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Page "The Taming of the Shrew" ¶ 181
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see and her
Her hat had come off and fallen behind her shoulders, held by the string, and he could see her face more clearly than he had at any time before.
Tell her Curt Adams wants to see her ''.
And now she could see him, looking uncommon handsome, standing there beside Sally Jackson and her folks in front of their trail-worn wagon.
And she was deeply thankful that she could see her now, out there in the midst of a gay, youthful circle, skipping and singing, `` Farmer in the dell, Farmer in the dell, Heigh-ho the dairy-oh, the farmer in the dell ''.
Her form was silhouetted and with the strong light I could see the outlines of her body, a body that an artist or anyone else would have admired.
You shall see her at dinner ''.
How would you ever see her again??
She would look at Jack, with that hidden something in her eyes, and Jack would see the Woman and become breathless and a little sick.
Ann, pleased to see her friend happy, was intrigued by the new fruits a friend of Captain Heard had sent on board for their enjoyment.
It had been whispered privately that she had smiled in the congregation, and the Governor Prence sent to knoe her business, and command, after punishment as the bench see fit, her departure and also anyone who brought her to the place from which she came ' ''.
Those famous lines of the Greek Anthology with which a fading beauty dedicates her mirror at the shrine of a goddess reveal a wise attitude: `` Venus, take my votive glass, Since I am not what I was, What from this day I shall be, Venus, let me never see ''.
And he would see her that evening.
It was not as though she noted clearly that her nephews had not been to see her for ten years, not since their last journey eastward to witness their Uncle Izaak being lowered into the rocky soil ; ;
The first thing every morning when she washed her face she could see the scar on her chin where he'd cut her with a boot cleat, and maybe she saw him heaving it again, the dirty sock popping out as it flew.
It was Giselle, the fille de chambre, come to clean the room, and while she stood before him with ears pricked up and regard all curiosity, explaining her errand, Alex could see from the corner of his eye the doctor doing all he could to calm the displeased bird.
I lived to see an envelope of hers in the morning mail and to lock myself in my room in the afternoon to reread her letter for the tenth time and finally prepare an answer.
'' and others concerning camp friends who resided in her suburban neighborhood,, and news of her commencing again her piano lessons, her private school, a visit to Boston to see her grandparents and an uncle who was a surgeon returned on furlough, wounded, from the war in Europe.

see and noble
In the third verse ( see above ), the author scolds the materialistic and self-serving robber barons of her day, and urges America to live up to its noble ideals and to honor, with both word and deed, the memory of those who died for their country.
The noble gases do not form diatomic molecules: this can be explained using molecular orbital theory ( see molecular orbital diagram ).
From 1587 to 1593 Kyd was in the service of an unidentified noble, since, after his imprisonment in 1593 ( see below ), he wrote to have lost " the favours of my Lord, whom I haue servd almost theis vi yeres nowe ".
This sort of account emerges from Solon's poems ( e. g. see below Solon the reformer and poet ), in which he casts himself in the role of a noble mediator between two intemperate and unruly factions.
What is said about Cleopatra is not always what one would normally say about a ruler ; the image that is created makes the audience expect “ to see on stage not a noble Sovereign, but a dark, dangerous, evil, sensual and lewd creature who has harnessed the ‘ captain ’ s heart ”.
The principal and almost contemporary source for the career of Priscillian is the Gallic chronicler Sulpicius Severus, who characterized him ( Chronica II. 46 ) as noble and rich, a layman who had devoted his life to study, vain of his classical pagan education, already being looked on with misgivings ( see Gregory of Tours ).
* see Datu, one of the traditional Philippine noble titles used along with Datu, Lakan and Sultan, depending on the prestige and wealth of the nobleman.
" and had " gradually learnt to see that it is just as noble a conception of Deity, to believe that He created primal forms capable of self development into all forms needful pro tempore and pro loco, as to believe that He required a fresh act of intervention to supply the lacunas which He Himself had made ", asking " whether the former be not the loftier thought.
Daniel Defoe enlivens this account of the Waveney's Broads course: The River Waveney is a considerable river, and of a deep and full channel, navigable for large barges as high as Beccles ; it runs for a course of about fifty miles, between the two counties of Suffolk and Norfolk, as a boundary to both ; and pushing on, tho ' with a gentle stream, towards the sea, no one would doubt, but, that when they see the river growing broader and deeper, and going directly towards the sea, even to the edge of the beach ; that is to say, within a mile of the main ocean ; no stranger, I say, but would expect to see its entrance into the sea at that place, and a noble harbour for ships at the mouth of it ; when on a sudden, the land rising high by the sea-side, crosses the head of the river, like a dam, checks the whole course of it, and it returns, bending its course west, for two miles, or thereabouts ; and then turning north, thro ' another long course of meadows ( joining to those just now mention'd ) seeks out the River Yare, that it may join its water with hers, and find their way to the sea together.
A " galvanic series " is a hierarchy of metals ( or other electrically conductive materials, including composites and semimetals ) that runs from noble to active, and allows designers to see at a glance how materials will interact in the environment used to generate the series.
Tom is admitted once more to see Mrs Fitzpatrick, and Lady Bellaston joins them — as does the noble lord, who ignores Tom.
:" English court " redirects here ; for the royal and noble court, see Court ( royal ).
For example, Hans Christian Andersen's classic " The Little Mermaid " ends with a tragic, noble sacrifice in which the Mermaid must see her beloved Prince marry another girl — but in the Disney version, the Mermaid does get to marry her Prince and live with him happily ever after.
Historically, during the Late Medieval to the Early Modern period, the term referred to a heavily armoured cavalryman of noble birth, primarily serving in the French army ( see Gendarme ( historical )).
* Archbishops and bishops with a fixed see were to be appointed to replace the noble laypersons who had received dioceses under Charles Martel ;
John Evelyn saw it 22 April 1656: " Went to see his Majesty's house at Eltham ; both the palace and chapel in miserable ruins, the noble wood and park destroyed by Rich the rebel ".
: For the Scottish noble, see Alexander Wedderburn.
An Imperial Court ( or imperial court ) is the noble court of an empire ( see List of empires ).
Ivan Gundulić was born in Dubrovnik in a wealthy Ragusan noble family ( see House of Gundulić ) in 8 January 1589.
: For " Group VIII ", the rightmost group on the Periodic Table, see noble gas.
Moondragon was present when the Avengers confronted Korvac ; her powers allowed her to see into his mind while they fought, and she decided that his goal of saving the universe by ruling it was noble ; she stayed out of the battle until Korvac, dejected, committed suicide.
Inescutcheons also appear in personal and civic armory as simple common charges ( for example, see the arms of the noble French family of Abbeville, pictured at far right below ).
They were owned by the noble families, who were supposed to answer royal call in case of an armed conflict ( see Pospolite ruszenie ).

see and lord
The word derives from traditional inherited divisions of the countryside, reassigned as local jurisdictions known as manors or seigneuries ; each manor being subject to a lord ( French seigneur ), usually holding his position in return for undertakings offered to a higher lord ( see Feudalism ).
The bard Iolo Goch (" Red Iolo "), himself a Welsh lord, visited him in the 1390s and wrote a number of odes to Owain, praising Owain's liberality, and writing of Sycharth, " Rare was it there / to see a latch or a lock.
After hearing the guards ' story, the chorus comments, " My lord, the thought has risen in my mind :/ Do we not see in this the hand of God?
Secondly, in medieval Gaelic and Welsh society, a bard ( Scottish and Irish Gaelic ) or bardd ( Welsh ) was a professional poet, employed to compose eulogies for his lord ( see planxty ).
In 1474 Lauenburg's liege lord Emperor Frederick III elevated Christian I as Count of Holstein to Duke of Holstein, thus becoming an immediate imperial vassal ( see imperial immediacy ).
: For the lord of Chièvres, advisor to Emperor Charles V, see: William de Croÿ.
In 1474 Lauenburg's liege lord Emperor Frederick III elevated Christian I as Count of Holstein-Rendsburg to Duke of Holstein, thus becoming an immediate imperial ( reichsunmittelbar ) vassal ( see imperial immediacy ).
One riddle, as stated in Hauksbók, refers to " the weaponless maids who fight around their lord, the ever sheltering and the ever attacking him ," although there is controversy over whether the word weaponless refers to the maids or, as in other versions, to the king himself, which may support the argument that a " weaponless king " cannot take part in captures ( see # Balance of play ).
Under the manorial system a bailiff of the manor represented the peasants to the lord, oversaw the lands and buildings of the manor, collected fines and rents, and managed the profits and expenses of the manor and farm ( see Walter of Henley ).
The rank of the title-holder is not determined by the title itself, but by his degree of sovereignty, the rank of his lord, or the age of the princely dynasty ( note the terms Uradel, Briefadel, altfürstliche, neufürstliche ; and see German nobility ).
Narayan further explained that the reason he had been given a chance to see his form was because his beauty and love would be a source of inspiration and would fuel his dormant desire to be with the lord again.
It was originally a declaration of fealty in the feudal system ( see Homage ( medieval ))— swearing that one was the man ( French: homme ) of the feudal lord.
It was the manor house ( see below ) and he as lord of the manor would have stayed there when he came to Risborough, but it was hardly palatial and might be better described as a hunting lodge.
The affix ' Royal ' was given to the village in the late 11th century by the king, who gave the lord of the manor of Farnham Bertram de Verdun the Grand Serjeanty, on the condition of providing a glove and putting it on the king's right hand at the coronation, and supporting his right arm, while the Royal sceptre was in his hand ( see also Manor of Worksop ).
Thus, Sigvat probably referred to an institution similar to the Danish heimþegar ( see below ) or to the housecarls of Canute the Great ( see below ): free men in the service of a king or lord, who gave them gifts as payment of said service.
He is the person who had a dream to see the tallest lord shiva statue in Nepal and therefore he worked hard and pulled all the resources to make this happen.
I see within your body the gods, as also all the groups of various beings ; and the lord Brahma seated on ( his ) lotus seat, and all the sages and celestial snakes.
Several archaic titles of nobility ( e. g., Middle English Sir ( knight ), Old French Sire ( lord ), proto-Slavic Tsar ( monarch ), Biblical Hebrew Sar ( chief ), Akkadian Saris ( court minister ), Old Egyptian Ser ( prince )) derive from the same etymological root, likely Sumerian ( from Sarrum meaning " king "; see Sargon of Akkad ).
" If our lord the King by his discerning judgment see that as Queen Mary by her sword of justice had no power over her subjects consciences ( for then had she power to make them all Papists, and all that resisted her therein suffered justly as evil doers ) neither hath our lord the King by that sword of justice power over his subjects consciences: for all earthly powers are one and the same in their several dominions.
The old men say, " Look, my lord the king, and see a wonder, this mountain which God has set as a great boundary.

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