Some years ago, I was in Judge Gladys Kessler's courtroom and admired the crisp decisiveness of her judicial temperament. |
|
As a schoolboy he had regularly passed the terrace and admired the houses' style and rundown grandeur. |
|
Our destination was the marsh edge, where we admired a stand of bald cypress, Taxodium distichum. |
|
His architectural sculpture and terra-cotta portrait busts of leading citizens were much admired in their day. |
|
Lord Jenkins of Hillhead was an admired writer whose biographies centred on the world in which he forged a successful career of his own. |
|
We looked through the sheds of woolcraft exhibitions and admired and marveled at some of the work on display. |
|
I have known and admired him since the early 1970's when we were postdocs together at Cambridge University. |
|
The eyes had been shadowed and the lips painted, the corsages had been attached, the flowers admired and the chocolates eaten. |
|
Have these people never walked on a leafy tow path, admired the multi-coloured boats or acknowledged the cheery salutation from a bargee? |
|
I'd always admired the way jewelers could place stones and create settings. |
|
He was a first baseman and a left-handed batter and I admired the way he played. |
|
The magnificent gardens of the well maintained houses on the corner of Maryville were greatly admired. |
|
Moore was admired and envied by 40-year-old women around the world for capturing the heart of an energetic beau 15 years her junior. |
|
I unwrapped my new turquoise heels from their delicate tissue paper and admired myself in the mirror. |
|
And their centers had turned into brown patches where it seemed even the little toadstools I had stupidly admired had trouble growing. |
|
Inside the restored corn mill we admired a variety of highly decorated canal boats, toleware and artifacts. |
|
The Aztecs, for example, admired and collected the art of their predecessors, the Toltecs and Olmecs. |
|
Instead she merely watched him and admired how the sun reflected off his opaline and topaz colored feathers. |
|
One of the most admired castles, it is a symbol of the topmost defence creation by medieval man. |
|
I admired them all a great deal, but would perhaps have picked the flautist on points myself. |
|
|
She sat with his head cradled in her lap and admired the perfect features of her beloved. |
|
Bach admired the theme, extemporised a fugue on it, and said that he would make a copperplate of it. |
|
She was a benign, kind and gentle lady whom Julia had admired, respected and adored greatly. |
|
His design was a tour de force, and it became one of the most glamorous and widely admired of all the Cold War embassies. |
|
The apple is esteemed as both an eater and cooker and is admired for its fine colouring, shape and size. |
|
His bloodshot eyes admired the clouds, their gentle and roaming cotton wool shapes. |
|
They had admired his silky black hair and his huge violet eyes, pinched his plump cheeks and fussed over him. |
|
Sampson's skills as a composer and guitar player are admired throughout the area. |
|
I've admired the fallen trees this morning, and the broken branches, and I've hauled many of them off the paths. |
|
You have shown a firmness and a commitment that has been admired by our members. |
|
She was a lady of great spirit, independence, determination and resourcefulness, much admired and much liked, and she will be greatly missed. |
|
I had some cake with them and admired Kait when she modeled her bathing suit for us. |
|
These kapok or silk-cotton trees belong to the Bombax family, Bombacaceae, which includes many fascinating, handsome and much admired trees. |
|
His trusting management style, and his genial manner, were no longer admired. |
|
The story confirms a preference for the unconsummated love of a distant, but admired object, over the conjugal relationship. |
|
And these were many, written in his much admired and inimitable prose style. |
|
I admired the apple green plumage on its chest that flowed into the fiery orange tail feathers and wing feathers. |
|
What I admired most about this book was the writer's fearlessness in portraying herself truthfully. |
|
I've always admired my mom's fearlessness to rip things up, start over, jump in. |
|
Long before I became a mother, I admired and appreciated the beautiful way she photographs babies. |
|
|
Anyway, I was interested in what Margaret Drabble thought and felt and rather admired her incautiousness. |
|
As in Mantegna, whom he admired, Burne-Jones's drawing and coloration are sharp and pellucid. |
|
This was impressed on me when I was about 13 or 14, by an art teacher that I admired very much. |
|
It was like a dream, really, to have fancied this boy for weeks, then discover he admired her too. |
|
Her people admired her and she continued to be an important figure in her homeland. |
|
He was a principal of the company, a public and critics' favorite, and admired personally and professionally by his fellow dancers. |
|
There was a persistency to his nature, a sort of dogged determination that she would have admired if it didn't grate her so. |
|
The children were perplexed by her unexpected good humor, but they admired her good-natured bravery in the face of personal tragedy. |
|
I admired the energy of the prose, the juxtapositions, the surreal imagery, the insights. |
|
Other Italians admired the quality of permanence which printing gave to literature in general. |
|
She took her daughter out to see them and they admired the little girl as they told her fortune. |
|
Jack, the elder, works at the coal mine and is admired by his pals for his defiant attitude. |
|
He always admired a Pembroke table I'd made years ago, and in fact, he commented on it almost every time he came to our house. |
|
But he was also a keen footballer who admired his idols Manchester United and who enjoyed a kickabout with friends. |
|
By the nineteenth century, the Titian was recognised as the clou of the collection, and was greatly admired. |
|
Her sisters had been praised and admired and stared at all their lives for their spellbinding, hypnotic electric-blue eyes. |
|
She slipped her feet into her black patent leather shoes, and admired herself in the mirror. |
|
Five minutes later, five Euros lighter, Lindsey flushed with pride as all admired her pashmina. |
|
Edmund Rubbra's symphonic cycle has long been admired as one of the finest of the century. |
|
I admired Catherine greatly for her constancy and sweet-tempered attitude about life. |
|
|
He admired the truthfulness of landscapes painted by an unschooled artist, who became his first teacher. |
|
Through the years I have protected you like a brother, cherished you as a friend, and admired you like a suitor. |
|
Throughout Tanzania, the Sukuma are admired for the spectacular appeal of their dance performances. |
|
This subtle blend of colour only charms the senses and begs to be pondered, assimilated and admired. |
|
In his hunger to possess books he admired, one friend copied down, sentence by sentence into a notebook, entire chapters from a favourite book. |
|
It did not take long for the cricketing community to realise why Cronje was admired and held in high esteem. |
|
During a secret speech in February 1956 he condemned the policies of the hitherto much admired Stalin and accused him of hideous crimes. |
|
He admired outlaws when their outlawry was conducted with daring and intelligence. |
|
Certainly his poems were much appreciated, for example Lucretius admired his hexametric poetry. |
|
I admired players but my heroes were the ones who were doing what I wanted to be doing or achieving in a year's time. |
|
Delaroche incorporated a widely admired portrait of Antonello da Messina in his 1841 hemicycle at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. |
|
He is often admired for his tasteful shirts, cool strides and groovy haircuts. |
|
I say this realizing that it could be a senior Administration official whom I generally have respected or admired. |
|
As he angled, we admired his teal plumage, chestnut neck, pine green cap, and white ventral stripe. |
|
A founder of the native-plant movement, he was admired by botanists, nurserymen, arboretum and public garden directors, and authors. |
|
I just stood back and admired the fine embroidery, trying to imagine if it was hand stitched and how long it would have taken that person. |
|
I always admired in particular his broad range of interests and activities. |
|
In the novel Stark assigns narrator Jack Burden the task of uncovering dirt on the universally admired Judge Monty Irwin. |
|
He admired her determination, but thought her survival tactics were a bit suicidal at times. |
|
Selling is in our American blood, and the ability to do it well is elusive and admired. |
|
|
Dire circumstances gave social sanction to small scale corruption and spivs were simultaneously despised and admired as buccaneers. |
|
His performance symbolised the true bulldog, never-say-die spirit which is deservedly admired. |
|
In keeping with the times, George was a strict, church-going Anglican who nevertheless admired Nonconformists. |
|
From the dimmish light of the hallway, I opened my room's door to a small entryway and admired the hardwood floors. |
|
Grunwald has admired old blues music since he was 10 years old, immediately drawn to the soulfulness of the genre. |
|
Or does he impinge on our current consciousness as a dandified dilettante admired by his own period but of utter irrelevance to ours? |
|
He despised quacks and charlatans because he admired the power of thought and reason so profoundly. |
|
Reg was a most popular man, admired for his leadership qualities and sincere dedication to everything he tackled. |
|
His humour was waspish and admired even by those who were often the target. |
|
Anyone who can has to be admired for they have a strength of character and bravery which I do not possess. |
|
Unlike axe brandishers, slaughterers are deeply respected and admired by the other warriors of their tribe. |
|
I want to see entrepreneurs become more admired and respected for their contribution to society. |
|
We have long admired the commitment and courage of Adi Roche and her fantastic team. |
|
He is admired by people with regard to his sporting career, but he also strikes me as a true gentleman! |
|
Will may have been the youngest on board the Louisa May, but every crewmember admired and respected him. |
|
What a grievous loss his death is to American culture and to those of us who knew him personally, admired, and loved him. |
|
She was very well respected and admired by most people in this Country, Canada. |
|
Here was a film that I admired in some respects, but which did not stir any kind of passion in me, one way or another. |
|
All she is doing is supporting her belief and she should be respected and admired for that. |
|
He was a good father, grandfather and friend and he was highly respected and admired by many. |
|
|
He was respected and admired by all the people, yet he still managed to be one of them. |
|
The passion for what they were doing was obvious and I admired their courage. |
|
From what I learned from my elders he was very much admired and respected by all who knew him. |
|
They made a fine impression upon all who visited them and were greatly admired. |
|
The mask which Jenny Pegg had won second prize with at the craft rally, was much admired. |
|
Soon the Ngaere Gardens were being admired by visitors who came from far and wide. |
|
The remarkable thing is that, for all its many faults, the garden is much admired. |
|
We talked to one of the gardeners and admired the fruit, vegetables and, of course, the flowers. |
|
Roosevelt the Germanist admired the kaiser's finer Teutonic qualities, as indeed he did those of Bismarck and Helmuth von Moltke. |
|
The occasion emphasized continuity with an admired past, but these composers' operas embraced a new style of realism. |
|
What would all the writers I admired think if they knew one of their own was being untrue to himself? |
|
Keiko admired herself in the full-length mirror as she tied the sash around her teal kimono. |
|
One could tell she had greatly admired the skills of other sportsmen and women. |
|
This picture was greatly admired by the King of France who above all else was a lover of art. |
|
He's aced parts of the army physical fitness test and was admired by his superiors for his work ethic. |
|
His reputation was revived by the Surrealists, who admired his visual punning. |
|
His departure was the biggest blow to the corporation, as he was widely admired for his unstuffy, blokey approach. |
|
But you'll find yourself admired, too, if you wear one while in your sweats and sneaks while out running errands. |
|
What he admired in these poets was their inventive use of word and sound in every device of onomatopoeia, alliteration, pun and palindrome. |
|
While his friends admired him as a nationalist leader, his enemies simply considered him a communist, a demagogue, and a dangerous man. |
|
|
His commitment to his hometown crowd was something to be admired, especially given his aggressive globetrotting schedule. |
|
Outside the land of the free, America's IT suppliers are admired more than America's political values. |
|
Newly landscaped areas are admired, as was the sculpture on the fairgreen near the handball alley. |
|
As a dancer he is admired for his startling grace, superb technique, and amazing control. |
|
Their practical religion of caring for others and keeping themselves unspotted from the world was what I had seen and admired in my father. |
|
Its spacious interiors and colour scheme were admired, but many people found its repetitiousness boring. |
|
The delegacy admired that Suzhou had made great efforts to the science prevalence in community and school. |
|
Some years ago, I was in Judge Kessler's courtroom and admired the crisp decisiveness of her judicial temperament. |
|
The study, Head of a Boy, was influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites whom his father admired. |
|
In many of the pre-Columbian and North American cultures gemstones were admired for their physical properties as well. |
|
The Australian team is admired very much in the world of cycling for its great team spirit. |
|
He too is the victim of the fashionable notion of rhetoric, logic and truth that was so widely admired at the time. |
|
One entry examined Lord Byron, whose libertine life and poetic license Porter clearly admired. |
|
The massive bronze statue of Richard in Westminster Palace Yard captures superbly the Ricardian qualities admired for centuries. |
|
No other Australian city is visited more religiously, admired more grudgingly, or reviled more unreasoningly. |
|
It was made of a soft furry material, creamish white. Oh how she had admired that bag! |
|
The March before last I bought and planted two specimens of what I thought was an aquilegia I'd admired at the Chelsea Flower Show. |
|
We admired the view and watched the sun set over Dublin with dramatic streaks of pinks, cyan, purple and red. |
|
Augustus John, who had a certain talent but nothing to say, so admired Romany culture that he dressed like one. |
|
Will stepped beside her and admired the castle's curtain wall and towers with pretty flags atop them. |
|
|
The picture by Picasso could have been admired by an unprejudiced critic a thousand years ago, and will be a thousand years hence. |
|
During the fifty plus years of his working life he saw the reputation and value of the modern art he admired rise. |
|
While admired for her looks and style, the empress never enjoyed the same degree of popularity as her husband. |
|
I particularly admired his performances of J. P. Johnson's stride pieces, boogie-woogie, and of his own works for organ. |
|
I took the crude construction paper offering and admired it like the child had created something worthy of the great masters. |
|
Then they met every day at twelve o'clock on the sea-front, lunched and dined together, went for walks, and admired the sea. |
|
Recent policies have cost our nation its reputation as the world's most admired champion of freedom and justice. |
|
My dress was properly admired, but unfortunately the castle cake came out looking rather munted. |
|
In addition, both writers were admired and criticized by artistic women of the day. |
|
I always admired that aspect along with the fact bodyboarding was pushing maneuvers far past what surfers dreamed of doing. |
|
For thousands of years, this has been admired as the most skillful accomplishment in war. |
|
The U.S. was so pre-eminent in military power as to be unchallengeable in any serious way, but it was also widely admired and emulated. |
|
I admired its moxie, its determination to be nothing more than a cheesy, exploitative, effects-driven popcorn movie. |
|
Her estimation of the revolutionary importance of her ideas was perhaps excessive, but Joyce admired her ambition and her savoir faire. |
|
Luckily some of these art forms have survived the ravages of man, beast, and time and can still be seen and admired. |
|
Brad built it to mimic the old growth forests he admired while hiking and backpacking as a kid. |
|
Single-mindedness and determination are admired but shade into bloody-mindedness and obstinacy. |
|
Much admired for his skill at carpentry, Tade made horses and donkeys carts and put bands on the wheels of carts. |
|
While condemning it in the strongest terms, many Westerners admired the courage of women who went willingly to their death in such a manner. |
|
His characteristic manner soon brought customers from near and far and his perfectness in hair styling was always much admired. |
|
|
The museum's painting is the sort of gloomy, tenebrist work for which he is usually most admired. |
|
Because Richard was so successful in his wars, and because he was genuinely liked and admired by much of the baronage, his rule met with little opposition in England. |
|
In contrast to the abrasive and high-handed Zakir, Ibrahim is an admired figure among the insurgents. |
|
Bernie is a fabulous writer I have long admired, a model McGill alumnus, and a new friend. |
|
Wilde deplored American commercialism and vulgarity, but he admired American simplicity and decency. |
|
Bingham Ray, a widely admired indie-film veteran and former studio head, has died, the Sundance Film Festival announced on Monday. |
|
Dostum was a natural soldier and a good leader whose troops admired his charisma and tough military approach. |
|
I admired him for his courage and determination to see his aim achieved. |
|
Kelly is admired in Westminster for the way she balances her family life and career, being the only minister who does not take her red boxes home at night. |
|
The most admired vocations are manual workers such as cook or driver. |
|
Hobsbawm, a historian long admired by anthropologists, wonders in a recent book why most of the world-shaking events of the 20th century were unexpected. |
|
We sat back on the bright orange reject couch and admired our handiwork. |
|
He played graveside laments for those he liked, mourned and admired. |
|
My photo of me attending a Bon Jovi concert, hair spiked and bleached Marilyn Monroe blonde, accompanied by a skin-tight zebra print, zippered mini-dress, is admired. |
|
After emailing a photographer whose work she admired, she was invited to sit for him. |
|
Over the next 20 years his anecdotal paintings of peasant life, based on a close study of Dutch 17th-century genre painters, were universally admired. |
|
In a storied career, it may be his unfailingly positive outlook for which he is most admired and emulated. |
|
You are a universally admired and respected musician and songwriter. |
|
He is to be admired for his kindness and genuine pastoral concern for all the members of his flock. |
|
It is one of the most admired of all Middle English romances nowadays, because of its narrative coherence and life and the sustained interest of its action. |
|
|
She is admired wherever she goes for her liveliness and her wit. |
|
This I would not dispute, although the direction of Low Latin grammar would indicate that the lesson was only partially learnt by the Romans who admired him. |
|
For as long as I recall, I have admired beautiful women, whether they have an attractive figure, beautiful eyes, luscious lips or other redeeming features. |
|
Even now, he admired the skill and tact with which the review was written. |
|
I asked, as I admired their beautiful silk outfits and their starched white faces and hair sculpted around their pretty faces. |
|
Those that earned their stripes by going to prison and taking the case are the ones that are admired. |
|
He read Borges and admired him, but the title of The Universal History of iniquity gave him an immediate jolt. |
|
We learned the difference between mastodons and mammoths and admired their sturdy columnar legs, but given our languor, we resembled nothing so much as the giant sloth. |
|
The elaborately carved rows or monumental crowns admired in the wooden sculptures of the Mende or Yoruba people in West Africa mirror the hairstyles worn today. |
|
He admired the way the players settled down after a harrowing opening against a very enthusiastic Navan, and felt that Kilkenny finished the stronger team. |
|
Cassie admired the thin white leather belt around her waist. |
|
The girl admired her mother's long white hair, and soft, milky skin. |
|
His employer treasured him, admired his skill greatly and paid him well. |
|
He wrote several intellectual treatises that are admired even today. |
|
They much admired Marius Victorinus, whose last years had been devoted to the deployment of Neoplatonic logic in defence of orthodox Trinitarian belief. |
|
Paris admired him from behind the trunk of a deciduous tree. |
|
There was a time when we admired genius, a time when we sang the praises of inventors, explorers, scientists, artists, writers and yes, even statesmen. |
|
I never really knew my father, while the rest admired their noble sires. |
|
Although I had been irritated with her on many occasions, I admired her drive and her uncomplaining coolness in the face of the dangers we'd encountered. |
|
He admired Tom Wolfe, and he had shockingly grand, novelistic aspirations of capturing full men. |
|
|
Kylie's bouncebackability is part of her charm though, and now in her late 30s she has become an artiste who is respected and admired by millions. |
|
I wish I still dreamt about hanging out with B-list rock stars, being admired just because I was precious, and living a life completely unselfconscious. |
|
What Sayre admired was not some vague nobility that she found among the London exiles, but their unshrinking and ongoing commitment to radical goals. |
|
If you've longed for a particular kind of snowball bush you've admired from a distance but can't find it at a store or in a catalog, ask permission to take a stem cutting. |
|
Have you ever admired those pictures of trampers walking through beautiful forest, or standing on a mountain top gazing over valleys or glaciers, and wished it were you? |
|
Lastman, especially, was admired for his clear narratives and classicizing, archaeologically veristic settings, and his attentive reading of classical sources. |
|
The Elizabethan Spenserians admired the romantic quality of Spenser. |
|
The man was one of great virtue, and his morals were admired by everyone. |
|
They admired the varied vistas of the narrow, crooked streets, and noticed how convenient it was to have shops and residences and even small factories mixed up together. |
|
For me, it was the professor who I thought admired my writing until he propositioned me. |
|
Some said they admired Cuccinelli for his work as a public servant and his stance on issues such as education. |
|
I wish I had the chance to know him, all the recon guys admired him, looked up to him, and are devastated by his loss. |
|
Their steadfast love in the face of horror can only be admired. |
|
While oohing and aahing over the stars, we fancy that those are the same constellations that the ancient Greek philosophers once admired and pondered over. |
|
From the early Renaissance on, they had been admired and drawn by painters and sculptors and carefully described and cataloged by art enthusiasts and antiquarians. |
|
Solon was inspired by a Chinese celadon case decorated with embossed flowers that he had admired in the museum at Sevres where he worked for a time. |
|
Having to navigate whilst seated on the deck facing aft with only a chart, a stopwatch and a navigation plan is a feat few could accomplish and must be admired. |
|
The combination of expressive painterliness and deft realism characteristic of Sargent's painting was admired internationally and imitated by many lesser artists. |
|
Tennis-elbow-addled fans admired stars like Borg and McEnroe because they knew how tough it was to hit accurate, firm strokes with wooden rackets with tiny sweet spots. |
|
In all aspects of life, humility and humbleness are admired. |
|
|
Even groups that we have admired are now in pell-mell cowardly retreat. |
|
As she speaks she adopts the pose of a sexually assured and admired woman, drawing down one strap of her petticoat to reveal and stroke a glamorous neck and chest. |
|
Produced throughout Europe, nautilus cups were an extremely desirable blend of superb craftsmanship in combination with one of nature's most admired creations. |
|
We see this as no less isolated than the pure, autonomous kind admired by formalists, but concerned for humanity and possibly good for us over the long haul. |
|
Every time he avowed that he wanted to be admired, not liked, Mr. Giuliani was, in Mr. Siegel's view, laying claim to his Machiavellian princeliness. |
|
We admired the Basilica, explored interesting side streets and leaned over bridges to watch stately gondoliers bend effortlessly as they passed underneath. |
|
I've long admired the punchy, humorous letters of G. Wallace. |
|
The magnificent Purple Emperor is probably the British butterfly most admired and most sought by butterfly watchers, breeders, photographers and general naturalists alike. |
|
Cesari admired Michelangelo and imitated his heroic muscular figures, although Cesari's Atlantes are generally more thickset. |
|
The original buildings of both colleges which united to form the University are much admired architectural features of Aberdeen. |
|
In 1973 Burton agreed to play Josip Broz Tito in a film biography, since he admired the Yugoslav leader. |
|
The first was Sir Alexander Korda in 1942, who was the producer of some of Reed's most admired films. |
|
He bought works from young artists he admired, such as James Lawrence Isherwood, whose Woman with Black Cat hung on his studio wall. |
|
One of Adele's earliest influences was Gabrielle, who Adele has admired since the age of five. |
|
Stigwood suggested Ken Russell as director, whose previous work Townshend had admired. |
|
Their works were admired and copied by early authors and composers of musicals in Britain and America. |
|
His 1940s accompaniments for Artur Schnabel in the piano concertos have been admired. |
|
Ruskin admired beauty, but believed it must be allied with, and applied to, moral good. |
|
George Orwell named him as one of the writers he most admired, despite disagreeing with him on almost every moral and political issue. |
|
One poet Thomas greatly admired, and who is regarded as an influence, was Thomas Hardy. |
|
|
The winners of the events were admired and immortalised in poems and statues. |
|
As Lean himself pointed out, his films are often admired by fellow directors as a showcase of the filmmaker's art. |
|
From the film industry, Chaplin drew upon the work of the French comedian Max Linder, whose films he greatly admired. |
|
We've all heard and perhaps admired overachievers who need only four hours' sleep per night. |
|
The Daltons had always admired the James boys and the Youngers, who were their cousins. |
|
This section of his Gospel begins with the story of the devoted, openhanded widow, the woman Jesus admired for her example of giving her all. |
|
They also admired the efforts of Dawa Academy and IIUI for holding such programs. |
|
The investment of PS2,500 by the Council in a snow blower is, of course, to be admired. |
|
Johnson modelled his style on that of Gentleman Jim Corbett, a boxer admired for defensive, technical skills. |
|
At first, Rourke's determination to play sleazeballs rather than likable heroes was admired as a brave, even brilliant artistic strategy. |
|
The job is often a sinecure offered to widely admired figures. |
|
First up was a Fascist group called Pamyat which admired the ultimate Fascist clown Mussolini. |
|
They all admired to see the foresaid riches in such dearth of money as was herebefore. |
|
As a boy and young man, Britten had intensely admired Brahms, but his admiration waned to nothing, and Brahms seldom featured in his repertory. |
|
I have always admired the man who invented the numbers GOOGOL and GOOGOLPLEX, and the boy who named them. |
|
Mauriac and Wiesel admired each other personally and respected each other's work. |
|
Like Flaubert, Tolstoy and Stendhal greatly admired Walter Scott. |
|
Assistant Van admired her elegant slenderness, the gray tailor-made suit, the smoky fichu and as it wafted away, her long white neck. |
|
In 1938, Huxley befriended Jiddu Krishnamurti, whose teachings he greatly admired. |
|
Woolf admired Chekhov for his stories of ordinary people living their lives, doing banal things and plots that had no neat endings. |
|
|
His patience, discernment, and intelligence are much admired. |
|
My roses, damascenas and banksias were gorgeous and out in time for my Charity Garden Opening in April and so were greatly admired. |
|
Davies, whose work, much of which was inspired by nature, he greatly admired. |
|
Burke would have agreed entirely, and admired the cogency of so few words. |
|
Austen learned that the Prince Regent admired her novels and kept a set at each of his residences. |
|
We hope to repay the generosity shown to the Qataris with even harder work and dedication to make Vodafone the most admired brand in Qatar. |
|
Charlotte especially admired Thackeray, whose portrait, given to her by Smith, still hangs in the dining room at Haworth parsonage. |
|
If that were the case, ayn Rand probably would have admired him for it. |
|
One of the few English authors he admired was Samuel Richardson. |
|
At the National Museum we admired Ethiopian artworks, pre-historic fossils and archeological findings from the Axumite period. |
|
Although Johnson admired Burke's brilliance, he found him a dishonest politician. |
|
Amanda has always admired the bricklaying skills of her husband Ian and decided to help him at work by becoming a hod carrier. |
|
As a kid, you'd admired pictures of knights in burnished suits of armor. |
|
Alma had admired them during a stay in Paris some years ago. |
|
I admired its construction and look similar to a watch mad by Cartier or Tag Huer. |
|
Synge admired their hard work and moral restraint even as they exhibited symptoms of an imputed wildness and primitivity. |
|
It was not, as Juan de Valdes very clearly attests, repugnant to an Erasmian Evangelical, even if he otherwise admired Luther. |
|
Long admired as a poet and proverbialist, Anonymous this year turned his pen to fiction. |
|
Far more often read were his five books of sermons, which were admired by a wide circle of pious readers including Queen Victoria. |
|
Boulton and Fothergill invested in the most advanced metalworking equipment, and the complex was admired as a modern industrial marvel. |
|
|
Its reflective, calm, and stoic tone was greatly admired, and it was pirated, imitated, quoted, and translated into Latin and Greek. |
|
The British people admired him for his piety, and for remaining faithful to his wife. |
|
Although Confucius admired Kings of great accomplishment, Mencius is clarifying the proper hierarchy of human society. |
|
In 1808 Southey met Walter Savage Landor, whose work he admired, and they became close friends. |
|
Holmes particularly admired and was close to his fellow officer in the 20th Massachusetts, Henry Livermore Abbott. |
|
Nevertheless, he was admired as one of the greatest European monarchs of his time. |
|
Chinese wealth grew as they delivered silk and other luxury goods to the Roman Empire, whose wealthy Roman women admired their beauty. |
|
He deeply admired and wished to save his father's accomplishments and spent a lot of time proving his claim to the throne. |
|
Everybody in Washington's social and diplomatic circles admired the beautiful Beverly Calhoun. |
|
Alexander and his exploits were admired by many Romans, especially generals, who wanted to associate themselves with his achievements. |
|
Alternatively, they may instead be admired and romanticised as noble savages. |
|
They heard her talking normally, even jestingly, with one of the aunts, and they admired her for her courage. |
|
He was famous across Europe, and greatly admired in Italy, where his work was mainly known through his prints. |
|
One speaks of a babbitt habit, a babbitt era. Nothing is more true. America recognized itself in Babbitt, it demurred, but it also admired. |
|
Among the most admired German poets and authors are Lessing, Goethe, Schiller, Kleist, Hoffmann, Brecht, Heine and Schmidt. |
|
The Protestant reformer John Calvin admired Gregory and declared in his Institutes that Gregory was the last good pope. |
|
Some societies bestow status on an individual or group of people when that individual or group performs an admired or desired action. |
|
Rembrandt's work, now praised for its ephemeral virtues, was most admired by his contemporaries for its virtuosity. |
|
Renaissance artists were not pagans, although they admired antiquity and kept some ideas and symbols of the medieval past. |
|
Many artists have admired elms for the ease and grace of their branching and foliage, and have painted them with sensitivity. |
|