Stirred Sentence Examples

stirred
  • She stirred the ice cream until it was soft.

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  • She stirred and cuddled into him.

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  • After a while, she stirred and finally opened her eyes.

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  • The whole country was stirred up.

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  • I don't know what it is, but it stirred up the soup.

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  • It stirred his blood.

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  • Her demon stirred in lazy agitation, as if still under the spell of Jame.

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  • Panic stirred at the idea of Gabriel dragging her to some freakish underworld.

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  • Fury stirred at the thought of Jessi taking it to them.

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  • Their turf wars and battle against the Dark One --and now Sasha --had stirred up some of the bloodiest wars in mankind's history.

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  • She stirred his intense curiosity, like only the unknown could.

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  • She stirred from her trance at the voice, mind replaying scenes of Darian's death.

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  • She was gorgeous in the moonlight, and desire stirred his blood.

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  • Something about her stirred his insides in a way that he thought might never happen again.

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  • Deidre stirred from behind him.

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  • Not even a slight breeze stirred the hot air, but the trees seemed to be swaying.

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  • Protective anger stirred at his dismissive tone.

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  • Katie had no idea what she had stirred up.

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  • She stirred, cuddling his hand and breathing a sigh of contentment.

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  • Zach stirred and yawned, the tiny hands opening in a stretch.

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  • Her hope had been crushed in every other way – except that it stirred once more at the idea there was more to him than she knew.

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  • Something stirred deep inside, increasing her pulse.

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  • Confusion and anger stirred again.

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  • Anger stirred within her at the satisfaction on his face.

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  • His scent stirred her blood.

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  • More anger stirred as Jade bit his lip to keep from defending Kris.

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  • In spite of her strict moral standards on premarital relationships, Carmen was obviously stirred deeply by desire.

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  • Brady stirred across the room.

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  • Kris's memories stirred stronger than he liked. He remembered Lilith, a beautiful Immortal whose laugh had filled him with happiness. Their love had been intense and brief, lasting less than a human year in total. One day, she was just … gone.

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  • The playful challenge in her gaze stirred his competitive edge, the one that didn't lose and hated being out of control.

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  • While many didn't care for the Army dress green uniform, when talk of eliminating it hit the army population, it stirred quite a lively debate.

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  • It was characteristic of his nature that he should be stirred to such delight by the Revolution in France, and should labour so earnestly to make his countrymen understand with what gravity and sobriety it had been effected..

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  • It is here stirred till it becomes ropy, and the perfume, colour or any other substance desired in the soap is added.

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  • The silicate in the form of a concentrated solution is crutched or stirred into the soap in a mechanical mixing machine after the completion of the saponification, and it appears to enter into a distinct chemical combination with the soap. While silicate soaps bear heavy watering, the soluble silicate itself is a powerful detergent, and it possesses certain advantages when used with hard waters.

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  • The soap is melted by heat, the glycerin is stirred in, and the mixture strained and poured into forms, in which it hardens but slowly into a transparent mass.

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  • First, the emperor's wrath was stirred by the influence of France in the counsels of the republic; then Cosimo, who was no less jealous of the French, conceived the design of annexing Siena to his own dominions.

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  • The loss of Ptolemais in 1291 stirred the pope to renewed enthusiasm for a crusade.

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  • He held a prominent place in the New School branch of the Presbyterians, to which he adhered on the division of the denomination in 1837; he had been tried (but not convicted) for heresy in 1836, the charge being particularly against the views expressed by him in Notes on Romans (1835) of the imputation of the sin of Adam, original sin and the atonement; the bitterness stirred up by this trial contributed towards widening the breach between the conservative and the progressive elements in the church.

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  • Her great deliverance and victory naturally stirred up the energies of Syracuse at home and abroad.

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  • Paris was the stronghold of conservatism, and Germany was stirred by the teachings of one who must be considered apart from all schools - Paracelsus.

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  • The English school of medicine was also profoundly stirred by the teachings of the two brothers William and John Hunter, especially the latter - who must therefore be briefly mentioned, though their own researches were chiefly concerned with subjects lying a little outside the limits of this sketch.

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  • An Indian sweetmeat is stirred up in water with a two-edged sword and the novice repeats after the officiant the articles of his faith.

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  • In the same year he edited Aids to Faith, a volume written in opposition to Essays and Reviews, the progressive sentiments of which had stirred up a great storm in the Church of England.

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  • If the liquid is stirred up by the rotation R of a cylindrical body, d4lds = normal velocity reversed dy = - Rx- Ry ds (5) ds 4' + 2 R (x2 + y2) = Y, (6) a constant over the boundary; and 4,' is the current-function of the relative motion past the cylinder, but now V 2 4,'+2R =o, (7) throughout the liquid.

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  • These pans are sometimes heated by boiling oil, with the idea that under such conditions the sugar which is kept stirred all the time as it thickens cannot be burnt or caramelized; but the same object can be attained more economically with steam of a given pressure by utilizing its latent heat.

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  • To prevent this various implements, such as disk harrows and specially constructed rollers, may be used to consolidate the upper stirred portion of the soil and place it in close capillary relationship with the lower unmoved layer.

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  • In 1864 the discovery of the six letters stirred up William Lee to a new investigation, and the results of this were published (London, 1869) in three large volumes.

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  • The discovery that the poet had printed secretly 1500 copies of The Patriot King caused him to publish a correct version in 1749, and stirred up a further altercation with Warburton, who defended his friend against Bolingbroke's bitter aspersions, the latter, whose conduct was generally reprehended, publishing a Familiar Epistle to the most Impudent Man Living.

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  • The method of using these liquids is in all cases the same; a particle is dropped in; if it floats a diluent is added and the mixture well stirred.

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  • For Waldo had a translation of the New Testament made into Provençal, and his preachers not only stirred up men to more holy lives but explained the Scriptures at their will.

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  • Taking advantage of the absence of Flaccus at Chalcedon and the discontent aroused by his avarice and severity, Fimbria stirred up a revolt and slew Flaccus at Nicomedia.

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  • The ground is then left unworked and open to the crumbling influence of frost till towards the end of winter, when it is stirred with the cultivator followed by the harrows, or in some cases ploughed with a shallow furrow.

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  • Herzl was stirred by sympathy for the misery of Jews under persecution, but he was even more powerfully moved by the difficulties experienced under conditions of assimilation.

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  • Saxony owes its unusual wealth in fruit partly to the care of the elector Augustus I., who is said never to have stirred abroad without fruit seeds for distribution among the peasants and farmers.

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  • When the Jews in Jerusalem, stirred to revolt by the outrages of the Roman procurators, had seized the fortress of Masada and treacherously murdered the garrison of the palace of Herod, Gallus set out from Antioch to restore order.

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  • A perusal of these books will show with how wide a range of investigation and with what care Lord Selborne prepared himself for the discussion of these ecclesiastical questions which deeply stirred him.

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  • He stirred up his own clergy, he wrote to encourage the dissidents at Constantinople, he addressed himself to the sister and wife of the emperor (Theodosius himself being known to be still favourable to Nestorius), and he beggared the clergy of his own diocese to find bribes for the officials of the court.

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  • The emissaries of Razin, armed with inflammatory proclamations, had stirred up the inhabitants of the modern governments of Nizhniy-Novgorod, Tambov and Penza, and penetrated even so far as Moscow and Great Novgorod.

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  • The favourite Buckingham stirred the flames of his master's discontent.

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  • It was perhaps only in time of war, when Israel felt himself to be fighting the battles of Yahweh, that the Hebrew was stirred to the depths of his nature by emotions of a religious colour.

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  • Haakon, therefore, stirred up strife between Snorri's kinsman Sturla and Snorri, who had to fly from Reykjaholt in 1236; and in 12 3 7 he left the country and went back to Norway.

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  • Thus Abarbanel calculated the coming of the Messiah for 1503 A.D.; the year 1500 was in many places observed as a preparatory season of penance; and throughout the 16th century the Jews were much stirred and more than one false Messiah appeared.

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  • For some years before 1860 Ruskin had been deeply stirred by reflecting on the condition of all industrial work and the evils of modern society.

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  • Those which are not required for the kitchen, if allowed to stand, and if the flower-bud is picked out on its first appearance, and the earth stirred about them, frequently produce bulbs equal in size and quality to the large ones that are imported from the Continent.

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  • On being ordained he became assistant to his father, and immediately stirred the entire county by his burning eloquence.

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  • Orleans stirred up Cinq-Mars to attempt Richelieu's murder, and then deserted his unfortunate accomplice.

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  • If a solution of a salt be stirred as it cools in an open vessel, a thin shower of crystals appears at or about the saturation temperature.

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  • This solution is stirred continuously and the temperature falls slowly below the freezing point, till the supersaturation point is reached, or until a crystal of ice is introduced.

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  • Queen Eleanor, whom he alienated by his faithlessness, stirred up her sons to rebellion; and they had grievances enough to be easily persuaded.

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  • The whole was thrown in several portions on to the hearth of a furnace previously heated to low redness and was stirred at intervals for three hours.

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  • The old Swedish and Norwegian missionary societies work in South Africa, Madagascar and India; but large numbers of Scandinavians have been stirred up in missionary zeal, and have gone out to China in connexion with the China Inland Mission; several were massacred in the Boxer outbreaks.

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  • In 1231 the hostile intentions of the emperor once more stirred the cities into activity.

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  • Where coke or ordinary hard coal are used, the removal of clinkers should be done systematically, and the fires stirred.

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  • Anthracite coal fires should not be stirred more than is absolutely necessary, and should not be fed in driblets.

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  • If the pig iron is to follow path 2, the purification which converts it into wrought iron or steel consists chiefly in oxidizing and thereby removing its carbon, phosphorus and other impurities, while it is molten, either by means of the oxygen of atmospheric air blown through it as in the Bessemer process, or by the oxygen of iron ore stirred into it as in the puddling and Bell-Krupp processes, or by both together as in the open hearth process.

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  • As the iron oxide is stirred into the molten metal laboriously by the workman or "puddler " with his hook or "rabble," it oxidizes the silicon to silica and the phosphorus to phosphoric acid, and unites with both these products, forming with them a basic iron silicate rich in phosphorus, called " puddling " or " tap cinder."

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  • They defeated the Fanti, stirred up disputes at Elmina, and encamped at Mampon near Cape Coast, to the great alarm of the inhabitants.

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  • The placer-miner's cradle and rocking-trough were replaced by puddling troughs stirred by a revolving comb worked by horse power; reservoirs were constructed for the scanty water-supply, bucket elevators were introduced to carry away the tailings; and the natives were confined in compounds.

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  • But in the meantime in 1733 the English and Dutch stirred up the Mahommedan general at Hugh to pick a quarrel.

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  • Garrison in 1831, had stirred the conscience of the North, and had had its influence even upon many who strongly deprecated its extreme radicalism; the Compromise of 1850 had failed to silence sectional controversy, and the Fugitive Slave Law, which was one of the compromise measures, had throughout the North been bitterly assailed and to a considerable extent had been nullified by state legislation; and finally in 1854 the slavery agitation was fomented by the passage of the KansasNebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise and gave legislative sanction to the principle of "popular sovereignty" - the principle that the inhabitants of each Territory as well as of each state were to be left free to decide for themselves whether or not slavery was to be permitted therein.

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  • It was the memory of the Empire which stirred his blood; from the beginning of his reign he looked forward to securing the Lombard and the imperial crowns.

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  • He wrote an important letter to The Times upon the subject, and stirred up much martial enthusiasm among his colleagues.

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  • The first half of the 3rd century was marked, especially in Syria, by a strong tendency to syncretism, which may well have stirred certain Christian Essenes to fresh propaganda.

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  • By this time the other Greek cities were stirred to help, while Sicels and Sicans joined Hannibal.

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  • He was also once more stirred up to play the part of a Hellenic champion in yet another Punic war.

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  • The actual outbreak of 1282, the famous Sicilian Vespers, was stirred up by the wrongs of the moment.

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  • There was a tremor in Bright's voice in the touching parts of his great speeches which stirred the feelings even of hostile listeners.

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  • The ploughshare is again in every quarter turning up a soil which had for many seasons never been stirred, except by the hoofs of predatory cavalry."

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  • By appropriating the fiefs of the Egyptian officers and giving them to his Kurdish followers he stirred up much ill-feeling, which resulted in a conspiracy, of which the object was to recall the Fran.ks with the view of overthrowing the new rgime; but this conspiracy was revealed by a traitor and crushed.

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  • At that moment it was in a state of - open rebellion, stirred up by a religious fanatic who proclaimed himself a mahdi of Islam.

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  • At a time when there was no real bond of cohesion between the different states, he stirred among them a common enthusiasm; and in making Prussia great he laid the foundation of a genuinely united empire.

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  • The result was an enormous influx of pilgrims to Rome, which stirred the pope's attention.

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  • The campaign of Jena and the battle of Eylau followed; and Napoleon, though still intent on the Russian alliance, stirred up Poles, Turks and Persians to break the obstinacy of the tsar.

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  • She was expelled from Austrasia, and then stirred up Theuderich II.

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  • In face of obstacles apparently insurmountable he had made a nation, consolidating all the forces which Wallace had stirred into life.

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  • When Theseus returned to Athens he found that a sedition had been stirred up by Menestheus, a descendant of Erechtheus, one of the old kings of Athens.

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  • Nor was any English king before Alfred stirred up to undertake the same task.

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  • His preaching stirred the commonalty.

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  • The air-pipe goes right to the bottom of the cylinder and there branches out into perforated side-pipes, so that the mass is thoroughly stirred up all the time.

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  • For accurate work it is essential that the liquid in the calorimeter should be continuously stirred, and also in the enclosure, the lid of which must be waterjacketed, and kept at the same steady temperature as the sides.

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  • We are told that an assembly was stirred to wild applause by a double trochee - - u.

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  • He brought the Turks into the field against them; he incited the native population of Transoxiana against their Arab lords, and stirred up discord between the Arabs themselves.

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  • Being deeply stirred by the best ideas of the Revolutionary epoch, he found a more congenial sphere for the display of his great powers in his new position.

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  • Probably no Oriental ruler, not even excepting Ali of Iannina, has ever stirred up so much interest among his contemporaries as Mehemet Ali.

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  • Catholic emancipation and the Reform Bill had deeply stirred, not only the political spirit of Oxford, but also the church feeling which had long been stagnant.

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  • The indignation excited by Leo X.'s sale of indulgences, the moral rage stirred in Northern hearts by papal abominations in Rome, were external causes which precipitated the schism between Teutonic and Latin Christianity.

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  • By introducing into his church a printed book of prayers and also an organ, Dr Lee stirred up vehement controversies in the church courts, which resulted in the recognition of the liberty of congregations to improve their worship. The Church Service Society, having for its object the study of ancient and modern liturgies, with a view to the preparation of forms of prayer for public worship, was founded in 1865; it has published eight editions of its " Book of Common Order," which, though at first regarded with suspicion, has been largely used by the clergy.

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  • When this white powder is heated and stirred about by any substance whatever, it collects in masses like new-fallen snow, and adheres to the body with which it is stirred.

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  • His great popularity, and the general ignorance of the reasons for his imprisonment, stirred up a strong feeling against the queen, who was reported to be influenced by Bacon, and such indignation was raised against the latter that his friends feared his life would be in danger.

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  • With a success and speed that contemporary writers deemed miraculous, Owen stirred up his countrymen against the king, and by their aid succeeded in destroying castle after castle, and burning town after town throughout the whole length and breadth of the land between the years 1401 and 1406.

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  • Naturally delicate and highly-strung, he was profoundly stirred by the horrors of the siege of Lyons.

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  • Evangelists like Samuel Harris (1724 - c.1794) and John Waller (1741-1802) stirred whole communities and established Baptist churches where the Baptist name had hitherto been unknown.

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  • The ground ore was stirred with this solution at 7 C. in wooden tubs until all the copper was dissolved.

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  • This last reason, while probably most effective with the judges, only stirred up more furiously the fury in Schopenhauer's breast, and his preface is one long fulmination against the ineptitudes and the charlatanry of his bête noire, Hegel.

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  • In the year 1854 England was stirred to its depths by the report of the sufferings of the sick and wounded in the Crimea.

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  • The chewed material is then placed in a bowl, and water or coco - nut milk is poured over it, the whole is well stirred, and subsequently the woody matter is removed by an ingenious but simple mechanical manipulation.

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  • In the first years of the reign of Charles VIII., Louis made a determined stand against the government of the Beaujeus, stirred up coalitions of the feudal nobles against them, and was finally defeated and taken prisoner at St Aubin du Cormier in 1488.

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  • The French Revolution had stirred the mind of Southey to its depths.

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  • He was inclined to regard Shepstone's act as premature, and he realized that it stirred very deeply Dutch national feeling throughout South Africa.

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  • Tertullian believed that an angel was sent down, when God was invoked, like that which stirred the pool of Bethesda.

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  • When received into the government stores the opium is kept in large wooden boxes holding about 50 maunds and occasionally stirred up, if only a little below the standard.

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  • But the success of Germanicus had already stirred the jealousy and fears of Tiberius, and he was reluctantly compelled to return to Rome.

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  • The passion for spiritual leadership stirred within him.

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  • Returning to England in April 1425 he soon entangled himself in a quarrel with the council and his uncle Henry Beaufort, and stirred up a tumult in London.

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  • Contests with the Flemings in West Zeeland and with the West Frisians, stirred up to revolt by his brother William, ended in his favour.

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  • Zinc carbonate is added to the mixture (to neutralize the acid formed), which is kept warm for some days and well stirred.

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  • Though the ranks of the priesthood were for ever firmly closed against intruders, a man of lay birth, a Kshatriya or Vaisya, whose mind revolted against the orthodox creed, and whose heart was stirred by mingled zeal and ambition, might find through these irregular orders an entrance to the career of a religious teacher and reformer.

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  • It is, however, clear from what follows, that about this time the mind of the young Rajput must, from some cause or other, have been deeply stirred.

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  • Rousseau wrote, " It is good composition when the objects represented are not there solely as they are, but when they contain under a natural appearance the sentiments which they have stirred in our souls..

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  • In the form of standard coil recommended by the Berlin Reichsanstalt the coil is immersed in an insulating oil which is kept stirred by means of a small electric motor during the time of making the measurement.

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  • Such a basis could not be found, and when Charles stirred up a fresh civil war and a Scottish invasion (1648) the leaders of the army vowed that, if victory was theirs, they would bring him to justice.

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  • The employment of soldiers to suppress liberty of speech stirred up the resentment of Englishmen as nothing else could have done, and this resentment was increased by the conviction that the government was engaged with the Holy Alliance in an unholy conspiracy against liberty everywhere.

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  • The same disgust for abstractions and naked doctrines of right that had stirred him against the pretensions of the British parliament in 1774 and 1776, was revived in as lively a degree by political conceptions which he judged to be identical in the French assembly of 1789.

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  • We cannot wonder that the whole nation was stirred to the very depths, or that they strengthened the aversion of the king, of Windham and other important personages in the government against the plans of Pitt.

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  • For the withdrawal of the residual coke at the end of the carbonization, the lower mouthpiece door is opened, the barrier removed and the coke in the lower part of the retort is "` tickled" or gently stirred with an iron rod to overcome a slight adhesion to the retort; the entire mass then readily discharges itself.

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  • In later times revolts were easily stirred up among individual cities, but a united national movement was rarely concerted.

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  • Although treated with great generosity by Caesar, he stirred up Massilia (Marseilles) to an unsuccessful resistance against him.

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  • So far, however, there is no ethical difference between Christian faith and that of Judaism, or its later imitation, Mahommedanism; except that the personal affection of loyal trust is peculiarly stirred by the blending of human and divine natures in Christ, and the rule of duty impressively taught by the manifestation of his perfect life.

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  • Political passions, which had been stirred up by the long struggle against King Milan's Progressive regime, could not be allayed so quickly; and as the anarchical element of the Radical party obtained the ascendancy over the more cultured,and more moderate members, all sorts of political excesses were committed.

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  • Neither St Leger nor his successor Sir James Croft could do anything with Ulster, where the papal primate Wauchop, a Scot by birth, stirred up rebellion among the natives and among the Hebridean invaders.

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  • The pope excommunicated the emperor and stirred up civil war against him in Saxony with such success that he brought about Henry's bitter humiliation at Canossa in the following year.

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  • The fact that the French Protestants in the Cvennes were again in arms enabled the Habsburgs and the Spaniards to make a fresh attack upon the Alpine passes; but after the peace of Alais Richelieu placed himself at the head of forty thousand men, and stirred up enemies everywhere against the emperor, victorious now over the king of Denmark as in 1621 over the elector palatine.

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  • The pillage was so shameless that public opinion was stirred to revolt.

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  • At most we can only fill up the portrait by reference to the tinge of simple old-fashioned scholarship, which on its historic side made him an eager searcher for antiquities and among old records, and on its poetic occasionally stirred him to an excursion as far as that gentlest slope of Parnassus inhabited by the descriptive muse.

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  • A little clay, stirred up with water in a glass vessel, takes hours to settle, and even after two or three days some remains in suspension; in fact, it has been suggested that in such cases the clay forms a sort of "colloidal solution" in the water.

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  • The first of these resemble an ordinary reverberatory furnace by having a flat bed which, however, has the form of a circular disk mounted on a central shaft, and receives a slow movement of rotation from a water-wheel or other motor, so that every part of the surface is brought successively under the action of the fire, the charge being stirred and ultimately removed by passing under a series of fixed scraper arms placed above the surface at various points.

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  • What was it about him that stirred her more deeply than any man she had ever known?

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  • She smelled it suddenly and jerked, scouring his body to find the blood whose scent stirred her senses.

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  • Her blood stirred at the sight of his lean frame.

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  • Her hope had been crushed in every other way – except that it stirred once more at the idea there was more to him than she knew.

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  • Rhyn.s anger stirred at the sight of her bleeding alone, and he crossed to her, snatching the first aid kit off the bed.

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  • Kris's memories stirred stronger than he liked.  He remembered Lilith, a beautiful Immortal whose laugh had filled him with happiness.  Their love had been intense and brief, lasting less than a human year in total.  One day, she was just … gone.  Slaughtered by Rhyn, who had taken her head the same way his brothers took the head of Rhyn's demoness mother.

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  • He stirred her blood in a way no mortal man ever had.

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  • He found the last few weeks hard, feeling the old animosity toward him stirred by the tensions in the camp.

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  • Open inspection of the papers amply confirmed Judge Babington's conclusions and stirred the public conscience.

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  • He scarcely stirred otherwise, but he lifted the chair bodily into the air with one hand and hurled it at Northover's head.

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  • They would go away chastened, stirred, amused; they would not be in the riotous mood associated with the tavern.

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  • Their spiritual destitution stirred the spirit of Baron Van Imhoff, by whose exertions two additional congregations were formed in 1743.

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  • Additives in the form of specially formulated powders can be stirred into the epoxy for special uses.

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  • I stirred with the first gray glimmer of dawn; I tried not to wake the geese.

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  • Therefore, we are linking to an MP3 file of the voicemail that has stirred this literal hornet 's nest of controversy.

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  • How many old Studio photographs have you come across and when looked at, have stirred the imagination?

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  • You're right, the whole issue has stirred up a bit of a hornet's nest.

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  • Traveling back to the airport in a van with a whole platoon of the grumpy old men I found he had stirred UKIP too.

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  • As the buffalo wandered the prairies, they stirred up insects that the = cowbirds ate.

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  • Even the normally quiescent Western States of the USA were stirred to protest by this flagrant disregard of the Rules of the Sea.

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  • Production is now normally carried out by submerged culture in stirred tank reactors.

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  • Its calm depths are stirred, and foaming breakers beat its shore; but it is still the salt, salt sea.

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  • Cores will be placed in a microcosm mesocosm tank containing filtered seawater, which is recycled, stirred and aerated to maintain ambient conditions.

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  • As Newcastle stirred from its economic slumber with piecemeal regeneration, Gateshead sank into an even deeper torpor.

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  • It than gives off more whey when it is stirred and warmed.

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  • Two years after the return of Cabot, the news of Francisco Pizarro's marvellous conquest of Peru reached Europe (1532), and stirred many an adventurous spirit to strive to emulate his good fortune.

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  • The sultans of Egypt were stirred to fresh activity by the attacks of the Mongols; and as Syria became the battleground of the two, the Latin principalities of Syria were fated to fall as the prize of victory to one or other of the combatants.

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  • Public sentiment in the North was deeply stirred by the Uncle Ton's Cabin (1852) of Mrs Harriet Beecher Stowe, which, as Senior said, under the disguise of a novel was really a pamphlet against the Fugitive Slave Law.

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  • It is with a sense of relief that we read of his having really been stirred into active enthusiasm anent the wrongs done the ill-fated John Brown.

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  • For Waldo had a translation of the New Testament made into Provençal, and his preachers not only stirred up men to more holy lives but explained the Scriptures at their will.

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  • It speaks of their defiance of their own constitution, expressly revived by Paul V., forbidding them to meddle in politics; of the great ruin to souls caused by their quarrels with local ordinaries and the other religious orders, their condescension to heathen usages in the East, and the disturbances, resulting in persecutions of the Church, which they had stirred up even in Catholic countries, so that several popes had been obliged to punish them.

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  • The tragic murder of Naboth (see Jezebel), an act of royal encroachment, stirred up popular resentment just as the new cult aroused the opposition of certain of the prophets.

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  • He goes on to narrate how Tell, irritated by his treatment, stirred up his friends against the governor, who seized and bound him and was conveying him by boat to his castle on the lake of Lucerne, when a storm arose, and Tell, by reason of his great bodily strength, was, _ after being unbound, given charge of the rudder on his promise to bring the boat safely to land.

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  • He at once began to take an independent part in the movements then agitating NewEngland, which between 1830 and 1850 was stirred by discussions pertaining to Unitarianism, transcendentalism, spiritualism, abolitionism and various schemes for communistic living.

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  • This last reason, while probably most effective with the judges, only stirred up more furiously the fury in Schopenhauer's breast, and his preface is one long fulmination against the ineptitudes and the charlatanry of his bête noire, Hegel.

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  • Jesuit missionaries after the Reformation stirred up schisms in some parts of the Eastern Church, and in Austria, Poland and elsewhere large numbers of Orthodox Christians submitted, either willingly or under compulsion to the see of Rome (see Roman Catholic Church, section Uniat Oriental Churches).

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  • The filtrate or opium solution is concentrated by evaporation at the boiling point, with occasional stirring until of a proper consistence, the time required being from three to four hours; it is then removed from the fire and stirred with great vigour till cold, the cooling being accelerated by coolies with large fans.

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  • Another cousin, Devadatta, the son of the raja of Koli, also joined the society, but became envious of the teacher, and stirred up Ajatasattu (who, having killed his father Bimbisara, had become king of Rajagaha) to persecute Gotama.

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  • His term of office was far from tranquil; discontented generals stirred up ceaseless revolts and insurrections; and, though he was re-elected in 1871, his popularity seemed to be on the wane.

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  • Neither the hand nor a single muscle of the count's face stirred.

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  • His column, titled " Trent Lott waxes nostalgic about the segregationist era ", stirred up the blogger community.

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  • Spritzer stirred at my mother 's feet, sniffed the air, and then snarled angrily at Spike.

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  • Jude D'Souza, current editor, asked whether the candidates thought features that stirred up controversy in the colleges were a good thing.

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  • Leaving Reach Lode, we have stirred up the silt a bit !

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  • Mrs Stevenson moodily stirred in several extra spoonfuls of sugar into her coffee that was strong enough to knock out a bull elephant.

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  • A first ever fourth-round appearance had stirred the locals in this charming spa town more used to thundering hooves than thunderous volleys.

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  • The RIB 's untimely departure would have stirred memories for Nelson.

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  • Bone removal can be painful for a cat, and so the act of declawing has stirred up quite a lot of controversy since its advent.

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  • It's an important matter of quality and distinction, and your ability to make one means more than "shaken, not stirred".

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  • Don't be shaken - or stirred - if the bitter aperitif of Blanc with quinine powder is not your favorite taste.

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  • Shaken, not stirred, is arguably the best way to serve this drink.

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  • The dry dust stirred up and carried into the atmosphere can become an irritant.

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  • Kohl in the eyeliner sense is actually made from ground up sulfide stirred together with olive oil.

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  • Seafood is as much a staple as rice; fish is so much a part of Korean fare that is sometimes stirred into breakfast porridge.

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  • Grits are added to a pot of boiling water, then cooked over medium to low heat and stirred occasionally.

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  • The next step in the evolution of the daiquiri was that the drink was shaken, not stirred.

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  • Miso is also an excellent way to flavor rice and can be spooned into the cooking liquid or stirred into the cooked rice to add a dash of different tastes.

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  • The couple was married to others when they met on the set of Lifetime's Northern Lights and stirred up controversy with their affair.

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  • The movie itself stirred much controversy simply because of its subject matter, but no scene was more disturbing to many viewers than the final love scene.

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  • At a little distance these low densely-branched little trees look like a Bay or a Holly Oak, only the leaf is smaller and narrower, with a powdery golden under-surface of beautiful effect when stirred by wind.

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  • If the garden soil be fairly good, it need only be well stirred and manured, but the manure should be thoroughly decomposed.

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  • Mortal Kombat stirred quite a lot of controversy upon it's initial release due to the realistic digitized characters engaging in gory battled that would end in violent deaths.

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  • Herrnstein and Charles Murray stirred the controversy.

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  • Sinead O'Connor turned heads and stirred quite a controversy when she shaved her head.

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  • Unlike some other Barbie dolls or accessories that may have stirred controversy (such as pregnant Barbie), most people readily accept an item like a car.

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  • Both of these additions are stirred into the melted wax while it is still warm enough to pour.

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  • Could it be that having hooked up with him, stirred up all your old feelings?

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  • Auctions and Internet websites have stirred a lot of interest among consumers in turning back the clock and owning a piece of movie history.

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  • The Sunnyside Daycare Center surely had an abundance of play things, and the addition of Andy's toys stirred up a few problems.

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  • Victor Kiriakis (played by John Aniston), a Greek shipping magnate, arrived in town and stirred up a lot of trouble.

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  • Liquid colorants are added to the melted soap base drop by drop and then stirred in carefully.

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  • The lye mixture is added to the heated fat and then is stirred over a heat source.

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  • During the drying process, the cacao beans are stirred to ensure that they dry evenly.

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  • All the martinis are to be shaken, not stirred.

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  • Not surprisingly the $50,000 prize money stirred up controversy.

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  • Untraveled, naive, even a little callow, we are not surprised to discover the heart of a hero just waiting to be stirred to action.

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  • Newt having stirred Ripley's maternal instincts, it's the Battle of the Enraged Mothers.

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  • But Anderson Cooper, even as a Q, would never be a malicious omnipotent being - no, his legendary compassion would be stirred by the crew's sad fashion plight.

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  • She stirred the pot of stew and stepped away from the fire.

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  • His other guests had not yet stirred.

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  • Panic stirred as she recalled what his men had done at Talon's stash house.

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  • No other sounds stirred but that of her boots over concrete.

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  • She read the list until panic stirred in her breast.

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  • Darian stirred, pushing himself farther into the corner.

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  • Panic and tears soon drained her of energy, and she stared listlessly at the bloodied ceiling until the man in the corner stirred.

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  • Her desire stirred, aided by emotion and hunger for him.

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  • Fred, who could find a mystery in a grilled cheese sandwich, hardly stirred.

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  • Desire stirred within her, along with some confusion.

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  • A familiar warmth stirred within her, and she braced herself before opening her eyes.

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  • Katie.s jealousy stirred again.

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  • Kiera said nothing, trying to think the best of her friend while anger stirred.

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  • My baby stirred within me today and were I not so bundled in winter garb the few times when I venture out, surely all the wagging tongues in town would know of my maternal state.

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  • Elisabeth stirred then lifted her head, watching him.

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  • Connor groaned and stirred.

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  • She stirred after dawn, startled to see she'd slept so late.

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  • The way he looked at her, the emotion that stirred within her when they talked and touched.

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  • The monster stirred when she was threatened, but had never awoken completely before.

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  • Dwellers of the many buildings around him stirred with the rising sun.

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  • Panic stirred within her at his words.

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  • The beast stirred as well.

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  • Dread stirred at the pit of her stomach.

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  • It had stirred before, but not with the warm tingle melting its icy cage.

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  • He stirred his potato salad thoughtfully.

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  • Panic stirred within her, along with cold fear.

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  • When a few lumps of sugar are added to a glass of water and stirred, the sugar soon disappears and we are left with a uniform liquid resembling water, except that it is sweet.

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  • On the addition, well stirred, of a small quantity of dilute sulphuric acid, a precipitate of sulphur slowly forms, and during its growth manifests exceedingly well the phenomena under consideration.

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  • On the other hand, mayors like Flaochat (in Burgundy) and Erkinoald (in Neustria) stirred up the great nobles, who claimed the right to take part in their nomination, against the king.

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  • Shortly afterwards he joined Essex with sixty horse, and was present at Edgehill, where his troop was one of the few not routed by Rupert's charge, Cromwell himself being mentioned among those officers who "never stirred from their troops but fought till the last minute."

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  • The mendicant monks stirred up the populace to acts of fanatical enmity.

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  • The result was a revolutionary agitation which in Sicily, stirred up by Mazzinis agents, Rosalino Pilo and Francesco Crispi, culminated, on the 5th of April 1860, in open NII,S revolt.

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  • His chief advance upon the doctrines of Anaximenes is that he asserted air, the primal force, to be possessed of intelligence- "the air which stirred within him not only prompted, but instructed.

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  • Flies and frogs were also complained of, and Sidonius, writing in the 5th century, complains bitterly of the "feculent gruel" (cloacalis puts) which filled the canals of the city, and gave forth fetid odours when stirred by the poles of the bargemen.

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  • Indeed even Gentiles helped them, so that the whole world (Dio Cassius says) was stirred.

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  • The distance of the plants on one ridge from those on the contiguous one he called an interval; the distance between the rows on the same ridge, a space or partition; the former was stirred repeatedly by the horse-hoe, the latter by the hand-hoe.

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  • He paid twenty-two visits, which stirred up all the Scottish churches.

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  • They were hampered, moreover, by an insurrection in the Morea, where a Russian expedition under Orlov had stirred up the' Mainotes, and by risings in Syria and Egypt.

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  • These events and the friction caused by mutual complaints of infringements of the treaty stirred up public opinion in Turkey, and the British ambassador lent his support to the war party.

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  • The great reputation achieved by this critique stirred the envy of Bayle's colleague, P. Jurieu, who had written a book on the same subject.

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  • The mass is then stirred to liberate the lead, which is removed as Riihrblei.

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  • The war had indeed stirred.

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  • The young Alexius and his friends now tried to form a party against the empress mother and the protosebastos; and his sister Maria, wife of Caesar John, stirred up riots in the streets of the capital.

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  • The idea of seeing a counselor was the only thing that stirred any emotion at all ... unreasonable fear.

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  • My mind stirred with the stirring times, and the characters round which the life of two contending nations centred seemed to move right before me.

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  • And at that moment, though the day was still, a light gust of wind blowing over the army slightly stirred the streamers on the lances and the unfolded standards fluttered against their staffs.

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  • Suddenly everybody stirred, began talking, and pressed forward and then back, and between the two rows, which separated, the Emperor entered to the sounds of music that had immediately struck up.

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  • He looked at Natasha as she sang, and something new and joyful stirred in his soul.

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  • He pushed forward, feeling stirred, but not yet sure what stirred him or what he would say.

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  • The men crowded closer together, stirred, and rapidly took off their hats.

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  • Nothing more stirred behind the screens and the French infantry soldiers and officers advanced to the gate.

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  • The creature stirred within her, sensing the threat.

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  • The rage stirred and with it, Xander's fangs.

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  • She stirred more than his interest.

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  • The sight of him stirred emotions that confused her.

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  • The woodman stirred the fire until the flames leaped high and the sparks flew out of the roof hole.

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  • After all, public opinion may just as easily be stirred up in favor of war as against it.

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  • I hope I haven't stirred up trouble for you.

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  • Carmen gave him a level look as she stirred the pot of fresh green beans.

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