Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "lore" ¶ 1042
from Brown Corpus
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

long and angry
Enemies turn " angry " – becoming pink-colored and moving faster – if they are the last enemy remaining, escape from a bubble after being left too long, or a certain amount of time has been spent on the current level.
When Samuel found out that Saul had not killed them all, he became angry and launched into a long and bitter diatribe about how God regretted making Saul king, because Saul was disobedient.
He left behind a long string of angry former hosts.
From 1814 to 1819 he, or rather his admirers, were engaged in a long and angry controversy with Baggesen, who represented the old didactic school.
He ate so much of it that Loki became angry, grabbed his long staff and attempted to strike him, but the weapon stuck fast to Þjazi's body and he took flight, carrying Loki up with him.
The two men had a long and angry discussion in the back of the taxi, and then George got out.
The Salween (, ;, ; ; ; Shan: ;, ; also spelled Salwine ; Salawin, Thai ; Gyalmo Ngulchu, Tibetan ; Thanlwin, Burmese ; Nu Jiang, which means " Angry River " in Chinese ( The river is actually named after the Nu tribe that lives in the area but Chinese being no phonetic script had to use a character with a similar sound as Nu and that happen to be the character for angry ), is a river, about long, that flows from the Tibetan Plateau into the Andaman Sea in Southeast Asia.
" The King, however, though he had long inclined to favour Tories over Whigs, was still angry at the refusal of Wellington and Peel to serve in Canning's cabinet.
The actual treatment of the hostages was far different from that purported in Iranian propaganda: the hostages described beatings, theft, the fear of bodily harm while being paraded blindfold before a large, angry chanting crowd outside the embassy ( Bill Belk and Kathryn Koob ), having their hands bound " day and night " for days or even weeks, long periods of solitary confinement and months of being forbidden to speak to one another or stand, walk, and leave their space unless they were going to the bathroom.
A longitudinal study showed that people who were generally more neurotic, angry and hostile in life were less likely to forgive another person even after a long time had passed.
Some Reform Party supporters were frustrated by the party's decision to expand its political base into Quebec as they continued to believe that the party should represent English Canada and others from the right-wing and populist faction of the party were angry that Manning punished MPs Bob Ringma and David Chatters During the campaign the Reform Party released a controversial television advertisement where the faces of four Quebec politicians: Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, Bloc Québécois leader Gilles Duceppe, Progressive Conservative leader Jean Charest, and the separatist Premier of Quebec Lucien Bouchard were crossed out followed by a message saying that Quebec politicians had dominated the federal government for too long and that the Reform Party would end this favoritism towards Quebec.
Guybrush is taken away by an angry mob however and is placed on trial for causing the " Pox of LeChuck ", in which Guybrush is able to stall long enough for Elaine, who is deeply infected by the pox, and LeChuck to come to his aid.
*" As long as I can get angry, then I play well.
Charles II thought that Shaftesbury was mainly angry because he had been out of royal favor for long, and hoped that he could rein Shaftesbury in by naming him Lord President of the Council on 21 April 1679, with a salary of ₤ 4, 000 a year.
He would shoot one direction, with all the equipment behind the view of the camera, and then he'd want to shoot in the other direction right away and we'd have to move and he'd get angry that we took too long ... and it was always everybody else's fault, never his ".
Adult males are blue-grey on the upperparts with white underparts and have a long slender bill, long black tail and an angry black unibrow.
The Bulls head is lowered, its nostrils flare, and its wickedly long, sharp horns are ready to gore ; it's an angry, dangerous beast.
The amount released is dependent on a variety of factors including the condition of the snake ( e. g. having long, healthy fangs and a full venom sack ) and its temperament ( an angry, hungry snake that has just been stepped on vs. a satiated snake that was merely surprised by walking near it ).
Some critics pointed out that this accusation was implemented because prosecutors were angry at Yasuda's court tactics to delay the trial as long as possible to avoid the sentence of a highly possible death penalty for Asahara.
Pentreath has passed into legend for cursing at people in a long stream of fierce Cornish whenever she became angry.
Though the bulk of his confiscated estates were lost beyond recall, he did not share the angry resentment of most of the returning émigrés, from whose company and intrigues he had held himself aloof during his long Russian exile.
Once they even attempt to help by arriving at the scene in disguise ( as bunny girls ); however, they only mess everything up and this results in angering Akira, though their sincere apology makes him unable to remain angry for very long.
Though angry with his daughter, Doran reveals to her that he has long had his own subtler plan for vengeance.

long and footnote
In a footnote, Freud laments that long term follow-up of this case was not possible, because the patient was killed in World War I.
( Philologist and Rector of the Leipzig Thomasschule, Johann Matthias Gesner, for whom Bach composed a cantata in 1729, published a substantial Quintilian edition with a long footnote in Bach's honor.
Philologist and Rector of the Leipzig Thomasschule, Johann Matthias Gesner, for whom Bach composed a cantata in 1729, published a substantial Quintilian edition with a long footnote in Bach's honor.
( JNES 25, p. 123 ) Donald Redford, in a BASOR 211 ( 1973 ) No. 37 footnote observes that the use of Horemheb's name and the addition of a long " Meryamun " ( Beloved of Amun ) epithet in the graffito suggests a living, eulogised king rather than a long deceased one.
The theory of share tenancy was long dominated by Alfred Marshall's famous footnote in Book VI, Chapter X. 14 of Principles where he illustrated the inefficiency of agricultural share-contracting.
As a footnote in the weapon's long history, an M1934 was used in the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi in New Delhi on 30 January 1948.
But in 1864 Brasseur published his French translation of Diego de Landa's recently recovered 1556 ethnographic manuscript, which decisively rejected the notion of Mayan circumcision, and in a footnote he acknowledged there had probably been a " mistake ", an admission that never found its way into the English-language literature although modern ethnography has long since understood the nature of these rituals.
A long footnote at the end of the review summarises The Conference of the Birds ( 1177 ), by Farid ud-Din Attar, in which a group of birds seek a feather dropped in the middle of China by Simurg, the bird king.
All medieval discussions about the nature of the continuum, of the infinite and the infinitely divisible, are a long footnote to this text.

long and opinion
His visual image, characterized by his long hair, mustache and big rings, softened the reaction of the otherwise conservative Turkish public opinion.
In favor of the supposition that Eusebius changed his opinion from deference to the Count of Anjou, the decided opponent of Berengar and his doctrine, it can be adduced that he did not defend Berengar against the hostilities of the court, and that for a long time he sided with this violent prince.
But I, though I saw and heard these things, refused to write for a long time through doubt and bad opinion and the diversity of human words, not with stubbornness but in the exercise of humility, until, laid low by the scourge of God, I fell upon a bed of sickness ; then, compelled at last by many illnesses, and by the witness of a certain noble maiden of good conduct nun Richardis von Stade and of that man whom I had secretly sought and found, as mentioned above, I set my hand to the writing.
In the opinion of his biographer Tom Frame, these have tended to obscure the many achievements of Holt's long and distinguished political career.
But you, being ignorant of how long he will have dominion, hold another opinion.
Von Soemmerring did not change his opinion that these forms were bats and this " bat model " for interpreting pterosaurs would remain influential long after a consensus had been reached around 1860 that they were reptiles.
Liberal opinion radio has long existed on the Pacifica network, though only available in a small number of major cities, and in formats that more often act as a volunteer-run community forum than as a platform for charismatic hosts who would be likely to attract a large audience.
The experience of World War I saw a complete reversal in opinion on the relative value of long rifles and bayonets in typical combat infantry operations.
Honecker was more specific about the SED's position toward the intelligentsia at the Fourth Plenum of the Central Committee, where he stated: " As long as one proceeds from the firm position of socialism, there can in my opinion be no taboos in the field of art and literature.
Against cabinet opinion, Kitchener correctly predicted a long war that would last at least three years, require huge new armies to defeat Germany, and suffer huge casualties before the end would come.
In a long and extremely detailed careful opinion, the reviewing court disagreed with Judge Elliott on the law and significantly on Elliott's scope of review of the courts martial proceedings.
Later on, he tries again to persuade the Trojans to stay inside the city in order to raise troop morale, but it is Aeneas that opposes his opinion this time, on the grounds that the Greeks will not be disheartened by a long stay inside the walls.
In Attic-Ionic the stem vowel has changed to long e ( eta ) in the singular, except ( in Attic only ) after e, i, r: gnome, gnomes, gnome ( i ), gnomen, etc., " opinion ", but thea, theas, thea ( i ), thean, etc., " goddess.
Fourth, Marshall supported the Court's opinion textually by invoking the Necessary and Proper Clause, which permits Congress to seek an objective that is within its enumerated powers so long as it is rationally related to the objective and not forbidden by the Constitution.
Chief Justice William Rehnquist Chief Justice William Rehnquist's majority opinion relied upon Roberts v. United States Jaycees, 468 U. S. 609, 622 ( 1984 ), in which the Supreme Court said: " Consequently, we have long understood as implicit in the right to engage in activities protected by the First Amendment a corresponding right to associate with others in pursuit of a wide variety of political, social, economic, educational, religious, and cultural ends.
Also, Robert Browning uses the term " Tertium Quid " in his long narrative poem " The Ring and the Book " to describe a speaker with a third point of view who has a different, more balanced, opinion on the 1698 Roman murder case his poem discusses, different from the opinions of " Half Rome " and " The Other Half Rome " who strongly sympathize with, or strongly do not sympathize with, the accused.
An opinion had long been gaining ground that it would be better for the community and the interests of learning, as well as for the university, if the power to elect the overseers were transferred from the legislature to the graduates of the college.
; John Chamberlain ( 1553 – 1628 ) reported at the time that the King " hath long had a desire to remove him from about the lord of Rochester, as thinking it a dishonour to him that the world should have an opinion that Rochester ruled him and Overbury ruled Rochester ".
Yes, but it was opinion with the helmet of a national guard on his head, and a long sword by his side ; it was opinion, standing, match in hand, at the breech of a gun charged to the muzzle.
American novelist Jack Kerouac dismissed it in Big Sur ( 1962 ) and it has had a long history of mixed critical reception and opinion at large.
The report from the Finnish team, however, was kept confidential by the EU until long after the war, and the team leader, Helena Ranta, issued a press release at the time containing her " personal opinion " and indicating differing and opposite findings.
President Truman declared the act a " mockery of the Bill of Rights " and a " long step toward totalitarianism " because it represented a government restriction on the freedom of opinion.
His knowledge of foreign affairs and of foreign languages, gained during his residence abroad, was considerable, but long absence from England had also taught him a cosmopolitan indifference to constitutions and religions, and a careless disregard for English public opinion and the prudential interests of the country.

0.416 seconds.