The temperature plummeted to below zero, enough to make one's teeth chatter! |
|
There were fountains spouting cold water enough to make one's teeth chatter. |
|
She used cheese and a mixture of other ingredients to make a delicious sauce. |
|
There will always be some tension between the desire to reduce risk and the desire to make as much money as possible. |
|
His interest in the American Civil War impelled him to make repeated visits to Gettysburg. |
|
The clear green water looks cold enough in a hot August noon to make one's teeth chatter, so that it requires some resolution to venture upon a bath. |
|
When your army has crossed the border, you should burn your boats and bridges, in order to make it clear to everybody that you have no hankering after home. |
|
I had to keep adjusting the radio dial to make the station come in clearly. |
|
The company's unwillingness to make a deal increased her desire to litigate. |
|
She ran a quick check of the computer to make sure it was working properly. |
|
We have to make a judgment about the value of their services. |
|
If you want to make things better, you need to get involved. |
|
He combines fact and fable to make a more interesting story. |
|
I'd like to make a few introductory remarks before we start the program. |
|
If you want to quit smoking, you have to make a serious effort. |
|
We need to make our network more secure against attacks by hackers. |
|
In Japonia 'tis a common thing to stifle their children if they be poor, or to make an abort, which Aristotle commends. |
|
The novel was abridged by the author to make the audio recording a more manageable length. |
|
The numerous absentee ownerships made it difficult for the owners to make common cause. |
|
Does the radio priest want to make a killing and leave town before his ministrations are revealed as ackamarackus? |
|
|
I may be forced to acquiesce in these recent developments, but I can hardly be expected to make merry over them. |
|
There is no way to make a strong and vigorous powder of saltpetre, without the admixtion of sulphur. |
|
For some years past I have managed to make the capitalist class pay me several pounds a week for writing books against capitalism. |
|
Ancient smiths developed the techniques needed to make metal tools. |
|
You should recast the last sentence in your essay to make it clearer. |
|
His charges were false, and he was forced to make a retraction. |
|
They used a crate of oranges to make enough juice for everyone. |
|
We're confident she has the moral fiber to make the right decision. |
|
They deliberately slanted the story to make themselves look good. |
|
The cookbook anglicized many exotic dishes to make them easier to prepare. |
|
The author uses obscenity to make a point about the culture. |
|
The new president plans to make changes to the company's organization. |
|
In these original ventures, the Normans failed to make any headway into Wales. |
|
It's important to make Web pages indexable if you want people to find them through search engines. |
|
Richard was keen to start his crusade, but was forced to wait for Henry to make his arrangements. |
|
I would use my omnipotence to make them no longer blind, and then I would will them to understand every color including infrayellow and bleen. |
|
The war was not going well for the loyalists, but Prince Louis and the rebel barons were also finding it difficult to make further progress. |
|
Henry remained a minor and his government's legal ability to make permanently binding decisions on his behalf was limited. |
|
Successive governments were able to make large amounts of money by taxing it. |
|
The justices in eyre had it formerly in charge to make inquisition concerning them by a jury of the county. |
|
|
Three weeks into it, I am finally beginning to make inroads on this project. |
|
The desired effect was to make the patient sweat violently and thus purge all corruption from the blood which was caused by the disease. |
|
Insofar as it expresses an expansion in physical plant, it ought to make possible the production of more goods. |
|
You need to click on the button in the top-left corner in order to make the image interactable. |
|
It was very expensive and difficult to make, so the panes were made small and held together with a lead lattice, in casement windows. |
|
Early examples were the development of perspective in oil painting and the recycled knowledge of how to make concrete. |
|
Ferdinand's solution was to make his daughter ambassador, allowing her to stay in England indefinitely. |
|
Finally, on 10 May, the King demanded of Convocation that the Church renounce all authority to make laws. |
|
Jesuits and seminary priests, trained in Douai and Rome to make good the losses of English priests, encouraged this. |
|
Within two weeks of Anne's execution, Henry married Jane Seymour, who urged her husband to make peace with Mary. |
|
She offered very limited aid to foreign Protestants and failed to provide her commanders with the funds to make a difference abroad. |
|
Raleigh was brought to London from Plymouth by Sir Lewis Stukeley, where he passed up numerous opportunities to make an effective escape. |
|
When the family wrapped up my father's will, no one tried to make me feel involved. |
|
They received no training in administration or leadership to make them independent of their British officers. |
|
Stale bread could be used to make bread puddings, and bread crumbs served to thicken soups, stews, and sauces. |
|
So as to make it easier to locate a particular passage, each chapter was headed by a brief precis of its contents with verse numbers. |
|
He irons his clothes how?! That's crazy! Well, I guess it takes all kinds to make a world. |
|
The City of London, preoccupied with its own grievances, refused to make any loans to the king, as did foreign powers. |
|
Having no desire to make James a martyr, William, Prince of Orange, let him escape on 23 December. |
|
However, unlike the useful firehooks, these large pumps had rarely proved flexible or functional enough to make much difference. |
|
|
In the movies and books we are only exposed to a handful of the Jedi that survived and were able to make HoloVision headlines. |
|
Having no desire to make James a martyr, the Prince of Orange let him escape on 23 December. |
|
The ballooners had to jettison all of their sand bags to make it over the final hill. |
|
A hillman from some distant village in Kumaon comes into Almora to make his fortune as a jhampani or coolie. |
|
Larger canal companies survived independently and were able to continue to make profits. |
|
He had no social ambitions, and it was rare for him to set out to make a friend. |
|
The scale of their defeat convinced the Russians to make peace with the French. |
|
Alexander faced pressure from his brother, Duke Constantine, to make peace with Napoleon. |
|
He convinced Parker to allow him to make an assault, and was given significant reinforcements. |
|
You must be quick, for I have one more signal to make, which is for close action. |
|
Nelson was also highly confident in his abilities, determined and able to make important decisions. |
|
You can stuff them full of kapok to make a decent cushion and there is nothing better to carry frogs in. |
|
Remember, the goal of kerning is to make letter pairs look natural, not necessarily to minimize letterspaces. |
|
Churchill returned to public life in October 1953 to make a speech at the Conservative Party conference at Margate. |
|
Bombsite rubble from Birmingham was used to make runways on US Air Force bases in Kent and Essex in southeast England. |
|
Without extra funding the NHS in England will according to The Guardian be forced to make unpopular and unpalatable choices. |
|
The kick-step she'd used to make steps out of the play area, was necessary to keep from sliding while walking across a slope. |
|
The National Assembly for Wales is the devolved assembly with power to make legislation in Wales. |
|
Devolved territories have the power to make legislation relevant to the area. |
|
Consequently, the monarch would have to make his or her feelings known to Parliament through his or her supporters in both houses. |
|
|
However, they are entitled to take part in constituency politics, and to make their views known on these matters. |
|
The Botha regime was attempting to make itself look less horrible, but I don't regard it as having been of the faintest political consequence. |
|
Some MEPs choose to make their family home in or near Brussels rather than in their home state. |
|
Therefore, parliament would have to choose to make policy either for the United Kingdom as a whole, or not at all. |
|
The Tchefuncte culture were the first people in Louisiana to make large amounts of pottery. |
|
Both freedmen and people of color who had been free before the war began to make more advances in education, family stability and jobs. |
|
Depublication is the power of a court to make a previously published order or opinion unpublished. |
|
An argument often used against the system is that it is undemocratic as it allows judges, which may or may not be elected, to make law. |
|
Immediately thereafter, lay members began to make speeches about the controversial case. |
|
Countries are divided up into these smaller units to make managing their land and the affairs of their people easier. |
|
The black kurrajong has a fibrous bark that Aboriginal artefact-makers used as a raw material to make string for their lines and carry-bags. |
|
By judicious leaking, he also managed to make la Kirkpatrick and her associates look rather unsavory. |
|
The UK Government did not propose a set structure for the boards and each region was free to make its own arrangements. |
|
Principal councils have the power to make a community governance review at any time for all or part of their district. |
|
Some residents sought to make a case for securing Welsh benefits such as free hospital parking and prescriptions. |
|
The landless younger sons of the gentry often entered the military as the only way to make a living. |
|
It was demolished to make way for Grey Street, where its replacement was built. |
|
We always, it seems, are provided with a glut of material on the next big thing and not enough on how to make the last big thing actually work. |
|
I like to do everything at the last minute. It does tend to make me late for things, though. |
|
Learn how to make out a laundry list and to check it when the laundry comes home. |
|
|
Large parts of the city centre were also cleared to make way for a new system of roads. |
|
Lead from the roof was used to make bullets, windows were broken, the organ smashed and horses stabled in the nave. |
|
Plans were drawn up to make Ripon a centre of education, a University of the North, to rival Oxford and Cambridge. |
|
Thus, it is necessary to make adjustments for differences in the quality of goods and services. |
|
Nevertheless, PPPs are typically robust in the face of the many problems that arise in using market exchange rates to make comparisons. |
|
As a side effect, the huge industrial effort needed, including establishing ironworks to make more nails and advances. |
|
Careful brand management seeks to make products or services relevant to a target audience. |
|
Its relief scene includes 11 cupids harvesting and stomping on grapes to make wine in a lenos, a long trough similar to the sarcophagus itself. |
|
We maintain peace by having the ability to make war and that has stood the test of time. |
|
The financial burdens placed on Germany by reunification caused Helmut Kohl to make an election promise to cancel the Eurofighter. |
|
Nearly 30 percent of test flights required more than routine maintenance to make the aircraft flightworthy again. |
|
Both were demolished to make way for the road, a move still criticised today. |
|
Very many investors in this sector buy properties in bad condition, and then renovate them to make them lettable. |
|
The student's lexiphanicism is an obvious attempt to appear smart but really only serves to make him look pompous. |
|
Equipment used by Faraday to make glass on display at the Royal Institution. |
|
Hawking acknowledged that he had lost the bet in 1990, which was the first of several that he was to make with Thorne and others. |
|
Police investigations took place, but were closed as Hawking refused to make a complaint. |
|
No discovery of mine has made, or is likely to make, directly or indirectly, for good or ill, the least difference to the amenity of the world. |
|
It was widely disputed whether it would be commercially viable for a ship powered purely by steam to make such long journeys. |
|
Before 1866, no steamship could carry enough coal to make this voyage and have enough space left to carry a commercial cargo. |
|
|
The main problem to which Papin had given no solution was how to make the action repeatable at regular intervals. |
|
Donated blood is usually subjected to processing after it is collected, to make it suitable for use in specific patient populations. |
|
In one mechanism, the elongation in a single plane is used to make a series stretches and position holds, similar to the way a caterpillar moves. |
|
The infinitesimal approach fell out of favor in the 19th century because it was difficult to make the notion of an infinitesimal precise. |
|
Much work is being put in to make sure that the traditional trams have a safe future. |
|
In quadruple track, trains are sorted in various ways in order to make maximum use of track capacity. |
|
This was the first aircraft that needed to make use of the new runway length. |
|
It allows such a contributor to make a single payment that will increase their state pension for the rest of their life. |
|
As emperor, Domitian assumed totalitarian characteristics, thought he could be a new Augustus, and tried to make a personal cult of himself. |
|
Caesar wrote his own histories to make a complete account of his military campaigns in Gaul and during the Civil War. |
|
The rather loose-handed ways in which Wilson presented his history and the generalizations he dared to make are also visible in later years. |
|
I was so eager to make their bedclothes agreeable and nice, I am afraid I was a bit loose-handed with the starch bottle. |
|
Thirdly, trees that usually would have intercepted rain water had been cut down for firewood or to make space for animals. |
|
Many Chinese graduates did indeed return to make a significant contribution to their country, but some stayed. |
|
In the effort to make Charles a widely acceptable king, lovability would be a necessary ingredient. |
|
In 1844 the Midland Counties Railway Company agreed to make a permanent arrangement with him, provided he found the passengers. |
|
The National Assembly for Wales has the power to make legislation in Wales. |
|
The lucrativeness of the business was unquestionable, but it was unethical to make money that way. |
|
Minority applicants for housing needed to make many more enquiries to view properties. |
|
This church was destroyed after the Norman Conquest to make way for a new abbey church. |
|
|
Anabaptists required that baptismal candidates be able to make their own confessions of faith and so rejected baptism of infants. |
|
Of those most critical of the Church's direction, some chose to stay and try to make constructive changes from within the Anglican Church. |
|
In 2006 Cornish MP Dan Rogerson asked the government to make 5 March a public holiday in Cornwall to recognise celebrations for St Piran's Day. |
|
Guru Gobind Singh makes it clear that human birth is obtained with great fortune, therefore one needs to be able to make the most of this life. |
|
Professional prostitutes were considered experts in love and therefore knew how to make love potions and cast love related spells. |
|
The Universal Preschool movement is an international effort to make preschool available to families, as it is for primary education. |
|
The exams are being revised to make them more difficult such as testing skills from a whole text in English instead of part of a text. |
|
So all that evidence we had gathered meant nothing and essentially this team of experienced inspectors was not trusted to make a judgement. |
|
But with the home side likewise unable to make the most of a period of first-half ascendancy, Villa were swift to make amends on the restart. |
|
It is very difficult to make a monkey out of policy makers who can read and write and can argue a case logically. |
|
If you're stuck in traffic, try not to make a mountain out of a molehill worrying about it too much. It could be much worse. |
|
I thought about just asking Rosalyn to move in with me, but I decided it was time to make an honest woman out of her. |
|
I suppose the people who wrote that stuff on the wall were trying to make a point, but they mainly made a mess. |
|
There is barely enough money, so we will have to make do with what we have. |
|
It is not the same hide but we make it do. You work harder to make it into good leather and harder to make it into good shoes, and we get by. |
|
After John gave her a lovely wooly hat for her birthday, she wanted to make it up to him so she took him out for dinner. |
|
The House Master and boys have an opportunity to make announcements, and sometimes the boys provide light entertainment. |
|
He was always trying to make time with Nancy, but she just wasn't interested. |
|
A long barrow site believed to be from the Beaker people was flattened to make way for RAF Charmy Down. |
|
Attempts to make profits from the park in the late 18th century included leasing it for grazing, growing wheat, and keeping sheep. |
|
|
Eve's decision is enough to make me consider choosing agnosticism as my preferred faith, or at least maltheism. |
|
In February 1952, Elizabeth II came to the throne and decided to make Windsor her principal weekend retreat. |
|
The Norman nave and transepts survived until the late fourteenth century, when they were demolished to make way for the present structures. |
|
The gatehouse contained a series of defences to make a direct assault more difficult than battering down a simple gate. |
|
The larger towers provided space for habitation to make up for the loss of the donjon. |
|
In an effort to make them more effective, guns were made ever bigger, although this hampered their ability to reach remote castles. |
|
The wattle may be made as loose panels, slotted between timber framing to make infill panels, or made in place to form the whole of a wall. |
|
The restoration not only brought visitors back, but also meant that the Palace started to make a small profit once more. |
|
Julia has to make various disclaimers before occupying a pro-feminist stance. |
|
A number of these tubes or cases are often combined so as to make, when kindled, a great variety of sparkling shapes, often variously colored. |
|
And I hope God will give you the grace to make good use of it, to whose holy protection I commend you. |
|
Teach thought that Governor Charles Eden was a man he could trust, but to make sure, he waited to see what would happen to another captain. |
|
The juices from the meat and vegetables were used to make a stock or gravy to pour on top of the dinner. |
|
In another episode entitled Boss Bacon Burger, over 400 strips of bacon are used to make a gigantic hamburger with bacon and other toppings. |
|
Additional seasonings are sometimes used, such as additional brown sugar or mustard to make the sauce more tangy. |
|
In Northern Europe, cooks created the pastry using fats like lard and butter to make stiff dough to hold an upright pie. |
|
It can also be used to make a blue cheese sauce to be served drizzled over a steak, or can be crumbled over a salad. |
|
As it was so expensive to make, early ginger biscuits were a cheap form of using up the leftover bread mix. |
|
The juice of any variety of apple can be used to make cider, but cider apples are best. |
|
The pressed pulp is given to farm animals as winter feed, composted, discarded or used to make liqueurs. |
|
|
Quite possibly the garrison bought the malt, and hired a local brewer to make beer from it for the troops. |
|
They had no legal capacity and were not able to make contracts, even though they were not slaves. |
|
Unferth, a warrior who had doubted him and wishes to make amends, presents Beowulf with his sword Hrunting. |
|
Some earlier Latin poets tried to make up for this deficiency by creating new compound words, as the Greeks had done. |
|
The incompleteness of the Tales led several medieval authors to write additions and supplements to the tales to make them more complete. |
|
Through the chaos triggered by Hamlet's staging of it, Guildenstern helps Rosencrantz vie with Hamlet to make Ophelia his bride. |
|
Zeffirelli borrowed from Brook's ideas, altogether removing around a third of the play's text to make it more accessible. |
|
According to Locke's scheme, men knew nothing at all of governments till they met together to make one. |
|
Common Sense is oriented to the future in a way that compels the reader to make an immediate choice. |
|
In 1804 he began expanding this autobiographical work, having decided to make it a prologue rather than an appendix. |
|
I had no engagements, no difficult decisions to make, no fear of callers, no interruptions to my work. |
|
I wish to make it plain that Russell himself is not responsible, directly or indirectly, for the writing of the pamphlet. |
|
Edward, James, Henry, and Francis Austen pledged to make annual contributions to support their mother and sisters. |
|
He decided to use this money to make his way to London, the literary centre of the British Empire. |
|
She had not given Orwell much notice about this operation because of worries about the cost and because she expected to make a speedy recovery. |
|
Newspeak is a simplified and obfuscatory language designed to make independent thought impossible. |
|
My apologies to Albert for de-athletizing him. Who am I to make such a decision? |
|
Appointed in 1780 to the position of agent-general of the clergy, he determined at once to make the most of the appointment. |
|
My number one aim in life is to make money to make my parents, siblings and kids happy. |
|
As to you, Mr. Carruthers, I think that you have done what you could to make amends for your share in an evil plot. |
|
|
Ada, on the grass, kept trying to make an anadem of marguerites for the dog while Lucette looked on, munching a crumpet. |
|
One by one the family are transformed by the pods, until only the angstful teen daughter is left to make her escape. |
|
In a brilliant figure that combines anthropopoeia and simile, the Lord is likened to a man who takes a lamp to make a diligent search. |
|
The bill would also establish a state commission that would study how to make antibullying laws more effective. |
|
Or will the Auto Workers Union force the car companies to make an antirobot reassessment of plans? |
|
The headmaster wondered what an appropriate measure would be to make the pupil behave better. |
|
The following sections describe how each of these transforms can be used to make changes to objects on the artboard. |
|
Visitors can learn to make their own tortillas or sample the traditional cornmeal drink atole. |
|
That is a way to make awkwards. And it's not fun to hang out with awkwards more than once. |
|
His attempt to make money by importing luxury cars backfired horribly when fuel prices tripled. |
|
Since you've bought this book and intend to make a will, I won't badger you with dire warnings about what would happen if you die without a will. |
|
Suppose that we have a Geiger counter and we are able to make measurements, during a ten hour period, of the balonium sample. |
|
The general practice in the West Indies was to baptize, add color, and otherwise adulterate rum to make it appear better. |
|
What avails it to make a shine in Greek if the next hour one does a barney in calculus. |
|
Next month the Four Winds, an old cafe and the last basket house in the Village, will close to make way for a dress shop. |
|
He had four months to make a special-effects extravaganza that had to make every want to wear a Batcape next Halloween. |
|
Susan beeped Jessica, and then Jessica called her back, because Susan didn't have enough credit on her phone to make the call. |
|
Steve Gerrard, unusually, had a below-par night, too, even if it was a lovely delivery to set up Welbeck to make it 2-2 with a glancing header. |
|
They bent over backwards to make sure everything was just right for the visit. |
|
In relating the story to Julie, he decided to bend the truth just enough to make her think he had really been in danger. |
|
|
In the Fourth 5 year Plan special efforts are to be made to make up the beway in the field of girls' education. |
|
Do you want to go out there and do the right things or do you want to make that big hit to gain a big name? |
|
A few wheels and a crate to make a billy cart would probably be acceptable, or the odd old alarm clock, but nothing more. |
|
Bind-rune. A combination of two or more Runes superimposed on one another to make a single shape or pattern. |
|
To enable them for bioapplications, a prerequisite is to make them dispersible in water and in saline buffers. |
|
In the process, he managed to make the Republican tax cut sound like a blast from the past. |
|
Blindable encryption also provides a useful way to make a given ciphertext unrecognizable. |
|
Jug bitten was all you were. You had enough blue ruin to make any man stagger. |
|
All you need to do is learn to make these little loops and Bob's your uncle, you're a real live knitter. |
|
We need boots on the ground to make the border a real barrier. Ten thousand new Border Patrol agents have been authorized by Congress. |
|
In other words, I am intentionally borking the headline writer, for no other reason than to make my point with greater force. |
|
The bottom-of-the-line patterns don't have complex designs, which are harder to make. |
|
We bow things the contrary way, to make them come to their natural straightness. |
|
These mills purchase broke from other paper mills through middlemen and use it to make paper. |
|
An easy mistake to make though, you'll hear more Brummie in Welshpool in August than Welsh that's for sure. |
|
The author has bulleted this section to make it easier to read and included important notes and warnings. |
|
This absolutely stunning set from Death Row Designs comes with everything you need to make over your place to be totally Burtonesquely awesome. |
|
Our main purpose in further experimentation with nuclear bombs is not... to make city-busters more horrible. |
|
He was the first one to use gelatin in his buttercreams, and to make such extensive use of the freezer. |
|
It needs more brains than one might think. Mario said, no doubt truly, that it took a year to make a reliable cafetier. |
|
|
Accusations of abuse were pure extortive calumny in a malicious bid to make money. |
|
He argued and hollered for so long that I finally capitulated just to make him stop. |
|
He said he would pay them a cent for every two loads of stones or gravel which they should wheel in to make the causey. |
|
They attempted to make the house childproof by covering all sharp corners with soft foam. |
|
The funny part of it all is that the starling appears to make the chippies do whatever it pleases. |
|
Okay, he can't pass for a breeder, but his sexuality isn't overt enough to make anyone but hardcore christards uncomfortable. |
|
Before proceeding to do so, however, it is advisable for me to make a few prefatory remarks on the clinology of biliary concretions. |
|
And in the cloud-headed days that followed, he struggled to make sense of this. Perhaps he was dreaming. |
|
Whether an early collegegoer, a late one, or right on the mark, you want to make the most informed choice you can. |
|
The children complected the frayed edges of their pot holders to make a composite class project. |
|
In the evenings, Ward and PJ offer guests a complimentary drink. This gesture seems to reinforce the hosts' desire to make everyone feel welcome. |
|
But he felt, later, a little compunction. He had been violent, cruel with poor Hermione. He wanted to recompense her, to make it up. |
|
Out in computerland, people are talking to each other about how to make a bomb. |
|
Joyce draws upon Christ's parable of the Good Samaritan to make Bloom's unassuming act of comradeliness an instance of Agape. |
|
Down in the concourses at half-time, football and Christmas collide to make excitable children of us all. |
|
Constructs with good predictive efficiency allow the construer to make sound predictions about what is likely to happen next in their world. |
|
They did the synod wrong to make this distinction of contraremonstrants and remonstrants. |
|
Germany would agree to make no ABC weapons, build only enough conventional weapons to arm its twelve divisions. |
|
As the currents were changing rapidly, the captain had to make many corrective course changes. |
|
If the senior wife decides to make life unbearable for her co-wife and their husband, she is likely to succeed in forcing the newcomer to leave. |
|
|
I refused to make so much as a curtsey for the passing nobles, as I am a staunch egalitarian. |
|
This afternoon, we started depaving the driveway to make room for another garden bed. |
|
We used a sale of the business at a ridiculously high multiple to make the numbers work, a deus ex machina. |
|
Attempts to make first culture-free and then culture-fair tests have largely been efforts to deverbalize intelligence. |
|
They stand back to make room for every rascal and demagogue who chooses to cloak his selfish deviltry under the veil of race pride. |
|
Having divested the child he kissed her gently and gave her a little pat to make her stand off. |
|
They were not additions which she desired to make, but she had come prepared to listen docilly. |
|
They not only forswore dopping themselves, but also contrived to make the National Party forgo a dop. |
|
This particular pitcher is categorized as drabware because of the putty-coloured clay used to make it. |
|
The corn ration was drastically reduced, and it was announced that an extra potato ration would be issued to make up for it. |
|
I was feeling drowsy and so decided to make a cup of coffee to try to wake myself up. |
|
Conservative leader is a stress-tested Duracell bunny with the capacity to make any crisis seem reasonable, or so his friends say. |
|
Two darzees attended upon the Maharaj Kumar to make last minute adjustments and fittings. |
|
Do not leave without checking each and every door to make sure it is locked. |
|
Lao Tse is seeking to make clear the relation of the unmanifested and the manifested Logos to eachother, as poles of the same Being. |
|
I will say that my comrade, the Doctor, did much to make it so, with his gentle fun, and his wide knowledge of earth-lore. |
|
How long does it take to make a bunch of civilians an effective military force? |
|
Everlastings of one kind or another were used to make gaiters, shoe tops and liveries for sergeants and catchpoles. |
|
The drinks company spent millions of dollars on advertising to make it into the consumer's evoked set. |
|
To supply the place of scenery, it was hung round with crimson curtains, through which we were to make our entrances and exeunts. |
|
|
The publisher decided to expurgate the love scene from the book, to make it more child-friendly. |
|
The back of the beetle was eyed to make it appear to be a snake to a predator. |
|
There is a support in the middle of this passageway to make sure the ceiling doesn't fall down on us. |
|
It is a great willfullnes in any such Land-lord to refuse to make any longer farmes unto their Tennants. |
|
A kind of fine Norwegian hay, used as packing in the finnesko to keep the feet warm and to make the fur boot fit firmly. |
|
Adam continued to moan in hypnotic agony. Joshua needed to make a move. Boldly, Joshua strode toward the firedragon. |
|
I paid violent and unusual attention to a flapper all through the meal in order to make you jealous. |
|
I am unwilling to believe that he designs to play tricks, and to flyblow my words, to make others distaste them. |
|
The single-barrel, freehanded drill guide is then used with the 2.5 mm drill bit to make the pilot holes in the inner vertebra. |
|
After the past disputes between the two countries, both sides decided to make a fresh start by agreeing to trade with each other again. |
|
If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe. |
|
While cucumber is technically a fruit, one would not usually use it to make jam. |
|
We don't know exactly how much the load will weigh, so we'll add in a fudge factor to make sure we don't underestimate. |
|
I checked my fuel gauges and decided that I couldn't stand any more full-throttle operation if I wanted to make it home to Munda. |
|
It was the task of the fusters, or joiners, to make the wooden saddlebows while the painters were employed to decorate the completed saddles. |
|
After the experiment was widely deemed a success, the House voted 342-44 to make gavel-to-gavel broadcast permanent. |
|
It's all part of a move toward ghettoization, they charge, an attempt to make the poor feel so shamefully unwanted that they will leave the area. |
|
The manager was given her head to make whatever changes she might deem necessary in the structure of her department. |
|
Thank you to all our dedicated volunteers who have given of themselves to make this project a success. |
|
He didn't want to make an unsecured loan to the business because it didn't look like a going concern. |
|