Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Arkansas Democrat-Gazette" ¶ 18
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

fiery and irascible
With his fiery, irascible temper, short stature ( in two early gags in Hare Trigger, a train he is attempting to rob passes right over top of him and he has to use a set of portable stairs to get on his horse ; in Bugs Bunny Rides Again, he rides a miniature horse ), and fiery red hair, Sam was in some ways an alter-ego of Freleng.

fiery and temperament
Not much is known about her beyond her fiery temperament.
The " fiery Latin temperament " described by early scholars on New Orleans culture made sweeping generalizations to accommodate Creoles of Spanish heritage as well as the original French, though the latter as an ethic group are not considered " Latin " either ethnically or culturally.
Though his fiery temperament was not ideally suited to teaching, Wolf's musical gifts, as well as his personal charm, earned him attention and patronage.
Sergei Rachmaninoff's fellow piano student Matvey Pressman adds, He enthralled you by his power, and he captivated you by the elegance and grace of his playing, by his tempestuous, fiery temperament and by his warmth and charm.
Both while he was alive and after his death ( the first edition of his works, for the most part elaborate sermons, was printed at Lyon in 1501 ), Bernardino's legacy was far from benign: of fanatical moralizing temperament, he preached fiery, intransigent sermons against many classes of people.
War Admiral inherited his father's fiery temperament and talent, but he did not resemble him physically.
She was particularly noted for her fiery temperament and dramatic intensity on stage.
The book reflects her fiery, forthright temperament and acerbic wit.
Lillee was known for his fiery temperament, ' never-say-die ' attitude and popularity with the fans.
A firebrand is a piece of burning wood, but also used to denote a person with a fiery temperament.
A fiery redhead, both in hair colour and temperament, Frost was a no-nonsense and efficient UNIT operative who nonetheless had problems maintaining personal relationships.
His straightforward ways have often put the detective duo at odds with even their fellow police, but while Twitch is considerably more reasonable than his larger partner, ( and often pokes fun at Sam's fiery temperament and statements ) he shows a deep trust and respect for him as well.
James Foster has been known to display a fiery temperament.
An offensive wingback, he is also known for his fiery temperament that leads to altercations with adversary players and referees numerous times.
Reynolds was a shrewd business man, a hard worker, and a good treasurer, but was of too sanguine and fiery a temperament to be a politician of the first rank.
Another uses her delicious dishes to soothe her husband ’ s fiery temperament.

fiery and war
As a fiery god of destruction and war, Nergal doubtless seemed an appropriate choice for the red planet, and he was equated by the Greeks either to the combative demigod Heracles ( Latin Hercules ) or to the war-god Ares ( Latin Mars ) -- hence the current name of the planet.
She also was believed to advance ahead of the Egyptian armies and cut down their enemies with fiery arrows, similar to other war deities She was less known to the people as Crown goddess ..
Chief among those issues was ( 1 ) the legality of the sale of a block of land at Waitara, which had sparked the first war, but Māori unrest was exacerbated by ( 2 ) a new land confiscation strategy launched by the Government and ( 3 ) the emergence of a fiery nationalist religious movement.
* Frederick Douglass, a former slave and a fiery orator, observes the Union forces at war.
Admiral Rozhestvensky, a veteran of the Turkish war, had a fiery temper when dealing with a subordinate, and both officers and men knew to stand clear of " Mad Dog " when a subordinate either disobeyed orders, was incompetent, or both.
In the rest of the war he was often distinguished by his fiery courage.
In Scotland, the fiery cross, known as the Crann Tara, was used as a declaration of war.
He referred to all the soldiers as noble victims of politicians, although he had been one who gave fiery speeches in favor of secession and war.
With the campaign of 1758 began the war of manoeuvre in which Daun, though he missed, through over-caution, many opportunities of crushing the Prussians, at least maintained a steady and cool resistance to the fiery strategy of Frederick.
In Scotland the " fiery cross ", known as the Crann Tara was used as a declaration of war, which required all clan members to rally to the defence of the area.
This is attributed to the " fiery " nature of Mars, the planet of war.
Rupert, on the other hand, had seen the swift fiery charges of the fierce troopers of the Thirty Years ' war, and was backed up by Patrick Ruthven, Lord Ruthven, one of the many Scots who had won honour under King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden.

fiery and was
This fiery swath was actually only a belt of minor planets, almost like the asteroid belt in the original Solar System.
Unprecedented gatherings of thousands of people attended camp meetings where they came to experience salvation ; preaching was fiery and focused on saving the sinner from temptation and backsliding.
The character of Karen McDonald ( Suranne Jones ) was developed, with her fiery marriage to Steve and warring with Tracy Barlow.
In 1916, he was elected to the U. S. House of Representatives, where he had a reputation as a fiery and devoted reformer.
She, like Menken, had a fiery temper and, like every other Bogart spouse, was an actress.
In stark contrast to its predecessor, Huevos was recorded in a swift, fiery fashion, with many first takes, and minimal second guessing.
In this wartime power struggle, he was urged by some of his more fiery allies to have Lenin arrested.
Glyndŵr has remained a notable figure in the popular culture of both Wales and England, portrayed in William Shakespeare's play Henry IV, Part 1 ( anglicised as Owen Glendower ) as a wild and exotic man ruled by magic and emotion (" at my nativity, The front of heaven was full of fiery shapes, Of burning cressets, and at my birth The frame and huge foundation of the earth Shaked like a coward.
In September 2007, after enduring a 12-day orbital mission and a fiery reentry, the European unmanned spacecraft Foton-M3 was retrieved from a field in Kazakhstan.
In contrast to Scrooge's and Hortense's fiery tempers, she was always amazingly calm.
Middle-aged thunder god, Perkūnas, with fiery hair was in the middle.
About the same time he published Passavantius,, a satire directed against Pierre Lizet, the former president of the Parliament of Paris, and principal originator of the " fiery chamber " ( chambre ardente ), who, at the time ( 1551 ) was abbot of St. Victor near Paris and publishing a number of polemical writings.
According to an archaic myth he was sired by Cronus when he had taken the form of a horse and impregnated the nymph Philyra, Chiron's lineage was different from other centaurs, who were born of sun and raincloud, rendered by Greeks of the Classic period as from the union of the king Ixion, consigned to a fiery wheel, and Nephele (" cloud "), which in the Olympian telling Zeus invented to look like Hera.
Their former habit of a mantle with black and white or brown and white stripes — the black or brown stripes representing the scorches the mantle of Elijah received from the fiery chariot as it fell from his shoulders — was discarded and they wore the same habit as the Dominicans, except that the cloak was white.
2003 was most memorable for Carey's fiery encounters with his ex-North Melbourne team mates Glenn Archer and Anthony Stevens in round 6.
After a short and restless sleep one evening, Mendelssohn found himself incapable of moving and had the feeling of something lashing his neck with fiery rods, his heart was palpitating and he was in an extreme anxiety, yet fully conscious.
In Italy it was customary to scatter rose petals from the ceiling of the churches to recall the miracle of the fiery tongues ; hence in Sicily and elsewhere in Italy Whitsunday is called Pasqua rosatum.
Although moved by Carmichael's fiery rhetoric, she was disappointed by her colleagues ' black nationalist sentiments and their rejection of communism as a " white man's thing.
At the end of this fiery course was a goal into which the ball had to be hurled.
His journalism was renowned for its fiery character and uncompromising stance toward " enemies of the revolution " and basic reforms for the poorest members of society.
Despite the profound differences regarding their ethical and world visions, Albizu's fiery and charismatic rhetoric captured Balaguer's imagination and his recollection of this occasion was a harbinger of his passion for politics and intellectual debate.
Ugly dark blotches mottled the dull orange surface and great columns of spinning flame arced around the rim .... < nowiki > watched </ nowiki > the titan sunspots drift slowly across the hideous disc, at times growing larger and merging into great gaping chasms in the fiery atmosphere, while at others dwindling almost to nothingness .... Something was stirring deep within that fiery atmosphere ; something monstrous that roared an insatiable anger against the chains of the Elder Gods which had bound it there for an eternity ....

0.308 seconds.