They exude the warmth of home, albeit an itinerant, impermanent home of temporary balconies. |
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The itinerant handyman is driving through the Arizona desert when he realizes that his car radiator is in need of water. |
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Those figures may have been dubious but, for an itinerant preacher, he had a pretty way with words that struck a raw nerve. |
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Trading standards officials in North Yorkshire are warning householders about teams of itinerant asphalt-laying gangs operating in the county. |
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The Lapps are traditionally an itinerant people, wandering the most northerly reaches of Scandinavia. |
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She makes her living as an itinerant folksinger whose songs become her means of trying to claim an identity for herself as a Zuni. |
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We do not consider these people to be gypsies or traditional Romanies but little more than itinerant workers. |
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Besides these, there are the urban and suburban wanderers, or those who follow some itinerant occupation in and round about the large towns. |
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The person who achieved it was not a famous master but an itinerant stonecarver of mandalas and sacred texts. |
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The Marists viewed themselves initially as itinerant missionaries, prepared to answer spiritual needs wherever they might arise. |
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Seemingly, by listening to an itinerant, well-heeled failure talk about his screw-ups, people feel less devastated by their own mistakes. |
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I can make enough as a bandleader and itinerant musician to eke by, supplemented with the occasional website construction gig here and there. |
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As an itinerant musician in his early life, Pickens played in barrelhouses across the southern states. |
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The mendicants called such a life of poverty and itinerant preaching the vita apostolica. |
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They adapt very well to an itinerant existence for a few weeks, setting up shop in various places, until they exhaust their stock of goods. |
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What began as a group of shaggy street performers and itinerant stilt-walkers now commands huge audiences and premium prices in Las Vegas. |
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An itinerant miniaturist, Dempsey later became a successful cutter of silhouette portraits. |
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She went on to paint a somewhat lurid picture of her father's itinerant lifestyle. |
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Born in San Francisco, he was the son of an itinerant astrologer and a spiritualist mother. |
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The religious duties included the offering of oblations to itinerant monks who preached the belief. |
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But itinerant odd-jobber Missy Park changed all that in 1989 when she started Title 9 Sports. |
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It's incredible that someone who, these days, is undoubtedly more superannuated than itinerant can still sound this convincing. |
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These homespun medications were sold by itinerant hucksters, pharmacies, and whoever could spellbind a listener with lofty promises of cure. |
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Before then, buying and selling occurred through fairs, market-stalls, artisans' workshops, or itinerant pedlars. |
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Sometimes women worked as cooks or as itinerant peddlers of small goods on the street. |
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Writing in 1929, Paynter recalled an itinerant pedlar who had visited fairs around East Cornwall almost two decades previously. |
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Even as late as the second half of the nineteenth century, glasses were provided by itinerant pedlars. |
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The most obvious category of jobs of this kind is that of itinerant jobs, such as a commercial traveller. |
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Now their only problem might come from itinerant lawyers wanting to discuss the finer points of local corporate law. |
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A restless, itinerant soul, he didn't stay in Symington long, setting up shop in a small family-run hotel in Ayr. |
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Taking a page from itinerant revivalists, he traveled the country on lecture tours, organizing schools and voluntary associations. |
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In the 1890s Montrealers bought milk, ice, bread, buns, fries and popcorn from itinerant street vendors. |
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The partnership built up a country clientele through itinerant trading with a hawker's licence. |
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We have had our share of itinerant carpetbaggers who had dubious magistrate credentials. |
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The alert follows a flood of complaints about itinerant traders who charge extortionate prices for bitumen coverings for drives. |
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Remember how, in response to the depredations of bandits, the villagers hired as protectors seven itinerant warriors. |
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These changes, which are more visible now, have been noted by many itinerant researchers. |
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He's also got a deep-blues vocal delivery, and comes across as a real genuine, home-schooled itinerant character. |
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Serving mostly itinerant and homeless women, many of whom have mental difficulties, Chez Doris is accepting donations. |
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Private accounts are not going to turn the nation's graybeards into itinerant millionaires anytime soon. |
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Gillard had few friends, looked up to and trusted Preston, depended on him, drank to excess, itinerant, living in shelters and hostels. |
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He has become an itinerant preacher, but his temporary religious conversion does not prevent him from persistently pursuing her. |
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Music-making was mainly in the hands of a few itinerant singers and entertainers at fairs and in taverns. |
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Their earliest pictures showed life among itinerant farm workers. |
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An itinerant court stayed at urban and rural palaces and hunting lodges. |
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Community workers sought smoking gun evidence of police harassment of itinerant youth and they say it's in the form of a big ugly pile of tickets. |
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When his saviour, Grace Seneiya, an itinerant teacher in the sacred Samburu lands of northern Kenya, set him free, Mitas could barely walk or talk. |
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Every Indian election brings with it a kind of itinerant circus full of immoderate speech. |
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The well-known itinerant painter Rufus Porter offered the following instructions on how to make a stencil and use it to decorate a floor or a floorcloth. |
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Another in 1853 spread to Chicago and St. Louis where itinerant railroad workers took it to Iowa City, which is the furthest the railroad had reached. |
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He came alone to Australia at the age of 16 and for some years he worked as an itinerant stockman on cattle stations in central Queensland and the Gulf country. |
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From there, Leo lived an itinerant childhood, eventually winding up in England. |
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In the meantime, he continued his itinerant existence, sometimes living for months in his airstream trailer with no phone. |
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It's a memoir of growing up as the son of an itinerant Arabist foreign service officer. |
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This 13th-century fresco of a lion was painted near Burgos in Spain, probably by an itinerant English artist from Winchester. |
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This is not to say we didn't get our share of itinerant whackos. |
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With the weed-spraying business she had to cook and wash and iron and generally look after hordes of itinerant workmen, as well as her own sons and husband. |
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Soon the word spread, and itinerant travelers began to squat there. |
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He is at his best when relieving a skinflint widow of her wealth, sorting out a king's love life or abandoning a band of raggle-taggle Gypsies to become an itinerant actor. |
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I had 20-page faxes of handwritten itineraries, imploring phone calls in the middle of the night, notes from strangers, the itinerant yogis of subcontinental tourism. |
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Palmer grounds further mistrust in an awareness of the late hour of language, in anxiety regarding its itinerant languor and lapse, its reflecting gaze having decayed. |
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In fact, the fury she unleashed upon the itinerant priest who administered her last rites had sprung from the failure of his holy water to shrink the tumor in her gut. |
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They were evangelists, missionaries and itinerant ministers living in an unholy era of subjugation, poverty and the dark brutal forces of the slaveocracy. |
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Bright is forty-five now, a baseball itinerant since the day he signed a contract with the Yankees at the age of sixteen. |
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It was a form danced by itinerant ploughboys in sets of three or four, about the time of Candlemas. |
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He began his career as an itinerant meat wagon driver who sold cut beef to farmers and working-class families along a regular route. |
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Peddlers or itinerant merchants filled any gaps in the distribution system. |
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Most importantly, he appointed itinerant, unordained evangelists to travel and preach as he did and to care for these groups of people. |
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He was an itinerant Chinese philosopher and sage, and one of the principal interpreters of Confucianism. |
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Nowhere are the vicissitudes and challenges of this itinerant life more vivid than in the Steelman stories. |
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Los hijos de Zerda, or Zerda's Children, about a family of itinerant woodcutters, took seven months. |
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It is no wonder that itinerant agricultural workers travel on the toby and sleep in casual wards between jobs. |
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In a petition presented to Parliament in 1439, the name is used to describe an itinerant felon. |
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Edward's royal court was itinerant, travelling around the country with the King. |
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Most importantly, Wesley appointed itinerant evangelists to travel and preach as he did and to care for these groups of people. |
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Red foxes either establish stable home ranges within particular areas or are itinerant with no fixed abode. |
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He became a fiery itinerant preacher, stirring to the depths every neighbourhood he visited. |
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The king's own courts were then itinerant, being kept in the king's palace, and removing with his household in those royal progresses which he continually made. |
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The troubadours were often itinerant, came from all classes of society, and wrote songs on a variety of topics, though with a particular focus on courtly love. |
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The central highlands were already home to over a million members of the Kikuyu people, most of whom had no land claims in European terms and lived as itinerant farmers. |
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He was initially looked after by a wet nurse called Ellen in the south of England, away from John's itinerant court, and probably had close ties to his mother. |
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No permanent capital city existed in the empire, the itinerant court being a typical characteristic of all Western European kingdoms at this time. |
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King Philip II ruled at a critical turning point in European history toward modernity whereas his father Charles V had been forced to an itinerant rule as a medieval king. |
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They replace such narratives with stories of the itinerancy of their embodiments and the itinerant situatedness of disability in its relation to dependency and heteronomy. |
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In concert with the curia regis, eyre circuits staffed by itinerant judges dispensed justice throughout the country, operating on fixed paths at certain times. |
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The Scottish monarchy in the Middle Ages was a largely itinerant institution, before Edinburgh developed as a capital city in the second half of the 15th century. |
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The church built at Steyning was one of around 50 minster churches across Sussex and these churches supplied itinerant clergy to surrounding districts. |
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Paying the manufacturer's list price shown on the window sticker of a new car may be about as smart as snapping up an itinerant rug merchant's opening offer. |
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Itinerant and illiterate, the Ma portrayed in Chinese newspaper reports was not a model citizen. |
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Itinerant malcontent Ben Rumson saves the life of a stranger injured in a runaway wagon accident. |
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Itinerant merchants traveled the backcountry buying or trading dried apples. |
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Itinerant peddlers took rags and bones from customers in trade for manufactured goods. |
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Itinerant preachers carried both the open and exclusive brethren to North America after the middle of the 19th century. |
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Itinerant justices began to emerge under Henry, travelling around the country managing eyre courts, and many more laws were formally recorded. |
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Itinerant traders traveled through the area, working by free market principles. |
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