Filth Sentence Examples

filth
  • This ceremony took place at Aix on the filth of September 813.

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  • You shouldn't be here at all with all the filth you look like you've rolled in.

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  • His antithesis is darkness, filth, death, and produces all that is evil in the world.

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  • He moved over to the windowsill and half sat on it, heedless of the accumulated filth.

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  • Or in modern day parlance if you vandalize and cover something in filth, don't be surprised if it doesn't look attractive.

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  • This is an opening salvo in our campaign to put an end to its racist filth.

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  • Among the filthiest are the Aghoris, who preserve the ancient cannibal ritual of the followers of Siva, eat filth, and use a human skull as a drinking-vessel.

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  • It was simply reeking with cholera germs, having a mud floor that had become saturated with filth.

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  • A little bread or a few potatoes would have done as well, with less trouble and filth.

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  • People of this sign cannot tolerate clutter or filth, no matter how little or how much it might be.

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  • If they do not undertake these duties, they may make by-laws imposing on the occupiers of premises the duty of cleansing footways and pavements, the removal of house refuse, and the cleansing of earth-closets, privies, ashpits and cesspools; and an urban council may also make by-laws for the prevention of nuisances arising from snow, filth, dust, ashes and rubbish, and for the prevention of the keeping of animals on any premises so as to be injurious to health.

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  • Sometimes this means giving the filth an earner, often it means giving him a body.

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  • Apart from the vile filth put out by the BNP it must be hard to distinguish sometimes.

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  • Thus the housing of the poor has been improved, though this difficult problem is yet far from solution; not the large towns only, but the larger villages also, are cleansed and drained; food has been submitted to inspection by skilled officers; water supplies have been undertaken on a vast scale; personal cleanliness has been encouraged, and with wonderful success efforts have been made to bring civilized Europe back from the effects of a long wave of Oriental asceticism, which in its neglect and contempt of the body led men to regard filth even as a virtue, to its pristine cleanliness under the Greeks and Romans.

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  • Singapore, where plague has several times been introduced, but never taken hold, is probably quite as dirty and insanitary as Hong-Kong, and it is pertinently remarked by the Bombay Research Committee that filth per se has but little influence, inasmuch as " there occurred in the House of Correction at Byculla, where cleanliness is brought as near to perfection as is attainable, an outbreak which exceeded in severity that in any of the filthy thaw's and tenements around."

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  • Test Six Results Our team 's delicate sensibilities meant that they were ill prepared for the deluge of filth that poured onto their monitors.

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  • I have no wish for such filth to come into my house in this underhand manner.

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  • The filth of the stable is confounded with the whiteness of fresh snow.

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  • Karastan allowed over 5 million people to walk, spill food and grind an assortment of filth into this rug.

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  • A puppy in a mill is basically neglected until it's time for a sale, frequently living in its own filth.

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  • They are grazing on pasture and moving freely rather than being confined in their own filth.

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  • The typhoid organism was not found to be taken off from the decomposing masses of semi-liquid filth largely contaminated with a culture of bacillus typhosus; but, on the other hand, it was abundantly proved that it could grow over moist surfaces of stones, &c. Certain disease-producing organisms, such as the bacillus of tetanus and malignant oedema, appear to be universally distributed in soil, while others, as the bacillus typhosus and spirillum cholerae, appear to have only a local distribution.

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  • Some attempt has been made to improve matters by macadamizing one of the principal thoroughfares, but it will be the labour of a Hercules to cleanse this vast city from the accumulated filth of ages of neglect.

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  • The story runs that food was passed through the bars to the child, who survived in spite of the accumulated filth of his surroundings.

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  • They attach, however, supreme value to the realities of which the observances are reminders or types - on the Baptism which is more than putting away the filth of the flesh, and on the vital union with Christ which is behind any outward ceremony.

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  • The first treaty of this kind was concluded on the filth of December 1834 with a Griqua chief named Andries Waterboer.

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  • As for the extreme theory of the anti-Rabelaisians, that Rabelais was a "dirty old blackguard" who liked filth and wallowed in it from choice, that hardly needs comment.

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  • Provision is also made for enforcing the removal of accumulations of manure, dung, soil or filth from any premises in an urban district, and for the periodical removal of manure or other refuse from mews, stables or other premises.

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  • Though the people of Geneva had cast off the obedience of Rome, it was largely a political revolt against the duke of Savoy, and they were still (says Beza) "but very imperfectly enlightened in divine knowledge; they had as yet hardly emerged from the filth of the papacy."

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  • There then follows the title sequence proper for The Filth, which features Inspector Drury collecting a bribe hidden in a lavatory cistern.

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  • That even an echo of emotional love or dependency exists amidst such moral filth and emotional madness is oddly endearing.

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  • The filth of the world that fastened itself to all of us, a filth of the world that fastened itself to all of us, a filth that soiled our very souls, has been removed.

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  • We simply didn't expect to see such filth on the family shopping site, Amazon.

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  • Don't tell me you don't hear the racist filth that shouted every game.

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  • Deep in the circle of his pupil was the reflection of a giant toad, sitting asleep among its own putrid filth.

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  • You typically roll around in paint and shaving cream and other filth in them, and you are never allowed to wash them.

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  • It says a lot about the sub-human filth who voted Respect that they have someone like him as leader.

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  • You've spent the last four hours among the awful oppressive space filth.

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  • The woman had a black eye, and was in a wretched condition, whilst the house was reeking with filth and dirt.

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  • This he found to be defiled with filth, spread upon it by the Christians in despite of the Jews.

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  • In the case of the common drone-fly, Eristalis tenax, the individual, from a sedentary maggot living in filth, without any relations of sex, and with only unimportant organs for the ingestion of its foul nutriment, changes to a creature of extreme alertness, with magnificent powers of flight, living on the products of the flowers it frequents, and endowed with highly complex sexual structures.

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  • Its geographical distribution is of the widest, and its rapidity of breeding, in manure and dooryard filth, so great that, as a carrier of germs of disease, especially cholera and typhoid, the house-fly is now recognized as a potent source of danger; and various sanitary regulations have been made, or precautions suggested, for getting rid of it.

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  • The mission arrived at this point on the 7th of July 1903, and here it remained till the filth of December.

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  • The study of law (filth), which rests on Koran and tradition, is more difficult and complex, and begins, but is often not completed, in the third year.

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