Out-to Sentence Examples

out-to
  • I don't know why you guys don't go out to dinner more.

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  • He was sitting in his chair, everything from the top of his head to his thighs covered with the newspaper he was holding out to read.

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  • He held the phone out to Lisa.

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  • Carmen sat with her hands clutched together tightly as the plane taxied out to the runway.

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  • Felipa held her hands out to Destiny.

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  • Sometimes we go out to eat.

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  • After breakfast, Morino arrived and took Alex and Jonathan out to see the mares.

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  • A cold wind tore at her hair as she stomped across the courtyard and out to the chicken coup.

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  • She stumbled as she dismounted from the ATV and Giddon reached out to help her.

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  • Thanks, now why don't you get dressed and we'll go out to dinner and a movie or something.

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  • Either he was sticking his neck out to protect her, or he wasn't involved in anything illegal.

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  • He carefully picked up the box and Yancey followed him out to the car.

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  • Lisa went out to help her carry things into the house.

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  • I want to take you out to the north pasture before we leave today.

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  • Why don't I take you out to get something to eat?

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  • His voice reached out to her from only a few feet away.

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  • The ride turned out to be short.

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  • She started to call out to him, but a pretty young Indian girl emerged from those same bushes.

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  • He reached his arms out to her.

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  • She'd rent a horse at the livery in the morning and ride out to the ranch.

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  • Galloping to the head of the team, she reached out to grab the halter on the lead horse.

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  • Well, show me where you're things are and I'll take them out to my truck while I wait.

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  • With the laundry washing and the sun peeping through curtainless panes, she set out to explore the house.

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  • He paid for the supplies with a check and took her and Mary out to eat.

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  • Only in a dream, she thought sluggishly and reached out to touch his cheek.

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  • He pulled his hands from behind his back and held them out to her.

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  • She gasped, reaching out to touch the kitten.

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  • As eager as Betsy and I were to pursue our testing, we were out to the picture for several weeks.

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  • In another case, a missing twelve year old boy turned out to be a runaway.

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  • I think it's worth publicizing it, especially if the license plate turns out to be stolen and we have nothing.

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  • As the others remained behind the closed door of the conference room, I went out to lunch on my own.

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  • He left me his car when he flew out to him mom's place.

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  • When they'd complied, I announced, "Howie want's Julie to fly out to Santa Barbara, today."

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  • These people we point out to the authorities... they must hate us beyond all reason.

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  • His cousin is flying out there tomorrow... today, and she's to take it out to him.

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  • The idea of any of us going out to California is another matter.

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  • You could drop Molly and me off at Logan airport for the ten o'clock flight to California, be in Philadelphia by early evening, and fly out to join us the next morning.

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  • Sure, he was insensitive, but how many sixteen year olds sneak out to drink?

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  • The idea that Jonny would turn out to be like Talon made her chest clench.

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  • She sighed and reached out to her brother, resting her hands on his cheeks.

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  • You mean, after you sold her out to Talon?

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  • She braced herself and reached out to him.

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  • She gave him a puzzled smile and reached out to take the phone he held out.

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  • He sat on the ottoman in front of her, reaching out to tuck her hair behind her ear.

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  • She wasn't the threat the Watcher made her out to be.

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  • His voice was soft, and she fought the urge to reach out to him.

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  • She pulled a pen and paper off the desk in the corner and held them out to him.

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  • Worse, what was she that hundreds of people were willing to seek her out to kill her?

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  • Everyone on the planet is out to get this girl.

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  • I'll send Dusty out to keep an eye on Ireland.

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  • His phone dinged, and he pulled it out to see the odd text message.

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  • Her heart went out to him.

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  • She hopped off the four by four, reached out to Darian and grabbed his hand, pulling him with her.

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  • They became one, and this time, when she reached out to him, he took her hand.

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  • Jule's arm shot out to block the interloper's progress toward them.

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  • He reached out to his brother, absorbing what memories were in his mind.

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  • He reached out to his brother and touched his head to Darian's forehead.

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  • Deidre closed her eyes as Darkyn's arm snaked out to grab her neck.

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  • He reached out to take the hourglass, grazing her skin in the act.

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  • His shifted, and his tongue flickered out to capture her tears.

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  • He's not out to eat me, is he?

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  • His tongue flicked out to taste her tears.

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  • I mean, why else did you want to ask me out to dinner at the end?

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  • I'm the only one in this mess who isn't out to hurt anyone else, she retorted.

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  • It was turning out to be a horrible day.

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  • Instinctively, she reached out to feel his warm skin and trace the ridges of his abdomen.

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  • I snuck out to a place where I was told not to go—a very dangerous place.

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  • He took her hand as they went out to his Jeep.

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  • You didn't drive this buggy all the way out to Colorado, did you?

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  • Silly me, I thought it was a hardware store, but it turned out to be a beauty shop!

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  • Lydia called out to him as he moved away from her.

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  • She twisted the cap from the bottle and held it out to him.

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  • I thought all the Dawkinses were out to dinner.

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  • You're just as mad at him because you think he hung you out to dry when he didn't answer your call the night Billy was killed.

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  • She was the victor of Vegas to the tune of three hundred dollars, and called to invite Fred out to spend the spoils.

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  • He's out to get you, or to use me to do it, or get both of us.

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  • She needs certain facts pointed out to her.

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  • He took Kathleen out to breakfast.

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  • He reached out to tilt her chin to the side to see her neck.

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  • He reached out to her again and pulled her hand away, placing his against her neck.

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  • Her tongue darted out to wet her lips nervously.

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  • Gabriel reached out to her, wiping away the tears on one cheek with his thumb.

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  • Dawn and Random followed their mother as they trotted out to the pasture.

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  • Alex held his arms out to Destiny.

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  • The shoulders slid out slowly and the foal was out to his hips.

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  • Another agonizing hour passed before a doctor finally came out to talk to them.

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  • Carmen stared at the spot, her heart going out to it as if Alex still lay there.

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  • Finally he reached out to return the brush to its holder.

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  • She reached out to touch his shoulder and then hesitated.

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  • The ride turned out to be a trip to the old house to see how things were coming along.

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  • It wasn't the brightest thing to walk all the way out to that shed without any protection after seeing the bear last night, either.

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  • She smiled and reached out to squeeze his arm.

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  • He looked out to sea again.

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  • He reached out to rest a hand on her belly, as he did every time they met the past few months.

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  • Maybe it's easier than you're making it out to be.

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  • She reached out to the cave.

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  • With a trembling hand, Deidre reached out to him, taking one of his.

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  • He reached out to her and placed a hand on her forehead.

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  • She reached out to take Wynn's hand.

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  • As if sensing her thought, Gabriel reached out to her.

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  • Or out to kill her.

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  • He reached out to her.

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  • I don't think he's the lost cause you're making him out to be, she said, disturbed.

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  • I came out to thank you for bringing me here and saving me more than once from those things.

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  • He retrieved a small bottle of what looked like perfume and brought it back, holding it out to her.

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  • He.d need to be if she turned out to be much worse of a mother.

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  • She peeked out to see two creatures at each other.s throats and frowned, wondering why demons were fighting one another.

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  • Turned out to be a demon.

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  • Fine. I.ll send Toby out to check on you.

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  • She stumbled up and crossed to her bathroom to brush her teeth before going out to breakfast.

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  • She held her forearm out to the door as she approached, glancing again at the gold band around her wrist that Romas had emphasized she needed to wear at all the times.

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  • Freeing a man should put him in her debt, and he was the last person in the house who would rat her out to Romas's family!

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  • At the moment he wanted nothing more than to reach out to her, and he was uncertain whether he wanted more to kiss those perfect lips or shake some sense into her.

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  • He restrained the urge to reach out to her.

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  • They nearly reached the women's wing when the strange little Council member with white eyes called out to her.

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  • He reached out to her, placing the translator on her ear.

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  • They reached a small encampment at the bottom of a mountain and passed around it, one calling out a greeting as someone trotted out to meet them.

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  • A'Ran's fingers flew over the command panel as he thought of how wise his forefathers had turned out to be.

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  • She didn't doubt Jetr had reached out to Evelyn, or her friend would never have come.

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  • All I can think of is perhaps she sent her clothes out to a laundry and didn't want them mixed up.

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  • He's coming out to gather her up and haul her home.

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  • She called me a couple of days ago and told me she'd taken off and flown out to Colorado with the boy.

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  • I knew her story couldn't be as simple as Claire made it out to be—wanted it to be.

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  • Piles of gear were stacked about while partners called out to those below, fed line and encouragement, while others watched, a number with anxious looks on their reddened faces as they looked downward.

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  • He hung up the phone and stormed out to the hall and donned his winter coat.

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  • Look, Edith Shipton had just poured her heart out to my wife and me that she had run away from an abusive husband and was hiding.

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  • He reached in his pocket and unfolded a sheet of paper and held it out to Dean.

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  • He smiled at Cynthia who looked as if she'd been out to lunch during an important discussion but she said nothing.

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  • Dean rose and wandered out to the front porch but in spite of his sterling speech, and overwhelming wish that he could forget the Shiptons and all the grief they had brought him, he couldn't quite chase the unfinished business from his churning mind.

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  • All that would do is warn them he knew and he would be coming out to get her.

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  • He pulled the chair out to offer her, and in doing so sent it airborne, into the opposite wall, where it splintered into pieces and cracked the plaster.

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  • He figured it would be quite some time before he could get out to hunt.

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  • The bonus of his day helping her out of her funk turned out to be an unexpected surprise.

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  • Her intention was to stay there to make sure he did not go out to hunt.

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  • Jackson heard Elisabeth's car pull up and hurried out to meet her.

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  • Jackson retrieved the roast, cut two chops from it, and held one out to her while sitting on a stool.

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  • Elisabeth suggested they go out to dinner.

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  • She pulled her phone out to call Sarah.

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  • Jackson said, "Elisabeth and I are going out to dinner if you want to join us."

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  • There he saddled Ed and rode out to the exercise field.

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  • They completed the morning chores and then Katie headed out to pick up her brother at the airport.

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  • It's been a long time since we all went out to eat together.

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  • Alex reached out to steady her and grinned.

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  • Maybe you'd like me to hike out to the highway and scrape up some road kill for supper.

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  • They spent the next fifteen minutes exploring the inside of the mill, and then they went out to the bridge.

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  • Carmen stepped back as he unloaded the horse and then she put her hand out to it.

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  • She held one hand out and the filly nickered, stretching her nose out to touch the hand cautiously.

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  • Dan activated one of the buttons on his command headpiece that sent his rally orders out to the soldiers in the building.

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  • Brady hesitated to respond, feeling as though he should concentrate on supporting her, per Tim's directions, rather than reach out to her when he needed her.

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  • She issued only a few commands, enough to lock them out to anyone but her.

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  • His instincts warned him there was no stopping someone like General Greene, once he set out to find someone.

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  • When he took a step towards her, she reached out to him.

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  • He reached into his pocket and withdrew the micro and Horsemen, holding them out to her.

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  • Lana watched then took it when Mrs. Watson held it out to her.

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  • As they walked into the town, they were greeted by people calling out to Kelli.

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  • He reached out to catch it.

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  • More medics rushed out to the helo.

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  • Another small smile crossed her face, and she sat down.  Gabe left her, knowing even if she did sleep, it wouldn't be long.  Death may have ignored their presence in her domain for three days, but something had made her reach out to him now.  He knew they'd have problems at some point and only hoped he could get Katie out of the underworld, before his own fate was sealed.

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  • Katie touched the roots ensnaring the sleeping woman's ankle.  The mess baffled her, as if the roots themselves had reached out to grab Deidre's ankles instead of her slipping and stumbling into them.  The gnarly roots were twisted and thick, wrapped too tightly for her to pry them apart.

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  • I saw him play last spring when I went out to the high school to bust the Cummings kid for breaking and entering.

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  • The office confirmed he and Byrne went out to have a drink or three, just the two of them.

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  • Dean heaved a deep sigh and plodded out to the kitchen for coffee.

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  • As they alighted from the car, Winston came out to meet them.

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  • The boy discovered something on the menu to his liking and enthusiastically pointed it out to his father.

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  • Winston rose and steered Dean out to the porch abruptly.

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  • Dean was halfway out to 156 Maid Marian Lane before it dawned on him he'd neglected to pick up his just-in-case change of clothes.

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  • He started to say something to the fleeing attendant but instead lifted the limp body up in his arms to a more reasonable position and carefully carried her out to the anteroom.

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  • He rose and, taking the arm of the attendant, steered the young man out to the slab where Wassermann was unaware of the turmoil he'd created.

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  • The sun flooded in through the still-open drapes, announcing that the violent storm of the night before had fled out to sea.

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  • What was supposed to be sunshine, mild temperature and puffy white clouds turned out to be intermittent showers and a sky as gray as Dean's sweat socks.

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  • I figured you'd come home early so I called out to you.

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  • They told me if Jeff's body wasn't found the first couple of weeks, it had probably washed out to sea and would maybe never be located.

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  • He's working out to be quite a find.

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  • I made it out to Gruber's place with no problem, hardly.

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  • Perhaps Byrne was afraid someone would connect him to the theft, a fear that would be eliminated by his "death"—a fear that was turning out to be well founded.

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  • They cleaned the room, folded the chairs and carried the gifts out to his truck.

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  • The three of them headed out to pasture.

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  • He held his arms out to her, waiting for her to hug him.

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  • He held his arms out to you.

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  • Carmen followed him out to the truck, eagerly allowing him to draw her into an embrace.

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  • Only this time her focus spread out to other things; the arbor of forget-me-nots where they would exchange vows, the cake with its three tiers of cascading flowers.

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  • Do you want me to take you out to get something to eat?

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  • So how about breaking tradition and going out to breakfast with me?

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  • It was actually a bit of a nuisance to go out to breakfast at times, but mostly they had completed chores and were on their way to some outing.

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  • After one last kiss, she left him to do his work while she went out to spend his money.

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  • She dodged his hand as it darted out to catch her, and raced around the counter, giggling all the while.

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  • I guess it must have been disappointing to him that I turned out to be a girl.

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  • Going to the doctor turned out to be unnecessary.

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  • She shoved it in the oven, set the timer for one hour and hurried out to do the chores.

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  • I'm going out to do the chores.

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  • Did you ever get up the nerve to ask that secretary out to supper?

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  • Donning a heavy coat, she escaped through the patio doors and hurried out to the barn.

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  • It took her the better part of an hour to locate the cow, and if it hadn't been for the white form that raced out to meet them, she might have missed the cow in the hollow with her two calves.

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  • Part of her wanted to reach out to him in his agony, and part of her wanted to make a matching imprint on the other side of his face.

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  • He had once told her that any time she didn't want to cook, they could go out to eat, but this hardly seemed the time.

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  • Every few days a nurse came out to see her, but other than that, Alex took care of her for the next two weeks.

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  • After she cleaned up the mess, he reached out to her.

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  • Their house guest turned out to be a sandy-haired boy named Jonathan.

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  • Three bedrooms and one bath — not much of a dude ranch, but she intended to rent the house out to small groups.

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  • Lori nodded assent and Alex set out to determine if anything needed to be done before they left.

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  • He fidgeted to keep from reaching out to her.

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  • He dug out his black notebook from the depths of a desk drawer and held it out to her.

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  • He reached out to snatch the Watcher's neck.

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  • Taran shrugged, and the boy approached, reaching out to rub his clothing between his hands.

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  • He reached out to her, pained by her beaten appearance.

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  • Taran flinched, hands clenching and unclenching as he tried not to reach out to her, to grab her and run to the Springs.

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  • The children ran upstairs and Alex set out to check the bathroom for leaks.

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  • He actually sought them out to spend time with them, as he had on this last trip.

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  • I'm going to walk him out to the barn and fix him a place to stay.

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  • He went upstairs to get his things and then out to the barn.

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  • Alex stayed in the house while she walked out to the barn.

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  • Alex leaned sideways and stretched a hand out to Sam, It's nice to meet you, Sam.

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  • She cleaned the table and then went out to the porch to remove an empty bird nest from the eve.

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  • They had been out to pasture all day, so they were looking for attention.

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  • He stuck a hand out to Carmen and then Felipa.

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  • Her heart cried out to him as he walked away.

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  • On the way home she decided to stop at the clinic and see if Alex wanted to go out to lunch.

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  • As he had pointed out to Carmen, they could lose each other in an accident any time.

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  • Go out to the beach and soak up some sun.

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  • I'm sure you're in a hurry to get back out to Denton.

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  • He ran out to his bicycle and pushed the kickstand back while he peered through the window.

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  • She sauntered out to the porch for some more unnecessary rest in the rocker.

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  • Worried enough to send someone out to keep an eye on me?

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  • No, I'm offering to take you out to dinner.

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  • You didn't want to go out to dinner with me, and just now you practically cringed when I touched you.

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  • The only things that seemed to upset him were minor things, like asking him out to dinner and such.

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  • I go out to eat.

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  • She went out to meet a friend and that's all I know.

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  • Xander withdrew from her neck, but not before his tongue flickered out to trace the sensitive spot.

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  • She went through the nightstands, drawers and closets then ducked out to make sure he was still drinking coffee on the porch.

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  • Xander stopped and assessed her for a long moment then reached out to her.

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  • Not wanting to deal with him at all, she took the coffee out to the porch and left, even more irritated to see he wore the necklace she desperately needed to steal.

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  • The kisses continued, and his tongue flickered out to taste her skin.

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  • Unable to help her curiosity, she stepped onto the porch and leaned against the railing, watching the three men swap in and out to spar.

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  • When he withdrew, she reached out to touch the planes and angles of his face.

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  • He held out a hand to Darian, who in turn held his fist out to Xander.

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  • His tongue flickered out to her neck, and she instinctively tilted her head, knowing what he wanted.

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  • Jessi's hands visibly shook, and he reached out to her, taking the hair band she was trying to use on her hair.

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  • Of course, she no longer had anyone to contact, now that Xander was out to make her number seven.

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  • Near tears, Jessi tugged the necklace free and held it out to him.

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  • Her children he adopted as his own; and it was chiefly for her sake that he desired the peerage which was twice held out to him.

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  • Memnon the Rhodian, now in supreme command of the Persian fleet, saw the European coasts exposed and set out to raise Greece, where discontent always smouldered in Alexander's rear.

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  • Alexander left the conquered portion of India east of the Indus to be governed under Porus, Omphis of Taxila, and Abisares, the country west of the Indus under Macedonian governors, and set out to explore the great river The g ?

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  • The latter enterprise Alexander designed to conduct in person; under his supervision was prepared in Babylon an immense fleet, a great basin dug out to contain 1000 ships, and the watercommunications of Babylonia taken in hand.

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  • The pampas were almost destitute of animal life before the horses and cattle of the Spanish invaders were there turned out to graze, and the puma and jaguar never came there until the herds of European cattle attracted them.

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  • If their ancestors had been carried out to sea once or twice by a flood and safely drifted as far as the Galapagos Islands" (Wallace), "they must have been numerous on the continent" (Rothschild and Hartert).

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  • In fear lest he should be outflanked by Uluch Ali, he stood out to sea, leaving a gap between himself and the centre.

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  • In 1177 John de Courci, with the countenance of Henry II., set out to the conquest of Ulster.

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  • The first Portuguese expedition sent out to capture Malacca was under the command of Diogo Lopez de Siqueira and sailed from Portugal in 1508.

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  • Immediately on the fall of Pembroke Cromwell set out to relieve Lambert, who was slowly retreating before Hamilton's superior forces; he joined him near Knaresborough on the 12th of August, and started next day in pursuit of Hamilton in Lancashire, placing himself at Stonyhurst near Preston, cutting off Hamilton from the north and his allies, and defeating him in detail on the 17th, 18th and 19th at Preston and at Warrington.

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  • Complete toleration in fact was only extended to Protestant nonconformists, who composed the Cromwellian established church, and who now meted out to their antagonists the same treatment which they themselves were later to receive under the Clarendon Code of Charles II.

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  • The flocks were committed to a shepherd who gave receipt for them and took them out to pasture.

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  • In July 1905 all the principal lines, which had been constructed by the state, but had been since 1885 let out to three companies (Mediterranean, Adriatic, Sicilian), were taken over by the state; their length amounted in 1901 to 6147 m., and in f 907 to 8422 m.

    0
    0
  • They soon appeared under their own captains, who hired them out to the highest bidder, or marched them on marauding expeditions up and down the less protected districts.

    0
    0
  • On the 6th of March 1885 parliament finally sanctioned the conventions by which state railways were farmed out to three private companiesthe Mediterranean, Adriatic and Sicilian.

    0
    0
  • Corbulo was thereupon sent out to the East with full military powers.

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    0
  • It is situated in the Sivas-Samsun chausee, altitude 2280 ft., at the mouth of a rocky glen which opens out to the broad valley of the Tozanli Su, a tributary of the Yeshil Irmak.

    0
    0
  • Just below the crown of tentacles, however, the body widens out to form a " head," termed the hydranth (a), containing a stomach-like dilatation of the digestive cavity.

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    0
  • They promised an easy expiation for crimes to both living and dead on payment of a fee, undertook to punish the enemies of their clients, and held out to them the prospect of perpetual banqueting and drinking-bouts in Paradise.

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    0
  • In other cases the leaf-gaps are very broad and long, the meristeles separating them being reduced to comparatively slender strands, while there is present in each gap a network of fine vascular threads, some of which run out to the leaf, while others form cross-connections between these leaf-trace strands and also with the main cauline meristeles.

    0
    0
  • Vasco Nunez was beheaded in 1517 by Pedrarias de Avila, who was sent out to supersede him.

    0
    0
  • In 1534 Jacques Cartier set out to continue the discoveries of Verazzano, and visited Newfoundland and the Gulf of St Lawrence.

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    0
  • Captain Vancouver was sent out to receive the cession, and to survey the coast from Cape Mendocino northwards.

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    0
  • In germination of the seed the root of the embryo (radicle) grows out to get a holdfast for the plant; this is generally followed by the growth of the short stem immediately above the root, the so-called "hypocotyl," which carries up the cotyledons above the ground, where they spread to the light and become the first green leaves of the plant.

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  • But the principle is hardly ever carried out to the end.

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    0
  • At one end of each rail the flange spread out to form a foot which rested on a cross sleeper, being secured to the latter by a spike passing through a central hole, and above this foot the rail was so shaped as to form a socket into which was fitted the end of the next rail.

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    0
  • The British warship "Calliope" (Captain Pearson) was in the harbour, but succeeded in getting up steam and, standing out to sea, escaped destruction.

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    0
  • Disciplined troops as they were, they resisted the temptation to escape Ferrara's fire by breaking out to the front; but the whole Spanish line was enfiladed, and on the left of it the papal troops, who were by no means of the same quality, filled up the ditch in front of their breastworks and charged forward, followed by all the gendarmerie.

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    0
  • Following up this line of investigation, Major Ronald Ross in 1895 found that if a mosquito sucked blood containing the parasites they soon began to throw out flagellae, which broke away and became free; and in 1897 he discovered peculiar pigmented cells, which afterwards turned out to be the parasites of aestivo-autumnal malaria in an early stage of development, within the stomachwall of mosquitoes which had been fed on malarial blood.

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    0
  • In temperate climates the impregnated females hibernate during the winter in houses, cellars, stables, the trunks of trees, &c., coming out to lay their eggs in the spring.

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    0
  • Contracts for large or important works or for the supply of large amounts of goods are usually put out to tender in order to secure the lowest price.

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    0
  • The high priest dressed in his robes went out to meet him, and at the sight Alexander remembered a dream, in which such a man had appeared to him as the appointed leader of his expedition.

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    0
  • The people whom they directed were called out to fight, at the bidding of an alien, for this and that foreigner who seemed most powerful and most likely to succeed.

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    0
  • The child was now taken out to walk on the roof of the Tower.

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    0
  • In this Annelid later the sac in question joins its fellow, passing beneath the nerve cord exactly as in the leech, and also grows out to reach the exterior.

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    0
  • The same prospect was held out to Charles IV., the queen and Godoy, with the result that the rivals for the throne proceeded to the north of Spain to meet the arbiter of their destinies.

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    0
  • Early in April he sought to gain the help of ioo,000 Austrian troops by holding out to Francis of Austria the prospect of acquiring Silesia from Prussia.

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    0
  • Mr. Churchill went out to Egypt, and held in Cairo a conference of the British civil and military officers then administering those countries.

    0
    0
  • The blockade of the harbour by Yeo was abandoned in June 1814 after the defeat of a force from the squadron sent out to capture guns which were being brought from Oswego to Sackett's.

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    0
  • In its long course it varies greatly both in depth and width, in some parts being only a few feet deep and spreading out to a width of more than a mile, while in other and mountainous portions of its course its channel is narrowed to 300 or 400 ft., and its depth is increased in inverse ratio.

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  • But the Sabbath was a feast on which, after attending to their souls, they indulged their bodies, like yoke animals let out to graze.

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    0
  • The bulk lead really excellent lives in monasteries, which are centres of education and poor-relief; while others go out to visit the poor as Gurus or teachers.

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    0
  • At the moment of marching out to meet the enemy, Johnston was relieved of his command and was replaced by Gen.

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    0
  • In order to ingratiate himself with the people, who still cherished the memory of the Gracchi, Saturninus took about with him Equitius, a paid freedman, who gave himself out to be the son of Tiberius Gracchus.

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    0
  • Ulrich Kreusler generates the carbon dioxide in a separate apparatus, and in this case the tube is drawn out to a capillary at the end (a).

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    0
  • He began his public ministry in 1647, but there is no evidence to show that he set out to form a separate religious body.

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  • There ought, he says, to be held out to the slave the hope of liberty as the reward of his service.

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    0
  • At the conference of 1769 two preachers, Richard Boardman and Joseph Pilmoor, volunteered to go out to take charge of the work.

    0
    0
  • About 1465 Bika, a Rathor Rajput, sixth son of Rao Jodha, chief of Marwar, started out to conquer the country.

    0
    0
  • But nothing could be done until the Porte should have come to terms with Russia as to the Treaty of Bucharest; for, as the British ambassador, Sir Robert Liston, was instructed to point out to the Ottoman government, " it is impossible to guarantee the possession of a territory of which the limits are not determined."

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  • The inhabitants of Berlin, headed by their mayor, came out to meet him, and the newspapers lavished adulation on the victors and abuse on the beaten army.

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    0
  • On the morning of the 19th the whole army moved out to accept this challenge, and the French were thoroughly worsted on the 24th in the battle of Maloyaroslavetz.

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  • The remaining colonial possessions of France, and of Holland, then wholly dependent on her, were conquered by degrees, and the ports in which privateers were fitted out to cruise against British commerce in distant seas were gradually rendered harmless.

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  • It was originally so used of converts to Judaism, but any one who sets out to convert others to his own opinions is said to " proselytize."

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  • He set out to invade Scotland with about 1000 men.

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  • Reformation; and most of them were Jesuits, the order that set out to be nothing Protestantism was, and everything that Protestantism was not.

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  • Rainouart turns out to be the brother of Guillaume's wife Guibourc, who was before her marriage the Saracen princess and enchantress Orable.

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    0
  • One of the stamens has been deprived of its spur; the other shows its spur, c. a row down the centre, are shot out to some little distance from she parent plant.

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    0
  • Yet notwithstanding this enormous effect in iron, the action of a current upon nickel and cobalt turned out to be almost inappreciable.

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    0
  • Several other species of alumen are described by Pliny, but we are unable to make out to what minerals he alludes.

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    0
  • The good intentions of the Jesuits were in part frustrated by the opposition of Costa the governor; and it was not until 1558, when Mem de Sa was sent out to supersede him, that their projects were allowed free scope.

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  • But as he rode out to view the ruins his horse plunged on the burning cinders and inflicted on him an internal injury.

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    0
  • Farewell was not daunted, and in September 1829 set out to return overland to Port Natal.

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    0
  • The new settlement was crushed by Crotona, but the Athenians lent aid to the fugitives and in 443 Pericles sent out to Thurii a mixed body of colonists from various parts of Greece, among whom were Herodotus and the orator Lysias.

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    0
  • In the winter of 1608 Richelieu went out to his poverty-stricken little bishopric, and for the next six years devoted himself seriously to his episcopal duties.

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    0
  • On the 14th Richard II., a boy of fourteen, undertook the perilous enterprise of riding out to confer with the rebels beyond the city wall.

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  • Further causes for alarms were the secret meeting between General Smuts and Count Mensdorv, to discuss a separate peace between Austria and the Entente (Dec. 1917) and the public pronouncements of President Wilson and Mr. Lloyd George in favour of " autonomy " for the subject races, instead of the independence held out to them by the Allied pronouncement of Jan.

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  • Unhappily, despite its warm assurances of American friendship, this document met with a most hostile reception in Italy, where it was interpreted as an attempt to undermine the position of her spokesmen and so mete out to her a different measure from that prescribed by France and Britain.

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  • In 1714 he set out to seek his fortune in Russia, and unsuccessfully solicited a place at the shabby court of the princess Sophia Charlotte, the consort of the tsarevich Alexius.

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    0
  • In the past the mobile columns, of which there were over sixty in the field, had always been bound to the railway for supply; now convoys could be pushed out to them along whatever blockhouse line they touched.

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    0
  • During the stress of war, Zaleucus violated this law; and, on its being pointed out to him, he committed suicide by throwing himself upon the point of his sword, declaring that the law must be vindicated.

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    0
  • In their funeral ceremonies, the moment the spirit has fled incense is burnt before the corpse until it is carried out to be buried.

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  • Fitzstephen tells how, when the great marsh that washed the walls of the city on the north (Moorfields) was frozen over; the young men went out to slide and skate and sport on the ice.

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    0
  • News of Isandhlwana reached England on the iith of February, and on the same day about Io,000 men were ordered out to South Africa.

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  • Meantime Sir Garnet (afterwards Lord) Wolseley had been sent out to super sede Lord Chelmsford, and on the 7th of July he Ulundi.

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  • This tradition is important in spite of the fact that it first comes clearly before us in a writer belonging to the latter part of the 2nd century, because the prominence and fame of Luke were not such as would of themselves have led to his being singled out to have a Gospel attributed to him.

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  • Shortly after his return, he was sent out to the Peninsular War in command of a considerable force which was sent to Spain to co-operate with Sir John Moore, to whom he was appointed second in command.

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  • To give an idea of what can be done in this way, it may be stated that gold can be beaten out to leaf of the thickness of - j g - mm.; and that platinum, by judicious work, can be drawn into wire 2?o o mm.

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  • In many cases they will probably turn out to be descriptive epithets of gods 3 The Assyrian language is practically identical with the Babylonian, just as the Assyrians are the same people as the Babylonians with some foreign admixtures.

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  • Thus some have made him out to be the Hermas to whom salutation is sent at the end of the Epistle to the Romans, others that he was the brother of Pius, bishop of Rome in the middle of the 2nd century, and others that he was a contemporary of Clement, bishop of Rome at the close of the 1st century.

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  • They associate in communities, forming their burrows among loose rocks, and coming out to feed in the early morning and towards sunset.

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  • Below this its course has not been followed by any European traveller, but it may be inferred from the line of watering-places on the road to Kuwet, that it runs out to the Persian Gulf in that neighbourhood.

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    0
  • The great wealth of the Arabs is in their flocks of sheep and goats; they are led out to pasture soon after sunrise, and in the hotter months drink every second day.

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  • Mahommed, the third son of the amir Abdallah, was at the time absent .; with a view of getting his uncle into his power, Bandar invited him to return to Hail, and on his arrival went out to meet him accompanied by Hamud, son of Obed, and a small following.

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    0
  • The " New Laws " were weakly revoked, and Pedro de la Gasca, as first president of the Audiencia (court of justice) of Peru, was sent out to restore order.

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    0
  • When the "Merrimac" advanced to attack the "Minnesota," the "Monitor" went out to meet her, and the battle between the iron-clads began about 9 a.m.

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    0
  • The wooded hills to the northward throw out to the south and south-west long spurs, between which are the low valleys of several rivers and brooks.

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    0
  • In 1712 a Nantucket whaler, Christopher Hussey, blown out to sea, killed some sperm whales and thus introduced the sperm-oil industry and put an end to the period in which only driftand shoreor boat-whaling had been carried on - the shore fishery died out about 1760.

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    0
  • Count D'Estaing hastily re-embarked his troops and sailed out to meet Howe.

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    0
  • The system of apportionment and the franchise qualifications were worked out to meet the needs of a group of agricultural communities.

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    0
  • Vessels set out to the fisheries, as far as Spitsbergen and the Kara Sea; and trade is brisk, not only Norwegian and Danish but British, German and particularly Russian vessels engaging in it.

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    0
  • In the spring the great herds of tame reindeer are driven out to swim Strommen and graze in the summer pastures of Seiland; towards winter they are called home again.

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    0
  • While he pointed out to the dissenters the scandalous inconsistency of their playing fast and loose with sacred things, yet he denounced the impropriety of requiring tests at all.

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    0
  • At the close of that day, Frederick rode down the lines and called out to General Prince Moritz, "I congratulate you, Herr Feldmarschall!"

    0
    0
  • In the spring of 377 invitations were sent out to the maritime cities.

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    0
  • Though Samos was not apparently one of the allies, this latter action could not but remind the allies of the very dangers which the second confederacy had set out to avoid.

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    0
  • Traversing this, it receives the waters of the Loue, its chief affluent, and broadening out to a width of 260 ft., at length reaches the Saone at Verdun.

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    0
  • In 1656 he was appointed governor of Tripoli; but before he had set out to his new post he was nominated to the grand vizierate at the instance of powerful friends.

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    0
  • For the moment the chief care of the Prince was to guard against an attempt of the French army to break out to the westward.

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    0
  • On the afternoon of the 25th he decided to break out to the northward by the right bank of the river, and orders to this effect were duly issued.

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    0
  • Between the 26th and the 30th of July Tromp, by a series of skilful manoeuvres, united the divided Dutch squadrons in the face of Monk's fleet, and on the 30th he stood out to sea with the wind in his favour, and gave battle.

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    0
  • Charlemagne's march on Saragossa, and the capture of Huesca, Barcelona and Girone, gave rise to La Prise de Pampelune (14th century, based on a lost chanson); and Gui de Bourgogne (12th century) tells how the children of the barons, after appointing Guy as king of France, set out to find and rescue their fathers, who are represented as having been fighting in Spain for twenty-seven years.

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    0
  • Shore Deposits are the product of the waste of the land arranged and bedded by the action of currents or tidal streams. On the rocky coast of high latitudes blocks of stone detached by frost fall on the beach and becoming embedded in ice during winter are often drifted out to sea and so carry the shore deposits to some distance from the land.

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  • As the result of his visit he left with the queen a memorandum in which he pointed out to her in plain terms the dangers of her conduct.'

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    0
  • Such vibrations may be damped out to a considerable extent by the use of a dash-pot, or may be practically prevented by using a relatively stiff spring.

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    0
  • The narrow foot-plateau of British East Africa broadens out to the south of Bagamoyo to a width of over loo m.

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    0
  • The king of Prussia had some reason to complain of the sudden desertion of his ally, but there is no evidence whatever to substantiate his accusation that Bute had endeavoured to divert the tsar later from his alliance with Prussia, or that he had treacherously in his negotiations with Vienna held out to that court hopes of territorial compensation in Silesia as the price of the abandonment of France; while the charge brought against Bute in 1765 of having taken bribes to conclude the peace, subsequently after investigation pronounced frivolous by parliament, may safely be ignored.

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  • They are seen to be united under the relation of cause and effect, determining and determined, which turns out to mean that they are merely passing manifestations of some single entity or energy which constitutes the real unknown essence of the things that come before our knowledge.

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    0
  • The Genoese, desiring to draw their enemy out to battle, and to make the action decisive, arranged their fleet in two lines abreast.

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    0
  • Accordingly, in the spring of the following year he sailed from Athens with the colonists who went out to found the colony of Thurii (see Pericles), and became a citizen of the new town.

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    0
  • They turned out to be stragglers; but their capture for a time helped to confirm the idea, prevalent in the French army, that Blucher was drawing off towards his base.

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    0
  • He was still determined to play the game out to the bitter end, and involve Wellington and Billow's corps in a common ruin.

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    0
  • Here he stopped to report to the emperor some intelligence which turned out to be false, and he remained for breakfast.

    0
    0
  • Demesne of the crown, or royal demesne, was that part of the crown lands not granted out to feudal tenants, but which remained under the management of stewards appointed by the crown.

    0
    0
  • They went out to preach two by two, and the junior was bound absolutely to obey the senior.

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    0
  • After passing through the established course of gunnery on board the "Excellent" in 1844-1845, he went out to the Cape of Good Hope as gunnery mate of the "President," the flagship of Rear-Admiral Dacres, by whom, on the 9th of January 1846, he was promoted to be lieutenant.

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    0
  • Pauw maintained his colony of Pavonia for about seven years and then sold out to the Company.

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    0
  • To the south of the district in southern Westland, where the Alps have passed out to sea, the Archeans become more extensive; for they spread eastward and underlie the whole of the dissected tableland of Otago.

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    0
  • He possessed the interior lines and the central reserve which enables interior lines to be utilized, and a stroke of good fortune prolonged the period in which he could command the situation, for The occupation of Siu-yen was chiefly the work of the brigade pushed out to his left by Kuroki.

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    0
  • Montaigne was not only put out to nurse with a peasant woman, but had his sponsors from the same class, and was accustomed to associate with it.

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    0
  • It has been thought from these two facts, and from an expression in one of the later essays, that the marriage of his daughter Leonore to Gaston de La Tour had not turned out to his satisfaction.

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    0
  • Here on the 3rd of July 1778 about 400 men and boys met, and under the command of Colonel Zebulon Butler (1731-95) went out to meet a force of about Iioo British troops and Indians, commanded by Major John Butler and Old King (Sayenqueraghte).

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  • They are sent out to nurse rich and poor alike, and their pay is very small.

    0
    0
  • These, however, soon ceased to be observed, and already in the 1 ith century, alBiruni could meet with no Hindu astronomer capable of pointing out to him the complete series.

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    0
  • At Chester their horses were taken by the Royalists, whereupon they again put out to sea and landed at Liverpool.

    0
    0
  • In the present case the total dielectric contribution to this current works out to be the change per unit time in the electric separation in the molecules of the element of volume, as it moves uniformly with the matter, all other effects being compensated molecularly without affecting the propagation.

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    0
  • In the autumn of 1096 the nobles of France and Italy, joined by the Norman barons of England and Sicily, set out to wrest the Holy Land from the unbelievers; and for more than a century the cry, " Christ's land must be won for Christ," exercised an unparalleled power in Western Christendom.

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    0
  • The interest here centres in the rivalry between Tristan and Lancelot, alike as knights and lovers, and in the later redaction, ascribed to Helie de Borron, the story is spun out to an interminable length.

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    0
  • The leading troops of the Army of the Potomac were now landed, and set out to join Pope's army, which faced Longstreet and Jackson on the Rappahannock between Bealton and Waterloo.

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    0
  • Abrahams points out to the writer that the rest is more summary.

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    0
  • The form it took was a solemn procession of boats, headed by the doge's maesta nave, afterwards the Bucentaur (from 1311) out to sea by the Lido port.

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    0
  • When Justinian issued the edict for the suppression of the school, Damascius along with Simplicius (the painstaking commentator on Aristotle) and five other Neoplatonists set out to make a home in Persia.

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    0
  • Vlacq rendered assistance in the publication of this work, and the privilege is made out to him.

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    0
  • This is not merely in the vague sense that on the whole good will be rewarded and evil punished, but that every single act must work out to the uttermost its inevitable consequences, and receive its retribution, however many ages the process may require.

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    0
  • A similar treatment was meted out to the ancient magistracies of the republic; and thus began the process by which the emperors undermined the self-respect of their subjects and eventually came to rule over a nation of slaves.

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    0
  • Coxcoxtli used the help of the Aztecs against the Xochimilco people; but his own nation, horrified at their bloodthirsty sacrifice of prisoners, drove them out to the islands and swamps of the great salt lagoon, where they are said to have taken to making their chinampas or floating gardens of mud heaped on rafts of reeds and brush, which in later times were so remarkable a feature of Mexico.

    0
    0
  • The large sale of the New Testaments of Tyndale, and the success of Coverdale's Bible, showed the London booksellers that a new and profitable branch of business was o opened out to them, and they soon began to avail Matthew's P ?

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    0
  • On each succeeding anniversary of that day, with the prevalent desire of perpetuating a feud, the citizens marched out to Cullenswood with banners displayed - "a terror to the native Irish."

    0
    0
  • The Lares are brought out to preside over this solemn feast, and for the occasion are incincti or clothed in tunics girt at the loins.

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    0
  • The young plants are thinned out to a width of 6 or 8 in.

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    0
  • He went out to reverse the Afghan policy of Lord Lytton, and Kandahar was given up, the whole of Afghanistan being secured to Abdur Rahman.

    0
    0
  • Thus from Canada as her basis was France reaching out to grasp a continent.

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    0
  • A representative of the government, Mr (later Sir James) Edgar, sent out to conciliate the province by some new agreement, failed to accomplish his object, and all the influence of the governor-general, Lord Dufferin, who paid a visit at this time to the Pacific coast, was required to quiet the public excitement, which had shown itself in a resolution passed by the legislature for separation from the Dominion unless the terms of union were fulfilled.

    0
    0
  • These organs are characteristic of all Lamellibranchs; they do not vary except in size, being sometimes drawn out to streamer-like dimensions.

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    0
  • After this Suleiman set out to subdue his brother Masud Shah, at Angora, who was finally taken prisoner and treacherously murdered.

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    0
  • On the following day with Ioo horsemen he went out to the same tomb and obtained the unconditional surrender of the three princes, who had been left behind on the previous occasion.

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    0
  • In 1749 he was appointed engineer-general to the East India Company, and went out to superintend th' reconstruction of their forts; but his health soon failed, and he died at Fort St David on the 29th of July 1751.

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    0
  • Unofficially, he pointed out to the French plenipotentiaries, arguing from Napoleon's experience, the extreme danger of an invasion of Spain, but at the same time explained, for the benefit of the duke of Angouleme, the best way to conduct a campaign in the Peninsula.

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    0
  • The larvae are killed and hardened by steeping some hours in strong acetic acid; the silk glands are then separated from the bodies, and the vis cous fluid drawn out to the condition of a fine uniform line, which is stretched between pins at the extremity of a board.

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    0
  • Whereas during the 19th century states were being cut out to suit the existing distribution of language, in the 20th the tendency seems to be to avoid further rearrangement of boundaries, and to complete the homogeneity, thus far attained, by the artificial method of forcing reluctant populations to adopt the language of the predominant or governing race.

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    0
  • Matter thus, which had at first been defined as a complex of perceptions objectified, now turns out to be a condition without which perceptions would not exist, but whose nature is known only as a complex of perceptions.

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    0
  • The accidents of political life suddenly opened out to him a career which made him, next to Lord Salisbury, the most prominent, the most admired and the most attacked Conservative politician of the day.

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    0
  • In his twenty-fourth year he entered the congregation of the Lazarists at Paris, and shortly after receiving holy orders in 1839 went out to China.

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    0
  • He then set out to establish his authority in Spoleto, but on the way was seized with paralysis.

    0
    0
  • A special form of funeral rite peculiar to the North was that of cremation on a ship. Generally the ship was drawn up on land; but occasionally we hear, in legendary sagas, of the burning ship being sent out to sea.

    0
    0
  • The ridges and intervening valleys, long parts of which have an approximately parallel trend from south-west to north-east, were formed by the erosion of folded sediments of varying hardness, the weak belts of rock being etched out to form valleys and the hard belts remaining as mountain ridges.

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    0
  • On leaving Cambridge he went out to Australia (1850), and became a member of the government of Victoria, but in 1857 returned to England as agent-general of the colony.

    0
    0
  • In the autumn he set out to visit western Inverness, the islands of Skye, North and South Uist and Benbecula.

    0
    0
  • Charles's chief claim to remembrance is that he was the first ruler to adopt the system of hiring his soldiers out to foreign powers as mercenaries, as a means of improving the national finances.

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  • The sovereign undertook to consult the knights before embarking on a war, all disputes between the knights were to be settled by the order, at each chapter the deeds of each knight were held in review, and punishments and admonitions were dealt out to offenders; to this the sovereign was expressly subject.

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  • Sometimes the Ressurrection is narrowed down to the resurrection of the righteous, at others widened out to the resurrection of all mankind for the last judgment.

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    0
  • 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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    0
  • In the one case we have no direct knowledge (though the Romans probably selected the passes pointed out to them by the natives as the easiest), while in the other we hear almost exclusively of the passes across the main chain or the principal passes of the Alps.

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  • Lift onions, and lay them out to ripen on a dry border or gravel-walk.

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  • In Pennsylvania the sandstone and shale, at its maximum, reaches 4400 ft., but even within the limits of the state this formation has thinned out to no more than 300 ft.

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  • Again, the remains of the Roman camp Brittenburg or Huis to Britten, which originally lay within the dunes and, after being covered by them, emerged again in 1520, were, in 1694, 1600 paces out to sea, opposite Katwijk; while, besides Katwijk itself, several other villages of the west coast, as Domburg, Scheveningen, Egmond, have been removed further inland.

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  • He laid himself out to diffuse the system, and also to carry out a reform of its abuses by en- forcing a strict observance of the Rule of St Benedict (of whom, it may be noted, he was the earliest biographer).

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  • Used in its widest sense this includes the Hysteriaceae, Phacidiaceae, Helvellaceae, &c. The group is characterized in general by the possession of an ascocarp which, though usually a completely closed structure during the earlier stages of development, at maturity opens out to form a bowl or saucer-shaped organ, thus completely exposing the layer of asci which forms the hymenium.

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  • Finally, the improvement in the quality of the iron which resulted from thus completely freeing it from the gangue turned out to be a great and unexpected merit of the indirect process, probably the merit which enabled it, in spite of its complexity, to drive out the direct process.

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  • Hodgson sent out a message on the 4th of June (it reached the relieving force on the 12th of June), saying that they could only hold out to the 11th of June.

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  • Meanwhile from 1692 onwards brighter prospects were opened out to the unfortunate Belgians by the nomination by the Spanish king of Maximilian Emanuel, elector of Bavaria, to be governorgeneral with well-nigh sovereign powers.

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  • The allies allowed the bulk of the Norse ships to pass, and then stood out to attack Olaf.

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  • The promoter of the faith, popularly called the "devil's advocate" (advocates diaboli), is the defendant, whose official duty is to point out to the tribunal the weak points of the case.

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  • The Romanist princes were becoming alarmed at his predominance, the Protestant princes resented his arbitrary measures and disliked the harsh treatment meted out to John Frederick and to Philip of Hesse; all alike, irritated by the presence of Spanish soldiers in their midst, objected strongly to take Philip for their king and to any extension of Spanish influence in Germany.

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  • But the goddess continued to be worshipped in her old home; her priests, the Galli, went out to welcome Manlius on his march in 189 B.C., which shows that the town was not yet in the hands of the Tolistobogii.

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  • Lysias and Polemarchus were on a list of ten singled out to be the first victims. Polemarchus was arrested, and compelled to drink hemlock.

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  • This and other anomalies will doubtless be corrected in future revisions of the allotment, although the German parties, foreseeing that any revision must work out to their disadvantage, stipulated that a two-thirds majority should be necessary for any alteration of the law.

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  • But, as the tithe was let out to publicani, oppression was easy.

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  • This decree, though in accordance with the rigorous customs of ancient warfare as exemplified by the treatment which Sparta shortly afterwards meted out to the Plataeans,.

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  • So, on the other hand, there is no single verse or clause which can be plausibly made out to be an interpolation by Zaid at the instance of Abu Bekr, Omar, or Othman.

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  • And although it took several generations of poets to beat their music out to the perfection of the Virgilian cadences, yet in the rude adaptation of Ennius the secret of what ultimately became one of the grandest organs of literary expression was first discovered and revealed.

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  • It is essentially an inhabitant of tidal waters and estuaries, and often goes out to sea; hence its wide distribution, from the whole coast of Bengal to southern China, to the northern coasts of Australia and even to the Fiji islands.

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  • To succeed, it was essential that the fellah should be taught that discipline might be strict without being oppressive, that pay and rations would be fairly distributed, that brutal usage by superiors would be checked, that complaints would be thoroughly investigated, and impartial justice meted out to soldiers of all ranks.

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  • When Horus grew ie set out to avenge his fathers murder, and after terrible ggles finally conquered and dispossessed his wicked uncle; is another version relates, the combatants were separated by th, and Egypt divided between them, the northern part ng to Horus and the southern to Seth.

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  • Battle-axes with rounded outline started as merely a sharp edge of metal (io) inserted along a stick (10, if); they become semicircular (12) by the VIth Dynasty, lengthen to double their width in the XIIth, and then thin out to a waist in the middle by the XVIIIth Dynasty.

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  • On the advice of Lord Northbrook, who was sent out to Cairo in September 1884 to examine the financial situation, certain revenues which should have been paid into the Caisse for the benefit of the bondholders were paid into the treasury for the ordinary needs of the administration.

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  • Sir Benson Maxwell British and Mr Clifford Lloyd, who had been sent out to nd native reform the departments of justice and the interior, officials.

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  • Fenwick, went out to look for Sidneys force, and were surprised by a large number of dervishes.

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  • After a preliminary reconnaissance to the north, which afterwards turned out to be vitally important, the summer of 1895 was spent in exploring the coast to the north-west by a boating expedition.

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  • The developing embryo at the end of the suspensor grows out to a varying extent into the forming endosperm, from which by surface absorption it derives good material for growth; at the same time the suspensor plays a direct part as a carrier of nutrition, and may even develop, where perhaps no endosperm is formed, special absorptive "suspensor roots" which invest the developing embryo, or pass out into the body and coats of the ovule, or even into the placenta.

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  • Meanwhile the force under Haesten set out to march up the Thames valley, possibly with the idea of assisting their friends in the west.

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  • Again, it assumes an ideal of truth which turns out to be humanly unattainable and incompatible with the existence of error, an d an ideal of science which no human science can be conceived as attaining.

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  • Moreover, since the "real" is the object of the "true," and can be distinguished from the "unreal" only by developing superior value in the process of cognition which arrives at it, the notions of "reality" and "fact" also turn out to be disguised forms of value.

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  • Because all truth is primarily a claim which may turn out to be false, it has to be tested.

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  • Some five years later, on the nomination of the duke of Wellington, William Broughton was sent out to work in this enormous jurisdiction as archdeacon of Australia.

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  • Gaps then appear in the apposed surfaces, usually at the isthmus; the entire protoplasts either pass out to melt into one another clear of the old walls, or partly pass out and fuse without complete detachment from the old walls.

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  • When the yeomanry were called out to suppress riots after the Peace, his sympathies were with the people rather than with the authorities.

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  • He was educated at University College, London, and in 1868 went out to Bengal in the service of the Indian Government Telegraph department.

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  • No doubt a large amount of variation is truly indefinite, so that many meaningless or useless variations arise, and in one sense it is a mere coincidence if a particular variation turn out to be useful.

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  • In 1885 the governor found it necessary to use the state militia to suppress riots in Will and Cook counties occasioned by the strikes of quarrymen, and the following year the militia was again called out to suppress riots in St Clair and Cook counties caused by the widespread strike of railway employees.

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  • He is generally naked; his right leg rests on a rock or the prow of a ship; he carries a trident in his hand, and is gazing in front of him, apparently out to sea; sometimes he is standing on the water, swinging his trident, or riding in his chariot over the waves, accompanied by his wife Amphitrite, the Nereids and other inhabitants of the sea.

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  • The foundation of the edifice can be traced back to Uspia (Ushpia), c. 2000 B.C., and may turn out to be even older.

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  • And they went out to make a compact with the followers of the worldly Herod to kill Him, and so to stave off a religious revolution which might easily have been followed by political trouble.

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  • Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung became Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre; the novel of purely theatrical interests was widened out to embrace the history of a young man's apprenticeship to life.

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  • But when Fabre substituted dead individuals of her own species or live larvae of another genus, the Osmia had no scruple in destroying them, so as to bite her way out to air and liberty.

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  • Louis set out to govern his principality as though it were an independent state.

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  • The right of sale is also usually farmed out to the highest bidder, subject to regulations fixing the minimum quantity of liquor that may be sold at one time.

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  • In 1524 Vasco da Gama came out to the East for the third time, and he too died at Cochin.

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  • In 1583 four English merchants, Ralph Fitch, John Newbery, William Leedes and James Story, went out to India overland as mercantile adventurers.

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  • Undaunted, he marched out to the battlefield of Plassey (Palasi), at the head of about 900 Europeans and 2000 sepoys, with 8 pieces of artillery.

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  • Lord Ripon was sent out to India by the Liberal ministry of 1880 for the purpose of reversing Lord Lytton's policy in Afghanistan, and of introducing a more sympathetic system into the administration of India.

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  • They passed a stormy winter and confirmed Borchgrevink's conclusion that it was impossible to make any extensive journeys either on the sea-ice, which frequently blew out to sea, or by land from this base.

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  • On May 6 1915 the " Aurora," which had been frozen in and made fast by many cables to the shore at Cape Evans, was blown out to sea with all the ice and was held fast for 315 days, during which time she drifted northward through Ross Sea nearly in the same direction and at nearly the same rate as the " Endurance " was drifting at the same time in the Weddell Sea.

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  • According to the commonest account, on the 23rd of August of that year Pliny the elder, who had command of the Roman fleet at Misenum, set out to render assistance to a young lady of noble family named Rectina and others dwelling on that coast, but, as there was no escape by sea, the little harbour having been on a sudden filled up so as to be inaccessible, he was obliged to abandon to their fate those people of Herculaneum who had managed to flee from their houses, overwhelmed in a moment by the material poured forth by Vesuvius.

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  • In 1908 eight tramway lines (all electric but one) extended out to these suburbs, some of the lines extending to the bathing resorts of Ramirez and Pocitos and the Buceo cemeteries on the eastern coast.

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  • Three years later Adam Ferguson was appointed secretary to the commissioners sent out to the American colonies, and at his urgent request Stewart lectured as his substitute.

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  • Myths that symbolized changes in season or occurrences in nature were projected on the heavens, which were mapped out to correspond to the divisions of the earth.

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  • This "new earth" turned out to be nothing more nor less than a basis yttrium phosphate.

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  • On Sunday, the 11th of May 1729, when going out to preach before the judges at Serjeants' Inn, he was seized with a sudden illness, which caused his death on the Saturday following (May 17, 1729).

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  • Hobaira sailed out to second him.

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  • Sahl, a Zoroastrian of great influence, who in 806 had adopted Islam, reanimated his courage, and pointed out to him that certain death awaited him at Bagdad.

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  • In 1907 a Korean delegacy, headed by Prince Yong, a member of the imperial family, was sent out to lay before the Hague conference of that year, and before all the principal governments, a protest against the treatment of Korea by Japan.

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  • Stricken by illness, Conrad returned to Constantinople at Christmas 1147, but in March 1148 set out to rejoin his troops.

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  • Then he moved out to fight the advancing English army under Thomas Howard, earl of Surrey.

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  • The Bourbons, on their return, dismissed him, though this treatment was not, compared to that meted out to Ney and others, excessively harsh.

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  • The best example of the basic sills forms the Clauchland Hills and runs out to sea at Clauchland Point.

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  • Surveys were carried out to De Long Fjord, where they linked up with previous work of Peary.

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  • In Beowulf the same story is told of Scyld, with the addition that when he died his body was placed in a ship, laden with rich treasure, which was sent out to sea unguided.

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  • Brutus refused to surrender the province, and Antony set out to attack him in October 44, But at this time Octavian, whom Caesar had adopted as his son, arrived from Illyria, and claimed the inheritance of his "father."

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  • From an early date the collection of the taxes had been farmed out to companies of contractors (societates vectigales), who became a by-word for rapacity.

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  • His father, a ship's carpenter, was frequently out of work owing to illness and the decline of his trade, and his mother had to go out to work soon after her son was horn.

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  • A new commission was now appointed to inquire into alleged abuses in Wales, and the existing evidence clearly shows how harsh and unfair was the treatment meted out to the clergy under the act of 1649, and also how utterly subversive of all ancient custom and established order were the reforms suggested by the commissioners and approvers.

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  • In this operation there is no doubling of the slivers, but each sliver passes separately through the machine, from the can to the spindle, is drawn out to about eight times its length, and receives a small amount of twist to strengthen it, in order that it may be successfully wound upon the roving bobbin by the flyer.

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  • After his sister had been carried off by Zeus, he was sent out to find her.

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  • Spinoza quieted his fears as well as he could, assuring him that as soon as the crowd made any threatening movement he would go out to meet them, "though they should serve me as they did the poor De Witts.

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  • Believing that he had now secured the support of the majority in congress on behalf of any measures he decided to put forward, the new president initiated a policy of heavy expenditure on public works, the building of schools, and the strengthening of the naval and military forces of the republic. Contracts were given out to the value of 6,000,000 for the construction of railways in the southern districts; some 10,000,000 dollars were expended in the erection of schools and colleges; three cruisers and two sea-going torpedo boats were added to the squadron; the construction of the naval port at Talcahuano was actively pushed forward; new armament was purchased for the infantry and artillery branches of the army, and heavy guns were acquired for the purpose of permanently and strongly fortifying the neighbourhoods of Valparaiso, Talcahuano and Iquique.

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  • Moreover, the family divisions among the ruling houses of Afghanistan grew from day to day more destructive to that patriotism and sense of nationality which Ahmad Shah had held out to his countrymen as the sole specifics for becoming a strong people.

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  • Fifteen or sixteen years later it was repeatedly pointed out to the authorities that the revenues from the customs of the Persian Gulf would be much increased if control were exercised at all the ports, particularly the small ones where smuggling was being carried on on a large scale, and in 1883 the shah decided upon the acquisition of four or five steamers, one to be purchased yearly, and instructed the late Au Kuli Khan, Mukhber ad-daulah, minister of telegraphs, to obtain designs and estimates from British and German firms. The tender of a well-known German firm at Bremerhaven was finally accepted, and one of the ministers sons then residing in Berlin made the necessary contracts for the first steamer.

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  • In this year, too, the mining rights of the Imperial Bank of Persia were ceded to the Persian Bank Mining Rights Corporation, and a number of engineers were sent out to Persia.

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  • He then set out to complete his education by travel, and on the 28th of October 1792 arrived in Baltimore, Maryland, where he finally decided to enter the priesthood.

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  • Castelar sent out to Cuba all the reinforcements he could spare, and a new governor-general, Jovellar, whom he peremptorily instructed to crush the mutinous spirit of the Cuban militia, and not allow them to drag Spain into a conflict with the United States.

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  • He did not, however, enter into the explanation of particular phenomena, as this had been done already by Laplace, but he pointed out to physicists the advantages of the method of Segner and Gay Lussac, afterwards carried out by Quincke, of measuring the dimensions of large drops of mercury on a horizontal or slightly concave surface, and those of large bubbles of air in transparent liquids resting against the under side of a horizontal plate of a substance wetted by the liquid.

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  • The experimental evidence which Dupre obtained bearing on the molecular structure of liquids must be very valuable, even if our present opinions on this subject should turn out to be erroneous.

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  • In such a film it is possible that no part of the liquid may be so far from the surface as to have the potential and density corresponding to what we have called the interior of a liquid mass, and measurements of the tension of the film when drawn out to different degrees of thinness may possibly lead to an estimate of range of the molecular forces, or at least of the depth within a liquid mass, at which its properties become sensibly uniform.

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  • When the flag captain pointed out to Byng that by standing out of his line he could bring the centre of the enemy to closer action, he declined on the ground that Thomas Mathews had been condemned for so doing.

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  • Then, in the larger political struggles and changes of Europe, they were incorporated into a kingdom, or principality or duchy, carved out to suit the interest of a foreigner, or to make a heritage for the nephew of a pope.

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  • Matthias, the eldest of his brothers, came to Prague and pointed out to Rudolph the necessity of appointing a coadjutor, should he be incapacitated from fulfilling his royal duties, and also of making arrangements concerning the succession to the throne.

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  • The pope in a forcible though formally courteous manner pointed out to him the evil results which his neglect of his royal duties would entail on his subjects, and called on him to appoint one of the Habsburg princes his successor both to the imperial crown and to the thrones of Bohemia and Hungary.

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  • On the northern side of the range which separates the upper Bukhtarma from the upper Katun is the Katun glacier, which after two ice-falls widens out to 700-900 yards.

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  • Having enjoyed a triumph, he was sent out to the East to settle the affairs of the provinces conquered by his brother.

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  • An act of accusation, containing in 37 articles the chief complaints against them, was read out to the people; not only their policy, but their orthodoxy was attacked, and there was even an insinuation of sorcery.

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  • It may, quite as likely as not, carry its occupants out to sea.

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  • The broad low tongue of Romney Marsh running out to Dungeness is a product of shore-building by the Channel tides, attached to the Wealden area, but not essentially part of it.

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  • This person gave himself out to be " some great one," but the popular voice defined his claims by saying " this man is that power of God which is called Great."

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  • When it became known in France that Peter of Courtenay was dead, his eldest son, Philip, marquess of Namur, renounced the succession to the Latin empire of Constantinople in favour of his brother Robert, who set out to take possession of his distracted inheritance, which was then ruled by Conon of Bethune as regent.

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  • It owes its rise to prosperity to the tolerance it meted out to the Jews, who found here an asylum from the oppression under which they suffered in Nuremberg.

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  • Beside these there is another group of largely freshwater species, constituting the family Platanistidae, and typified by the susu (Platanista gangetica), extensively distributed throughout nearly the whole of the river-systems of the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Indus, ascending as high as there is water enough to swim in, but never passing out to sea.

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  • The first statement may frequently turn out to have been merely provisionally or relatively true; it is then superseded by, or rather inevitably merges itself in, a less abstract account.

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  • Eldad first set out to visit his Hebrew brethren in Africa and Asia.

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  • The regulation by the state of the duties and customary status of peasants on government domains turns out to be one of the roots of serfdom in the Roman world, which in this respect as in many others follows on the lines laid down by Hellenistic culture.

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