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Page "Idylls of the King" ¶ 16
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borrows and arms
He offers to court Ettare for Pelleas, and for this purpose borrows his arms and shield.

borrows and from
The Roman writer Virgil's characterization of the Volscian warrior maiden Camilla in the Aeneid borrows heavily from the myth of the Amazons.
Some historians believe that Acts borrows phraseology and plot elements from Euripides ' play The Bacchae.
Instead, he proposed that other pieces of Germanic literature contain " kernels of tradition " from which Beowulf borrows and expands upon.
John Henry Fleming's Fearsome Creatures of Florida ( Pocol Press, 2009 ) borrows from the medieval bestiary tradition to impart moral lessons about the environment.
Shakespeare often used Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland — commonly known as Holinshed's Chronicles — as a source for his plays, and in Macbeth he borrows from several of the tales in that work.
In 2003, The Protomen released their debut album Act 1 ( The Protomen ) which borrows from the story of the Megaman franchise to create a dystopian rock opera.
The musical additionally borrows characters and story elements from a few other Runyon stories, most notably " Pick The Winner.
The 21st century also saw the development of " electrogrind " ( or " cybergrind "), practiced by The Berzerker, Body Hammer, Gigantic Brain and Genghis Tron which borrows from electronic music.
Rufinus borrows from his Latin original of Hadrian's letter.
This medium borrows traits from both improvisational stage acting and writing.
The historical content of Shakespeare's play is drawn from Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland, which in turn borrows from Boece's 1527 Scotorum Historiae, which flattered the antecedents of Boece's patron, King James V of Scotland.
* Charles Frazier's novel Cold Mountain ( 1997 ) borrows much from the Odyssey to tell the story of an American Civil War veteran's homecoming.
SOAP is the successor of XML-RPC, though it borrows its transport and interaction neutrality and the envelope / header / body from elsewhere ( probably from WDDX ).
At the very end of the text he borrows an analogy from Arthur Schopenhauer, and compares the book to a ladder that must be thrown away after one has climbed it.
This game's story heavily borrows from Zoroastrianism.
( The packaging artwork for the album also borrows heavily from the THX 1138 2004 DVD release packaging.
Now beginning to run low on cash, Alvin borrows a cordless phone from a homeowner-gently but resolutely refusing an invitation to come indoors-and calls Rose to ask her to send him his Social Security check.
A Sicilian woman cunningly conveys from a merchant that which he has brought to Palermo ; he, making a show of being come back with far greater store of goods than before, borrows money of her, and leaves her in lieu thereof water and tow.
Robert B. Parker's 2001 novel Potshot borrows heavily from the end of the movie for the final confrontation between Spenser's group of seven outlaws and the Dell, the antagonists of the story, going so far as to acknowledge it in dialog between characters and having one of them say the line, " We deal in lead, friend.
Xena freely borrows names and themes from various mythologies around the world, primarily the Greek, anachronistically adapting them to suit the demands of the storyline.
She also borrows heavily from the people around her and seldom pays bills.
When a company borrows from the primary capital markets, often the purpose is to invest in additional physical capital goods, which will be used to help increase its income.
In an interview included with the audio book editions of his novels, author Robert Jordan has stated that his bestselling fantasy series The Wheel of Time borrows the titular concept from Hindu mythology.

borrows and remote
The action of the play however also borrows from ancient folklore-the rescue of a maiden or a treasure from the inaccessible stronghold of a giant or monster was already familiar to Athenians in the story of Perseus and Andromeda and it is still familiar to modern audiences as ' Jack and the Beanstalk ' ( Trygaeus like Jack magically ascends to the remote stronghold of a giant and plunders its treasure ).

borrows and Lord
Music critic Jeff Bond writes, " The final result was one of the most unusual Star Trek movie themes ," consisting of a six-note theme and variations set against a repetitious four-note brass motif ; the theme's bridge borrows content from Rosenman's " Frodo March " for The Lord of the Rings.
After his victory in the battle, Richard III is then unintentionally killed by Lord Edmund Plantagenet ; Richard borrows Edmund's horse, which he thinks is a stray.
The motif of the Hover Pilder docking itself into Mazinger's head also borrows from Nagai's 1971 manga Demon Lord Dante ( the prototype for his more popular Devilman ), in which the titular giant demon has a human head ( of Ryo Utsugi, the young man who merged with him ) in his forehead.
Sydney Carter's " Lord of the Dance " borrows the melody from the Joseph Brackett song " Simple Gifts ".
During the events of Uncle Fred in the Springtime, he is impersonated by Lord Ickenham, who borrows his identity to take lodgings in Blandings so as to resolve a series of complications.

borrows and finishing
The game borrows the attack set of Street Fighter and is also inspired by the finishing moves from Mortal Kombat.

borrows and agrees
The monk without her knowledge borrows the money from the merchant to give to the wife and she agrees with the monk:

borrows and wear
Additionally, it borrows elements of Punk fashion, such as a fanned and / or dyed Mohawk hairstyle, and fetish wear, such as black leather or PVC tops, pants and shorts ( female Rivetstyle ), embellished with modern primitive body modification, such as tattoos, piercings and scarification.

borrows and daughter
However, by other more documented accounts, the lake's designation borrows from the moniker of a Native American woman, Magdalena, who interpreted the language for a Spanish expedition into Florida in 1549, or even more likely, the name comes from the 1882 marriage of John Parrish and Mary Magdalene Yates, daughter of Jonah Yates, first mayor of Plant City in the Lake Magdalene section of Hillsborough County.

borrows and
In Shards of Honor, Cordelia borrows a holovid reporter s camera, but in most of the books a computer / holovid screen seems to have a built-in camera which can record an image or video.
This contradicts speculations that the song simply borrows on a Nemo character of an earlier work, such as J. Verne s Captain Nemo, Homer s Ulysses alias Nemo, C. Dickens Captain Hawdon alias Nemo, W. McCay s Little Nemo, or the Disney Studio s film Finding Nemo.
Is the law the same if a shop assistant “ borrows ” money from his employer s till, intending to replace it when his ship comes in?
Chris Finch, Brent s hero, looks up to him and " borrows " his best jokes.
In that year he moved to Boston, where he painted Family of Isaac Royall ( 1741 ), a group portrait which borrows its composition from John Smibert s The Bermuda Group ( 1729 ).

borrows and s
William M. Hoffman, in his own version of the Figaro myth in John Corigliano ´ s The Ghosts of Versailles ( which borrows from La mère coupable ), has him taking part in the French Revolution, refusing to help Almaviva's plan to free the Queen from her impending fate at the guillotine.
Valensi often borrows fellow Strokes guitarist Albert Hammond, Jr .' s backup guitars, which include a Gibson Les Paul Jr. and a Les Paul Special.
The level of feature analysis ( and possibly the onomasiological level ) can be spared if the speaker simply borrows a word from a foreign language or variety ; it is also spared if the speaker simply takes the word s / he originally fell back to and just shortens it.

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