In elated disposition, she was informally attired in a brown lacy top and black trousers. |
|
Dressed informally in windbreakers and sweaters, they helped build a consensus for free trade. |
|
He dressed informally, and his rounded forehead was furrowed under a widow's peak of hair. |
|
There are some economic advantages to small, intimate places that function informally. |
|
Twenty-five of 43 students informally polled by the Peak said they did not intend to vote in the elections. |
|
Martha informally adopted her until a suitable foster family could be found. |
|
Element 110 or darmstadtium as it is informally called, was discovered at the Laboratory for Heavy Research in Darmstadt, Germany. |
|
She then chatted informally to students asking them how they were getting on in their different courses. |
|
What childcare is available is provided informally by relatives who are prepared to assist for a few hours a day. |
|
Lunch can be taken informally at the golf club or as a traditional buffet in the Castle. |
|
Whether this reeve consulted informally with the more important townsmen, we can only speculate. |
|
Most construction laborers learn informally on the job, but becoming an apprentice can really pay off. |
|
However, launch vehicle and spacecraft representatives will be available afterward to informally answer questions from the media. |
|
He is the patriarch of a small, informally organized group engaged in psycho-historical studies. |
|
So in addition to being available and approachable, make time during the day to informally interact with staffers. |
|
Many of the big meetings allowed little time for discussion, so most debates took place informally or at smaller meetings and seminars. |
|
Sometimes it was expressed informally, as when spectators at public demonstrations quietly put the animal subjects out of their misery. |
|
There will also be hands-on activities and the chance to talk informally with well known presenters from TV and radio. |
|
A series of modular pieces tends to create a more relaxed style, where function and form combine informally. |
|
After the war, Mostar remained informally divided between its eastern, Bosniak, and western, Croat, part. |
|
|
Similar to the manner in which craft apprentices informally learn, teaching can comprise activities which are socially considered and planned. |
|
It is the kind used in pronouncing dictionaries, and is referred to informally as broad transcription. |
|
Even before the incident, the emperor had spoken informally with associates of Cavour about an eventual alliance with Piedmont against Austria. |
|
It allows one to speak informally with band members and their assistants, and to observe their nonpublic behavior. |
|
It is equally inappropriate to address an older non-relative informally as it is to address a child with the polite-formal style. |
|
You need access to information, face time and schmoozing informally, off-site and in nonworking hours. |
|
Your Honour, in obedience to requests made to me informally by the Registrar, I invite your Honour to certify for counsel. |
|
Learning disorders may be informally flagged by observing significant delays in the child's skill development. |
|
In contrast to many of the self portraits, it shows him dressed informally, tieless, hatless and with his shirt sleeves rolled up. |
|
A few deciduous bushes make nice hedges, although many look best grown informally rather than sheared. |
|
Historically, land was obtained through titles given by Spanish and Portuguese representatives, distributed by caudillos, or informally occupied. |
|
These were jawless, armored fish informally called ostracoderms, but more correctly placed in the taxon Pteraspidomorphi. |
|
This community outreach effort goes on informally between our scheduled interventions. |
|
The Act established procedures for resolving minor complaints informally, if complainants agree to this. |
|
There's less opportunity to informally settle conflicts fostered by an increasing diversity. |
|
My first real job involved informally managing 40 world-class software engineers. |
|
I enjoy spending time in the South Bronx with my camera and have worked informally with youth groups. |
|
We no longer live in a society where it is common for families to spend their evenings informally making music with friends. |
|
The nuns, most dressed informally in pants or skirts, gave her a standing ovation. |
|
The informally dressed abbot offered only a simple expression of respect before dismembering the statue. |
|
|
In contrast to many of the self-portraits, it shows him dressed informally, tieless, hatless, and with his shirt sleeves rolled up. |
|
Quietly spoken and informally dressed, he describes himself as an energetic, inquisitive, compassionate person. |
|
He looked uncommonly fine, though a little informally attired and scruffily dressed. |
|
William was informally dressed, the collar of his shirt was open, and he had a brandy glass in his hand. |
|
And even though they had since stopped attending the meetings, members still met up informally at a local pub on a regular basis to chat about how they were getting on. |
|
What was said at the time informally to the inhabitants remains disputed. |
|
You both were informally dressed, but quite fetching in your wet clothing. |
|
At the signing ceremony held to formalize that contract, some company executives were talking informally about supplying dry goods through Labrador and Newfoundland. |
|
The Council agreed informally to grant him a right of way along the further stretch of road and to permit him to gain access to his property by a new gate. |
|
Nevada regulators have gone so far as to informally allow casino dealers to count cards and shuffle whenever the remainder of a shoe favors the players. |
|
At best, Grimes is informally shooting trap, which features only one target-launching device. |
|
Once in London, Frederick presented himself as a fashionable man about town, entertaining freely and informally. |
|
In other words, in spite of the facade of the modern state, power in most African polities progresses informally, between patron and client along lines of reciprocity. |
|
The couple who raised Maria claimed she was informally adopted from a mother who could not cope. |
|
It is often informally referred to by the British middle class as a BBC accent or a public school accent and by the working class as talking proper or talking posh. |
|
Schmitt watched English-language movies, and sought out a native speaker to converse with informally. |
|
He lunched with young pupils in their canteen, then spent an afternoon dropping in on lessons and chatting informally before laying the foundation stone for a new building. |
|
Some claimants were informally aware of the location of their awards and believed they had a right to occupy the land, only to find that it was classified as Crown land. |
|
Employee appraisal, training, and development involve both informally and formally evaluating employee performance and the need for training and development. |
|
Keyes puts on thick socks to keep her feet warm and curls up informally. |
|
|
In similar fashion, and mostly informally, the ballerina would be the prima donna of the dance world. |
|
These names were informally given and varied according to region and even politics. |
|
De facto leaders sometimes do not hold a constitutional office and may exercise power informally. |
|
In many countries, the terms conservative and progressive are informally used to describe the character of particular Brethren assemblies. |
|
In the same year the government asked Shaw informally whether he would accept the Order of Merit. |
|
Lakes are informally classified and named according to the seasonal variation in their lake level and volume. |
|
Lakes are also informally classified and named according to the general chemistry of their water mass. |
|
In fact, the badges themselves often came to be known informally as orders. |
|
The party is informally known as the Scottish Tories, due to the Conservative Party's historic links with the Tory Party. |
|
Instead these traditions are passed along informally from one individual to another either through verbal instruction or demonstration. |
|
These folk artifacts continue to be passed along informally, as a rule anonymously and always in multiple variants. |
|
Historically, Llandaff was informally known as a 'city', because of its status as the seat of the Bishop of Llandaff. |
|
This name is used informally to refer to a common local species or all gulls in general, and has no fixed taxonomic meaning. |
|
Minor evacuations continued informally from the Mediterranean coast of France, until 14 August. |
|
After World War II, Europe was informally split into Western and Soviet spheres of influence. |
|
The designation is sometimes found used informally in respect of the county as whole. |
|
Jeremy Vine's weekday lunchtime show covers current and consumer affairs informally, a style pioneered by Jimmy Young. |
|
After he sued one of his wife's rumoured 27 lovers, the couple informally separated. |
|
By the 16th century, the three western rapes were grouped together informally, having their own separate Quarter Sessions. |
|
They met together informally 145 times and made all the major decisions, which in turn were ratified by the others. |
|
|
The post had previously existed informally, but the holder used not to rank as an Officer. |
|
People had been informally sharing risk for hundreds of years, but the formal ways they were now sharing risk was new. |
|
All that remains of them in modern horses is a set of small vestigial bones on the leg below the knee, known informally as splint bones. |
|
This vowel is sometimes informally referred to as schwi in analogy with schwa. |
|
This vowel is sometimes informally referred to as schwu in analogy with schwa. |
|
Jurists are, however, informally categorized in legal and political circles as being judicial conservatives, moderates, or liberals. |
|
Upstate and downstate are often used informally to distinguish New York City or its greater metropolitan area from the rest of New York State. |
|
In March 1917 he was informally offered the Lord Chancellorship, with the highest salary in government, but he declined. |
|
Many British expatriate school teachers informally taught the game in Botswana's secondary schools. |
|
Variants of the committee of the whole are the quasi committee of the whole and to consider informally. |
|
Those who had been informally involved in foreign trade before the Meiji Restoration also flourished. |
|
The naval blockade of the United States began informally in 1812 and expanded to cut off more ports as the war progressed. |
|
The Jordanstown campus, often informally referred to as UUJ, is the largest university campus. |
|
Wesleyanism inspired congregations to sing informally and for the love of it. |
|
Nations that are known or thought to have nuclear weapons are sometimes referred to informally as the nuclear club. |
|
Avian influenza, known informally as avian flu or bird flu, refers to influenza caused by viruses adapted to birds. |
|
Jenner had sent the paper informally to Sir Joseph Banks, the Society's president, who asked Everard Home for his views. |
|
Police officers had to summon emergency rescuers in order to undrape the sculpture of a lone Soviet soldier, informally known as Alyosha. |
|
Opposition front-bencher and Meriden MP Caroline Spelman will join young Coventry Tory councillors to chat informally with guests. |
|
The evidence data collection may be conducted formally, informally or semiformally. |
|
|
The Working Party on the Accession of Vanuatu was reconvened informally on 4 April 2011 to discuss Vanuatu's future WTO membership. |
|
But surely he continues to informally advise his father-in-law? |
|
The next diocese formed was Manchester and its Borough Council began informally to use the title city. |
|
On 25 September 1956 the Chancellor of the Exchequer Harold Macmillan met informally with Eisenhower at the White House. |
|
The site protected one of the world's greatest concentrations of Cretaceous-period fossils, known informally as cycads or scientifically as Bennettitales. |
|
The 1547 Injunctions against images were a more tightly drawn version of those of 1538, but they were more fiercely enforced, at first informally, and then by instruction. |
|
This sometimes caused a labour shortage for plantations and public works and so the colonists informally and gradually, at first, initiated the Atlantic slave trade. |
|
During the First World War, it was used as a naval training establishment under the name of HMS Victory VI, informally known as HMS Crystal Palace. |
|
Franciscan brothers are informally called friars or the Minorites. |
|
Previn would talk informally direct to camera and then turn and conduct the LSO, whose members were dressed in casual sweaters or shirts rather than formal evening clothes. |
|
They were informally known as West Germany and East Germany. |
|
The family is frequently referred to informally as the British Royal Family, sometimes in conflict with official national titles, such as those in Canada. |
|
The United States military facilities on Diego Garcia have been known informally as Camp Justice and, after renaming in July 2006, as Camp Thunder Cove. |
|
The purpose of the preapplication conference is to allow the developer to meet informally with the planning board before going to the expense of preparing a formal plat. |
|
He writes easily and informally, with only occasional stiltings of phrase. |
|
Mr Hinkes, from Northallerton, is the youth hostelling charity's firstever ambassador and will promote YHA informally in the fields of outdoor adventure and education. |
|
That is the delicious truth behind the music industry's best-kept secret, a revolving cluster of Hollywood-based sidemen informally known as The Wrecking Crew. |
|
According to Doncaster council, killing formal town twinning has saved pounds 4,000-a-year and the twinning arrangements are continuing informally. |
|
Sranan has a long written tradition and has had two official orthographies, but it is still often written informally using conventions largely derived from Dutch. |
|
She also employed Francis Dereham, who had previously been informally engaged to her and had an affair with her prior to her marriage, as her secretary. |
|