She is as famous and prestigious as her father, and very esteemed with her warm and sympathetic personality. |
|
He relinquishes this fabled sword to fellow esteemed warrior Yu Shu Lien, who he has loved in secret just as she has loved him. |
|
We all like to hear the gaffs that are made on television and radio by our esteemed sports commentators. |
|
Any licensee fortunate enough to receive praise from this esteemed tome can be guaranteed success beyond compare for years to come. |
|
The apple is esteemed as both an eater and cooker and is admired for its fine colouring, shape and size. |
|
Then came the actions of our esteemed spy agency, that sees fit to harass people into cooperating with it. |
|
The orchestra will be under the baton of esteemed conductors Philip Edmondson and Richard Nicholls. |
|
He ranks with the great Persian poets, highly esteemed in Iran, a country with a rich and vital cultural history. |
|
The black smoked apricots of Hupei were famous, and apricots in general were greatly esteemed as a food, being considered good for the heart. |
|
A third toper bawls out a song not much esteemed, evidently, by his companions, who ignore him. |
|
She is one of the esteemed ladies of the city, gracious, kind and benignant of character, and a model mother to her family. |
|
Most of the greatest minds in history belonged to those who were esteemed to be mentally unstable. |
|
The firm white flesh is highly esteemed, and is often honoured with an expensive sauce in restaurants. |
|
Has there, in fact, ever been so great a player so universally unbeloved as the esteemed Mr. Bonds? |
|
Pacific oysters are not as esteemed as natives but turning down a plate of spanking fresh Pacifics is simply misplaced snobbery. |
|
Such rural women were less bound by gender segregation than their urban counterparts, particularly those from socially esteemed families. |
|
He was just being mindful of his stature as an respectable and esteemed brilliant scientifically oriented mind. |
|
Smallmouth buffalo are esteemed above all suckers from a culinary standpoint. |
|
An esteemed veteran actor with a penchant for the unpredictable arrived and sat under a painting of fairies in a field. |
|
Now, one esteemed social critic, Jon Stewart, had something to say on the subject. |
|
|
Patrick was a popular and esteemed member of the local rural community and much sadness was occasioned by his death. |
|
In the introduction, Fergusson begins with a striking anecdote that reveals how highly Brown was esteemed by his fellow poets. |
|
Here's a sample that slipped by the hawk-eyed letters editors of some of the nation's esteemed newspapers. |
|
The palsgrave of Lorraine, who had his seat at Aachen, was later esteemed the foremost in rank. |
|
During the 15th century, developing humanistic attitudes among patrons increasingly esteemed the creative contribution of the individual artist. |
|
The deceased gentleman was well known and highly esteemed throughout the district, having at one time been a timber passer on the mills. |
|
I have been receiving your esteemed fortnightly regularly, which is popular among one and all. |
|
A former foster child himself, he had been a prominent prosecutor and president of the board of the esteemed Children's Aid Society. |
|
In both traditions the white rooster, which crows at dawn to dispel the darkness of night, is highly esteemed. |
|
Then it was straight off to the darkroom to run off photographs of our esteemed educators in various sizes. |
|
The esteemed editress of the Liverpool Daily Post is leaving to become a full-time novelist. |
|
There were elves, wizards, enchantresses, noblemen, and the esteemed king himself. |
|
The lost man, a senator from Georgia so esteemed that colleagues cried when eulogizing him on the Senate floor. |
|
And now we turn it over to my esteemed colleague, who did a dynamite job last night anchoring in a very difficult situation. |
|
It might have been esteemed by those who knew it, but such regard does not signify popularity. |
|
Smith was so esteemed by his neighbors that he was elected to Congress in 1852 as an independent. |
|
Leo was in his mid-50s and was a popular and esteemed member of the community. |
|
He rejected privilege and chose to bear the hardships of his men, and was in turn esteemed by them. |
|
At that point, some might even label these esteemed legal scholars lunatics. |
|
Besides, he is a highly esteemed reporter who has won many prizes for his books, articles and television documentaries. |
|
|
I have heard esteemed constitutional law scholars make this argument as well. |
|
News of her passing was met with genuine sorrow in her home district, where she was an esteemed and highly regarded member of the community. |
|
Some immigrants, like Henry Kissinger, are among the most productive and esteemed members of American society. |
|
Each short listed candidate will be interviewed and assessed by an esteemed panel of judges who will select the final 28 candidates. |
|
Gemstones are minerals esteemed for their qualities of beauty, durability, and rarity. |
|
Motherhood is a powerful metaphor because it is central to esteemed ideals of womanhood, particularly among Latinos. |
|
John was a highly regarded and esteemed member of the local community and his passing evoked much sadness and sorrow in the district. |
|
I'm a week late with the rent, but my esteemed landlady said it was okay as long as I pay up next week, and give her a free guitar lesson. |
|
He was called to the Irish bar in 1951 and has earned a reputation as an esteemed playwright, poet and biographer. |
|
Random observations has proof that esteemed academic qualifications can go with severe looniness. |
|
Perhaps you mean that we need the moral imprimatur of this august and esteemed body. |
|
The white pomfret is the most highly esteemed fish for serving at honorific meals in Malaysia, where the excess of demand over supply makes it expensive. |
|
Gilbert Blane and Thomas Beddoes, highly esteemed authorities on scurvy in the 18th century, rightly doubted that there was any antiscorbutic virtue in malt. |
|
The skepticism, empiricism, and detachment so esteemed by journalists seem worlds away from the awe, mysticism, and credulousness demanded by faith. |
|
He was highly esteemed in the fashion world, but his real vocation was fulfilled in the evening hours. |
|
Apart from a brief spell as an official with Chelsea after the last war he has remained with the Highbury club ever since and is one of its most esteemed officials. |
|
Players are justifiably esteemed for their amazing feats of athleticism. |
|
The dialogue skitters from Georgian to French, the family having grown up with both, with France esteemed as the zenith of intelligence and culture. |
|
He'd met with the Governor General back in January to discuss the needs of underprivileged children and has so far received her esteemed stamp of approval. |
|
An esteemed historian of Southern culinary culture, Ferris had all the utensils to do some serious carving on Paula Deen. |
|
|
The esteemed fashion school has cancelled the course due to curricular disagreements with the disgraced designer. |
|
Sometimes when tensions run high, even our esteemed elders show a certain lack of maturity. |
|
The animated hit has had five song-filled episodes, largely featuring original compositions by esteemed TV composer Alf Clausen. |
|
In season, heads of unripe wheat or barley may be gathered and dried over the fire so that they can be ground and made into a highly esteemed green couscous. |
|
These are highly esteemed, including the ink caps and honey fungus. |
|
Chrissie is a very popular and esteemed member of the local community and her many friends look forward to seeing her back home in the near future. |
|
Public readings were an esteemed but ancillary activity, something an established poet might do spurred by vanity, ambition, or a shortage of funds. |
|
And why would the Innocence Project, an esteemed group dedicated to freeing the wrongly imprisoned, have framed an innocent man? |
|
Theda Skocpol, the esteemed Harvard social scientist, agrees with Cohen that they will set up the exchanges. |
|
The notes and general introduction are taken from the esteemed Arden Shakespeare edition of the plays and poems. |
|
Ethiopian Airlines wishes to apologize to its esteemed customers for the inconvenience caused by this diversion. |
|
Ross is an esteemed paleontologist and university professor. |
|
Libanus shall be turned into charmel, and charmel shall be esteemed as a forest. |
|
No man is esteemed any ways considerable for policy who wears religion otherwise than as a cloak. |
|
Whatever a man really is, he is so esteemed and named by Goethe in Faust, quite disregardless of any conventional titles or obloquys he bears. |
|
Famous men, whose scientific attainments were esteemed hardly less than supernatural. |
|
Then he forsook God, which made him, and lightly esteemed the Rock of his salvation. |
|
Ninus being esteemed no man of war at all, but altogether feminine, and subject to ease and delicacy. |
|
Johnson asserted that Macbeth, though esteemed for his military bravery, is wholly reviled. |
|
William Hawkins said that at common law, piracy by a subject was esteemed to be petty treason. |
|
|
Since Kublai Khan only esteemed the Sakya sect of Tibetan Buddhism, other religions became less important. |
|
In 2000, Rattle was the Music Director of the esteemed Ojai Music Festival. |
|
The meat of the Welsh Mountain lamb is much esteemed, and carcasses have often won prizes at shows like the Royal Smithfield in London. |
|
The tribe members who dealt the killing blow were highly esteemed among their compatriots. |
|
Smoked hams made from badgers were once highly esteemed in England, Wales and Ireland. |
|
In 1864, she exhibited for the first time in the highly esteemed Salon de Paris. |
|
Ambrose himself I esteemed a happy man, as the world counted happiness, because great personages held him in honor. |
|
Its economy, speed, agility, and power made it esteemed as the best sailing vessel of its time. |
|
The aforesaid warme water is made with the powder of a certaine hearbe called Chaa, which is much esteemed, and is well accounted among them. |
|
That which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God. |
|
The Turkish nation never accepter the Treaty of Sevres which attempted to ignore its independence and underestimate its esteemed character. |
|
Piloted by Mr Bird, the town's esteemed senior water bailiff, this was the first of a seemingly never-ending fleet floating down over the years. |
|
Scott Carpenter, 21 from Sedgefield Water Polo club is the first Great Britain player to ever win the esteemed accolade of top goal scorer. |
|
Several of my esteemed colleagues pound the streets for mile after mile, yet remain well-adjusted, even likeable, individuals. |
|
Out of these, three lucky winners will be selected by our esteemed judge Lamia Al Rumaih and the Kraft Foods MEA panel. |
|
Less esteemed was her attempt to drive all snakes from the Apple Isle by paying convicts a shilling for each reptilian head brought to her. |
|
How pleasantly surprised I was to see an article by my friend, and esteemed colleague, Subdeacon Adam Deville. |
|
Johann Theile is esteemed among the north-German baroque contrapuntists, including Dietrich Buxtehude and Johann Adam Reincken. |
|
A third, and least esteemed, method is to simply blend red and white wine. |
|
Macquarrie was a philosophical giant, translator and explicator of the German philosopher Martin Heidegger and one of the most esteemed divinity professors at Oxford. |
|
|
These esteemed gentlemen were part of a club in Westminster known as the Turk's Head Tavern, where they would often meet to discuss the topics of the day. |
|
We're delighted that conference attendees saw significance and value in the work between Brion and our esteemed co-authors from Freescale and Applied. |
|
This trend was in part attributable to Florence's reluctance to debase the gold florin, which was internationally esteemed for its stable value, prestige, and reliability. |
|
A national myth is a legend or fictionalized narrative which has been elevated to a serious mythological, symbolic, and esteemed level so as to be true to the nation. |
|
Fisher was a figure universally esteemed throughout Europe and notwithstanding the subsequent efforts of the English government, was to remain so. |
|