Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"tell of" Definitions
  1. (formal or literary) to make something known; to give an account of something

284 Sentences With "tell of"

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

And I experienced and heard tell of many dangerous situations.
They tell of a house of locked doors that you
We wondered: What story would students tell of this year?
I've heard tell of people predicting the weather through achy joints.
Time will tell, of course, whether these expectations become a reality.
Another may tell of a son bludgeoned by a prison gang.
Stories like his tell of both enormous sorrow and extraordinary determination.
READ MORE: ISIS human shields tell of their escape What happens next?
Hell, to hear many tell of it, he has kompromat on them.
But this isn't the first time we've heard tell of Kanye's laptop.
Their former colleagues tell of spiritual awakenings, physical survival and mental toughening.
"I've heard tell of some of these things over the years," she says.
Some tell of the soul-searching or guilt provoked by the Pulse tragedy.
There are people who lived to tell of harrowing Moscow real estate transactions.
The case is still pending and only time will tell of the squirrel's fate. 
Doesn't seem like the numbers tell of a destructive crisis that's ripping America apart.
In the latest season the episodes are more connected, and tell of Bighdaddy's origins.
Recent news reports tell of her passionate relationship with a Siberian Husky named Balto.
You had to be there, or you can only ever hear tell of it.
Not every club in the capital has a happy story to tell, of course.
A lot of people's heard tell of it but don't know what it is.
Corny they may be, but these images of Christian Lindner tell of a political renewal.
I'll tell of ancient rights and wrongs Of what we feared or praised in songs.
Most of all, these archives tell of the violence and hatred LGBT people have endured.
You might tell of the travel, or the cooking, of the eating or the squabbles.
You could tell of the traditions you keep or the ones you abandoned, and why.
In one short section, a few orphans tell of their lives before meeting Mr. Mully.
Asa'ad is thin and prematurely grey; his rheumy eyes tell of a life of hard graft.
The things we keep at home can tell of varied experiences, symbolizing the politics of living.
"If only those brains could tell of what happened there," his grandson, Miguel Angel Martinez, said.
That friend is standing there and they come with new stories to tell of their life.
But people who have escaped from the camps tell of the systematic torture that happens inside.
They tell of a fleeing multitude, a people retreating in panic, his kin on the run.
She is a daughter of Linda R. Nass-Tell and Dr. Brian L. Tell of Edina, Minn.
At a vast public-housing complex in Kwun Tong district, elderly residents tell of just scraping by.
READ: ISIS human shields tell of escape from forced march "They came and beat [her]," she says.
Every trader on the London Metal Exchange probably has a tale to tell of wrong-footed rivals.
This week, the flashiest, most advanced show and tell of the year is going down in Las Vegas.
In a moment, a meme can become outdated, and its application, a poker tell of a brand's unhipness.
Those records tell of underground springs containing salts of lithium—at that time quite a recently discovered element.
The statistics tell of a longevity of domination that the fickle world of sprinting had never seen before.
The first pages of the book tell of Grant's rise from a hardscrabble life in Point Pleasant, Ohio.
Ibrahim and Hassan lived to tell of their suffering, but like other survivors, they have not moved on.
Elderly residents tell of being encouraged out of their homes to witness the first explosions and mushroom clouds.
Mishka is one of many walk-ins who will tell of Russia's condition and change Rostov's static life.
The narrators tell of physical and psychological abuse, beatings and sleep deprivation, humiliations, isolation and threats to relatives.
The latest figures tell of about 2,500 tested positive to Covid-143 and more than 1,800 people dead.
Legends tell of how Aztec settlers founded the ancient city of Tenochtitlan after a vision sent by their god.
Besides, any good sneaker will look way better scuffed up with an audacious story to tell of its travels.
Deep in the heart of the Amazon, legends tell of a river so hot that it boils from below.
Some tell of being disowned by their families and having to work as prostitutes, for lack of other choices.
They tell of colleagues going for coffee when they speak at meetings, or being cut out of email chains.
They tell of swift V.I.P. entry to a sold-out Beyoncé concert, where 45,000 commoners thronged at the gates.
The museum plans to reopen with both its physical spaces and the story they tell of modernism greatly expanded.
These stories tell of outsiders navigating hierarchies propped up by race and class while making new homes in exile.
The diaries tell of her four-day affair when her children and husband were gone to the state fair.
However, those numbers do not tell of the complexities of any fight, let alone one featuring a game Frankie Edgar.
A few dozen escaped to tell of the night that Boko Haram militants brought terror to a Nigerian girls' school.
So, when we heard tell of Krispy Kreme's new Gingerbread Glazed Doughnuts we were admittedly interested, but not overly enthused.
It's not as though Ms. Haley is the first person to tell of Trump aides working to contain their boss.
How do you tell of battles where combatants never face each other and death comes out of nowhere in seconds?
And the lyrics — proudly belted, then joyfully sighed — tell of the restoration and clarity to be found en plein-air.
My grandmother would tell of the resistance movement she had joined before the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 823.
Venezuelans who fled to Colombia tell of harsh conditions, including the absence of food, electricity and hospitals with basic supplies.
Only time will tell, of course, but this is a legal complication that was as unnecessary as it was unprecedented.
The Daily Mail ran an article under the headline "Women Tell of Spirit Kisses," recounting the testimony of Duncan's supporters.
Michael Bloomberg has a dramatic story to tell of New York City's transformation should he decide to enter the presidential race.
They will tell of her journey there and back, and to Hell and Heaven, too, and of her interview with God.
Losing after great striving is the story of man, who was born to sorrow, whose sweetest songs tell of saddest thought.
Family members tell of frightened and confused residents arriving unaccompanied at emergency rooms, unable to give clear accounts of their problems.
The victims also tell of being forced to wash soldiers' clothes in a nearby river where they were also repeatedly raped.
Those who make it to Italy tell of being extorted, beaten, tortured, raped, starved and forced to work for no pay.
The employee "thought that it was appropriate to tell of my shift supervisors about my trans identity," he told BuzzFeed News.
Every few years, the family agreed to admit a journalist, always a foreigner, to tell of their grievances against the state.
Some of the most marvelous accounts in the book tell of the poet's sincere affinity for famous men she's never met.
The cheers brought by such snappy juxtapositions, as well as cascades of votes, tell of more than Mr Modi's skill with words.
I mentioned the transition to the pie earlier, and that for me is the true tell of how this scene was intended.
Most have similar stories to tellof loved ones beheaded in front of their eyes and of babies thrown onto the flames.
Some returnees at the Yaounde hotel had injuries or were limping, and were keen to tell of the horrors they had suffered.
Many have stories to tell of vehicle owners that didn't pay them, that docked their pay unnecessarily, or that were verbally abusive.
Last week, IAG, the parent firm of British Airways, Iberia and Aer Lingus, became the latest carrier to tell of its woes.
He would often tell of meeting the guitarist Django Reinhardt in Paris in 1945 and jamming with him on his penny whistle.
News accounts tell of them snatching surreptitious cat naps and trying to sneak chewing tobacco onto the floor to relieve the boredom.
Murky reports from the film festivals where it has shown tell of swoonings, walkouts, and throwing up, and you can see why.
But the tell of this no-lose strategy has been to tinker with US war fighting at levels well short of decisive.
While Trump does watch a lot of TV and tweet a lot, we've never heard tell of him watching Game of Thrones.
Public records with the San Francisco Department of Motor Vehicles and an industry source familiar with the matter tell of other missed targets.
There's no definitive way to tell, of course, but if you haven't smoked at all in a month, odds are you're probably good.
Donning sensors that measures changes in their brainwaves, heartbeats, and voices, participants each tell of a great love story from their own lives.
Other stories tell of secret tunnels hidden within, used in centuries gone by for priests to travel to the nearby village of Ranwin.
Testimonies by former employees tell of a "troll factory" in St Petersburg that churns out anti-Western stories, comments, "likes" and shareable media.
While literature and film are full of love stories between men and women, there are very few that tell of lovers who transitioned.
If only the sandstones could sing, imagine the stories they'd tell, of dinosaurs, mammoth hunters and the "ancient ones" known as the Anasazi.
Time will tell, of course, but with the future so uncertain and the lineup so fundamentally altered, there is still much to mourn.
After hearing tell of the form's fabled efficacy, some martial arts students are seeking to learn the 52 Blocks in more formal settings.
The lyrics tell of a farmer who is "loco de contento" (crazy with happiness) at the prospect of selling his produce in town.
They tell of being locked out of deals, of being condescended to, of having to prove their skills and then prove them again.
Many passengers also tell of spending time picking up or dropping off other passengers on maddeningly roundabout routes in Access-A-Ride vans.
Some of the early reviews there tell of nasty stability issues, but those have since been addressed with a series of firmware updates.
" He added: "I tell of the miracle now because it towers over my life and ministry like the steeple of a great cathedral.
These pendants take inspiration from Hindu, Chinese and Indigenous mythologies which tell of the world being found on the back of a turtle.
In bars or in blockbusters, there's tell of coke lines in bathrooms, frat parties that graduated into boardrooms, the finance industry's theology of avarice.
The migrants tell of grisly murders, of how gangs have recruited boys as lookouts and drug runners and forced girls into becoming their brides.
Reports from post-hurricane Puerto Rico tell of American citizens experiencing a level of humanitarian desperation usually seen only in the poorest of countries.
Throughout history, its process has stayed relatively the same, playing a big part in the stories we tell of events, whether personal or collective.
In it, 28 Afghan women tell of struggling for liberation from the isolation and strictures of the Taliban, and of often oppressive, patriarchal practices.
"In fact, it's a classic tell of a bottom, because it signals that your weak-handed fellow shareholders have at last capitulated," he continued.
Alexander the Great, Pliny, Cicero, Hesiod all tell of the remarkable kinship humans have with dolphins and the uncanny awareness of the cetacean mind.
In which case, what will the multitude of twenty-first-century gins, and the silly things that we do with them, tell of us?
Essential needs remain constant, but a growing number of amenities, such as lavish spas and farm-to-table dining, tell of an evolving trend.
It was the event that signaled the internet bubble was about to burst (it was the "tell" of the end of the internet stock boom).
To impress their visitors, she has prepared a little show and tell of all the kids their handmaids have given birth to over the years.
Still, the new findings tell of a time when the climate and ecology of Saudi Arabia was most likely much different from today, he said.
A visit by the NASA administrator to a rocket factory is usually a predictable show-and-tell of the latest gadgets destined for outer space.
"Beyond confirming specific allegations of abuse, every four out of five interviewees had their own stories to tell" of "their own nightmare encounters," Chiy wrote.
It was roughly 24 hours after professor Christine Blasey Ford raised her hand before this same senator, to tell of her 36 years of pain.
Melvin, a father who was separated from a child, cries as he listens to other immigrants tell of their separation from their children at the border.
The Icelandic sagas tell of fairy houses to magical rings that control the world, and now one of those, the Wave, has landed on the internet.
We've also heard tell of a man who walks around the line carrying two bags full of Spectacles, though we did not witness this man ourselves.
Others think that many Germans acted against their will under government pressure, and many interviewees tell of Germans who courageously defied Nazi law to help them.
Basheer and Abdullah, 13, use it as a prop in a story that they are eager to tell -- of their friendship and escape from the battlefield.
In the introduction to the show's catalogue, the curators, Barbara Drake Boehm and Melanie Holcomb, tell of meeting with Theophilus, the Greek Orthodox patriarch of Jerusalem.
Countless studies, including a 2018 report from Harvard Business Review, tell of how women continue to face significant impediments in the workplace, compared to their male colleagues.
On one hand you are still technically summertime (even though some kids are heading back to school), and yet you tell of the coming of cooler temps.
Reports tell of an ideological divide between Bannon and Kushner that has split White House staff and has stood poised to determine the administration's agenda moving forward.
The majority tell of patients turned away from public hospitals, or who were victims of malpractice, and who would have died, if not for the Santa Muerte.
Some records even tell of the rapid appearance and disappearance of stars so bright they can be seen by the naked eye even during in the day.
Traders in Hong Kong tell of selling large bladders for HK$1 million ($130,000) in 2011 and 2012, according to a recent Greenpeace East Asia report (pdf).
The flattening yield curve is often viewed as a classic tell of slowing economic growth, leaving some market watchers calling the strength of the rally into question.
The horror stories members tell of their suffering give the movie what little vitality it has, but that adrenaline is more of a drip than a shot.
Prosecutors said 31 people were injured, with some expected to testify at the trial and to tell of glass and metal fragments piercing their limbs and faces.
Since he was one of Canada's more familiar figures through his hockey exploits, people from all over the country would contact him to tell of their problems.
Whether a modern-day Huang Chao would then appear — and would know how to galvanize a disgruntled population into rising up — no one can tell, of course.
The story they tellof land worked, gained and lost — carries the weight of the discrimination and dispossession that have defined the brutal history of sugar farming.
Others tell of a 363 call for help ending in the caller's arrest, or of a minor charge leading to 12 hours in a fetid holding cell.
Ancient songs tell of a fallen angel who took the shape of a peacock and describe how Noah's Ark was saved from sinking by a particularly ingenious snake.
Professors tell of the scarcity of basic school supplies like paper and chalk, swelling class sizes, hiring freezes and increasing reliance on poorly paid adjuncts to teach classes.
Locals tell of checkpoints on country roads and even within city limits, gunmen checking drivers' IDs—and their mobile phones, denying entry to anyone from their opponents' territories.
From stories women tell of fear and confusion, even coercion, of expectations crushed, and of humiliation experienced, there emerges a picture of a maternity care system in crisis.
The whistleblower could be a genuine hero moved by conscience with a compelling firsthand story to tell of a president putting political self-interest ahead of national security.
I'll listen to Ford tell of her alleged sexual assault but, unless she says something new about her experience with Kavanaugh, it's not going to change my mind.
Many of the addicts tell of having been in government treatment programs like Camp Phoenix, financed by international donors, only to find them rife with easily available drugs.
When we first heard tell of this unconventional beer, it was not lost on us that the this year, Easter just so happens to fall on April Fool's Day.
"She was always this poor, abused, wretched child from San Antonio that no one wanted," she says, going on to tell of the devastating poverty Crawford was born into.
The story went on to tell of the man's slow discovery that his home had been taken, his values trampled, his security washed away with the tides of change.
The UNC troops at the border are quick to note they are not a peacekeeping force, and often go out of their way to tell of North Korean provocations.
Ask a plant employee to lift a sleeve or pull back a head scarf, and deep scars tell of encounters with rebel groups and journeys through war-torn countries.
You may have heard tell of the South Asian obsession with weddings and children, but on Family Karma it rears its head as the ubiquitous plague that it is.
Related: The People Displaced by the Hunt for El Chapo Tell of Helicopter Attacks Urique, Chinípas, and Valle de Juárez are the most affected municipalities by the forced displacements.
Historical accounts tell of the relentless rains that spoiled back-to-back harvests in parts of Europe from 240 through 2000, and may have helped bolster the plague's grip.
Watch: Rescued migrants tell of abuse In Libya, they say they were imprisoned by bandits, beaten and barely fed, before their family sent $1,100 to pay for their release.
The decline in Congrier's fortunes is mirrored in small towns and villages across rural France where empty properties and vacant storefronts tell of the slow decay of local businesses.
Co-authored with thriller writer James Paterson, "The President is Missing" is due to be published in June and will tell of the sudden disappearance of a sitting U.S. president.
Policymakers will release new economic forecasts and update their views on the appropriate level of interest rates for coming months, an early tell of possible support for a rate cut.
I heard tell of a closing door, as labels became squeezed out of previous life-raft licensing money, and the Rolling Stones's of the world folded in on their navels.
Cutting mats, X-acto knives, rulers and scissors on a table, and a long, high shelf filled with paper and spools of thread tell of the craft behind the objects.
It is their stories that often get lost in the larger debate over new technology and commutes, and tell of the human cost of the city's rapidly evolving transportation landscape.
When I talked about this with other minority employees, they seemed relieved to tell of their own experiences being slighted because of perceptions based on the color of their skin.
Some of the plays at the Tamanaco tell of Venezuelans' grim realities, such as kidnappings at gun-point and hunger in the slums, while comedies poke fun at everyday nuisances.
Additional allegations described to Eater tell of Batali's behavior with more fans, one of whom said Batali tried to shove his tongue in her mouth at the 2017 Link Stryjewski Foundation.
And, from what we could tell of our brief time with Little Dragons Café, is also what makes this new IP feel like a true spiritual successor to Wada other series.
Picturing a warmer but more habitable Earth, however - one with plentiful clean energy, and less pollution and waste – is more challenging because so few futuristic tales tell of such a world.
The sad part is, in all of our childbirth-education classes and from what we can tell, of all the patients at the birthing center, we are the only black family.
It was a fraught time in Kenya, with the Mau Mau rebellion making life dangerous for European colonists, and Ms. Sheldrick had some harrowing tales to tell of brushes with violence.
They tell of a decades-long cover-up by the Zulu Nation and a hidden network of victims whose lives were allegedly haunted by death threats, suicides, drug abuse, and violence.
The story that Harth and the boyfriend, George Houraney, tell of their interactions with Trump over six years — including business cheating and attempted rape — shows how that predation worked in practice.
The directors have a refined style — the shooting and editing tell of a sensibility informed by Robert Bresson, the Dardenne brothers and Cristian Mungiu — but it doesn't always fully pay off.
The German words, sung by the soprano, tell of the profound intimacy that used to exist between this woman and her lover — as opposed to the cold distance between them now.
Yesterday, the startup show-and-tell of a life sciences accelerator called IndieBio showed just how far young biotech companies have come from their roots as the geeky offshoots of academic labs.
SS Teo: For cost savings, we can't really tell, of course we'll be saving on man power, but that has to be balanced with the investment in the hardware and the software.
Feek went on to tell of the time, while on tour, that he and Brown visited a mandolin maker just to check out his custom instruments, each worth several thousand of dollars.
The concept of "history" is not unyielding in this regard, as history is essentially the story we choose to tell of our origins based on evidence that survives to the present day.
Refugees in Kalobeyei, just outside the Kakuma refugee camp in northern Kenya, tell of widespread violence against civilians in southern states, often against smaller ethnic groups caught between the Dinka and Nuer.
Then start saving recipes and cooking them, rating them with stars and leaving notes on them, for yourself or others, to tell of ingredient substitutions or hacks you've made to the instructions.
Ludington said he felt it was his civic duty to tell of his experience drinking with Kavanaugh, and said in his statement he is going to take his information to the FBI.
Wabanaki origin stories tell of the mythic hero Glooscap shooting an arrow into a brown ash tree, and the Wabanaki people pouring out into the world from the hole in the trunk.
BARBARA STARR, CNN PENTAGON CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): An auditorium of teenagers listening to 210-year-old Fanny Aizenberg, a survivor of the Nazi Holocaust, tell of unimaginable fear more than 210 years ago.
She has heard women tell of gang rapes, men forced to rape one another or the women under their protection, mothers raped in front of children, and people raped to death with objects.
They tell of hospitals running out of medication and fuel for their generators and struggling to keep up with the "avalanche of patients that came after the hurricane," as one journalist put it.
Residents who have fled to the outskirts of Jalalabad from Achin, where IS has set up its headquarters, tell of decapitations of government workers, shrine-smashing and demands for women to don burqas.
Instead, it's a fun-if-not-rigorous listening experience, as the two—Kendrick specifically—put on a show-and-tell of all the animated vocal tones and takes Lil Wayne helped to pioneer.
Related: 'We're Going Up Against the State Here': The UK's Victims of Deep Undercover Policing Tell of Their Trauma Dines is not the first undercover policeman to move on to a university environment.
While the index is still a good tell of the market's general attitude toward risk, it's become a "speculative object" that has pushed implied volatility to all-time lows this year, he explained.
The 250 objects on view sample the immense collection — most of which was purchased by the Society in 1937 — while the great Nadelman wood sculptures tell of the inspiration Elie drew from it.
The 211894 objects on view sample the immense collection — most of which was purchased by the Society in 21212 — while the great Nadelman wood sculptures tell of the inspiration Elie drew from it.
The 211950 objects on view sample the immense collection — most of which was purchased by the Society in 211966 — while the great Nadelman wood sculptures tell of the inspiration Elie drew from it.
The 21989 objects on view sample the immense collection — most of which was purchased by the Society in 212 — while the great Nadelman wood sculptures tell of the inspiration Elie drew from it.
The 53503 objects on view sample the immense collection — most of which was purchased by the Society in 211109 — while the great Nadelman wood sculptures tell of the inspiration Elie drew from it.
Democrat after Democrat on the panel thanked Dr. Blasey for her bravery in speaking up now, saying her courage had inspired other women to come forward to tell of their long-silenced terrors.
And, in a scene worthy of The Innocents Abroad, he proceeded to tell of the emptiness and ruin and disappointment that met Mark Twain when he traveled to the Holy Land that year.
I stepped into the sunken dormitory known as the Abaton, inside Asclepius' sanctuary there — the walls tell of visitors 24 centuries ago being healed by their dreams — and couldn't resist the curative spell.
On his backdrop, violent greens, reds and yellows meet one another as if in battle, while the opera's words tell of the heart's despair; brush strokes hang like clouds in the fiery sky.
It does however prompt me to take some meetings in Hollywood to pitch my memoir PERFECTION IS NOT A SITCOM MOM, and tell of the behind the scenes story before I leave this earth.
POPE, MAKING NEW CARDINALS, HEARS IRAQI TELL OF MARTYRS "I'm guilty of living my religion and that's all I'm saying today because I've never denied that," Blackmore told reporters last year after his conviction.
While the news cycle brings its share of negativity, it does also tell of a new swell of activism, of first-time protesters and participators stepping into politics in both the US and Europe.
They tell of survivors struggling to navigate the very basics of returning to what once was normal life in their community -- a community now confined to tents for the displaced, visible across the region.
He liked to tell of his first experience there, a late assignment to play Strauss's "Salome," with its difficult parts for the cellos, which he had never seen, under the redoubtable conductor Karl Bohm.
Related: Sex, Snacks, and Soccer: How Mexican Drug Lords End Up Captured Locals tell of a 22014-vehicle strong convoy of state and non-state forces sweeping the area for Templarios in early 1503.
Stan Brock, a former British cowboy and co-host of the long-running television show "Wild Kingdom," liked to tell of an exchange he had with the sixth man to walk on the moon.
Another key tell of where this was going came throughout the weekend, when the Democrats clearly spent much more time bashing Trump and the Republicans than speaking out in favor of the Dreamer immigrants.
In the videos obtained by the Times, the platoon members accuse Gallagher of shooting at a 12-year-old, refer to Gallagher as a "psychopath," and tell of rumors that Gallagher had targeted civilians.
"The story she wants to tell of Daria is different, it's about Daria and Jodie and two close friends taking on the world today and what's happening in our culture at large," McCarthy told THR.
Civilians reached by Reuters over the Internet and telephone tell of a bleak existence amid the ruins — of shortages of food, water and electricity, and incessant fear for their own lives and their loved ones.
"When I think of what my ancestors had to go through..." the U.S. tourist says, adding that she would go back and tell of her experiences so today's children are made aware of their past.
They tell of sorting through hundreds of candidates to fill a few positions, only to find that the strongest candidates have no interest in working in the low-income communities where charters are typically located.
Officials in Srinagar, the capital of Indian-controlled Kashmir, tell of mass detentions and residents say tear gas and pellet guns are being used against Kashmiri citizens and restrictions on movement are still in place.
They tell of smoking in a housing project hallway, or of being in a car with a friend who was smoking, or of lighting up a Black & Mild cigar the police mistake for a blunt.
Read: Migrants tell of brutality in Libya Al-Maeda says she could not leave because she was too scared to go outside, she didn't know the country and didn't know if anyone would help her.
"I would call it, probably, one of the top archaeological discoveries of the century in that we now have a new story to tell of a navigational route that connected the ancient Mediterranean," Campbell told Reuters.
Time will tell, of course, but Yang believes real growth in VR will come from adoption of the more lightweight mobile VR headsets like the Samsung Gear VR — which is powered by Oculus — and Google's Cardboard.
Because of my ongoing interest in this subject, I have also heard tell of a mythical UTI vaccine, available in Germany and other European countries, but further research revealed it to be probably not that great.
The song drops us onto a street somewhere in southern Afghanistan, from what I could tell of the accents, and I thought of the Afghan children, laughing and playing, despite the constant threat of US airstrikes.
"We are deeply troubled by the findings in our report, and the stories they tell of unfair practices occurring within Australia's largest and most well-known financial institutions," ASIC Commissioner Sean Hughes said in a statement.
Both events tell of the burgeoning links between the survivors and bereaved of the Dunblane massacre and those intimately affected by the shooting at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida in February 250.
Many tales tell of the great battles the Philistines fought and lost until their utter destruction at the hands of King Nebuchadnezzar and his Babylonian army in 604 B.C. "The victors write history," Dr. Master said.
El Alto, however, has a more complex story to tell: of fault lines among Bolivia's many indigenous communities, whose views on Morales are far from uniform in a country already being ripped apart by political divides.
When it finally arrived in bookstores, "A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies and Leadership" did indeed tell of the lessons in "ethical leadership" that Comey learned while rolling up the Gambino crime family and prosecuting Martha Stewart.
Joel Paley's book and lyrics, set to Marvin Laird's peppy ballads, tell of Tina Denmark (Tori Murray), a perky prepubescent in tap shoes, willing to do whatever it takes to get the lead in the school play.
Inside one of the NGO's tents in Regent, children play, seemingly as carefree as kids the world over, but look closer, and they bear the scars and scabs that tell of their struggle to survive the mudslides.
More general articles tell of the immense difficulty faced by gay Muslims to reconcile their faith and sexuality, and of the little progress that has been made in bringing visibility to and changing attitudes about the community.
His vanity books tell of the Tudor revivals and Spanish colonials that played host to Golden Age movie stars and moguls, house histories written for a limited readership of the famous and wealthy who currently own them.
That is, until you realize that what binds them — all tell of a determinedly independent young hero's quest for selfhood catalyzed by the crucible of New York City — is also what makes them so resistant to comparison.
In the story we tell of America, this violence and tumult and repression is absorbed into a tale of progress — a country gaining in power and prosperity, inching ever closer to the fulfillment of our founding ideals.
The takeover started at 3 A.M. ET with a little show-and-tell of his new python jacket, and ended almost 24 hours later at none other than Kanye West's show (and yes, there was a Kardashian kameo!).
From everything we can tell of the chemistry and the minerals deposited in the Gale crater where Curiosity is stationed, "we think it was a habitable environment," Jennifer Eigenbrode from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center told Gizmodo.
They tell of a patient who used an ancestry test and sent her raw genetic information to an online interpretation service, which told her she had a variant that could increase her risk of breast and ovarian cancer.
The Post's report leads with a dinner party scene where the hostess asks Crooks — who's running for a a seat in Ohio's state legislature — to tell of her interaction with Trump 12 years ago, when she was 22.
The stories of ICE agents taking away fathers, who had committed no serious crimes outside immigration violations, in front of their kids tell of a harsh new reality that bears little relation to the nation we once knew.
Fed-up residents tell of contaminated drinking water or no water at all; but only when the movie turns from small-town specifics to the uncertain future of our global water markets does the real chill set in.
She loved to tell of the 14-room apartment on Manhattan's Upper West Side where he delighted in trimming the Christmas tree with icicles and how, when she began dating, he made sure she returned home by midnight.
Mosul families tell of desperate flight The Iraqi government -- with the support of the coalition -- wants Mosul's civilians to stay in their homes, both to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe and to prevent ISIS from using them as human shields.
Circular dry plough tracks resemble the concentric circles in Aboriginal dot paintings that tell of an ancient mythology, starving cattle queuing for feed look like an abstract painting and their black shadows stretching across the land a surrealist image.
Based on Díaz's own experiences as a Dominican immigrant who moved to New Jersey, the 10 short stories in "Drown" perfectly tell of the struggles the New Jersey immigrant community faces, from poverty to homesickness to the language barrier.
If the walls of Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church could talk, this is what they might say: They might tell of Adam Daniel Williams, who during his 25-year tenure as senior pastor helped found the Atlanta chapter of the NAACP.
Arrestingly direct, one of his most well-known English songs opens with the line "I was born blind and I don't know why," going on to tell of his parents "crying their hearts in confusion" when learning of his condition.
Survivors of tragedy tell of heroism, loss On the same day the boat capsized near Rashid, the coast guard foiled an illegal immigration attempt, rescuing 294 on board a boat off the shore of El-Alamein, according to a military statement.
Among the program's highlights are a tour of the police department, a "show-and-tell" of various equipment used by police and the reenactment of scenarios in which officers have to make decisions on whether to fire their weapons, Heck said.
Aside from an annual average of around 8,000 "dowry deaths"—wives killed because they have not coughed up enough money—recent newspaper reports tell of such persuasive methods as beating with hockey sticks, stealing a kidney and blackmailing with sex tapes.
But the charred ruins of burned huts tell of long-running tensions in the area surrounding Apaa village, northern Uganda, where families who claim the area as ancestral land are pitted against the government, which has declared it a wildlife reserve.
Hopefully those young people will have their own stories to tell of their own experiences, how the game made a huge impact on their lives, too, even as it continues to leave its indelible mark on the fabric of American life.
After Nixon, you might hear tell of some other insurgent state senate candidates, like Jessica Ramos, for whom Nixon recently mixed drinks at a joint campaign fundraiser, or Julia Salazar, who's teamed up with Nixon at rallies, news conferences, and panels.
Veterinarians tell of dogs who took refuge in hiding places so tight that they got stuck, who gnawed on door handles, who crashed through windows or raced into traffic — all desperate efforts to escape inexplicable collisions of noise and flashing light.
The National Archives on Friday released a new batch of documents, mostly from 1994, that tell of internet anxiety at the prime minister's office, Margaret Thatcher's thoughts of Nelson Mandela and the journey of a stallion from Turkmenistan to London.
The story that the old Dutchmen in the town tell of the ghost is that sixty years ago a belated traveler, with lots of gold in his belt, staid over night at the farmhouse of one Krug, a thrifty Dutch farmer.
Those markers tell of musicians and sites that are significant to the development and dissemination of Mississippi's greatest contribution to the arts (sorry, Faulkner), but they testify, less directly, to the suffering and resilience of its sizable African-American population.
Kraus's East Village experiences bear little resemblance to those described by Patti Smith in "Just Kids" and Richard Hell in "I Dreamed I Was a Very Clean Tramp," which tell of adventurous young people whose artistic risks are quickly rewarded.
There's a story black people ruefully tell of the day they knew integration was coming to a black high school in Charlotte, N.C.: A crew of workers arrived to fix up the facilities because now white children would be attending.
There's a story black people ruefully tell of the day they knew integration was coming to a black high school in Charlotte, N.C.: A crew of workers arrived to fix up the facilities because now white children would be attending.
The AirPods were as close as we got to an honest-to-goodness hardware surprise at today's big Apple event in San Francisco — though anyone who heard tell of the untimely demise of the headphone jack probably could have seen this coming.
Given the timing of their releases, Surviving R. Kelly and Leaving Neverland are destined to be linked together in much the same way that the stories they tellof beloved and famously eccentric entertainers, accused of unforgivable abuses — bind Kelly and Jackson.
But the book didn't tell of her dancing in a Hawaii strip club to pay her way through college, marrying her first husband at 21, or moving to New York for grad school and then scaling the corporate ladder at a publishing company.
Fascinatingly, the books tell of a legend known as The Night's King (confusingly, he's not the same character as the show's "Night King"): One of the earliest Lord Commanders — who was probably a Stark — married a beautiful "Corpse Queen" beyond the Wall.
In fact, the index, known as the "fear gauge," hasn't traded up to its long-term average of about 19.4 once this year, and that has some market watchers debating whether it's a reliable tell of what's happening in the market anymore.
As for the HTC HD7 that Spencer wields in season two, I dare you to find me a 2011 teen who had heard tell of Windows Phone OS. The Samsung Intercept that Emily owns this season is on the mark for me.
They tell of a time when places like Eveleth, where the population of 3,700 is about half of its 1930 peak, had more businesses, more young families, more high school graduates staying home instead of moving to the cities, Minneapolis and St. Paul.
When people stroll past a five-story mansion that sits less than 100 yards from the royal Amalienborg Palace in Copenhagen, there is no historical marker to tell of the Schimmelmann family who owned it, or the slaves they kept there, including Hans Jonathan.
You'll hear tell of women who'd seen so many ads that they finally actually bought one and loved it, or people who are pretty sure that the ads for $22018 bikinis from out-of-nowhere brands are total scams (but more on that later).
The legendary origins of the Milky Way's formation tell of Jupiter setting an infant Hercules to nurse at Juno's breast while she was sleeping; when she awoke, startled, she pulled her breast away from the baby, and her breast milk sprayed into the heavens.
Both movies tell of an inconvenient crush, but the new one feels stuck in the groove, with a single theme—the unlikely half-romance, crossing the borders of age and race, and thwarted by the prejudices of the establishment—returning from scene to scene.
The contrast between Bryant's and Ben Roy's, argues Dave Tell of the University of Kansas and author of a new book, "Remembering Emmett Till", shows that, in the Delta, it is easier to commemorate the charm of rural nostalgia than the ugly facts of lynching.
But it's not even close to the same thing as constructing an elaborate mechanism -- in coordination with the National Enquirer -- to buy the silence of women who are threatening to come forward and tell of affairs they allegedly had with the Republican presidential nominee. 6.
Following Abdu Sulwon's killing, security forces raided Maung Hna Ma village, torching at least one home, arresting several men and sending others into hiding, according to accounts given by women there who beckoned reporters from a river bank to tell of their missing husbands and sons.
They tell of a child not yet familiar with the language of her new country, who was deposited, apparently without explanation, in a class of twenty children and a teacher who believed her to be somehow impaired, what today we would call a "special needs" child.
I've heard tell of girl-band auditions where female guitarists were turned away at the door in favor of male applicants because the agents or marketeers who made the call in the first place came to the conclusion that there were "already enough women" on board.
Known to most as DVF, von Furstenberg doesn't just borrow those initials from the alphabet — she owns them, along with the incredible story they tell of a Belgian immigrant-turned-designer who has taken the industry by storm since entering the scene in the early 1970s.
After all, some of the most telling clues in Game of Thrones hide in the characters' signature styles: While Jon Snow's man bun and Arya Stark's (Maisie Williams) half-up style pay homage to their late father, Daenerys' growing braids tell of her incredible victories and equally formative losses.
These programmers and enthusiasts tend to be on the young side; they've heard tell of the ostensible golden days of New York repertory cinema in the '70s and '80s, when there was a huge amount of classic and maverick cinema available, albeit frequently in flea-pit-like theaters.
Casper&aposs numbers illuminate a tell of a frothy economy: firms that should be sold in the private market doing a kabuki dance ("technology" mentioned over 100 times in prospectus), asking people to suspend their disbelief until the founders, VCs, and bankers sell their shares and get their fees.
And just as that show gave us the first comprehensive view of Mohamedi's work, particularly her delicately rigorous abstract drawings in pencil and ink, an inclusive, scholarly look here in America is merited for Singh's complex oeuvre, which consists, as far as I can tell, of at least four distinct phases.
But the nice thing about punching from a hands low guard is that it changes up the angles on the opponent and removes that subtle tell of a forearms up kickboxing guard—the fronts of the fists, 'the barrels of the guns', changing from pointing upwards to pointing at the opponent.
Long, long ago, some brave internet theorist came up with the idea that Jon Snow's parents must have been Rhaegar Targaryen and Lyanna Stark, and that Ned had raised Jon as his own bastard, because he knew Robert would kill the boy if he heard tell of the kid's royal blood.
The blogger, who goes under the pseudonym "slackur" or "Jesse Mysterious," then described a harrowing tale for a serious collector: After reading up on the disc rot problem, he went through his game collection, much of it in mint condition, and found white specks on many of the discs—a major tell of disc rot.
Right handed hitters are already facing the dugout, but lefties could even listen for a specific cheer from their teammates, for instance a "let's go now 2 - 7" rather than "let's go now kid" to denote one pitch over another without giving the other team the tell of a consistent glance into the dugout.
Ms. Feather began to tell of jam sessions with Dizzy Gillespie and Bobby Short, and of her godmother Billie Holiday performing several numbers there in November of 1956, a week after her two sold-out "Lady Sings the Blues" concerts at Carnegie Hall — and 15 years before Mr. Steinhardt and his wife, Dorothea von Haeften, moved into the building.
I say "and" instead of "or" because it's possible to think both at once and not be wrong; but, as regards the latter, I will tell of just one more thing I saw in Belzoni, as I made my way to the Humphreys County Library, which shares a parking lot with the Humphreys County Sheriff's Department next door.
The energy for change burst out of an emotionally raw CNN town hall meeting in Florida on Wednesday night, and a moving event at the White House where Trump, the most pro-gun President in modern history, watched survivors and relatives of the dead tell of the horror in Florida and issue wrenching pleas for action.
Juliana Crain (Alexa Davalos), for instance, is supposed to be the crux of the series, as the man in the high castle himself (Stephen Root, a great actor wasted in a MacGuffin of a role) has named her as crucial in the collection of the newsreel-style films that tell of alternate universes and are at the heart of the series' resistance movement.
One year on from the program's launch, three previous recipients tell of their experiences since receiving the grant, and how Reuters support will help them to develop and advance their careers: Much of Ekaterina Anchevskaya's career so far has seen her focus on the people and culture of her home country, Russia, including a Reuters Wider Image feature on Russian Orthodox nationalists, published last month.
Rank-and-File Tell of Discontent Over Sessions's Approach • The Issues That Russian Operatives Used to Divide Americans, in Their Own Words • McGahn, Soldier for Trump and Witness Against Him, Leaves White House Mr. Trump's decision to give the Saudi government the benefit of the doubt about Mr. Khashoggi's death marks another instance in which the president has chosen to believe his own facts, our correspondent writes.
It was plant stand-up — slightly blue patter with quick takes on Linnaeus and Darwin; binomial nomenclature (note the shape of the Venus fly trap for cues to how it got its name); detailed care instructions (carnivorous plants evolved in acidic bogs, which means they need distilled water, not tap, and lots of it); and a show-and-tell of Mr. Satch's collection of butterworts and sundews.
I think I've heard tell of some mythical term for when you're away from your office, and your devices have stopping binging, shaking and clanking, and your laptop isn't lighting up in all four corners because of instant messages, VPN prompts, deadline reminders, email pop-ups with EMERGENCY in the subject line... I think they might have successfully lobbied for this in faraway utopias, like France.
As leader of the New Journalism in the 1960s he piled up detail, drama and the flash of fiction to tell of trips, bus and otherwise, of the LSD crowd across America ("The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test"), the business of customising cars in Los Angeles ("The Kandy-Koloured Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby"), and status battles among pilots and astronauts in the first space programme ("The Right Stuff").
I have also received letters and emails from women around my age, with a more familiar story to tell: of having received a letter long ago, around the age of 18 — an absolutely captivating letter, magical, even — composed in a voice they recognized as that of Holden Caulfield, though bearing an even more familiar name at the bottom of the page and containing words I could recite, I know them so well.
Students Pour Into Dhaka's Streets to Demand Safer Roads President Admits Trump Tower Meeting Was Meant to Get Dirt on Clinton 2 Blasts, a Stampede and a 'Flying Thing': Witnesses Tell of Attack on Maduro U.S. to Restore Sanctions on Iran, Deepening Divide With Europe Indonesia Earthquake: At Least 98 Dead and 133,000 Homeless Apple, Facebook and YouTube Remove Content From Alex Jones and Infowars California Fire Now the Largest in State History: 'People Are on Edge' 5 Takeaways From Tuesday's Election Results Argentina's Senate Rejects Bill Legalizing Abortion We Use Sports Terms All the Time.

No results under this filter, show 284 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.