Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Virgil Earp" ¶ 28
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

What and coward
Despite the fact that she calls him a coward, Macbeth remains reluctant, until she asks: " What beast wasn't, then, that made you break this enterprise to me?

What and was
What else he said was lost in the rattle of gunfire on all sides.
What a spectacle he was, caked with dirt and sweat and blood, filthy as a pig and naked as an Indian, kissing the finest, the sweetest, the bravest, and absolutely the prettiest girl in this whole wonderful world.
What Joyce wanted me to do was go to Thor's house and `` do whatever detectives do '', and get her clothes -- and handbag containing her identification.
What had caught his attention was obscured by the car itself, so that neither the girl nor the truck drivers could see, but Benson knew what it was.
What they wished for most was security ; ;
What Lincoln could not concede was that the states rather than the people were sovereign in the Union.
What was only a vague suspicion in the case of Sherlock Holmes now appears as a direct accusation: the private eye is in danger of turning into his opposite.
What irritated Miriam was that Wright had told the papers about a reasonable offer he had made, which he considered she would accept `` when she tires of publicity ''.
What I fled from was my fear of what, unwittingly, you might betray, without meaning to, about my father and yourself.
What was the list??
What is not so well known, however, and what is quite important for understanding the issues of this early quarrel, is the kind of attack on literature that Sidney was answering.
What was true for archaeology was also true of place-name studies.
What they meant was that there was no evidence to show that the south and east coasts of Britain received Germanic settlers conspicuously earlier than some other parts of England.
What was perhaps more important than his concept of the nature of history and the historical method were those forces which shaped the direction of his thought.
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 ''.
What was he doing??
What Mr. Kennedy, in fact, wrote was: `` It is the Department's view that no anti-trust enforcement considerations justify any loss of revenue of this proportion ''.
What was missing in the Governor's argument, as in so many similar arguments, was a premise which would enable one to make the ethical leap from what might be militarily desirable to what is right.
What if it came when he was playing, or was asleep and dreaming??
What the hell was he up to now??

What and !
She wrote gay plays about the girls for family entertainments, like `` Oh, What Fun!!
What I have to put up with!!
What a fool he had been to think of his brother!!
What a patchwork of proclamations and renunciations!!
`` What a nasty fall was there ''!!
What a swinging group they must have been when they first started entertaining!!
What a terrible thing, that `` wailing wall '' in Berlin!!
What a man this Petipa was!!
What a production to make of a letter commending your own son!!
* What a Widow!
# 4. 50 from Paddington, or What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw!
This first film was based on the 1957 novel 4: 50 from Paddington ( U. S. title, What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw!
:" What a joy he is!
What a shame!
" What a disgrace for Marlborough ," exulted Villeroi, " to have made false movements without any result!
" Corporal Collins later recalled that, after Wegener's death, Herbert threw a revolver in the German captain's face and screamed, " What about the Lusitania, you bastard!

coward and was
If a guest was considered a ' coward ' for dropping out of the game, he could be branded as a ' deserter ' and not invited back to further drinking bouts.
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.
Far from being a saint, then, he was at best a fool, perhaps an anti-Semite and probably a coward.
During his absence Segimerus was declared a coward by other Germanic chieftains because he had bowed down to Roman rule – a crime punishable by death under Germanic law.
Bligh was painted as a coward for this but Duffy argues that if Bligh was hiding it would have been to escape and thwart the coup.
His Malvolio was a swaggering and conceited fool, King John a superstitious and deceitful coward, and Macbeth a neurotic and self-torturing monarch.
As he admitted in the Papers, Flashman was a coward, who would flee from danger if there was any way to do so, and on some occasions collapsed in funk.
Of course, Flashman arrived at the Fort by accident, collapsed in terror rather than fight, was forced to stand and show fight by his subordinate, and was ' rumbled ' for a complete coward.
Essex claimed that he was only impotent with her and had been perfectly capable with other women, adding that she " reviled him, and miscalled him, terming him a cow and coward, and beast.
The Zulu attitude towards firearms was that: " The generality of Zulu warriors, however, would not have firearms-the arms of a coward, as they said, for they enable the poltroon to kill the brave without awaiting his attack.
He was the son of Panopeus and had the reputation for being a coward.
In the first place you attacked me before all the Danaans and said that I was a coward and no soldier ...'" Achaean council-Book IX
If one party failed to appear, he was accounted a coward.
During the struggle to achieve power, Streicher was accused by the opposition of the Nazi party as being “ a liar, a coward, of having unsavory friends, mistreating his wife and of flirting with women ”.
The boys hear about what happened and decide he was a coward.
When first offered the project, Cagney's agent was convinced that his star property would never consent to playing a role where he would be depicted as an abject coward being dragged to his execution.
Smith suggested a tribal name that was in origin pejorative, meaning " the cowards ", cognate to quake, Old Norse hvikari " coward ".
" He therefore responded in kind in Have With You To Saffron-Walden ( 1596 ) with various observations on Barnes: he was a bad poet, he had dreadful dress sense (..." getting him a strange pair of Babylonian britches, with a codpiece as big as a Bolognian sausage ...") and had been a coward on the field of battle during the wars in France.
The Zulu attitude towards firearms was that: " The generality of Zulu warriors, however, would not have firearms – the arms of a coward, as they said, for they enable the poltroon to kill the brave without awaiting his attack.
The women's suffrage movement was sharply divided, the slight majority becoming very enthusiastic patriots and asking their members to give white feathers ( the sign of the coward ) in the streets to men of military age who had not joined the army.
Taped remarks from the President were aired from Barksdale Air Force Base, stating that " freedom itself was attacked this morning by a faceless coward and freedom will be defended.
No woman shall be left aboard this ship because Ben Guggenheim was a coward.

0.708 seconds.