I fear it may have taken the microorganisms from all these Dumpsters, though in this polar clime who can discern the unliving from the merely dead? |
|
More than a decade later, Claude Debussy also produced a dance from a more southern clime. |
|
These temples are the greatest draw of Abu, apart from its salubrious clime. |
|
Out of the rigours of this harsh clime emerged a religion of stark simplicity which enjoined good thoughts, good words and good deeds, and respect for the environment. |
|
In the meantime, she is off to Egypt on assignment and he continues his research in the musty clime of an Oxford library. |
|
He may have preferred topographical specificity, but given his delicate health, he would have been ill-advised to visit any such insalubrious clime. |
|
Following Ptolemy, the Arab geographers placed Syria in the third clime and Iraq in the fourth, both known for their temperate weather. |
|
If, as in this case, it is the father who flies away with the child, the mother is not bound to follow him to a foreign clime. |
|
In such clime of consensus and cooperation we are working on the electoral reform. |
|
Australia is an ideal place for this type of energy, because of its sunny clime, surface area and huge distance between towns. |
|
Equipped with rubber crawler belts, it enables you to clime important slopes. |
|
Of course Picosleep's renowned clime zone construction has not been altered. |
|
When James Bond fells another foe in some exotic clime, is there a wife and child losing sleep over the possibility that, this time, he might not come home? |
|
Although the clime of the Mont Blanc will perhaps not be the most technical or difficult clime, the effect on the persons physical and mental condition will be tremendous. |
|
One of Rome's eternal stories is that of the bookish spinster from a cold clime, whose life has its late spring in Italy, and who loses her inhibitions, amid the ruins, with a man like Giovanni Ossoli. |
|
The clime is continental-moderate, especial for its unstable character. |
|
Following such a fire, in 1699 the capital was relocated inland, away from the swampy clime of Jamestown to Middle Plantation, soon to be renamed Williamsburg. |
|