Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Cliché" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Ironically and making
Ironically the perpetrator turns out to be a strong, assertive women, capable of taking bold initiatives and setting the agenda for everybody else-and making use of all this to aggressively promote a violently anti-feminist agenda.
Ironically, the OpenContent License is not libre because it forbids making copies for profit.
Ironically, both of the Presidents making the offer to Webster died in office, meaning the three-time Presidential candidate could have become President if he had accepted either.
Ironically, Florence would later take up her mother's mantle as a committed suffragette, making public speeches on the subject and authoring the book Julia Ward Howe and the Woman Suffrage Movement ( 1913 ).
Ironically, the bay windows seem to elevate upwards, opening up the two lowermost levels into voids enclosed with steel-framed glazing, making these elements seem lighter than they really are.
Ironically, Bobby Kennedy ( learning of Boyd's CIA connection and erratic behavior upon discovering the wire tap ), fingers Boyd as the person trying to set up the president ; he fires Boyd from the Justice Department, severing his ties with the Kennedys, and making an enemy of Boyd.
Ironically it is now a field of graves, making it a tourist attraction site.
Ironically, these views aided Müller's rise as it guaranteed the hostility of the Nazis, thereby making Müller very dependent upon the patronage of Reinhard Heydrich, who in turn appreciated Müller's professionalism and skill as a policeman, and was aware of Müller's past, making Müller rely upon Heydrich's protection.
Ironically, in making the Swords as a game to inflict on man, the gods unwittingly engineered their own demise.
Ironically, the next area they had to drive through was especially wet and muddy, making the heavy BMW bikes undrivable, forcing McGregor & Boorman to man-handle and push them for long distances, while von Planta, now on the much lighter Planeta, had no trouble riding through it.

Ironically and Dalí
Ironically, along with painting over the signature of Spanish painter Salvador Dalí ( he intertwined his name with that of a Pulitzer Prize-winning American writer ), D. H. Lawrence ( who drew a phoenix ), they also painted over the signature of Eva Braun.

Ironically and was
Ironically no president we have had would have regretted more than President Eisenhower the possibility to which his own words, in the press conference held at the beginning of August, testified: that unable as he was himself to say his running was best for the country, unconsciously he had placed his party before his nation.
Ironically, Salieri's music was much more in the tradition of Gluck and Gassmann than of the Italians like Paisiello or Cimarosa.
Ironically, this highly irregular policy ( along with the subsequent fame of Frank Frazetta ) has led to the misconception that his strip was " ghosted " by other hands.
Ironically, it was Hoyle who coined the phrase that came to be applied to Lemaître's theory, referring to it as " this big bang idea " during a BBC Radio broadcast in March 1949.
Ironically, the great anti-imperialist rebel was now identified with the head of the British Empire, and her statue stood guard over the city she razed to the ground.
Ironically though, it was this lack of ports which brought the Dutch to trade at Banda instead of the clove islands of Ternate and Tidore.
Ironically, it was his work as a budding historian that destroyed his early career.
Ironically, Holliday, traded from Oakland to St. Louis in July, was in the opposing dugout watching the play.
Ironically, the rise of infantry in the early 16th century coincided with the " golden age " of heavy cavalry ; a French or Spanish army at the beginning of the century could have up to half its numbers made up of various kinds of light and heavy cavalry, whereas in earlier medieval and later 17th century armies the proportion of cavalry was seldom more than a quarter.
Ironically, it is also in the Reeve films that Clark Kent's persona has the greatest resemblance to Woody Allen, though his conscious model was Cary Grant's character in Bringing up Baby.
Ironically, the star tracker was an off-the-shelf component, expected to be highly reliable.
Ironically, one of the benefits to come out of the EISA standard was a final codification of the standard to which ISA slots and cards should be held ( in particular, clock speed was fixed at an industry standard of 8. 33 MHz ).
Ironically, the first new film released in Soviet Russia did not exactly fit this mold: this was Father Sergius, a religious film completed during the last weeks of the Russian Empire but not yet exhibited.
Ironically, the loss of his priesthood had allowed him to pursue a military career, as the high priest of Jupiter was not permitted to touch a horse, sleep three nights outside his own bed or one night outside Rome, or look upon an army.
Ironically, the film was released in the final few weeks of Nazi Germany's existence, when most of the country's cinemas were already destroyed.
Ironically, one aspect of American society that the Americo-Liberians recreated was a cultural and racial caste system — however, in this case with themselves at the top instead of the bottom.
Ironically, Batman ultimately learns that the entire debacle was the fault of Luthor alone as he attempted to take control of Gotham by forging deeds for the land in his name, which results in Bruce Wayne severing all commercial ties between the U. S. government and his company, Wayne Enterprises, in protest of Luthor's election as President.
Ironically, Bradman was bowled shortly thereafter at a memorial match by Grimmett, who produced a perfectly pitched stock ball that turned just enough to remove Bradman's off bail.
Ironically, Mazda's version was unsuccessful, while the Ford ( available from the start as a 4-door or 2-door model ) instantly became the best selling sport-utility vehicle in the United States and kept that title for over a decade.
Ironically, it was at this time that the Hosokawa lords were also the patrons of Musashi's chief rival, Sasaki Kojirō.
Ironically it was preparations for this concert, rather than historical interest, that brought about the first detailed post-Cold War survey of the area with a view to determining what, if anything, was left of Hitler's bunker and any other underground installations.
Ironically, in the 1912 campaign, McDonald was Woodrow Wilson's bodyguard.

Ironically and words
Ironically recorded at the Granville Theatre in London, Betjeman closed the epilogue and the station with these words:
Ironically, profitable-meaning inefficient-markets have difficulty meeting the definition a free market because a free market is to some extent defined as an efficient one: one in which goods or services are exchanged without coercion or fraud, or in other words with competition ( to prevent monopolistic coercion ) and transparency ( to prevent fraud ).
Ironically: the same people who were, for decades, stigmatised as ultra-Croatian " linguistic nationalists " ( Stjepan Babić, Dalibor Brozović, Radoslav Katičić, Miro Kačić ) have been accused as pro-Serbian " political linguists " simply because they opposed these " language purges " that wanted to kick out numerous words of Church Slavonic origin ( which are common not only to Croatian and Serbian, but are also present in Polish, Russian, Czech and other Slavic languages ).
Ironically, in Greek " Dinotopia " ( Δεινοτοπία ) means " terrible place " or " land of suffering ", since the original Greek word for " dinosaur " ( δεινόσαυρος ) translates as " terrible lizard " and is made up of the words for " terrible " ( δεινός, dinos ) and " lizard " ( σαύρα, savra, transliterated as saura ).
Ironically, it is Bulosan ’ s success and America Is in the Heart ’ s dominance in the study of Filipino-American literature that may have a greater impact of then his actual words.
Ironically, Gandhi dies without his famous last words: " Hey Ram!

Ironically and French
Ironically, France and New Zealand had been allies since French missionaries settled in Akaroa, in 1835.
Ironically, the Foochow Navy Yard represented a substantial French investment in China's future, having been built several years earlier under the direction of the French administrator Prosper Giquel.
Ironically and hypocritically, Pol Pot himself was a university-educated man ( albeit a drop-out ) with a taste for French literature and was also a fluent French speaker.
Ironically, the prison had been designed in the mid-19th century by Krystyna Skarbek's great-great-uncle Fryderyk Florian Skarbek, a prison reformer and Frédéric Chopin's godfather, who had been tutored in French language by Chopin's father.
Ironically, for a soldier-prince who fought France most of his martial career, seventeen years after the margrave's death the only one of his daughters to survive childhood, Princess Auguste, married Louis d ' Orléans, son of the infamous French Regent and, at the time of the wedding, first in the line of succession to the throne of France.
Ironically the threatening letters actually helped the British and French at the United Nations, since they ensured that all of NATO ( including the United States ) was committed to defend the UK and France from a Soviet attack.
( Ironically, these episodes will never air in France on the French channel that carries the show, as it was canceled there prior to these episodes airing, but French fans were able to pick them up on satellite channels from Germany ).
Ironically, Tresckow played a role in the adoption of the Manstein Plan, which proved to be so successful in the French campaign.
Ironically, however, the affranchis were barred the actual franchise ( voting ) prior to a 1791 court case whose decision in their favor prompted a backlash from the French planter class which sparked the Haitian Revolution.
( Ironically the French excluded Captain Alexander Ball, as chief of the Maltese, from the negotiations, as the French did not want to surrender to the Maltese.
Ironically, the small kingdom of Kénédougou would become one of the last major hold-out against French ambitions in West Africa.
* Ironically, TDF did not pursue this option at Allouis or Issoudun — a technological blow to French security.
Ironically, he won this election by defeating incumbent Conservative Errick French Willis, the son of Richard G. Willis.
Ironically, several expressions are used by both the English and the French to describe the same culturally unacceptable habit, but attributing the habit to the other people: e. g., " taking French leave " ( leaving a party or other gathering without taking polite leave of one's host ) is referred to in French as " filer à l ' anglaise " ( literally, " flee English-style "), while the ( now somewhat archaic ) expression " French letter " ( referring to a condom ) is rendered in French as " capote anglaise " ( English hood or cap ).
Ironically, the French commander in charge of the encampment at the top of the bluff, and the first to encounter the English forces, was again the hapless de Vergor.

0.724 seconds.