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13 Sentences With "without stint"

How to use without stint in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "without stint" and check conjugation/comparative form for "without stint". Mastering all the usages of "without stint" from sentence examples published by news publications.

When William sailed to Torbay his friend accompanied him, and when the Dutch prince was safely established on the throne of England, honours without stint were showered upon Lord Mordaunt.
He was for a time a barber in London (Wood, Athenae Oxon. ed. Bliss, iv. 763), but he soon relinquished the razor for the pen. "The scissors, however, he retained, for he borrowed without stint, and without acknowledgement also, from his predecessors", Much of his literary work commemorates his connection with Essex.
Interior In 1866 the new Church of St Peter was consecrated. Soon afterwards cholera struck the East End. Lowder organised Sisters of Mercy and others to care for the sick and raised funds for a tented hospital. The Priests and Sisters took great risks and worked without stint for the people of Wapping. At the end of the cholera people were calling Lowder, ‘the Father’ because he seemed like the father of the whole community.
Her death on Saturday, December 19, was hastened, but not caused by, her accident. A Memorial Service was held at St. leonards Church, Streatham at Noon on December 23 with her funeral at Brockley." On the same day, a correspondent wrote to the Times. "The untimely death of Miss Rosa Bassett is a severe loss, not only to London Education, but to teachers in all parts of the world, to whom her advice and aid were given without stint.
Almost every major collection of Japanese art in the world has an example of Michinobu's prolific work. The declares him "the last member of a great house" who had "to labour without stint". His work was highly praised and was often judged the greatest since Kanō Tan'yū's, though writer Ueda Akinari stated he could not "detect much to admire in him". The shogunate retainer considered Michinobu "a good painter" who was "compromised" by his ambitions and self- promotion.
When > they died, it was as though they were overcome with sleep, and they had all > good things; for the fruitful earth unforced bare them fruit abundantly and > without stint. They dwelt in ease and peace. Plato in his Cratylus referred to an age of golden men and also at some length on Ages of Man from Hesiod's Works and Days. The Roman poet Ovid simplified the concept by reducing the number of Ages to four: Gold, Bronze, Silver, and Iron.
As it is, we must recognise, without stint, the authentic mission of this poet to portray phenomenal phases of bush life. The rest is our loss.""Henry Kendall" Border Watch, 4 November 1882, p2S The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature called the poem "an iconic portrait of one of Australian outback life and literature." They then go on to note that while the poet "applauds the sturdy independence and easygoing nature of the teamster, he also subtly criticises his parochialism and insensitivity to the natural wonders that surround him.
These reflected at once a public > desire for the best, a concern on the part of citizens for the education of > their children, and the availability of taxes to provide the funds without > stint for public wants. Even the smaller communities were able to install complete water systems. After the end of iron mining, as the communities lost population, many of the publicly funded improvements such as schools have disappeared, and many of the houses have either been torn down or were left abandoned and dilapidated. Within Trommald and Cuyuna, the water towers are the most visible remains of the mining boom years.
There are also of arable land to the said estate, as its proportion of break from the Forest. Mapperley is a very pleasant situation, near Sherwood Forest, in a fine sporting country and is entitled to a common right, without stint on the said Forest.Nottingham Journal 14 November 1772 To judge from the land awarded as a result of the Basford Enclosure Act of 1792, ‘Mapperley’, at this time, meant all that area bounded by Redcliffe Road, Mansfield Road, Private Road and Woodborough Road.Nottinghamshire Archives Office, EA 131/2/1: Basford Inclosure Award, 1797 It is thought that the banker, John Smith, bought the advertised Mapperley estate.
Words such as liberal, liberty, libertarian and libertine all trace their history to the Latin liber, which means "free".Gross, p. 5. One of the first recorded instances of the word liberal occurs in 1375, when it was used to describe the liberal arts in the context of an education desirable for a free-born man. The word's early connection with the classical education of a medieval university soon gave way to a proliferation of different denotations and connotations. Liberal could refer to "free in bestowing" as early as 1387, "made without stint" in 1433, "freely permitted" in 1530 and "free from restraint"—often as a pejorative remark—in the 16th and the 17th centuries.
At the rally the next day, several hundred people listened to Dixon speak against the abortionist, calling for her neighbors to demand her eviction or else to take matters into their own hands. The crowd then walked to her residence three blocks away to shout threats but eventually dispersed.Browder 64–5. Restell responded with a letter to the New York Tribune and New York Herald alleging that Dixon was simply trying to extort money from her in return for an end to his agitation: > Again and again have I been applied to by his emissaries for money, and as > often have they been refused; and, as a consequence, I have been vilified > and abused without stint or measure, which, of course, I expected, and, of > the two, would prefer to his praise.
In 1780 a terrible hurricane devastated the island, where upon he furnished aid and medicines to the afflicted inhabitants without stint and without compensation. In 1781 he returned to England on account of bad health and during the voyage lost his wife. In 1790 he received from the Dutch government the appointment of surgeon-major to the colony of Demerara in South America; there he had charge of a military hospital of sixty to eighty beds. In 1796 he went to Baltimore. Here he helped forward the founding of the Baltimore General Dispensary, 1801; the penitentiary, 1802; the Bible Society, and the Baltimore Library. He delivered courses on natural history at the College of Medicine in 1811 and 1812, and his introductory lecture on “The Cause, Seat and Cure of Diseases” is extant.
Adolescence is a time when it is natural to be active, and it is also an awakening to the power of beauty, beauty of all kinds – in colour form, movement, sound and spiritual aspiration. The boy and girl see these first in their human counterparts, and if left to themselves will hardly look anywhere else. But it is now that they are ready for the beauty of poetry, music, painting, drawing, and above all the earth around them, and these they must be given without stint ... The tendency of modern civilisation is to hurry on the awakening of sexual consciousness – a fact that is much to be deplored, and that makes the tasks of all schoolmasters and schoolmistresses far more difficult. Children now see erotic films and posters and read erotic books at an age when we had not thought about such things.

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