Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Miguel Pro" ¶ 18
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Declining and with
Declining attendance meant that the club's payroll could no longer support a franchise stocked largely with veterans from other clubs.
Declining sales after the Second World War prompted Duncan to launch a comeback campaign for his trademarked " Yo-Yo " in 1962 with a series of television advertisements.
Declining student enrollment caused the Kosse School Board to vote in favor of consolidation with Groesbeck in 1968.
Declining to pursue increased speed with pipelining may make the resulting design simpler and cheaper to manufacture.
* Stephen Miller-Conversation: A History of a Declining Art: provides an extensive history of conversation which dates back to the ancient Greeks with Socrates, and moving forward, to coffeehouses around the world, as well as the modern forces of the electronic age, talk shows, etc.
Declining emigration during the Celtic Tiger years of the early 21st century, combined with tighter US immigration restrictions, led to a decline in the number of clubs in the USA, but the subsequent collapse of the Irish economy led to a resumption of emigration and growth of international GAA clubs.
Declining to identify his molester, a 42-year-old man, Haim claimed that a rape situation had continued for two years with Feldman's knowledge.
Declining sales along with passive restraint regulations led to the discontinuation of the brand after 1989.
Beginning with The Declining Significance of Race, Wilson's work has attracted a great deal of controversy and criticism.
Declining sales of the Essex, combined with the growing pressure from the effects of the Great Depression forced Hudson to replace the Essex with a re-designed automobile with a lower manufacturing cost and selling price.
Declining health saw her role as Aunt Harriet reduced, and with the introduction of Batgirl in the third and final season of Batman she only appeared in two episodes that season as a guest role.
Declining at first due to feeling too busy with his composing duties and attempts to become a music producer with his Smile Please label, Uematsu agreed to join them in a single live performance as a keyboardist.
Declining crowds and poor financial management eventually saw the club merge with Burnham F. C., before disappearing in 1987.
Declining ridership and continuing red ink led the train to be jointly operated with the Great Northern's Empire Builder between Chicago and Minneapolis.
Declining health saved him from the embarrassment connected with the divorce and second marriage of Napoleon ( April 1810 ).
Declining to take on the Parramatta captaincy in his final year with the club, his career appeared to be winding down after injuries and suspension saw him miss much of the second half of the season.

Declining and one
Declining exports, reduced domestic consumption and fixed asset accumulation hit Hungary hard during the Financial Crisis of 2008, making the country enter a severe recession of-6. 4 %, one of the worst economic contractions in its history.
He is the author of numerous publications including The Declining Significance of Race, winner of the American Sociological Association's Sydney Spivack Award ; The Truly Disadvantaged, which was selected by the editors of the New York Times Book Review as one of the 16 best books of 1987, and received The Washington Monthly Annual Book Award and the Society for the Study of Social Problems ' C. Wright Mills Award ; When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor, which was selected as one of the notable books of 1996 by the editors of the New York Times Book Review and received the Sidney Hillman Foundation Award ; and The Bridge Over the Racial Divide: Rising Inequality and Coalition Politics.
Declining an English Literature scholarship to Oxford, Fry instead earned her equivalent of a BA in Science in one year and went on to then receive her medical training at the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin, Ireland.

Declining and other
Declining wharfage trade, light industry and factories have given way to residential development, shops, restaurants, galleries, bars and most notably major office developments housing international headquarters of accountancy, legal and other professional services consultances, most notably along London Bridge City and More London between Tooley Street and the riverside.
Declining to respond on the grounds that anyone could duplicate and thus verify his experiments, Franklin sees another French author refute Nollet, and as Franklin's book is translated into other languages, its views are gradually accepted and Nollet's are discarded.

Declining and out
Declining economy and the dominance of the local scene by Group C touring cars towards the latter part of the 70s saw Formula 5000 gradually fall out of favour.
Nominated for " Rock Album of the Year " at the 2011 Juno Awards, Vancouver beat out Bears, Mayors, Scraps & Bones ( Cancer Bats ), Fino + Bleed ( Die Mannequin ), Life Turns Electric ( Finger Eleven ) and Population Declining ( Hail the Villain ), marking the second time Good won the award.
Declining to enforce the follow on in the heat Border batted again and Matthews made 27 not out in Australia's 170 / 5, which set India 348 runs to win on the last day.

Declining and have
Declining oil fields, saline aquifers, and unminable coal seams have been suggested as storage sites.
Declining levels of sexual desire have been linked to the use of anti-hypertension medication and many psychiatric medications ; such as anti-psychotic medications, tricyclic anti-depressants, monoamine-oxidase ( MAO ) inhibitors, and sedative drugs.
Declining to enlist is not evasion, however some hold the view that young persons ( or young men ) of combat age have an affirmative duty to enlist in the military during wartime, even if not drafted.

Declining and on
Declining competitiveness in tourism and especially in manufacturing are expected to act as a drag on growth until structural changes are effected.
Declining an offer from the Duke of Sussex that they travel to South Africa on a Navy ship, Herschel and his wife paid £ 500 for passage on the S. S. Mountstuart Elphinstone, a ship of 611 tons, which departed from Portsmouth on 13 November 1833.
Declining a UN armistice, the two sides fought intermittently on both sides of the 38th Parallel until the armistice was signed on June 26, 1953.
The song was subsequently released as a remix by The Declining Winter on their album Haunt The Upper Hallways.
Declining a renomination for Congress on account of financial embarrassment, he was appointed, on the accession of James K. Polk to the Presidency, to superintend the building of the new custom-house at New Orleans, Louisiana.
Declining television ratings on NBC had already led many to believe that the NBA's next television rights fee would be lower than previous years, and the economic recession made that a likely scenario.
Declining enrolment and rising costs during the 1980s led to its closing and absorption by the Talmud Torah, a more religiously oriented, Hebrew-language day school on Matheson Avenue, which created a Yiddish-language track to accommodate those interested in continuing education in Yiddish.
Declining receipts lead to the passenger service being withdrawn on 15 September 1952 but services continued between Belmont and Harrow.
Declining passenger numbers on the North Australia Railway led to services on the line being suspended in 1976.

blindfold and with
Lady Justice depicts justice as equipped with three symbols: a sword symbolizing the court's coercive power ; a human scale weighing competing claims in each hand ; and a blindfold indicating impartiality.
Cyradis, still grieving over the loss of Toth and unable to consult with her people, experiences a few moments of terrible panic for fear of making the wrong choice, until Polgara removes her blindfold so that she may see with human eyes.
Examples of the lyrics from " Yellow Fever " include " like an oriental rug ' cause I lay her where I please, then I blindfold her with dental floss and get on my knees " and " Oh me Chinky, she's so kinky, got me hot like Nagasaki, burnin ' up like napalm burstin ' like an a-bomb.
In preparing for the role Garfield lived for several weeks with Schmid and his wife in Philadelphia and would blindfold himself for hours at a time.
After the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, he played with a red blindfold around his head as an action against the government.
With the stretcher standing on end, Idle covered his eyes with a black blindfold and announced it as an impersonation of Gary Gilmore.
The song presumably asks Gary Gilmore's mother what's wrong with him, saying that he never comes out to play anymore ; the song also inquires about the holes in his vest and why he is wearing a blindfold.
In South Indian villages, festivals feature a competition called Uri adithal ( Pot breaking with blindfold ) which closely resembles the piñata event.
The picture of Pillsbury sitting calmly in an armchair, with his back to the players, smoking one cigar after another, and replying to his opponents ' moves after brief consideration in a clear, unhesitating manner, came back to my mind 30 years later, when I refereed Alekhine's world record performance at the Chicago World's Fair, where he played 32 blindfold games simultaneously.
( 1990 ) presented chimpanzees with the choice of two experimenters from which to request food: one who had seen where food was hidden, and one who, by virtue of one of a variety of mechanisms ( having a bucket or bag over his head ; a blindfold over his eyes ; or being turned away from the baiting ) does not know, and can only guess.
A hood to hide or control the wearer often covers the whole head, with the result that the wearer can see little or nothing, like a blindfold, or it can be to prevent identification of the wearer.
At one point he was the world's second most successful player, with a string of tournament victories behind him, but he really enjoyed popularising chess by giving simultaneous and blindfold displays around the country.
Blackburne's introduction to blindfold chess was a little later: in November 1861 Louis Paulsen give a simultaneous blindfold exhibition in Manchester, beating Blackburne among others ; Blackburne was soon playing chess blindfolded with three players simultaneously.
A blindfold with nose hole to make it harder to slip off
The latter is a female figure with a broken staff and the tables of the law held upside down, blindfold to symbolize ignorance of the Messiah.
One of his most famous tricks was one in which he would cover his eyes with soft dough balls, blindfold himself, swath his entire head in strips of cloth, and yet still be able to see.
In one episode as a guest on BBC1's They Think It's All Over she asked if she could take part in the Feel The Sportsman round as an all-girls team, donning the blindfold along with Jo Brand instead of regular captain David Gower.
In 1925 Réti set, and for a time held, the world record for blindfold chess with twenty-nine games played simultaneously.
Some years later, Mother Barnes, a midwife from Great Shefford, recalled being brought blindfold in 1575 to the childbed of a lady, with a gentleman standing by who commanded her to save the life of the mother, but who ( as soon as the child was born ) threw it into the fire.
Snapdragon's mask bears a black band around the eyes like a blindfold, with a similar, thinner band from the mouth.
The great French player André Danican Philidor demonstrated his ability to play up to three blindfold games simultaneously in 1783 with great success, with newspapers highlighting his achievement, having taught himself to visualize the board while in bed at night when he had trouble sleeping.

0.307 seconds.