Mingling Sentence Examples

mingling
  • When the vision disappeared Francis felt sharp pains mingling with the delights.

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  • He could see puffs of musketry smoke that seemed to chase one another down the hillsides, and clouds of cannon smoke rolling, spreading, and mingling with one another.

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  • She stared at his retreating back, relief mingling with a new ache.

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  • In the midst of his explanation shouts were heard from the army, growing more incoherent and more diffused, mingling with music and songs and coming from the field where the review was held.

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  • Belfair crept away from the castle of the lovely Queen Sinthee and her lazy mate Dorvad, past the kindly Fird of Kornor, mingling on the street with the commoners.

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  • For Alexandria little can be urged save a certain strain of "Alexandrine" idealism and allegorism, mingling with the more Palestinian realism which marks the references to Christ's sufferings, as well as the eschatology, and recalling many a passage in Philo.

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  • Faster and faster, vying with one another, they moved at the double or at a trot, vanishing amid the clouds of dust they raised and making the air ring with a deafening roar of mingling shouts.

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  • She spoke, mingling most trifling details with the intimate secrets of her soul, and it seemed as if she could never finish.

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  • His conception of Yahweh shows a mingling of the high and the low.

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  • From the alighting board, instead of the former spirituous fragrant smell of honey and venom, and the warm whiffs of crowded life, comes an odor of emptiness and decay mingling with the smell of honey.

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  • The peninsula and archipelago known as Malaysia presents a remarkable mingling of races, languages and beliefs.

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  • A collection of songs for the reception for when guests are mingling, eating, and dancing.

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  • With all his devotion to study at Lausanne' (he read ten or twelve hours a day), he still found some time for the acquisition of some of the lighter accomplishments, such as riding, dancing, drawing, and also for mingling in such society as the place had to offer.

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  • Those who had been scattered from Palestine lived in small colonies, sometimes mingling and intermarrying with the natives, sometimes strictly preserving their own individuality.

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  • The clouds of steam condensed to copious torrents, which, mingling with the fine ashes, proiced muddy streams that swept far and wide over the plains, aching even to the foot of the Apennines.

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  • The text shows a curious mingling of sources; the real primitive Perceval story, the Enfances, is omitted; he grows up in his father's house and goes to court at his wish.

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  • The other prose romance, the Perlesvaus, is decidedly superior in literary form, but here too we have a mingling of old and new elements.

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  • Already before Alexander pan-hellenic feeling had in various ways overridden the internal divisions of the Greek race, but now, with the vast mingling of Greeks of all sorts in the newlyconquered lands, a generalized Greek culture in which the old local characteristics were merged, came to overspread the world.

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  • The diffusion of the Greek race far from the former centres of its life, the mingling of citizens of many cities, the close contact between Greek and barbarian in the conquered lands - all this had made the old sanctions of civic religion and civic morality of less account than ever.

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  • According to the somatologist Elliott Smith, the most important change in the physical character of the people of Upper Egypt, in the entire range of Egyptian archaeology, took place at the beginning of the dynastic period; and he accounts for this by the mingling of the Lower with the Upper Egyptian population, consequent on the uniting of the two countries under one rule.

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  • The mingling of despotism and good-natured familiarity there described (and the spirit is doubtless correctly given by Josephus, whether or not his details are historical) agrees with the picture in Proverbs.

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  • Bettina von Arnim came into personal touch with Goethe in 1807, and her Briefwechsel Goethes mit einem Kinde (published in 1835) is, in its mingling of truth and fiction, one of the most delightful products of the Romantic mind; but the episode was of less importance for Goethe's life than Bettina would have us believe.

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  • But the fertility of the soil, the warm and genial climate, the mingling of races and the absence of opposition, combined to render the Messenians no match for their hardy and warlike neighbours of Sparta.

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  • In spite, however, of the artificial restrictions placed on the intermarrying of the castes, the mingling of the two races seems to have proceeded at a tolerably rapid rate.

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  • Indeed, even prior to the definite establishment of the caste-system, the mingling of the lower race with the upper classes, especially with the aristocratic landowners and still more so with the yeomanry, had probably been going on to such an extent as to have resulted in two fairly well-defined intermediate types of colour between the priestly order and the servile race and to have facilitated the ultimate division into four" colours "(varna).

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  • The king's habit of mingling with the peasantry secured for him a large amount of popularity, and probably led many to ascribe to him the authorship of poems describing scenes in peasant life, Christis Kirk on the Grene, The Gaberlunzie Man and The Jolly Beggar.

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  • On the other hand, it was difficult practically to realize this alienation, and a keen sense of this difficulty induced the same hostility to the body as a clog and hindrance, that we find to some extent in Plato, but more fully developed in Neoplatonism, Neopythagoreanism, and other products of the mingling of Greek with Oriental thought.

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  • The emperor then visited southern Italy, where by mingling justice with severity he secured respect for the imperial authority; and returned to Germany to find Ernest of Swabia, the younger Conrad, and their associates again in arms. One cause of this rising was the claim put forward by Ernest to the Burgundian succession, as King Rudolph was his great-uncle.

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  • Cannon and musketry, mingling together, thundered on the right and in the center, while the capotes of Lannes' sharpshooters were already seen crossing the milldam and forming up within twice the range of a musket shot.

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  • Guests will be spending a large part of the wedding at the reception, so you want to create a space where they are comfortable eating, mingling, and dancing.

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  • Setting up several tents in a geometric formation with seating in the center can be a creative way to get guests mingling.

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  • Is there enough space for dancing, mingling, and other activities?

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  • Unlike many senior singles sites, where people take baby steps before meeting others, dating services host events and personal one-on-one sessions to encourage mingling and conversation between interested individuals.

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  • If you'd prefer to spend more time mingling, a caterer is a great option.

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  • These types of programs are known as social clubs, focused on mingling seniors through activity.

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  • Each senior must meet with every person at the event so there is no chance of passing up someone you may have not met at casual, mingling, affairs.

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  • Mingling allows your Mii to visit other Wiis; they'll show up in games or when your Mii is put on parade.

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  • Homeschooling parents often raise the point that mingling with people of all ages and positions in life is a much better way to prepare children for the real world, where diversity prevails.

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  • Every little girl enjoys mingling the ethereal fairy wings with the delicacy of the ballerina whether she plans to dance in The Nutcracker or not.

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  • All of your guests will know that you spent extra time preparing for the event when they see you mingling with the crowd and holding a plate of cookies, dressed as Miss Santa Claus.

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  • No kiss hello, no being by my side… he was mingling with every girl there besides me.

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  • While other zodiac signs like Cancer and Capricorn prefer the peace and quiet of their own homes, Gemini and Sagittarius love the energy they get from mingling with others.

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  • Just like most years, the ceremony was a perfect setting to ogle stars mingling with their contemporaries while dressed in their finest attire and borrowed diamonds.

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  • The gothic setting of a southern town mingling with the teen angst and supernatural beings make for a truly unique soap opera that has fans of all ages tuning in.

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  • Individuals practice the method outlined above while mingling and making eye contact.

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  • Girls my age were interested in things that just didn't interest me at all like boys, dating, dances, mingling, etc.". This awkwardness would only lead to depression after the ugly divorce of her parents in high school.

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  • Many New Year's Eve parties are all about mingling, and that's all well and good, but why not jazz it up with some ideas for a party you and your friends will remember all year?

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  • Guests will be piling snacks onto paper plates and venturing through your house, mingling and then bolting toward the TV at every touchdown.

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  • Cocktail party food selections should be something that guests can eat while mingling with others.

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  • Icebreakers don't have to be complex; any activity that gets guests mingling and talking will work.

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  • It's easier on the budget than a full meal, and it allows for optimal socializing and mingling between guests.

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  • Both rooms have access to a patio, providing extra space for mingling.

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  • Words cannot do justice to the startlingly diverse clientele mingling in the unpretentious gritty pub.

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  • The nose was slightly minty with some blackcurrant and herbaceous aromas, mingling with gentle oak and spiciness.

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  • Greater Rheas are a declining species, but these individuals seemed to be quite happy mingling with the cattle in fairly ordinary looking pasture.

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  • Poets and Actors, mingling with the general public, will stop you and read you love poems or recite Shakespearean soliloquies.

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  • Consider factors such as your height, whether you plan on dancing most of the time or just mingling with friends and how much zebra print you want in your prom look.

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  • In controversy he was too fond of mingling personal abuse with legitimate argument, and this weakness mars his letters, which were held in high admiration in the early middle ages, and are valuable for their history of the man and his times.

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  • Mingling with Siamese and Chinese, who form the major part, may be seen persons of almost every race to be found between Bombay and Japan, while Europeans of different nationalities number over 1000.

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  • Never mingling with the sea which it encloses, according to Homer it has neither source nor mouth.

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  • Even the characteristic dualism of Gnosticism has already proved to be in part of Iranian origin; and now it becomes clear how from that mingling of late Greek and Persian dualism the idea could arise that these seven halfdaemonic powers are the creators or rulers of this material world, which is separated infinitely from the light-world of the good God.

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  • Romance and tradition speak of strange rites - the mingling and even the drinking of blood - as having in remote and rude ages marked the inception of these martial and fraternal associations.

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  • The stoics, on the other hand, taught his immanence, while the eclectics sought truth by the mingling of the two ideas.

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  • Just as the emperor is kami, and provincial officers of rank, so also mountains, rivers, the sea, thunder, winds, and even animals like the tiger, wolf or fox, are all kami.7 The spirits of the dead also become kami, of varying character and position; some reside in the temples built in their honour; some hover near their tombs; but they are constantly active, mingling in the vast multitude of agencies which makes every event in the universe, in the language of Motowori (1730-1801), the act of the Kami.

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  • They passed eastward to the Danube mouth and into southern Russia, as far as the Sea of Azov, mingling with the Scythians, as is proved by the name Celto-scyths.

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  • The headlands, the deep indentations and the numerous islands in the bays and beyond produce a beautiful mingling of land and sea and give to the whole ocean front the appearance of a fringed and tasselled border; west of the mouth of the Kennebec River are a marshy shore and many low grassy islands; but east of this river the shore becomes more and more bold, rising in the precipitous cliffs and rounded summits of Mt Desert and Quoddy Head, 1527 and 1000 ft.

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  • It was a double cd full of stuff I've never heard of mingling among stuff I have heard of.

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  • The statement of Diodorus Siculus that the mingling of these Iberians with the immigrant Celts gave rise to the Celtiberians is in itself probable.

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  • Watch other peoples faces while mingling.

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  • The first shots had not yet ceased to reverberate before others rang out and yet more were heard mingling with and overtaking one another.

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  • Neoplatonism, originally Alexandrine, is often regarded as Hellenistic rather than Hellenic, a product of the mingling of Greek with Oriental civilization.

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  • So far, however, as it is possible to disengage one's self from this captivation, it may be said that the mingling of distinct and original vision with a singularly conscientious handling of the English language, in the sincere and wholesome self-consciousness of the strenuous artist, seems to be the central feature of Stevenson as a writer by profession.

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