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harbinger and type
The Homestead strike was organized and purposeful, a harbinger of the type of strike which would mark the modern age of labor relations in the United States.
The shape of the Short Empire was a harbinger of the shape of later aircraft yet to come, and the type also contributed much to the designs of later ekranoplans.

harbinger and movie
* In the movie Hellboy, Samael ( Sammael, Samil ) the Hell hound is said to be the son of Nergal, the seed of destruction and the harbinger of pestilence.

harbinger and would
In 1904, he also wrote a novel, Born Again, clearly inspired by the popular Utopian fantasy Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy, an early harbinger of the metaphysical turn his career would take with the theory of Lawsonomy.
Their absurd, highly sexual rock music was a harbinger for what Nisker would become, as it was during this time that she adopted the Peaches name.
That one-month experience would be a harbinger to Brown's nomadic coaching career.
While Lovitz's departure happened relatively quietly and without controversy, the Dunn / Clay incident seemed to be a sad harbinger for the turmoil which would mark much of the 1990s.
He was motivated by his fear that the automation of academic work would destroy the dignity of scholarship and argues that EZ-27 is a harbinger of a world in which a scholar would be left with only a barren choice as to what orders he should issue to robot researchers.

harbinger and become
It has become more than an urban legend, and it is believed to be a harbinger of imminent disaster, now being seen around the globe before great tragedies.
The rats of the clan had become completely devoted to The Horned Rat in his role as the harbinger of disease and plague.
In the 1985 municipal election, the newly-founded Labour Party won 8 of the 20 seats on the City Council to become the largest single party, and succeeded in electing Bob Kumar as Lord Mayor in a harbinger of the national election two years later, when an FLP-led coalition ousted the long-time Alliance Party government.

harbinger and popular
Thus, the old one street barrio of Limonso is the harbinger of the popular town of Padada.

harbinger and 1970s
A Severed Head was a harbinger of the Sexual Revolution that was to hit Britain in the 1960s and 1970s.
This placed him not within the camp of evangelicalism, as some critics may suppose, but that of neo-orthodoxy, particularly the part of that school influenced by the Swiss-German thinker Karl Barth, who made a rare compliment to Stringfellow on one of his visits to the U. S. Yet others might classify him as a harbinger of the later liberation theology during the 1970s and 1980s.

harbinger and was
Grimm theorizes that the Helhest, a three legged-horse that roams the countryside " as a harbinger of plague and pestilence " in Danish folklore, was originally the steed of the goddess Hel, and that on this steed Hel roamed the land " picking up the dead that were her due.
" Archie Macpherson stated that " with the stopwatch always in his hand, he elevated athletics to a new plane of intelligent application of effort and was the harbinger of the modern scientifically prepared athlete.
Despite the smashing victory that followed, Longstreet's performance at the battle was criticized by postbellum advocates of the Lost Cause, claiming that his slowness, reluctance to attack, and disobedience to Gen. Lee were a harbinger of his controversial performance to come on July 2, 1863, at the Battle of Gettysburg.
Despite the profound differences regarding their ethical and world visions, Albizu's fiery and charismatic rhetoric captured Balaguer's imagination and his recollection of this occasion was a harbinger of his passion for politics and intellectual debate.
His reign was a harbinger of the fifth century, when children or nonentities, reigning as emperors, were controlled by powerful generals and officials.
It was the first deep mine shaft in Plymouth and the first on the west side of the river ... a harbinger of things to come.
Galway was the harbinger of the fatal crisis to come.
This was the harbinger for the mental decline that destroyed the last part of his life-dementia pugilistica, the atrophy of the brain from repeated blows to the head, eventually leading to an Alzheimer's-like state.
It was a harbinger of finals to come for the Revolution.
The interaction was controlled through a dynamically-generated menu overlaid on top of the video image: speed and viewing angle were modified by the selection of the appropriate icon through a touch-screen interface, harbinger of the ubiquitous interactive-video kiosk.
This revolutionary development was the harbinger for the total liquidation of the estate system that took place later.
It was a result that many political pundits, as Larry J. Sabato noted in his Crystal Ball newsletter, saw as a harbinger of the Republican gains in Congress in the regular election later that year.
This new, raw, emotionally charged style seemed at the time to signal the end of the previous era's singing styles and was, indeed, a harbinger of the rock ' n ' roll music that was to come.
De Rada was the harbinger and first audible voice of the Romantic movement in Albanian literature, a movement which, inspired by his unfailing energy on behalf of national awakening among Albanians in Italy and in the Balkans, was to evolve into the romantic nationalism characteristic of the Rilindja period in Albania.
In a harbinger of what was to follow, Trethowan's final months at the BBC saw the Thatcher government dissatisfied with what it saw as the corporation's insufficiently patriotic coverage of the Falklands War.
" Jones's support for Hoover, though quixotic in 1928, was perhaps the earliest harbinger of the demise of the Solid South.

harbinger and with
They are often associated with an individual family line or said to be a harbinger of death similar to a banshee.
Later, a new theme developed, linking free love with radical social change, and depicting it as a harbinger of a new anti-authoritarian, anti-repressive sensibility.
** Zip to Zap, a harbinger of the Woodstock Concert, ends with the dispersal and eviction of youths and young adults at Zap, North Dakota by the National Guard.
As with the Zebulon Pike expedition two decades earlier, the authorities saw Smith's party as a harbinger of future trouble with the United States.
Connected with the romantic harbinger Globe, he obtained a small government clerkship.
This bird is familiar to sailors, and much folklore is associated with this harbinger of stormy weather.
Later, a new theme developed, linking free love with radical social change, and depicting it as a harbinger of a new anti-authoritarian, anti-repressive pacifist sensibility.
Later, a new theme developed, linking free love with radical social change, and depicting it as a harbinger of a new anti-authoritarian, anti-repressive sensibility.
The sides of the room display, in satin curtains draped in ample folds over panels of looking-glass and edged with black velvet, the fiery hue which fringes the clouds just before sunrise ; and in a ceiling of cooler sky blue are sown, amidst a few unextinguished luminaries of the night, the roses which the harbinger of the day in her course spreads on every side around her.
David Williams claims that the Age of Aquarius arrived around 1844, with the harbinger of the Siyyid ` Alí Muḥammad ( 1819 – 1850 ), who founded Bábism.
The New Age movement is more accurately a phenomenon and yet seen by many as the harbinger of this future changeover of values associated with the arrival or imminent arrival of the Aquarian age.
Finnish membership in the Nordic Council in 1955 and a progressive increase in trade with the West was seen in Moscow as a harbinger of the " loss " of Finland to the West, particularly under a politician like Fagerholm known for Nordic sympathies and US connections.
Coinciding with earthquakes, rainbows and lunar eclipses in the capital ; uprisings in the north ; and pirate disturbances in the west ; it threw the court and the capital into a panic, and climaxed, according to most versions of the story, with the protagonist ’ s claiming for himself the title, “ New Emperor .” Many historians have perceived the incident as an early harbinger of the late twelfth -, thirteenth-and fourteenth-century events that, step by step, ushered in the medieval era of warrior rule.
Their scream is the harbinger of death, and when people hear the banshee's wail, they tremble with fear.
Her efforts are met with heavy-handed criticisms by Republicans on Capitol Hill, and right-wing media throughout the country, who characterize her plan as the harbinger of socialism.
NWF also created Conservation Summits ( a harbinger of eco-tourism and green living trends ) with the first Summit on July 20 – 25, 1970 at the YMCA of the Rockies, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado.
" The images of the epilogue seem to serve as a harbinger of the more ordered and settled civilization which will soon replace the war-torn chaos of the West, with its own rituals and codes very unlike those portrayed in the novel's setting.
Polyphonte became a strix " that cries by night, without food or drink, with head below and tips of feet above, a harbinger of war and civil strife to men ".

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