Lodged Sentence Examples

lodged
  • Jule hissed through his teeth and more blood bubbled up, but the lodged arrow refused to move.

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  • Workhouses both lodged the poor and gave them work.

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  • The reproductive cells may be regarded as belonging primarily to neither ectoderm nor endoderm, though lodged in the ectoderm in all Hydromedusae.

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  • She pulled hard on the rope, feeling some give, then tautness as the anchor lodged itself between unmovable objects.

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  • Boris lodged with another adjutant, the Polish Count Zhilinski.

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  • Foreign Governments lodged protests against their subjects being dispossessed before obtaining adequate compensation.

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  • Nor was the advice bad, for a porter was likely to be as plentifully fed, and as comfortably lodged, as a poet.

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  • Not only were they lodged in cages of tortoise-shell and ivory, with silver wires, but they were professedly esteemed as delicacies for the table, and one emperor is said to have fed his lions upon them!

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  • The monks are lodged in a guest-house built against the north wall of the church.

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  • In Scotland, medical and other scientific reports are lodged in process before the trial, and the witness reads them as part of his evidence and is liable to be examined or cross-examined on their contents.

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  • The plan was unsuccessful, and soon after his return to Paris Brissot was lodged in the Bastille on the charge of having published a work against the government.

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  • The sub-epithelial layer consists primarily of the so-called inter stitial cells, lodged between the narrowed basal portions of the epithelial cells.

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  • The mesogloea in the hydropolyp is a thin elastic layer, in which may be lodged the muscular fibres and ganglion cells mentioned above, but which never contains any connective tissue or skeletogenous cells or any other kind of special mesogloeal corpuscles.

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  • The stomach may be altogether lodged in the manubrium, from which the radial canals then take origin directly as in Geryonia (Trachomedusae); it may be with or without gastric pouches.

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  • It constructs large ball-like nests of dried leaves, lodged in a fork of the branches of a large tree, and with the opening on one side.

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  • He too was lodged in the castle in 1569, and after three years' imprisonment was handed over to the English, by whom he was beheaded at York in 1572.

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  • The king (Henry VIII.) happened at the time to be visiting in the immediate neighbourhood, and two of his chief counsellors, Gardiner, secretary of state, afterwards bishop of Winchester, and Edward Fox, the lord high almoner, afterwards bishop of Hereford, were lodged at Cressy's house.

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  • One of such enclosures constitutes the British legation, and most of the other foreign legations are similarly, though not so sumptuously, lodged.

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  • On the 21st of July 1801 he nearly lost his life by the fall of the house in which he lodged, and the elector of Bavaria, Maximilian Joseph, who was present at his extrication from the ruins, gave him 18 ducats.

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  • The prisoners were lodged at first in the smaller Tower, but were removed to the larger Tower on the 27th of October.

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  • In the majority of the Megascolicidae each sac is provided with one or more diverticula, tubular or oval in form, of a slightly different histological character in the lining epithelium, and in them is invariably lodged the sperm.

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  • In this duct and sac the spermatophores received in copulation from another snail are lodged.

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  • When Ignatius arrived in Paris, he lodged at first with some fellow-countrymen; and for two years attended the lectures on humanities at the college de Montaigu, supporting himself at first by the charity of Isabella Roser; but, a fellowlodger defrauding him of his stock, he found himself destitute and compelled to beg his bread.

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  • At Bruges he became acquainted with the famous Spanish scholar, Juan Luis Vives, with whom he lodged.

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  • Parliament voted her £ 20,000 in 1660 for the payment of her debts, but Elizabeth did not receive the money, and on the 19th of May 1661 she left the Hague for England, in spite of the king's attempts to hinder her journey, receiving no official welcome on her arrival in London and being lodged at Lord Craven's house in Drury Lane.

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  • But Buteo and Kircher have proved geometrically that, taking the cubit of a foot and a half, the ark was abundantly sufficient for all the animals supposed to be lodged in it.

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  • He was lodged in `the Louvre, received the grant of an income equal to that he had hitherto enjoyed, and, with the title of "veteran pensioner" in lieu of that of "foreign associate" (conferred in 1772), the right of voting at the deliberations of the Academy.

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  • Its wards, in which nearly ten thousand patients receive treatment annually, are lodged in a series of turreted pavilions, and cover a large space of ground on the margin of the Meadows, from which, to make room for it, George Watson's College - the most important of the Merchant Company schools - was removed to a site farther west, while the Sick Children's hospital was moved to the southern side of the Meadows.

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  • In 1738 George Watson's hospital for boys was founded; then followed the Trades' Maiden hospital for burgesses' daughters, John Watson's, Daniel Stewart's, the Orphans', Gillespie's,' Donaldson's 2 hospitals, and other institutions founded by successful merchants of the city, in which poor children of various classes were lodged, boarded and educated.

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  • Speaking generally, the New Town wzs resorted to by professional men - lawyers, doctors and artists, - and in its principal streets will be found the head offices of the leading banks and insurance offices, all lodged in buildings of remarkable architectural pretensions.

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  • As the edges of the wound are brought into accurate apposition there is little or no blood lodged between them, so that an extremely narrow strip of fibrin glues the cut edges together.

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  • He lodged with Thomas Paine, and listened to the debates in the Convention.

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  • The prisoners were conveyed to the Palazzo Vecchio, and Savonarola was lodged in the tower cell which had once harboured Cosimo de' Medici.

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  • Hence came his " conversion," and the sense of vocation for the ministry which impelled him in 1822 to enter Manchester College, then lodged at York.

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  • Wylde conjectures that it had become unsuitable for a royal seat by having acquired the status of a sacred city, and thus affording sanctuary to criminals and political offenders within the chief church and a considerable area round it, where there are various houses in which such persons can be lodged and entertained.

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  • During his whole reign (1751-1771) Adolphus Frederick was little more than a state decoration, the real power being lodged in the hands of an omnipotent riksdag, distracted by fierce party strife.

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  • This consists of a heavy cast iron ring, known as a wedging crib, or curb, also fitted together in segments, which is lodged in a square-edged groove cut for its reception, tightly caulked with moss, and wedged into position.

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  • He loved music himself, and justified this profane pleasure by the example of Bishop Grosseteste, who lodged his harper in the chamber next his own; but he holds up as a warning to gleemen the fate of the minstrel who sang loud while the bishop said grace, and was miserably killed by a falling stone in consequence.

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  • The chapel served as the sanctuary of the relic lodged in the upper chapel, and the whole building was attached as the place of worship to the king's palace.

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  • This led to a protest (in 1870) from Montsioa, which he lodged with a landdrost at Potchefstroom in the Transvaal, threatening to submit the matter to the British high commissioner if any further attempt at taxation were made on the part of the Boers.

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  • He was, therefore, appropriately lodged in the immediate vicinity of the refectory and kitchen, and close to the guest-hall.

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  • Southwell was then lodged in the Tower, but he was not brought to trial until February 1 595.

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  • It judges cases in which auditors of the Rota are concerned, such as personal objections, but especially objections (querelae) lodged against sentences of the Rota, with a view to their being annulled or revised (restitutio in integrum).

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  • By another of those many miraculous interpositions which occur in his history he was twice supplied with food and drink, in the strength of which he journeyed forty days and forty nights until he came to Horeb, where he lodged in a cave. ?

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  • It is probable that what he had suffered during his first year in London had often reminded him of some parts of the satire in which Juvenal had described the misery and degradation of a needy man of letters, lodged among the pigeons' nests in the tottering garrets which overhung the streets of Rome.

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  • A large part of every year he passed in those abodes, which must have seemed magnificent and luxurious indeed, when compared with the dens in which he had generally been lodged.

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  • Among the public institutions are the State School for Feeble-minded Children, a cottage hospital and the Laconia Public Library, lodged in the Gale Memorial Library building (1903).

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  • On the day after the Katipunan conspiracy had been brought prematurely to light by a traitor, three hundred prominent Filipinos were lodged in prison.

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  • Their father was a riverside labourer, who lodged during the week in Oporto, but went home for Sunday.

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  • All fear being now removed, the Danish king and his followers pass the night in Heorot, Beowulf and his comrades being lodged elsewhere.

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  • His scholars, who were lodged in appropriate buildings, met daily to hear the master read and comment on the classics.

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  • Its citizens lived in such luxury that Aeneas Sylvius (Pope Pius II.) has left it on record that a simple burgher of Nuremberg was better lodged than the king of Scotland.

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  • He was almost immediately made the companion and trusted friend of its sovereign, loaded with honours, lodged in a fine house, enrolled among the nobles of the realm, enriched, and placed at the very height of social importance.

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  • Jung (La Verite sur la masque de fer) had brought forward another candidate, with the attractive name of "Marechiel," a soldier of Lorraine who had taken part in a poisoning plot against Louis XIV., and was arrested at Peronne by Louvois in 1673, and said to be lodged in the Bastille and then sent to Pignerol.

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  • He also conversed at times on more serious topics with the simple people with whom he lodged, often, for example, talking over the sermon with them when they came from church.

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  • Colleges, madrasah (where young men are instructed, fed, and frequently also lodged gratuitously), exist in nearly every town.

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  • In 1539 the last and 60th abbot of Glastonbury, Robert Whyting, was lodged in the Tower on account of "divers and sundry treasons."

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  • According to local belief, Ephesus was also the last home of the Virgin, who was lodged near the city by St John and there died.

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  • He carefully refrained from incurring suspicion and unpopularity by opposing the general outcry, and though he saw through the imposture from the beginning he made no attempt to moderate the popular frenzy or to save the life of any of the victims, his co-religionists, not even intervening in the case of Lord Stafford, and allowing Titus Oates to be lodged at Whitehall with a pension.

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  • Posidonius, unable to explain the emotions as " judgments " or the effects of judgments, postulated, like Plato, an irrational principle (including a concupiscent and a spirited element) to account for them, although he subordinated all these as faculties to the one substance of the soul lodged in the heart.

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  • All advances were lodged by him in the Bank of England until required, and all subsidies were paid over without deduction, even though it was pressed upon him, so that he did not draw a shilling from his office beyond the salary legally attaching to it.

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  • The rhopalia are lodged in the notches be tween the marginal lobes of the umbrella, and each rhopalium is covered over by a little protecting flap or lappet.

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  • In some cases the ova, after leaving the mouth, are lodged in the oral arms, and undergo the earliest phases of their development in this situation, accumulating in the grooves that continue the angles of the mouth, and bulging the wall of the groove into sacs or pockets.

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  • The ephyra has a flat, disk-shaped body, with eight marginal lobes (four perradial, four interradial); a tentaculocyst is lodged in a deep notch at the apex of each lobe.

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  • In the Branchiopoda the maxillary gland is lodged in the thickness of the shell-fold (when this is present), and, from this circumstance, it often receives the somewhat misleading name of " shell-gland."

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  • The mob, egged on by the republicans, attacked the palace where the king was lodged, and he escaped with difficulty, returning to Piedmont with the remnants of his army.

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  • The meaning was soon enlarged to include any place where travellers could be lodged or entertained, and also by transference the person who provided lodgings, and so one who goes on before a party to secure suitable lodgings in advance.

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  • On hearing the news the king banished the monks of Canterbury and lodged a protest with the pope, in which he threatened to prevent any English appeals from being brought to Rome.

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  • He was, moreover, plagued by insubordination and malignity on the part of two German assistant craftsmen lodged in his apartments.

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  • Edmund de la Pole accordingly was brought back to England and lodged in the Tower.

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  • He was not ill, but several cases of plague occurred in the house in which he lodged.

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  • In these processes, which do not take place at equal rates in different cases, all kinds of survivals remain lodged, and embarrass every attempt to fix the place of specific religions in any general course of development.

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  • Every village, however small, every separate quarter of a town, has a sheikh in whom is lodged the executive power of government - a power loosely defined, and of more or less extent according to the personal character and means of the individual who wields it.

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  • But in order that the action may be complete the initial resistance to percolation of water at every part of the soil must be such that the motion of the water through it shall be insufficient to disturb the water-borne mineral and organic particles lodged on the surface or in the interstices of the soil.

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  • Between the two middle toes, in most species, is lodged a deep glandular bag having the form of a retort with a small external orifice, which secretes an unctuous and odorous substance.

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  • He landed in England in January 1364 and was received with great honour, lodged again in the Savoy, and was a frequent guest of Edward at Westminster.

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  • All that could be said was, that it was expedient in a widespread empire that the power of final decision should be lodged somewhere, and that it was also expedient not to use that power in such a way as to irritate those whom it was the truest wisdom to conciliate.

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  • He lodged in the College Fortet, reading Greek with Pierre Danes and beginning Hebrew with Francois Vatable.

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  • Philip lodged a formal complaint at Athens.

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  • Under the Wyndham Act of 1903 the process was greatly extended., The following tables give summarized particulars, for the period from the 1st of November 1903 to the 31st of March 1906, of (1) estates for which purchase agreements were lodged in cases of sale direct from landlords to tenants; (2) estates for the purchase of which the Land Commission entered into agreements under sects.

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  • The Spanish government lodged a vigorous protest, but the French National Assembly refused to lend any assistance, and Floridablanca was forced to conclude a humiliating treaty and give up all hope of opposing the pf ogress of Great Britain.

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  • A porter, appointed by the municipal authority of the place, is always present, lodged just within the gate, and sometimes one or more assistants.

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  • In 333 B.C., after the battle of Issus, it was delivered over by treachery to Parmenio, the general of Alexander the Great; the harem and treasures of Darius had here been lodged.

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  • This committee elected from its members a committee of five in whom executive and judicial powers were lodged.

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  • He mumbled a summary of his interview with the high school lover who'd lodged in the next room.

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  • Any MSP may lodge amendments at Stage 2, and there is no limit on the number of amendments that may be lodged.

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  • I had had an unusual stroke, a clot lodged in the cerebellum, rather than the more common left or right cerebrum.

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  • Liability or malpractice lodged with state handled claims says camera recommends Charles brown.

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  • Before leaving he safely defused a land mine, which had started ticking, lodged in the rafters of the Palladium theater in London.

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  • One behind a watchman's hut at the end of Lawrence Street, a man who lodged in Lawrence Street, was killed.

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  • Any stock deposit lodged at the CCSS on Friday, 9 July 2004 will be rejected (bad delivered) by the registrar concerned.

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  • In the same year the landed gentry of Herefordshire lodged a petition.

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  • Mr Tregenna lodged an appeal and was eventually reinstated in late 1994.

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  • Captain Cook Memorial Museum This museum is housed in the building where James Cook lodged as an apprentice seaman.

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  • A second point of dispute concerns the spot at which thepoison is lodged.

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  • The surface of the coenosteum is covered by a layer of common ectoderm, containing large nematocysts, and is perforated by pores of two kinds, gastropores and dactylopores, giving exit to gastrozoids and dactylozoids respectively, which are lodged in vertical pore-canals of wider calibre than the coenosarcal canals of the general net 'work.

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  • James Grant's view that it may have been the earlier name of the castle, from dun (" the fort "), and edin (" on the slope "), conflicts with the more generally received opinion that the Britons knew the fortress as Castelh Mynedh Agnedh (" the hill of the plain "), a designation once wrongly interpreted as the " castle of the maidens " (castrum puellarum), in allusion to the supposed fact that the Pictish princesses were lodged within it during their education.

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  • According to Vasari, Marcantonio, in copying Diirer's series of the Little Passion on wood, had imitated the original monogram, and Darer, indignant at this fraud, set out for Italy in order to protect his rights, and having lodged a complaint against Marcantonio before the signory of Venice, carried his point so far that Marcantonio was forbidden in future to add the monogram of Darer to copies taken after his works.

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  • In the precincts of a great shrine a malefactor finds a safe refuge from his pursuers and is lodged and fed, and from the security of his retreat he can arrange the ransom which is to purchase his immunity when he comes out.

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  • Four days after this Parnell was arrested under the Coercion Act and lodged in Kilmainham gaol.

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  • He is here! thought Rostov, who had unconsciously returned to the house where Alexander lodged.

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  • Also lodged in the Tower are the Crown Jewels including all the regalia used by British monarchs at their coronation.

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  • The two sisters were witches, and in the form of cats robbed travelers who lodged under their roof.

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  • And Ken Stott 's Philippe lapses regularly into unconsciousness due to shrapnel lodged in his brain.

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  • The original sinkers of the pits (about 40 in number) had been lodged in one dwelling house, ' Y Lluest '.

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  • In the midst of the thorough eye exam, the doctor discovered that a small sliver of metal had lodged in his eye.

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  • You can even check with organizations like the Better Business Bureau to make sure the dealer has not had complaints lodged against it.

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  • When the purchase is complete, the title deeds are lodged at the land registry.

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  • Otherwise, it runs the risk of becoming lodged inside of the intestinal tract, causing constipation and a possible intestinal blockage.

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  • This prevents chunks of fruit from becoming lodged in the bottom of the blender container.

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  • Prior to purchasing a card online you may want to check the BBB website to make sure there are no complaints lodged against the card seller.

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  • This may result in gelatinous masses that have the potential to become lodged in a pet's intestinal tract.

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  • Both a cultured pearl and a natural pearl form inside of an oyster as the result of a foreign object, which becomes an irritant, getting lodged inside the body of the mollusk.

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  • Following implantation, some people may experience sore throat, swelling, a metallic taste in the mouth, or the sensation of having a foreign body lodged in the soft palate.

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  • There's no need for the bulk involved with trying to wear your usual eyeglass frames, and there's nothing worse than getting something lodged underneath your contact lens while maneuvering at rapid speeds.

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  • Heimlich maneuver-An emergency procedure for removing a foreign object lodged in the airway that is preventing the person from breathing.

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  • When a foreign object is lodged in the eye, the person should not rub the eye or put pressure on it which would further injure the eyeball.

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  • The Heimlich maneuver is an emergency technique for removing a foreign object lodged in the airway that is preventing a child or an adult from breathing.

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  • If a foreign object becomes lodged in the ear, only a doctor should try to remove it.

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  • When this occurs, they precipitate out and become lodged in the capillaries, which can cause the capillary to burst, resulting in a local hemorrhage.

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  • If there is an object lodged in the ear canal, pushing on the otoscope may push the object further into the ear and damage the eardrum.

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  • Sudden sharp pain during elimination may signify that an object is lodged in the rectum.

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  • In most cases the doctor needs only a brief history to determine what type of foreign object is involved and where it may be lodged in the child's body.

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  • The doctor may perform a digital examination to locate objects lodged in the rectum.

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  • Items that are lodged deep in the ear canal are more difficult to remove because of the possibility of damaging the eardrum.

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  • Mechanical obstruction of the airways, which commonly occurs when food gets lodged in the throat, can be treated by applying the Heimlich maneuver.

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  • Surgery under general anesthesia may be required for objects deeply lodged within the body, as in the case of a 14-year-old Dutch adolescent who had inserted a soda can into his rectum.

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  • Before contracting the services of a mortgage broker which is arbitrarily chosen from the phone book, the customer may want to check with the Better Business Bureau to make sure no complaints have been lodged against that particular broker.

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  • The mucus plug is a protective substance that is lodged in the cervical opening.

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  • Check the toys to see if there are any parts that break off easily, or if the top can become lodged in a child's throat; choking is always a danger for children, so you'll want to be vigilant in this aspect.

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  • The push button may become lodged inside the device, causing it to break if it is pushed with force.

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  • Test the wheels themselves to see if food has become lodged inside of them.

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  • Hair, shaving cream, and other dirt can easily become lodged in the shaver.

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  • While most cities have some public Christmas rituals, only New York offers traditions that are lodged in the national conscience.

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  • There are no complaints lodged against them.

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  • There are no French fries lodged under the front seat, no buildup of dust on the dashboard, and no wet dog odor in the upholstery.

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  • The old episodes are lodged firmly in the sixties, and many of them show their cultural age.

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  • His arrival, however, roused the suspicion of the natives, and under King Mwanga's orders he was lodged in a filthy hut swarming with rats and vermin.

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  • In all, 612 Nethinim came back from the Exile and were lodged near the "House of the Nethinim" at Ophel, towards the east wall of Jerusalem so as to be near the Temple, where they served under the Levites and were free of all tolls, from which they must have been supported.

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  • Women were formerly lodged in the old infirmary, close to the main gate, which is now a hotel.

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  • If the object is lodged lower in the airway, a bronchoscope (a special instrument to view the airway and remove obstructions) can be inserted.

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  • But before leaving Paris Ignatius heard once more that complaints had been lodged against him at the Inquisition; but these like the others were found to be without any foundation.

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