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phrase and anger
The song was titled " Don't Make Me Over ", the title ( according to the A & E Biography of Dionne Warwick ) supplied by Warwick herself, when she snapped the phrase at producers Burt Bacharach and Hal David in anger.
The trial court granted the motion, but the Minnesota Supreme Court reversed, rejecting petitioner's overbreadth claim because, as the Minnesota Court had construed the Ordinance in prior cases, the phrase " arouses anger, alarm or resentment in others " limited the reach of the ordinance to conduct that amounted to fighting words under the Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire decision.
The Latin phrase Odium theologicum ( literally meaning " theological hatred ") is the name originally given to the often intense anger and hatred generated by disputes over theology.
The Star Trek franchise once again used a variation of the phrase in the 2009 film Star Trek, in which the character James T. Kirk used the phrase to goad Spock ( a character known for his propensity for logic ) to anger, in order to make the latter realize that he was emotionally compromised.

phrase and turned
He turned back to the screens, the crucial, conclusive phrase on his lips.
But instead of this too many of the younger Germans simply make use of the phrase historical materialism ( and everything can be turned into a phrase ) only in order to get their own relatively scanty historical knowledge — for economic history is still in its swaddling clothes!
Some also began to use the phrase to refer to non-marital unions: a man interviewed in Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor admitted: " I never had a wife, but I have had two or three broomstick matches, though they never turned out happy.
In an oft-quoted phrase, Ranjitsinhji said of Grace that " he turned the old one-stringed instrument ( i. e., the cricket bat ) into a many-chorded lyre " and that " the theory of modern batting is in all essentials the result of W. G.
At the beginning of the century, there was a phrase " database mining "™, trademarked by HNC, a San Diego-based company ( now merged into FICO ), to pitch their Data Mining Workstation ; researchers consequently turned to " data mining ".
is turned almost wholly on his freeness with the startling idea or phrase, as glibly tossed off ( for the most part ) by a young lady who appears a wide-eyed child.
The War that changed the South forever has turned his world upside down, with everything he had believed in ' gone with the wind ', a phrase composed by the poet Ernest Dowson.
In The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha: Apocalypic Literature and Testaments edited by James H. Charlesworth, manuscript J, taken as the best representative of the longer recension, has " and three of them descended " ( p. 130 ), while manuscript A, taken as the best representative of the shorter recension, has " and they descended ", which might indicate that all the Grigori descended, or 200 princes of them, or 200 princes and 200 followers, since it follows the phrase " These are the Grigori, 200 princes of whom turned aside, 200 walking in their train " ( p. 131 ).
Brown subsequently conceded that when he had " used the phrase ' an agent ' to describe someone who turned out to be I. F.
It is not uncommon for a Sturges character to deliver an exquisitely turned phrase and take an elaborate pratfall within the same scene.
1977's The Kentucky Fried Movie turned the phrase into a running gag.
Cleese turned the phrase into a song for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, the first time Cleese had played Basil Fawlty in 27 years.
Each time a panelist mentions a word that is part of the phrase that describes the secret talent, the word is turned over on a game board displaying the puzzle.
He turned the phrase " West of the Rockies " into Rock of the Westies.
Aquinas ' phrase was consciously turned on its head by John Wesley, who informed a correspondent that it was " in 1730 I began to be homo unius libri, to study ( comparatively ) no book but the Bible.
" Bugs replies with the phrase that turned him into Elmer.
It is also believed that Macdonald coined the popular phrase " on your bike " as he turned away the incumbent Edinburgh mayor who claimed the number plate was rightfully his.
His dismissal led to a widely circulated witticism in Ford circles as the hallmark phrase of Henry Ford I, " History is bunk ", was turned around to " Bunkie is history ".
This phrase is mostly used when exploring the sensations and feelings of the characters: " As if she felt his look, she turned to him " ( chapter 22 ); " He had shaken off his emotion as if he was ashamed of ever giving way to it " ( chapter 28 ); " She lifted up her head, as if she took pride in any delicacy of feeling which Mr. Thornton had shown " ( chapter 39 ).
: A database search for the phrase, " If we, then the terrorists have won ," turned up hundreds of hits in U. S. newspapers and magazines.
In the 1950s and 1960s, thanks largely to William F. Buckley's popularization of the phrase, Young Americans for Freedom turned it into a political slogan.
When Governor Frederick Broome turned the first sod on the Great Southern Railway at Beverley on 20 October 1886, he again used the phrase, presumably as an allusion to Weld's earlier use.
This is a process by which a grammatical expression is turned into a noun phrase.

phrase and back
there was no Martian concept to match it -- unless one took `` church '' and `` worship '' and `` God '' and `` congregation '' and many other words and equated them to the totality of the only world he had known during growing-waiting then forced the concept back into English in that phrase which had been rejected ( by each differently ) by Jubal, by Mahmoud, by Digby.
In the United States, farmland was typically divided as such, and the phrase " the back 40 " would refer to the 40 acre parcel to the back of the farm.
The American slang phrase bo diddly meaning " absolutely nothing " goes back possibly to the early 20th century or earlier.
The phrase has been used to mean giving actual or figurative support or aid to someone in a situation or project, i. e. to " watch their back ".
Much as in a sunset, the atmosphere tends to more strongly scatter light with shorter wavelengths, so the illumination of the Moon by refracted light has a red hue, thus the phrase ' Blood Moon ' is often found in descriptions of such lunar events as far back as eclipses are recorded.
This usage dates back to the Medieval period, where the phrase ' not worth a fart ' would be applied to an item held to be worthless.
' I have to come back to it here, however, for the particular flavor of Kubla Khan, with its air of mystery, is describable in part through that convenient phrase.
Prior to Buzan's popularization, the phrase " mind map " dates back at least a century.
He derived the phrase spontaneous order from Gestalt psychology, and it was adopted by the classical liberal economist Frederick Hayek, although the concept can be traced back to at least Adam Smith.
In Polish, a word / phrase can be brought to the front or, less commonly, put to the back of a sentence or clause to add emphasis e. g. " Roweru ci nie kupię " ( I won't buy you a bicycle ), " Od piątej czekam " ( I've been waiting since five ).
The phrase can be traced back to the 1936 publication of General Ludendorff ’ s World War I memoir Der Totale Krieg (" The Total War ").
In November 2001, Taliban, Al-Qaeda combatants and ISI operatives were safely evacuated from Kunduz on Pakistan Army cargo aircraft to Pakistan Air Force bases in Chitral and Gilgit in Pakistan's Northern Areas in what has been dubbed the " Airlift of Evil " Former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf wrote in his memoirs that Richard Armitage, the former US deputy secretary of state, said Pakistan would be " bombed back to the stone-age " if it continued to support the Taliban, although Armitage has since denied using the " stone age " phrase.
Rousseau's striking phrase that man must " be forced to be free " should be understood this way: since the indivisible and inalienable popular sovereignty decides what is good for the whole, then if an individual lapses back into his ordinary egoism and disobeys the leadership, he will be forced to listen to what they decided as a member of the collectivity ( i. e. as citizens ).
Dancers use the phrase " hop, hop back " for these three movements, and there is a slight pause between the hop, and hop back.
The phrase for this whole movement is: " hop, hop back, hop back 2-3-4.
A common example is, in English, " The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog's back " which includes an apostrophe by adding " dog's back " to the phrase.
To " bite one's tongue " is a phrase which describes holding back an opinion to avoid causing offence.
At its simplest, this is just a short phrase which is played back as necessary, e. g. the Mind the gap announcement introduced by London Underground in 1969.
The term goes back to the early 1900s, and is known to have been used in the U. S. Marine Corps in the 1940s, where it was often expressed in the phrase " as fucked up as a Chinese fire drill.

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