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rose and from
When East Germans fled to the West by the thousands, paeans of joy rose from the throats of Western publicists.
The smoke from that chimney rose as sluggishly as smoke from any other, and hung as sadly in the drizzle, creeping back down along the sopping canvas of the roof.
Adam rose from the crouch necessary to enter the hut.
Unsinkable slowed and stopped, hundreds of brilliant white flares swayed eerily down from the black, the air raid sirens ashore rose in a keening shriek, the anti-aircraft guns coughed and chattered -- and above it all motors roared and the bombs came whispering and wailing and crashing down among the ships at anchor at Bari.
A plume of smoke rose from a Central Vermont locomotive which idled behind a string of gravel cars, and little figures that were workmen labored to set the ruptured roadbed to rights.
A cow rose from the ground rear end first.
He rose from the chair, took off his coat.
He rose from his chair.
Tractor production at Massey-Ferguson, Ltd., of Toronto in July and August rose to 2,418 units from 869 in the like period a year earlier, says John Staiger, vice president.
Net earnings of that road rose from 62 per cent of interest requirements in calendar 1957 to 86 per cent in the 12 months ended Feb. 28, 1961.
The azaleas were as large as shrubs, and their myriad blooms, many still tight in the bud, ranged in color from purple through fuchsia and rose to the palest pink, along with many white ones too.
A hermit living there told him that amid the rocks was a chasm communicating with purgatory, from which perpetually rose the groans of tortured souls.
In Alfred Duggan's Conscience of the King, a historical novel about Cerdic, founder of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Wessex, Ambrosius Aurelianus is a Romano-British general who rose independently to military power, forming alliances with various British kings and setting out to drive the invading Saxons from Britain.
Although, the young prince's troops could get the mastery in 1189 when the boyars of Halych rose against his rule, but shortly afterwards Prince Vladimir II Yaroslavich managed to escape from his captivity and he expelled the Hungarian troops from Halych.
The proportion of natives of Tehran, the Caspian, Azarbaijan and Kurdistan rose from 4 % of blue collar workers to 22 % of white collar workers to 45 % of managers.
The population of the parish rose from 6, 471 in 1841 to 14, 999 in 1851 and 32, 299 in 1861 and John Davies described it as " the most dynamic place in Wales ".
Coal mined in Aberdare parish rose from in 1844 to in 1850, and the coal trade, which after 1875 was the chief support of the town, soon reached huge dimensions.
: the third day he rose from the dead ;
: Do you believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord, who was born of the Virgin Mary, was crucified, died, and was buried, rose from the dead, and is now seated at the right hand of the Father?
On the third day He rose again from the dead.
The school in Weimar experienced political pressure from conservative circles in Thuringian politics, increasingly so after 1923 as political tension rose.
The English infantry rose from the edge of the Nebel, and silently marched towards Blenheim, a distance of some.
The 1981 season saw Walsh lead the 49ers to a Super Bowl championship ; the team rose from the cellar to the top of the NFL in just two seasons.

rose and ashes
Although Finnish wages and standard of living could not compete with wealthy Sweden until the 1970s, the Finnish economy rose remarkably from the ashes of World War II, resulting in the buildup of another Nordic-style welfare state.
This new series rose from the ashes of a proposed Home and Away spinoff that was to have been produced in conjunction with the UK channel, Five, which screens Home and Away.
New Decatur, Alabama was a city that rose out of the ashes of former Decatur west of the railroad tracks.
It is largely considered by the students who transferred were that Three Rivers rose from the ashes of Thomas More.
Both Margaret and Joan were played by Fiona Bell ( as Joan is burned, Bell symbolically rose from the ashes as Margaret ).
Several groups rose from the Birthday Party's ashes: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds ( featuring Cave, Harvey, Adamson, Bargeld and briefly Pew ), Crime and the City Solution ( featuring Harvey and Howard, later just Harvey ) and These Immortal Souls ( featuring Howard ).
The plaque in Cecil Court commemorating Mozart's residence there in 1764The street rose from the ashes to become the temporary home of an eight-year-old Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart while he was touring Europe in 1764.
However, after the singed manuscripts held at the NMIC were examined in 1999, it became apparent that Tveitt indeed had a copy of the 1938 original score-and through tedious restoration work by Norwegian composer Kaare Dyvik Husby and Russian composer Alexej Rybnikov from the singed manuscripts, recording, and a piano version, the ballet literally rose from the ashes.
He was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium in London ; his ashes are buried under a rose bush in the gardens.
La Fenice once again rose from its ashes to open its doors on the evening of December 26, 1837.
* Tharda rose from the ashes of the former Corani Empire ( as did Kanday and Rethem ) and is the island's only non-monarchist state ; its patron-client social structure is superficially similar to that of Republican Rome.
The Giants rose from the ashes along with their ballpark, winning the National League pennant in 1911 ( as they also would in 1912 and 1913 ).
The ashes were interpreted as they rose.
They almost succeeded in destroying the Republic in that year, but the Republic rose from its ashes and by the turn of the century, she was one of the two European power centers, together with the France of Louis XIV of France.
Administered until the end of the season by one of the original pillars, Joey Saputo, the club rose from its ashes in 2002, set up as a non-profit organization owned by the Quebec government, Hydro-Québec and Saputo.
René Barjavel wrote several novels with these themes, such as Ravage ( translated as Ashes, ashes ), Le Grand Secret, La Nuit des temps ( translated as The Ice People ), and Une rose au paradis.
Other artists whose music is Scrumpy and Western in flavour include The Yetties from the village of Yetminster in Dorset, The Golden Lion Light Orchestra from Worcestershire, Fred Wedlock, Who's Afear'd ( also from Dorset ), the Skimmity Hitchers ( who rose from the ashes of Who's Afear'd ), the Surfin Turnips ( more punky folk ), Trevor Crozier, the Yokels ( from Wiltshire ), Shag Connors and the Carrot Crunchers, and the Pigsty Hill Light Orchestra.
The Ottoman Empire rose from the ashes, but ( according to the traditional view ) the Golden Age was over.
Area-7 rose from the ashes of Madness cover band Mad Not Madness.
It rose from the ashes with renewed youth to live through another cycle.
The minor league Orioles rose from the ashes, in heroic fashion, going on to win the International League championship that year, and also the Junior World Series over Louisville of the American Association.
By this time she had changed her name from Pilkington to Phoenix, after the mythological bird that rose from the ashes.
Out of the ashes rose a new partnership between Carolco's owner ( Mario Kassar ) and Cinergi's owner ( Andrew G. Vajna ) in 1998.
From the ashes rose a new, singular universe.

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