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50 Sentences With "take the air"

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

Way to take the air out of this great segment.
You take the air time because participation is really important.
We were trying to take the air out of the gym.
Teaching children how to take the air out of the teasing.
Simply knowing what these words mean can take the air out of them.
Take the Air India case above (the details of which are still far from clear).
Such a decision will likely take the air out of the investigation into the scandal.
"Take the Air Max 90 Neon," he says, pouring vodka into a glass over ice.
" But she said the idea was to just "take the air out of the situation.
South Carolina will take the air out of the ball and hope Marquette goes cold.
Bits Facebook keeps trying to take the air out of allegations that it is anti-conservative.
So you know, I said, 'I'll just quit drinking and take the air out of their tires.
"This song right here — 'take the air out of the ball just so I can flex,'" Landry said.
According to Padilla, Uber agreed to settle with Jacobs to "take the air out" of his whistleblowing threats.
"It's a business decision that we're not going to take the air out of our broadcast," Druley said Thursday morning.
He finished with six catches for 14 yards as Cordrea Tankersley and Adrian Baker helped take the air out of Alabama's passing attack.
If expectations for economic growth start to slow, that could take the air out of the stock market, at least in the United States.
"I came down here to brood over my failure to predict the Greyjoy attack," he says as they take the air on a hill in Dragonstone.
Reaction's breakthrough was inventing a "precooler" or heat exchanger which can take the air down to minus 150 degrees centigrade in less than a 20th of a second.
In order to "take the air out of" brokers, on June 9th Hamilton's producer, Jeffrey Seller, raised the price of "premium" tickets to $849, and cranked up most seats closer to $200.
So I think Mr. Mulvaney was trying to rob House Democrats of a headline and frame the events on his own, to take the air out of the sails by saying it out loud.
FLORIDA MAN WRANGLES ALLIGATOR FROM 10-FOOT PYTHON'S DEADLY GRIP IN EVERGLADES Last year, Dunn's husband and his brother, who were both not named, showed up to the woman's home to take the air conditioner.
"Uber's deputy general counsel Angela Padilla testified that Jacobs and his attorney were attempting to extort the company and that Uber disclosed his letters to the US Attorney's Office to "take the air out of his extortionist balloon.
"We felt that Halunen was trying to extort the company, and I wanted to take the air out of his extortionist balloon," Padilla testified, explaining the decision to turn over his letters to the US Attorney's Office in June.
I was feeling a little lightheaded from the drinking, and from the small amount of weed I smoked at the party before remembering I hated smoking weed, and so I climbed down into the yard to take the air.
Daenerys beseeches the King in the North to join her in defiance of Cersei Lannister (Lena Headey), and Tyrion and Jon take the air and discuss better times, back when much of the cast was dead instead of most.
On Tuesday, Trump endorsed the idea of a Space Force, which would take the Air Force's current space missions and put them under a brand new branch of the US armed forces, whose sole mission would be to focus on space.
Some investors, including now apparently Wien, believe the expansion in the Fed's balance sheet since the financial crisis artificially inflated asset prices and now that the central bank is looking to take the air out of the balloon, equity prices will eventually follow.
Back at the Cherokee, Ms. Kolendo gave a nod to her building's past, when, on a warm spring afternoon, she threw open the floor-to-ceiling window to her balcony to "take the air," just as the former residents would have done.
The company did share the letter from Mr. Jacobs's lawyer with three different United States attorney offices, because Mr. Jacobs had threatened to take his claims to federal prosecutors and Uber wanted to "take the air out of his extortionist balloon," Ms. Padilla testified.
In Chaw's view, the scene does something very different than its detractors say: I would argue Tarantino's decision to have Booth fight Lee to a draw doesn't take the air out of Lee; it takes the air out of the constructed mystique that Lee was forced to maintain.
Unfortunately, President Donald Trump's announced meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, his continued trashing of the NATO alliance, and recent calls for a reassessment of US force posture on the European continent have undercut the planned NATO agenda and will likely take the air out of the room in Brussels, Belgium.
This is a family flick, with a PG rating, but many a pinch and a punch are delivered by the March clan ("I really did want to hurt you," Amy says to Jo, who forbade her a trip to the theatre), and Jo, offered an arm by Laurie as they take the air, responds with a manly thwack.
On 16 July 1926 he married "vaudeville and revue comedienne" Edna Leedom who had performed in the Follies of 1923, 1924 and 1925. The marriage ended within two years. On 16 August. 1928 he married Agnes White, a Follies performer who was in Stamper and Buck's musical Take The Air (1927).
The goal is to take the air from the patient and have it absorbed into the earth. For this reason, the animal figures are made of clay. After the cigarettes are tied to the animal figures, each one is passed over the patient as a kind of cleansing, while prayers are said.
WLVU is a radio station broadcasting on the FM band at 97.1 MHz licensed to the city of Belle Meade, Tennessee, but serving the Nashville market as a whole. It is currently branded as K-LOVE, repeating a satellite-delivered Contemporary Christian format. The station is owner by Educational Media Foundation. It is Nashville's most recent full-power FM station to take the air.
New Delhi. She requested the manager to give her a ticket to London instead, but the manager refused her request saying he had to follow the rules. She did not know, at that time, that she could just take the air ticket and change it to where ever she wanted to go at the airline. She decided to stay at Palo Alto, California with a colleague and her family.
119-22 Leaving this haven, the path descended and then climbed to Milton's Seat itself, with its panoramic view.Photo online From there one returned downhill to the Hall. Up until the mid-19th century the park was generally open to the public, "And citizens who take the air/ Full oft to Hagley Park repair," a local author observed.Thomas Sewell Allen, A Trip to Paris: In Verses (Dudley 1831) p.
The design of the grounds included 'yards for patients to walk and take the Air in' as well as provisions for a fence to keep the patients out of the nearby town. The Gunpowder Incident began in April 1775 as a dispute between Governor Dunmore and Virginia colonists over gunpowder stored in the Williamsburg magazine. Dunmore, fearing rebellion, ordered royal marines to seize gunpowder from the magazine. Virginia militia led by Patrick Henry responded to the 'theft' and marched on Williamsburg.
Illustration by Grandville from Un Autre Monde. "Saturn's ring becomes a cast iron balcony on which the inhabitants of the planet take the air in the evening." Here Benjamin examines the way in which the World Exhibitions (preceded by National Industrial Exhibitions) give birth to the entertainment industry and for the first time begin to cultivate workers as consumers, providing a foundation for the transformation of the world and its contents into commodities. He analyzes the extent to which the illustrations of Grandville portray this process.
On his refusal to plead he was sentenced to a fine of 1000 marks and to imprisonment during the king's pleasure. Holles had at first been committed and remained for some time a close prisoner in the Tower of London. The "close" confinement, however, was soon changed to a "safe" one, the prisoner then having leave to take the air and exercise, but being obliged to maintain himself at his own expense. On 29 October Holles, with Eliot and Benjamin Valentine, was transferred to the Marshalsea Prison.
After defeating them, they accidentally summon the third Fiend, Ur (known in the game as Kraken). The Light Warriors kill Ur, retrieve the Water Orb and travel on to Lefein in search of the Air Orb, where they meet Dragoon, the last Dragon Knight, and the evil dragon Muffin, the fourth Fiend, who guards the Orb of Air. During a battle in Muffin's Sky Castle she is killed by Dragoon. The Sky Castle itself explodes after Fighter and Black Mage take the Air Orb.
Sir Banister Fletcher included the building in a list of Shingle Style architecture. The layout of the structure, a "rambling group of masses", snaked through the trees, curving to follow the bend in the river, the curve creating a courtyard with a circular drive and a central fountain. The dining room enjoyed a three-sided view of the river, and diners could take the air on a wraparound porch. The porch opened to the river in a flight of wooden steps leading down to an octagonal gazebo pierced and supported by a large tree, overhanging the tumbling waters.
During his first trip to London, Buck befriended a man who turned out to be a German spy. Two results of this event were fellow passenger Eddie Rickenbacker deciding to enlist to fly, and Dave Stamper having to prove to British police and a Judge that his pages covered with numbers were sheet music rather than a code. Stamper was fully occupied with work for Ziegfeld until 1927, when Gene Buck hired Stamper to write the music for Take The Air (1927). He also worked for the Schubert organization on Lovely Lady (1927) before returning to Ziegfeld for the 1931 Follies.
In 1913, the area then known as Leas Cliff was leased by the Radnor Estate to the local corporation, to be used mainly for a park, but the estate still kept the tolls from the toll road. In the park, tea rooms, shelters and woodland walks were provided among the newly planted holm oaks (Quercus ilex) and pine trees so that people could “take the air”. The 'Zig Zag Path' was built in 1921 as a new attraction and to provide work for the unemployed. This also leads down from the Upper leas to the park and seafront.
The house and garden were first constructed by Sir William Cavendish and Bess of Hardwick in 1555. The Elizabethan garden was much smaller than the modern garden is now. There were terraces to the east of the house where the main lawn is now, ponds and fountains to the south, and fishponds to the west by the river. The main visual remnant of this time is a squat stone tower known as Queen Mary's Bower on account of a legend that Mary, Queen of Scots, was allowed to take the air there while she was a prisoner at Chatsworth.
Edward became ill during January 1553 with a fever and cough that gradually worsened. The imperial ambassador, Jean Scheyfve, reported that "he suffers a good deal when the fever is upon him, especially from a difficulty in drawing his breath, which is due to the compression of the organs on the right side". Edward felt well enough in early April to take the air in the park at Westminster and to move to Greenwich, but by the end of the month he had weakened again. By 7 May he was "much amended", and the royal doctors had no doubt of his recovery.
The act, which intended to, "Make Provision for the Support and Maintenance of Ideots, Lunaticks, and other Persons of unsound Minds," authorized the House of Burgesses to appoint a fifteen-man Court Of Directors to oversee the future hospital's operations and admissions. In 1771, contractor Benjamin Powell constructed a two-story building on Francis Street near the College capable of housing twenty-four patients. The design of the grounds included "yards for patients to walk and take the Air in" as well as provisions for a fence to be built to keep the patients out of the nearby town. Beginning in April 1775, the Gunpowder Incident, a dispute between Governor Dunmore and Virginia colonists over gunpowder (stored in the Williamsburg Magazine) evolved into an important event in the run-up to the American Revolution.
On this > supposition the name which was intended to please the queen gave her great > offence, so that the publication had to be delayed. This accounts for the > presence of two madrigals, by Pilkington and Bateson respectively, in which > the burden of the words runs "In Heaven lives Oriana", instead of the ending > common to all the rest of the compositions, "Long live fair Oriana". The > contribution of Michael East (probably the printer's son) arrived too late > to be inserted in any other place than immediately after the dedication, and > Bateson's When Oriana walked to take the air was too late to be printed at > all in the collection. It was placed in the first set of madrigals by this > composer, which was published by East later on in 1603, together with > Weelkes's second set, and Medulla Musicke by Byrd and Ferrabosco.
To the north and east of Hampstead, and separating it from Highgate, is London's largest ancient parkland, Hampstead Heath, which includes the well-known and legally-protected view of the London skyline from Parliament Hill. The Heath, a major place for Londoners to walk and "take the air", has three open-air public swimming ponds; one for men, one for women, and one for mixed bathing, which were originally reservoirs for drinking water and the sources of the River Fleet. The bridge pictured is known locally as 'The Red Arches' or 'The Viaduct', built in fruitless anticipation of residential building on the Heath in the 19th century. Local activities include major open-air concerts on summer Saturday evenings on the slopes below Kenwood House, book and poetry readings, fun fairs on the lower reaches of the Heath, period harpsichord recitals at Fenton House, Hampstead Scientific Society and Hampstead Photographic Society.

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