Ebb Sentence Examples

ebb
  • He listened intently to the ebb and flow of these sounds.

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  • She didn't know what he was, only that the ebb and flow of magic and energy between them felt … natural.

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  • Gabriel sat in silent thought, comforted by the ebb and flow of the waves.

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  • The causes of the ebb were both internal and external.

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  • Realism was at a low ebb.

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  • Materialistic views were at the time rampant and fashionable, and faith in immortality was at a low ebb.

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  • The rise of the tide is very considerable in the estuary of the Meghna, and many of the creeks and water-courses in the island of Dakshin Shahbazpur, which are almost dry at ebb tide, contain 18 or 19 ft.

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  • The administration of justice, he declared, had fallen to so low an ebb as to be practically non-existent.

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  • In France the philosophes and the quarrels over the Unigenitus had effectually killed the spirit of religion; nor was the Christianity of other countries at a much higher ebb.

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  • Meanwhile, the Roman Empire was at the lowest ebb.

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  • He was at the lowest ebb I've ever seen him " .

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  • As I watched the life slowly ebb from my parents, so too did the life ebb from me.

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  • There was a strong ebb tide with 15 feet of water.

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  • Without rigid edges, this energy is able to maintain a constant ebb and flow.

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  • This constant ebb and flow of energy, or constant change, relates to the yin yang concept of polarity.

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  • Most remarkable is the presence of a number of beetles along the seashore between tide-marks, where, sheltered in some secure nook, they undergo immersion twice daily, and have their active life confined to the few hours of the low ebb.

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  • Hegel's fortunes were now at the lowest ebb.

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  • The other Greek kings who aimed at power in Asia Minor were his natural enemies, and about 222 reduced Pergamenian power to a very low ebb.

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  • The parochial clergy were probably in a healthier condition; but the old abuses of pluralism and non-residence were as rampant as ever, and though their work may have been in many cases honorably carried out, it is certain that energy and intelligence were at a low ebb.

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  • She didn't know what he was, only that the ebb and flow of magic and energy between them felt … natural.

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  • Plans to develop a ebb and flow aero pod along the same principles are in the pipe line.

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  • Thus we see in history a regular alternation of ebb and flow in the tide of human progress.

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  • They wrote 2 by 5, a musical cabaret which showcased a selection of classic Kander and Ebb songs.

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  • Deposition occurs where the two opposing forces are evenly balanced forming the ebb tidal delta.

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  • The Axis alliance as such had again reached low ebb.

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  • Estuary - The mouth of a river where it broadens into the sea and within which there is tidal ebb and flow.

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  • The trick is to catch them at their peak and relinquish them wholly at their natural ebb.

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  • Superb views from the front windows over the width of the Solway Firth with colors changing as the tides ebb and low.

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  • There was a Russian freighter on the still used upstream wharf, which meant that John's dash across the ebb side on.

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  • There is a part of an old wreck that can be seen on a big ebb spring tide.

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  • These attributes jarred on the sensitive Ritson, who racked his brains for contumelious epithets such as "stupid and disgusting," "cart-loads of rubbish," &c.; and during the greater part of the 18th and 19th centuries Lydgate's reputation was at its lowest ebb.

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  • The population henceforth dwindled in consequence of pestilence and emigration, and although the island recovered somewhat in the 18th century under a comparatively lenient rule it was brought to a very low ebb owing to the severity of its governor during the Greek revolution.

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  • The market reporters make some attempt to materialize the current gossip, and doubtless catch well enough the great movements in the ebb and flow of demand, but the sum of countless obscure transactions cannot be estimated.

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  • Essentially the water would be drawn from the ebb tide of the Thames, which is about two thirds less salty than the sea.

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  • Cash flows ebb and flow, causing cash shortages in some months and providing additional cash in other months.

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  • Flood and Drain (Ebb and Flow) - The plant containers sit above the nutrient reservoir.

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  • Demand for a book may ebb and flow depending on many circumstances.

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  • Ebb and flow your way to the alter with a carefree wavy style.

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  • Sit at an outdoor table and watch the ebb and flow of San Franciscans coast by.

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  • Tide Pools - Shallow tide pools ebb and flow with water depicting the tidal action.

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  • If you're looking for something a bit more specifically surf centered, you can try Surfboard Shack, although the selection seems to ebb and flow like the tides.

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  • Don't be afraid to let the conversation ebb and flow.

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  • Depending on the ebb and flow of the tides, the crab decides how to best chart its course.

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  • While stories of the Loch Ness Monster seem to ebb and flow within the media, a new sighting or image of Nessie, as the creature is known, is usually all that it takes to prompt a new interest in this old legend.

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  • Bottom line, it is fun to make shoes that respect the real shape and miracle of feet, and it is fun to participate in the ebb and flow of collective ideas as expressed in fashion!

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  • Like other popular looks, these items tend to ebb and resurface as a result of runway trends.

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  • Each program revolves around the lives and businesses of two or more powerful families, with other characters entering and exiting with the ebb and flow of various story lines.

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  • But the ebb and flow of the business makes this impossible.

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  • During active swimming months, remind young children to keep a close eye on the glistening surface of the water and these stinging rainbows who casually float, ebb and flow their way through the changing tides.

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  • The fragrant ocean breeze was chilly as it brushed his skin, and his movements fell into the rhythm of the ebb and flow of waves.

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  • When Hastings landed at Calcutta in October 1750 the affairs of the East India Company were at a low ebb.

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  • In the sense of "flowing water," the word is applied to the inflow of the tide, as opposed to "ebb."

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  • Russia, was reduced to a very low ebb, in consequence of the silkworm disease, and was only renewed with any vigour towards the end of the 'eighties.

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  • Looking at eastern Europe and western Asia only, one must say that Asiatic influences have on the whole prevailed hitherto (though perhaps the tide is turning), for Islam is paramount in this region and European culture at a low ebb.

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  • The fall of the republic was accompanied by interruption of trade and decay of manufacture, and in the last years of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century the glass-making of Murano was at a very low ebb.

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  • Peace returned, and during the next twenty or twenty-five years Sikhism reached its lowest ebb; but since then the demand for Sikhs in the regiments of the Indian army and farther afield has largely revived the faith.

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  • But its architectural poverty and small size show that the resources of Assyria were at a low ebb.

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  • Because the volume of the pipe represents the excess of the contraction of the inner walls and the molten lake jointly over that of the outer walls, between the time when the lake begins to ebb and the time when even the axial metal is too firm to be drawn further open by this contraction, the space occupied by blowholes must, by compensating for part of this excess, lessen the size of the pipe, so that the more FIG.

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  • Thus during the ' closing years of last and the opening years of the present century, political life in Austria was at a low ebb and the constitution was observed in the letter rather than in spirit.

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  • Without touching him, she still felt the ebb and flow of energy.

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  • The sound of the ocean was calming under the full moon, the steady ebb and flow of waves drawing him to sit on the beach.

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  • The health of the city depends, of course, to a large extent on this ebb and flow.

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  • The Federal and Confederate forces controlled at this time different parts of the state; there was some ebb and flow of military fortune in 1864, and for a short time two rival governments.

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  • He found their religion at a low ebb, the regular clergy apathetic and sensual, the bishop little obeyed, the laity divided by the family feuds of their rulers, unchaste and ignorant.

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  • The greater part of the area of the town is occupied by gardens and plantations of palm-trees, intersected by a number of little canals, cleansed twice daily with the ebb and flow of the tide, which rises here about 9 ft.

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  • He also shows how his method may be used to determine some curious and long-discussed problems, such as the light of the stars, the ebb and flow of the tide, the motion of the balance.

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  • As the tide rises the spiders take refuge in crevices and spin over their retreat a sheet of silk, impervious to water, beneath which they oie in safety with a supply of air until the ebb exposes the site again to the sun.

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  • As a result of the porosity of the rock, many of the wells feel the influence of the sea and exhibit an ebb and flow.

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  • Under ordinary conditions the sluices are raised to admit boats to pass from the half flood to half ebb, so that the river remains tidal up to Teddington, the next lock.

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  • Education, as need hardly be said, was in the 'sixties at a very low ebb, and nothing approaching the standard of a high school existed.

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  • After that the empire fell to a low ebb, and Central Burma was often subject to Shan dynasties.

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  • She was in such shallow water that the Confederate iron-clad ram could not get near her at ebb tide, and about 5 o'clock the Confederates postponed her capture until the next day and anchored off Sewell's Point.

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  • Even at the lowest ebb of his fortunes Christian had never lost hope of retrieving them, and between 1629 and 1643 the European situation presented infinite possibilities to politicians with a taste for adventure.

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  • Algae of more delicate texture than either Fucaceae or Laminariaceae also occur in the region exposed by the ebb of the tide, but these secure their exemption from desiccation either by retaining water in their meshes by capillary attraction, as in the case of Pilayella, or by growing among the tangles of the larger Fucaceae, as in the case of Polysiphonia fastigiate, or by growing in dense masses on rocks, as in the case of Laurencia pinnatifida.

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  • Intermittent springs exist in Weston, which are affected by the ebb and flow of the tide.

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  • The tide turned from flood to ebb during the action, and the surface current which in the Channel sets to the west with the ebb began to carry the fleets with it.

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  • The crossing of the bar requires considerable care, and at ebb tide the outward current runs 51knots per hour.

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  • As they are subject to the ebb and flow of the Elbe, at certain times they run almost dry.

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  • He did not take the field till the Carlist cause appeared to be at a very low ebb, and until he had received a commission from Don Carlos as commander-in-chief in Navarre.

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  • At the ebb of the tide the more or less clear water flows back again from the land into the main river with sufficient force to clean out any deposit which may have accumulated in the drain leading to the warped area, thus allowing free access of more warpladen water at the next tide.

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  • Russia's military prestige was at a low ebb, her finance in a state of chaos, the Tsarist regime discredited and the country in the throes of revolution.

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  • The ebb and flow of the tide is distinctly visible here, Taranto being one of the few places in the Mediterranean where it is perceptible.

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  • The shore lagoons are, however, rendered healthy by the ebb and flow of the tide, which is much more considerable than elsewhere in the Mediterranean.

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  • This ebb continues, and, combined with the progressive narrowing of the molten lake as more and more of it solidifies and joins the shore layers, gives rise to the pipe, a cavity like an inverted pear, as shown at C in fig.

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  • The immediate effect however of what Knox thus approved was to bring his cause to its lowest ebb, and on the very day when Mary rode from Holyrood to her army, he sat down and penned the prayer, "Lord Jesus, put an end to this my miserable life, for justice and truth are not to be found among the sons of men!"

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  • The war destroyed the fisheries, which steadily declined, reaching their lowest ebb from 1820 to 1840.

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  • In September 1894 was published The Ebb Tide, the latest of his books which he saw through the press.

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  • British prestige after the disastrous Boer War of 1881 was at a very low ebb, and he realized that he could not count on any a ctive help from the imperial or colonial authorities.

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  • In consequence this census marks the lowest ebb of American census work.

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  • The ebb and flow of the tides were, he asserted, a visible proof of the terrestrial double movement, since they resulted from inequalities in the absolute velocities through space of the various parts of the earth's surface, due to its rotation.

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