Forsake Sentence Examples

forsake
  • He won't forsake his duty, she said and rose, agitated.

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  • When you forsake divine code, it has a way of forsaking you.

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  • He will never forsake you or cause you harm.

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  • Never forsake comfort for "hot" fashion.

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  • As early as 1425 the herring, a constant source of early wealth, began to forsake the Baltic waters.

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  • These bags really do prove that you can spend less money without having to forsake style.

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  • Now, do not forsake your own mercies, for lying vanities.

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  • And by what right does the United States now forsake Bosnia's legitimate claim to these rights?

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  • Will we act to eliminate hunger or will we forsake our credibility through omission?

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  • Well the wise seer the coming death foreknew, Yet scorned he to forsake his Spartan lords.

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  • For You will not forsake him who trusts in You to the very end.

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  • Crispi's uncompromising suppression of disorder, and his refusal to abandon either the Triple Alliance or the Eritrean colony, or to forsake his colleague Sonnino, caused a breach between him and the radical leader Cavallotti.

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  • The groom, on the other hand, may forsake a tuxedo jacket for a more casual shirt, and the bridal party may find themselves barefoot in the sand for easier walking as well as comfort.

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  • Kian is all about minimalistic style that doesn't forsake fashion.

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  • Various pieces of evidence go to show that it was shortly after this date that he resolved to forsake the world, divided his fortune among his friends and the poor, and betook himself to the monastery of St Sabas, near Jerusalem, where he spent the rest of his life.

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  • He shall turn back and give heed to those who forsake the holy covenant.

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  • Rejoice, Thou Who in thy care dost forsake none!

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  • In 1 Maccabees he is represented as writing an order to all his subjects to forsake the ways of their fathers and conform to a single prescribed pattern, and though in this form the account can hardly be 'exact, it does no doubt represent the spirit of his action.

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  • Hurley shorts are a fantastic ways to play at the beach without having to forsake any of your fashion sensibilities.

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  • Not only are these swim fashions between $80.00 and $150.00 -- which means that you won't have forsake your wallet and budget for high fashion -- with prices like those, you might just be able to purchase more than one look.

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  • Gone are the days when women are forced to forsake fashion for motherhood -- today's stylish Moms can look great while having their little ones' necessities easily at hand.

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  • Prussia, emboldened by Russia's difficulties, now went so far as to invite Poland also to forsake the Russian alliance, and placed an army corps of 40,000 men at her disposal.

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  • His good fortune, however, does not forsake him; he lands in Ireland just as a fierce dragon is devastating the country, and the king has promised the hand of the princess to the slayer of the monster.

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  • However, do n't forsake the rest of UGU just to get to the Linux-specific information.

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  • They were, as Milton said, " faithful and freeborn Englishmen and good Christians constrained to forsake their dearest home, their friends, and kindred, whom nothing but the wide ocean and the savage deserts of America could hide and shelter from the fury of the bishops."

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  • Rather than subject themselves to the tyranny of Ali Pasha, the Pargiotes decided to forsake their country; and accordingly in 1819, having previously exhumed and burned the remains of their ancestors, they migrated to the Ionian Islands.

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  • In 1545 he became minister of the Italian Protestant congregation at Augsburg, which he was compelled to forsake when, in January 1547, the city was occupied by the imperial forces in the Schmalkaldic War.

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  • After visiting the chief medical schools on the continent, he returned to Ireland in 1788; but the sudden death of his elder brother, Christopher Temple Emmet (1761-1788), a barrister of some distinction, induced him to follow the advice of Sir James Mackintosh to forsake medicine for the law as a profession.

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  • Probably I should not consciously and deliberately forsake my particular calling to do the good which society demands of me, to save the universe from annihilation; and I believe that a like but infinitely greater steadfastness elsewhere is all that now preserves it.

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  • Thus they circle until they fall upon the recent trail of a fox, for a wise hound will forsake everything else for this.

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  • Wherefore let us forsake their vain doing and their false teaching and turn unto the word which was delivered unto us from the beginning."

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  • Then the Word will drop into one heart to-day and to-morrow into another, and so will work that each will forsake the Mass."

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  • The Tupinoquins at first offered some opposition; but having made peace, they observed it faithfully, notwithstanding that the oppression of the Portuguese obliged them to forsake the country.

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  • During Thy passion she alone did not forsake Thee.

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  • This different treatment shows the feeling of the poet - the feeling for which he seeks to evoke our inmost sympathy - to oscillate between the belief that an awful crime brings with it its awful punishment (and it is sickening to observe how the argument by which the Friar persuades Annabella to forsake her evil courses mainly appeals to the physical terrors of retribution), and the notion that there is something fatal, something irresistible, and therefore in a sense self-justified, in so dominant a passion.

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