Help


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

Some Related Sentences

She and loved
She might have been someone he had once loved.
She loved him and missed his company.
She loved the children.
She would weep in private, he was sure, for she loved him in her frigid way, though in public she would be dry-eyed.
She was loved by Apollo and consorted with him in said grove.
" She loved him and wanted him and did not understand him.
She loved school and loved to study.
She readily acknowledged that Gregory Bateson was the husband she loved the most.
She is most famous for her cover version of the Little Willie John hit " Fever " written by Eddie Cooley and John Davenport, to which she added her own, uncopyrighted lyrics (" Romeo loved Juliet ," " Captain Smith and Pocahontas ") and her rendition of Leiber and Stoller's " Is That All There Is ?".
She said: " I loved it.
She wants to avenge the murder of her four-year-old brother, telling Léon that he was the only one of her family she loved.
She believed that God loved and wanted to save everyone.
She also loved dolls as a young girl, as captured by a family portrait in which seven-year-old Antonia excitedly held up a fancy doll.
She justified herself by saying that " she was used to play and never loved to do anything that looked like an affected constraint.
She was said to be well loved by the residents of Lille, who by that time numbered 10, 000.
She is loved by both Quasimodo and Claude Frollo, but falls deeply in love with Captain Phoebus, a handsome soldier who she believes will rightly protect her but who simply wants to seduce her.
She has written more than fifty novels including the much loved " Flambards " series of pony stories, for which she won both the 1969 Carnegie Medal in Literature from the Library Association and the 1970 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, judged by a panel of British children's writers.
She loved dancing and pageants, activities often frowned upon in Presbyterian Scotland, but for which she found a vibrant outlet in Jacobean London, where she created a " rich and hospitable " cultural climate at the royal court, became an enthusiastic playgoer, and sponsored lavish masques.
She claims to never have loved him and that she ’ d only been using him to advance her career.
She is a childhood friend of David Copperfield, who loved her in his childhood days.
She loved the annual science fairs at her classes, and frequently set off experiments in her parents basement at the age of 7 +.
She was a nymph loved by Apollo, the sun god.
She loved painting and politics and served as a stabilizing influence throughout their enduring marriage ; they had three children: David, Jane, and Mary.
She loves and is loved by Troilus and then Diomedes.

She and reading
She taught her husband arithmetic up to basic algebra and tutored him to improve his literacy, reading, and writing skills.
She bases this reading on Genesis 1, calling that the true record of creation in contrast to Genesis 2, the false record of creation obscuring the true ( which occurred when " a mist went up from the face of the ground ").
She also sketched President Teddy Roosevelt during her White House visits in 1902, during which " He sat for two hours, talking most of the time, reciting Kipling, and reading scraps of Browning.
She was chronically ill as a child and spent much of her time reading literature of the fantastic.
She and Herman were deported to Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria, where he died, as Gemma learned from reading a newspaper account a year following her release.
She learned to " hear " people's speech by reading their lips with her hands — her sense of touch had become extremely subtle.
She became proficient at using Braille and reading sign language with her hands as well.
She said, " I learned important reading is at home from my mother.
She reflected on her employment experiences to a group of children in 2003, saying, " I worked as a teacher and librarian and I learned how important reading is in school and in life.
She implemented four major initiatives: Take Time For Kids, an awareness campaign to educate parents and caregivers on parenting ; family literacy, through cooperation with the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy, she urged Texas communities to establish family literacy programs ; Reach Out and Read, a pediatric reading program ; and Ready to Read, an early childhood educational program.
She found most offensive the reading of her love letters before her eyes by a hostile police agent.
The Court, like most Imperial Courts, was considered a reflection of the ruler at its center and Elizabeth was said to be “ the laziest, most extravagant and most amorous of sovereigns .” Elizabeth was intelligent but lacked the discipline and early education necessary to flourish as an intellectual ; she found the reading of secular literature to be “ injurious to health .” She kind and warm-hearted for the emotions sake alone, once going so far as to offer to finance the reconstruction of Lisbon after the 1755 earthquake destroyed the Portuguese city despite having and wanting no diplomatic relationship with the nation.
She snapped after reading about one infidelity in a newspaper.
She organised some 37 women in her Leek School of Art Embroidery to collaborate working from a full-scale water-colour facsimile drawing provided by the South Kensington Museum The full-size replica was finished in 1886 and is now exhibited in the Museum of Reading in Reading, Berkshire, England .< ref name = reading >
She earned further notoriety in Ballarat when, after reading a bad review in The Ballarat Times, she attacked the editor, Henry Seekamp with a whip.
She also spent a great deal of time sitting with her mother and ill brother, reading to her mother or playing games to occupy the time.
She later recounted that she was " exceedingly fond of reading " and spent countless hours in the large family library.
She passed the time by reading poetry, learning to play the banjo and studying mechanics.
She had, in Shapiro's reading, a ' revolutionary agenda ' that consisted in upturning the myths of America's founding fathers and the Puritan heritage.
She had gotten off a bus, and was seated on a bench, reading a book.
She was completely different from the king: he enjoyed hunting and riding, while she enjoyed reading and art.
She enjoyed reading, especially books by Charles Dickens in her father's small den, and she took a strong interest in flowers, which she learned to classify with a copy of Asa Gray's Elements of Botany.
She was instrumental in the founding of the first public mental hospital in Pennsylvania, the Harrisburg State Hospital, and later in establishing its library and reading room in 1853.
She wrote to the World Service " Waveguide " program complaining that her listening had been spoiled by a female voice reading out numbers in English and she asked the announcer what this interference was.
She was inspired by her reading of John L. Motley's lengthy, multi-volume history works: The Rise of the Dutch Republic, and The History of the United Netherlands.

0.666 seconds.