Durfort de Lorges, the wife of the Duke of Saint-Simon, while her first cousin, Marie Anne de Bourbon became her lady-in-waiting, a post Marie Anne later resigned because of her cousin's wayward nature. > I shall pass lightly over an event which, engrafted upon some others, made > some noise, notwithstanding the care taken to hush it up. The Duchess of > Burgundy supped at Saint-Cloud one evening with the Duchess of Berry and > others, Madame de Saint-Simon absenting herself from the party. The Duchess > of Berry and the Duke of Orléans, but she more than he, got so drunk that > the Duchess of Burgundy, the Duchess of Orléans, and the rest of the company > knew not what to do.
Mallett, the great beauty and > fortune of the North, who had supped at White Hall with Mrs. Stewart, and > was going home to her lodgings with her grandfather, my Lord Haly, by coach; > and was at Charing Cross seized on by both horse and foot men, and forcibly > taken from him, and put into a coach with six horses, and two women provided > to receive her, and carried away. Upon immediate pursuit, my Lord of > Rochester (for whom the King had spoke to the lady often, but with no > successe) was taken at Uxbridge; but the lady is not yet heard of, and the > King mighty angry, and the Lord sent to the Tower. Hereupon my Lady did > confess to me, as a great secret, her being concerned in this story.
Lucius Cornificius, a member of the plebeian gens Cornificia, was a Roman politician and consul in 35 BC. Cornificius served as the accuser of Marcus Junius Brutus in the court which tried the murderers of Julius Caesar. In 38 BC Octavian gave him the command of a fleet in the war against Sextus Pompeius during which he distinguished himself in battle in the waters around Sicily. In 36 BC he was given part of the army and managed to extricate his troops from a dangerous situation and unite them with Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa at Mylae. For these services he was rewarded with the consulship in 35 BC. It is said of Cornificius that he afterwards accustomed himself in Rome to ride home upon an elephant whenever he supped out.
Before the 1969 revision of the Roman Missal, the phrase mysterium fidei was included in the formula of consecration of the wine spoken inaudibly by the priest, appearing as follows (here accompanied by an unofficial English translation):Canon of the Mass :::Text (in Latin) :Simili modo postquam cenatum est, :accipiens et hunc praeclarum calicem :in sanctas ac venerabiles manus suas: :item tibi gratias agens, benedixit, :deditque discipulis suis, dicens: :Accipite, et bibite ex eo omnes. :Hic est enim calix sanguinis mei, :novi et aeterni testamenti: :mysterium fidei: :qui pro vobis et pro multis effundetur :in remissionem peccatorum. :Haec quotiescumque feceritis, :in mei memoriam facietis. ::Unofficial English translation :In like manner, after He had supped, :taking also into His holy and venerable hands :this goodly chalice, :again giving thanks to Thee, He blessed it, :and gave it to His disciples, saying: :Take and drink ye all of this: :For this is the chalice of My blood, :of the new and eternal testament: :the mystery of faith: :which will be shed for you and for many :unto the remission of sins.
Philotas of Amphissa was a physician of the 1st century BC . He studied at Alexandria, and was in that city at the same time with the triumvir Mark Antony, of whose profusion and extravagance he was an eye-witness. He became acquainted with the triumvir's son Antyllus, with whom he sometimes supped, about 30 BC. On one occasion, when a certain physician had been annoying the company by his logical sophisms and forward behaviour, Philotas silenced him at last with the following syllogism: Cold water is to be given in a certain fever; but every one who has a fever has a certain fever; therefore cold water is to be given in all fevers; which so pleased Antyllus, who was at table, that he pointed to a sideboard covered with large goblets, and said: I give you all these, Philotas. As Antyllus was quite a lad at that time, Philotas scrupled to accept such a gift, but was encouraged to do so by one of the attendants, who asked him if he did not know that the giver was a son of the triumvir Antonius, and that he had full power to make such presents.

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