Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Philippine name" ¶ 955
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Inevitably and person
Inevitably, copies of the recordings were passed from person to person and demand increased for a commercial release of the album.

Inevitably and be
Inevitably smaller poleis might be dominated by larger neighbours, but conquest or direct rule by another city-state appears to have been quite rare.
Inevitably, when Joan died, the lands would be inherited by her own children.
On his decision to leave Melbourne Barassi stated “ Inevitably with many decisions in life there will be a downside.
Inevitably, the final scene would be back at the Townsend office with Charlie offering his congratulations for a job well done.
Inevitably someone would recognize him, usually it would be a guy standing about ten feet above us in a sixty-foot SeaRay or a large sailboat, pointing and remarking, " Hey, it's Senator Pell down there.
Inevitably, after Hitler's defeat, the colossal dimensions of his buildings tended to be seen, as they were by Speer in his memoirs, as symbols of Hitler's megalomania.
He has a strong broad chin and speaks with a directness that appeals to Australians ... Inevitably, he is beginning to be known in Australia as ' Aeroplane Jellicoe '.
Inevitably the members of the new force will be provided by present B Specials and just as inevitably it is already being smeared in some quarters as simply the old force in new uniform.
Inevitably, there was unrest and the police had to be involved.
Inevitably, certain sides of some objects ( e. g., walls ) in a game scene will never be visible to the player during normal play.
Inevitably such brief, unofficial reports cannot present the full picture of these complex negotiations, in which both parties discussed a range of possibilities but ultimately found closure of the lab to be the only mutually-agreeable option.
Inevitably, the characterization of a broad range of contemporaneous poets and poetry under the single unifying name can be viewed more as an exercise in historical compartmentalization than an attempt to capture the essence of the actual ‘ movement ’.
Inevitably, a limited selection of historical empires had to be chosen for inclusion in the game.
Inevitably, at such a time of change and invention, there would be some variation in the exact design of instruments in favour from country to country and so the actual constituent parts of Ewald ’ s quintet would have differed in some ways from those instruments played in Bellon ’ s quintet and certainly in current times, by such as Canadian Brass.
Inevitably the human species will be forced out of the Solar System altogether, to live between the stars where other displaced intelligences are already in residence.
Inevitably, there will be some wine left — either of inferior quality or leftovers from the blending.
Inevitably therefore, there will be inequalities of access in terms of the
Inevitably, the engine's direction of thrust will not be perfectly aligned with the rocket's axis, so the rocket will have an inbuilt tendency to turn.

Inevitably and .
Inevitably this means some compromise.
Inevitably, one side was pleased and the other displeased, regardless of how we ruled.
Inevitably, Mrs. Hull died of starvation and tuberculosis, weighing 60 pounds.
Inevitably, the surviving evidence is not complete enough to determine whether one should interpret, with older scholars, that he wisely curtailed the activities of the Roman Empire to a careful minimum, or perhaps that he was uninterested in events away from Rome and Italy and his inaction contributed to the pressing troubles that faced not only Marcus Aurelius but also the emperors of the third century.
Inevitably, the zinc coating becomes breached, either by cracking or physical damage.
Inevitably, he scored.
Inevitably, with Delta's head start, software was marketed in either system, but rarely both.
Inevitably, with respect to homosexuality, Talmud Torah study will place us at odds with political correctness and the temper of the times.
Inevitably, both the Bomber B and Amerika Bomber programs were victims of the continued emphasis of the Wehrmacht's insistence for the Luftwaffe to support the Army as its primary mission, as well as the increasingly devastating results of the RAF Bomber Command at night, and by 1943 the USAAF's Eighth and Fifteenth Air Forces ' heavy bomber raids by daylight on the German aviation industry, which catastrophically diminished the Third Reich's overall aviation production capacity later in World War II.
Inevitably, some of the numbers that occur in nature are prime.
Inevitably Vladimir Lenin, supported by Zinoviev and Radek, strongly contested them.
Inevitably, some artistic license was taken by the filmmakers for the sake of drama.
Inevitably, the real ale-producing Valhalla Brewery is the most northerly in Britain.
Inevitably, a number of imitations of Viz were launched, but these never matched the original in popularity, and rarely in quality.
Inevitably, besides its religious and military dimensions, the triumph offered extraordinary opportunities for self-publicity.
Inevitably, Catiline was forced to fight when Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer with three legions in the north blocked his escape.
* D. H. Lawrence: A Brief and Inevitably Fragmentary Impression ( 1930 )
Inevitably, the people of Guellen fall in the trap of gaudy materialism, justifying themselves as they increasingly allow themselves to become selfish ; they promote normlessness.
Inevitably, the evidence is only anecdotal.
Inevitably, however, pieces of said genres are verbal attacks at jongleurs, in general and in specific, with named individuals being called out.
Inevitably, over time those two floriferous groups were interbred, the distinctions became blurred and overlapped, and the Bailey species names became redundant.
Inevitably, the domination of politics and concomitant aggregation of wealth by small groups of families was apt to cause social unrest in many poleis.
Inevitably each setter has an individual ( and often very recognisable ) approach to clue-writing, but the way in which wordplay devices are used and indicated is kept within a defined set of rules.

0.150 seconds.