Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"unfeigned" Definitions
  1. real and sincere

37 Sentences With "unfeigned"

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

So why the glee and unfeigned passion in her delivery?
"She is making my Europe kaputt," he complained, with unfeigned proprietorial anguish.
His unfeigned hawkishness is to be deployed to make Mr Trump, the rising star, look strong and intimidating.
Word of the Day : not pretended; sincerely felt or expressed _________ The word unfeigned has appeared in one article on nytimes.
So does his unfeigned devotion to his wife and children, a commitment by no means universal among politicians, and which, say those who know him well, is a reaction to that childhood loneliness.
It's almost as if he were faintly ashamed at having to concoct yet more unlikely shenanigans—plots within plots, at the C.I.A.—at a time when unfeigned drama is bursting out of the headlines.
Picturing the First World War Even in this stiffly staged picture, made decades before candid photography was possible, unfeigned joy comes through in the faces of the women we might assume to be Mère (center) and Grand-Mère (right).
But by the time evening arrived, there was the 20-year-old Shapovalov holding off the 23-year-old Berrettini and howling with unfeigned delight before celebrating with his teammates and a small but rowdy group of red-clad Canadian fans.
"Even though his IQ was approximately 60, his common sense, his theological depth, his delight for life, and his unfeigned love for God, his family, and absolutely everyone constantly astonished us all," Franks wrote in the Washington Examiner about his brother, Bruce, who died earlier this year.
Trent Reznor was given an unfeigned special thanks in later editions of the IOU Babe album credits.
However, Thomas's troops were by now weary of the prolonged conflict, and their submission was unfeigned. Many surrendered to Michael, while others fled to nearby fortified cities. Thomas sought refuge in Arcadiopolis with a large group; his adopted son Anastasius went with some of Thomas's men to Bizye, and others fled to Panion and Heraclea., Chapter 2.3.
The chamber felt an "unfeigned sorrow" due to the "heavy loss sustained by the Confederacy in the death of one of her most efficient counselors." They did confirm Bartow's posthumous rank of acting brigadier general.Eicher, p. 589, lists Bartow in the "Might- Have-Beens" chapter, reserved for men often considered generals, but who actually achieved only brevet or acting status.
It has no > life-blood. The characters neither move nor speak.... Only a professional > student of analytics or an inveterate devotee of criminology can read it > with any degree of unfeigned interest. Poe's literary rival Rufus Wilmot Griswold, however, voiced a high opinion of the story and considered it an example of Poe's cunning intellect. Charles Baudelaire considered this tale as "a masterpiece, a wonder".
He was regarded as a "lucid and accurate" lecturer. He concentrated his work on the four gospels, particularly the Gospel of Mark. He was described as "zealous in promoting Biblical research" at Oxford, but published little as he was "a hesitant writer with an unfeigned horror of inaccuracy". However, his St John's Gospel: A Commentary was published posthumously in 1957, edited by C F Evans.
Brotherly love in the biblical sense is an extension of the natural affection associated with near kin, toward the greater community of fellow believers, that goes beyond the mere duty in to "love thy neighbour as thyself", and shows itself as "unfeigned love" from a "pure heart", that extends an unconditional hand of friendship that loves when not loved back, that gives without getting, and ever looks for what is best in others.
Reputed to be the wealthiest of the Habsburgs, Albrecht owned some in Hungary. He also owned a fine collection of paintings and engravings, later the nucleus of the Albertina museum. His popularity was profound, for his generosity to the poor was genuine and unfeigned; he was widely known as Engelsherz (Angel's-heart). When Albrecht was made a Feldmarschall in March 1888, Crown Prince Rudolf was appointed his subordinate as Generalinspekteur der Infanterie (Inspector General of Infantry).
Thackeray in 1864. He wrote that A Christmas Carol was "a national benefit and to every man or woman who reads it, a personal kindness". According to Douglas-Fairhurst, contemporary reviews of A Christmas Carol "were almost uniformly kind". The Illustrated London News described how the story's "impressive eloquence ... its unfeigned lightness of heart—its playful and sparkling humour ... its gentle spirit of humanity" all put the reader "in good humour with ourselves, with each other, with the season and with the author".
Of his age 75. Here also lies his dearest spouse, Anna Murray, who running the course of her life, by unfeigned piety, unshaken patience, singular prudence, true Christian charily, worshipping God, bearing the cross of Christ, managing her lawful affairs, and helping the faithful in affliction, surrendered her soul to God, 25 October 1704. Of her age 84. In token of their perpetual respect, their six generous children an offspring very like their father, erected this monument for both their parents.
And accordingly I believe there are not many academies freer in general from those vices than we are. In particular, my bedfellow Mr. Scott is one of unfeigned religion, and a diligent searcher after truth. His genteel carriage and agreeable disposition gain him the esteem of every one. Mr. Griffith is more than ordinary serious and grave, and improves more in every thing than one could expect from a man who seems to be not much under forty; particularly in Greek and Hebrew he has made a great progress.
In his De bono coniugali (On the Good of Marriage), he wrote: "I know what people are murmuring: 'Suppose', they remark, 'that everyone sought to abstain from all intercourse? How would the human race survive?' I only wish that this was everyone's concern so long as it was uttered in charity, 'from a pure heart, a good conscience, and faith unfeigned'; then the city of God would be filled much more speedily, and the end of the world would be hastened." Armstrong sees in this an apocalyptic dimension in Augustine's teaching.
Zairema was a conservative theologian and a rigorous pacifist. His attempt to restore peace from the Mizoram insurgency of 1966 was extraordinary, personally struggling his ways between the rebel leaders in the deep jungle and central government officials of India (Prime Minister, Home Minister and Home Secretary). A notable political figure, A. Thanglura, even dubbed him as one of the three blind mice of the insurgency because of his often futile but unfeigned actions. His commitment to political and social justice was best exemplified by his Public Interest Litigation petition to the Supreme Court of India against corruption.
Up until her death, Kenojuak contributed annually to the Cape Dorset Annual Print Release and continued to create new works. She was one of the last living artists from the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative. A CBC report of Kenojuak's death characterized her as a person of unfeigned humility and simplicity: : Okpik Pitseolak, an artist from Cape Dorset who knew her personally, said Kenojuak Ashevak brought Inuit art to the world but was "very humble about her work." Pitseolak said that when she appeared on the radio to talk about her art, she didn't want to come across "as someone who brags" about it.
Nam Cao is often referred to as one of the most prominent short-story writers in Vietnamese literature. In fact, his works became widely known only after the birth of the short story “Chí Phèo” in 1941, which reaches the zenith of success in his writing career. Prior to the August Revolution, his works often focused on two main themes: the life of the impoverished lower middle-class intellects and the destitute life of the farmers in rural areas during the war. Through these stories he successfully depicted the plight of miserable people in the society with unfeigned vivid words and flexible descriptions.
1703, aetatis suae 70 ; hoc monumentum sacrum esse voluit Gulielmus Law, filius. :To the memory of his most excellent parents, Mr John Law, a most prudent and vigilant pastor of the Church at Edinburgh, distinguished by his zeal for pure religion, and his unfeigned piety ; and Isabella Cuninghame, his affectionate wife, noted for true holiness, and the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, who, pressing towards the joys of eternal life, laid aside mortality, — the former on the 26th December A.d. 1712, in his 80th year ; the latter on the 8th November A.d. 1703, in her 70th year,— this monument was dedicated by William Law, their son.
The eotena "good faith" referred to at the beginning of the Beowulf episode is puzzling, in any of the theorised senses of eotena. Though the peace treaty has not yet been mentioned by the narrator at that point in the text, this good faith may refer to the very submissive terms of the peace treaty. If so, this would indicate that it was not only Finn who swore the oath of peace "with unfeigned zeal" to Hengest, but that the eoten- force had good faith too. If so, then it is a particular disadvantage to have lost the description of what, and who, provoked the siege.
He was acting Bishop of Newcastle in August, 1914,when the Great War broke out, and served for a second term as acting bishop between the resignation of the bishop, Norman Straton, and the appointment of his successor, Herbert Wild, in 1916. Like Straton and Wild, Ormsby was a strong supporter of British participation in the War. 'Men and women have begun to realise the greatness of the cause...The cause of justice and righteousness and truth and freedom is one and the same everywhere, and without the unfeigned desire for these fellowship and progress may be but empty names'. Newcastle Diocesan Gazette,January 1916.
MacGregor's mother was also christened Helen. Walter Fergus MacGregor has a stained glass window and memorial dedicated to his memory in St George's Church, Everton, also the last resting place of Charles Hodgson Horsfall, it reads: > This Monument is erected by a few of his numerous friends as a testimony of > his great worth and many excellencies, and the unfeigned love and esteem > they bear to his memory. MacGregor's second son, Reverend William MacGregor (1848–1937), used his inherited wealth as benefactor to the town of Tamworth, Staffordshire and became a leading Egyptologist and collector of Egyptian antiquities. He eventually held the position of Vice President of the Liverpool Institute of Archaeology.
Hal and Ned Poins There has been longstanding debate about the character of Hal in the two Henry IV plays, particularly concerning the extent to which Hal's riotous and rebellious behaviour is authentic and to what extent it is wholly staged by the prince for effect.Paris, Bernard J., Character as a Subversive Force in Shakespeare: The History and Roman Plays, Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1991, p. 72. The portrayal of Hal as a son in conflict with his father derives from stories that circulated in English popular culture before Shakespeare. These had previously been portrayed in the anonymous play The Famous Victories of Henry V, in which Hal's criminal and riotous behaviour is depicted as entirely unfeigned.
Edward R. Ware came to Athens in 1829 and was one of Athens' most prominent physicians practicing during the antebellum, Civil War, and post-Civil War periods. The house was the site of many parties; William Hope Hull (founder of University of Georgia's law school in 1859) described Mrs. Edward R. Ware as "full of life, loving the company of old and young, rich and poor, hospitable to lavishness, never too sick to go to a 'party,' and never too tired to give one…that youthful vivacity and unfeigned cordiality, which added to the other attraction of her elegant home [today the Lyndon House, a city-owned art center] made it one of the centers of social life in Athens."Thomas, Frances Taliaferro.
Instead it states that all those condemned at the last judgement, but who subsequently respond in faith, who demonstrate unfeigned penitence, and who make a free choice of blessedness, will eventually be offered salvation (Chapter 137). Only those whose persistent pride prevents them from sincere repentance will remain forever in Hell. Such radically Pelagian beliefs in the 16th century were found amongst the anti-Trinitarian Protestant traditions later denoted as Unitarianism. Some 16th-century anti-Trinitarian divines sought to reconcile Christianity, Islam and Judaism; on the basis of very similar arguments to those presented in the Gospel of Barnabas, arguing that if salvation remains unresolved until the end times, then any one of the three religions could be a valid path to heaven for their own believers.
In 1628 her friend William Mason of Westminster left her a legacy of £600, "as a pledge of my unfeigned heart, to her unstained honour, wishing every penny of it were a thousand pound". Acknowledging her marital difficulties, Mason asked his executrix, Harington's sister Sarah, Lady Hastings (by now Lady Edmondes), to ensure that she, not Lord Dudley, received the money. Mason left legacies to Theodosia's daughters, and to other members of the Harington/Sidney family, including Anne Dyer, Lady Carr Cromwell and Theodosia, Lady Bodenham. He owned portrait miniatures of Theodosia Harington, Lady Hastings, and Lady Chesterfield, in gold cases enamelled with green.'Will of William Mason, Gentleman of Westminster, Middlesex', (8 October 1628) 2 February 1630, TNA PROB 11/157/110.
The SABIA-Mar, scheduled to launch in 2022, is a Brazilian/Argentine earth observation satellite. The jurisdiction can be agreed on at the time the contract is signed, during the life of the contract, or even when the dispute actually arises. The validity and effects of the choice of venue will be governed by the law of the member nations that normally have jurisdiction to hear the case, always resorting to the law most favorable to the validity of the contract. Whether or not jurisdiction is chosen, such jurisdiction will be prorogated in favor of the courts of the member state where the proceedings are in fact filed, provided the respondent voluntarily allows this in an affirmative and unfeigned way.
The peace treaty must have been reasonable to both commanders as the best way out of the stalemate. The fact that the two sides did not fight to the death may indicate that Finn felt some remorse for the rules of hospitality having been broken against his brother-in-law Hnæf and his men. Seiichi Suzuki points out that the Beowulf poet implies twice that Finn was to blame and was blamed.. Still, Finn may not have been a primary belligerent, only responsible in the capacity of a figurehead; and the picture is made more complex by the role of the eotena (see below). The Beowulf poet seems to allude to Finn's sincerity about the peace treaty when he says that Finn swore oaths to Hengest "with unfeigned zeal".
From the outset, they had called for armed resistance to a French restoration and for an immediate transfer of industry to workers and land to peasants.Daniel Hemery (1975) Revolutionnaires Vietnamiens et pouvoir colonial en Indochine. François Maspero, Paris. 1975Ngo Van (2000) Viet-nam 1920–1945: Révolution et contre- révolution sous la domination coloniale, Paris: Nautilus Editions The French Socialist leader Daniel Guerin recalls that when in Paris in 1946 he asked Hồ Chí Minh about the fate of the Trotskyist leader Tạ Thu Thâu, Hồ Chí Minh had replied, "with unfeigned emotion," that "Thâu was a great patriot and we mourn him, but then a moment later added in a steady voice ‘All those who do not follow the line which I have laid down will be broken.’"Daniel Guerin (1954) Aux services des colonises, 1930–1953, Editions Minuit, Paris, p.
It wasn't that an attempt hadn't been made to capture a likeness of Bromfield: > At [the January 1846] meeting of the Proprietors, a vote was passed, > requesting Mr. Bromfield to sit for his portrait or bust (as he might > prefer), to be preserved in the Athenæum. This vote was duly communicated to > Mr. Bromfield by the President, who received a courteous answer, containing > the following characteristic sentence: “Deeply impressed with the kindness > of the motives of the gentlemen who have made this proposition, and fully > appreciating the honor intended to be conferred upon me thereby (for which I > beg you to tender them my most grateful and unfeigned thanks), I > nevertheless beg leave, most decidedly and explicitly, to decline their very > friendly and polite proposition.”Josiah Quincy, The History of the Boston > Athenæum with Biographical Notes of its Deceased Founders. Cambridge: > Metcalf and Company, 1851.
Thomas Grantham "was for many years the principal minister among the General Baptists," and he wrote "chiefly in explanation or defense of Baptist sentiments. The largest was a folio volume, entitled Christianismus Primitivus."baptistlibraryonline.com In it he writes, > That such who are true believers, even branches of Christ the vine, and that > in the account of Christ whom he exhorts to abide in him, or such who have > Charity out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith > unfeigned, 1 Timothy 1:5, may nevertheless for want of watchfulness, swerve > and turn aside from the same, and become dead branches, cast into the fire, > and burned [John 15:6]. But such who add unto their Faith Virtue, and unto > Virtue Knowledge, and unto Knowledge Temperance, &c.; such shall never fall > [2 Peter 1:5–10], for they are kept by the power of God though Faith unto > Salvation [1 Peter 1:5].
These terms he construes as follows: "Hear the right, O Lord," represents the recital of shema (the declaration of God's unity); "Attend to my cry" - the Torah reading; "Give ear to my prayer" - that part of the service generally called Tefillah (prayer); "which I offer with unfeigned lips" - the Mussaf prayer.Yerushalmi Rosh Hashana 4 59c; compare Pesikta Rabbati 40; Midrash Tehillim on the verse The same R. Alexandri in whose name R. Huna b. Aḥa (Roba) reports this observation: Come and see how great is the influence of those who perform pious deeds: generally where the Bible uses the term hishkifto look toward or down, as in Genesis 19:28, Exodus 14:24 a curse is implied, while when used in connection with the discharge of duty, it means blessing, as in the prayer recited after the offering of tithes,Deuteronomy 26:12-15 which concludes with the expression: "Look down from thy holy habitation, from heaven, and bless".Yerushalmi Ma'aser Sheni 5 56, where the author's name is written Alexandra.

No results under this filter, show 37 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.