Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Central Plaza, Hong Kong" ¶ 16
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

And and most
And while he was ever alert for game, and most particularly a tiger, Penny marvelled at the Eden they were traversing.
And no doubt many people in states like the Carolinas and Georgia, which were among the most Tory in sentiment in the eighteenth century, bitterly regretted the revolt against the Crown.
And this, in effect, means most of modern America.
And the life they lead is undisciplined and for the most part unproductive, even though they make a fetish of devoting themselves to some creative pursuit -- writing, painting, music.
And it is precisely in this poorer economic class that one finds, and has always found, the most racial friction.
And most of the great periods are represented, because we will compare Plato and Aristotle from the golden age of Greece ; ;
And a minister of all men is most conscious that he is mere man -- prone to the stresses that earthly humanity is heir to.
And Anthony was busy most of the time courting this girl and that.
And the name Rayburn is one of the most dominant in the history of American politics for the last half century.
And this is meeting the world's need, too, since what the world most needs from this country is better understanding of the world.
And trailer makers, those most industrialized and therefore most efficient of homebuilders, say they save hundreds of dollars by always building from the inside out.
And most of the gain will be in self-unloading vehicles ''.
And when they had got to their little lawn, they had had a most twirlingly magnificent time.
And irrespective of the outcome in centuries elapsed since splitting, calculations obviously carry more concordant and comparable meaning if they deal with the most stable units than with variously unstable ones.
And so well is such ignorance preserved by the amateur and the money-maker that even at the college level most of the hundred-odd folklore courses given in the United States survive on sentiment and nationalism alone.
After years of digging, nights and weekends, he put together the big, profusely illustrated book, Of Garryowen And Glory, which is probably the most complete history of any military unit.
And in this country Gustave Weigel's delineation of the line between the sacral and secular orders during the last presidential campaign served to provide a most impressive Roman Catholic defense of the practical autonomy of both church and state.
And the subtleties of the dialogue are most helpfully conveyed.
And in a series of bitterly fought battles in the jungles and hills and along the great rivers of Burma he waged one of the most brilliant campaigns of the war.
And Khrushchev turned out to be prime copy for the most witty caricaturist of them all.
One of the most appealing of the rooftop canvases is `` Sun And Wind On The Roof '', with a woman and child bracing themselves against flapping clothes and flying birds.
The man most firmly at grips with the problem is the University of Minnesota's Physiologist Ancel Keys, 57, inventor of the wartime K ( for Keys ) ration and author of last year's bestselling Eat Well And Stay Well.
And most of all it is not having the only man you could love, whether he drives a bread truck or delivers the mail or checks the berry crates down at the sheds, or owns seventeen oil wells and six diamond mines, for if you are anybody what he is or does makes no difference if he is the one.
Simone de Beauvoir tries to base an ethics on Heidegger's and Sartre's writings ( The Ethics of Ambiguity ), where she highlights the need to grapple with ambiguity: " as long as philosophers and they have thought, most of them have tried to mask it ... And the ethics which they have proposed to their disciples has always pursued thre same goal.

And and attractive
And even now existentialism is not a philosophy I find either attractive or plausible.
And possessing slim waists and fair large hips, they began to perform various evolutions, shaking their deep bosoms, and casting their glances around, and exhibiting other attractive attitudes capable of stealing the hearts and resolutions and minds of the spectators.
And, since standard enameling steel is magnetically attractive, they may also be used as magnet boards.
And yet these extraordinary institutions survived for over three hundred years, and the society in which they survived appears to have been in many ways an attractive one.
" And I find fearlessness very attractive.
And finally, the significant improvements in Intel x86 performance made abandoning it less attractive, and although ACE supported x86 for a time, Intel was never a member.
In 2002, his explanation for the defection was: The first Thatcher government did get a bit bogged down and it wasn't really the radical government that subsequently emerged ,... And the fact that you had a completely new opportunity to wipe the slate clean, with no baggage, was a very attractive thing.
And the absence of her overdone make-up and glamorous good-looks has made her look more attractive (!
And where the club earlier had to look in vain for local support it is today seen as an attractive investment.

And and point
And he missed the point that the swarthy witches might be laughing at him for hoping to escape Nicolas Manas.
And this occurs now, at the refrain of Jacoby's song -- at the point, in fact, of the name `` Lizzy '' -- ; ;
And with this point about the passions, we encounter Plato's dualism.
And there is one other point in the Poetics that invites moral evaluation: Aristotle's notion that the distinctive function of tragedy is to purge one's emotions by arousing pity and fear.
And from that point of vantage he concedes another two years of grace to nations maintaining a pro-Western posture.
And now Mr. Hodges has pioneered further into the economic unknown with the announcement that he thinks business has stopped sliding and that it should start going upward from this point.
And even more complex items can be interpreted to conform to one's own point of view, which is by nature so personal.
And my point in this sad story is the spirit of the matter.
And this is true in the case of some turnpikes on which revenues have risen close to, or beyond, the point at which the roads start to pay all operating costs plus annual interest on the bonds.
And at this point, Lucy thought, there should be a lecture on little cousins' sharing dolls -- but she could sympathize with Susan ; ;
And at one point, I realized it really doesn't have this kind of crazy humor that people from New York would expect to see.
And yet we know that at some point we will have a heap.
He famously put the point into dramatic relief with his 1939 essay " Proof of an External World ", in which he gave a common sense argument against scepticism by raising his right hand and saying " Here is one hand ," and then raising his left and saying " And here is another ," then concluding that there are at least two external objects in the world, and therefore that he knows ( by this argument ) that an external world exists.
And yet his constant reiteration of the point that well-disciplined professional soldiers counted for twice as much as erratic amateurs helped overcome the ideological distrust of a standing army.
And then also, one can look in the sky just after sunset, and see a very similar pointthat has been called " the Evening Star ".
And now I shall again recite the words which I have spoken in proof of this point.
And this is the point of Reichenbach's demonstration that some believe the exclusive-or should take the place of the inclusive-or.
" Jaffee, a Kurtzman enthusiast, replied, " And then there's a large group who feel that if Harvey had stayed with Mad, he would have upgraded it to the point that only fifteen people would buy it.
And even to the point where its supposed omnipotence would make it impossible to be omniscient, to which in turn, makes it impossible to be omnipotent due to due to the problem of infinite egress.
And, according to Irenaeus, the Ebionites used this to claim that Joseph was the ( biological ) father of Jesus: From Irenaeus ' point of view that was pure heresy, facilitated by ( late ) anti-Christian alterations of the scripture in Hebrew, as evident by the older, pre-Christian, Septuagint.
And at some point we're going to do something about it.
And he built Medeba and Beth-diblathen and Beth-baal-me ” On, and he set there theof the land .” The stone is defaced at this point so we do not know what the King set up, but it was likely an image of his god, Ashtar-Chemosh.
And just to prove my point, I spent two days or something cooking up the first version of the server, just to prove a point.

0.669 seconds.