The mother bird started to peck at me, but I dodged all the pecks and hit her beak with my mace. |
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The mayor and six previous mayors, preceded by the city's senior mace bearer, all on horseback, received them in great splendour. |
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His left sword clashed against the goblins mace, and to the elf's surprise, he parried the attack. |
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There are about 30 different combat attacks and combos with double-handed axe, sword or mace. |
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The bread sauce should be smooth and well-flavoured, mace being a traditional spice to infuse with the milk. |
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Before the enemy had time to turn to see what was happening, mace, lance, and horse slammed right into them. |
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His heavy plate armour clanked as he waved his shield arm and brandished a huge spiked mace. |
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They're all sizes and nationalities, a crowd of curious youngsters who gather around the two mayors and their mace bearers with interest. |
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They were led by their officers, town clerk Graham Gittins, borough beadle Alfie Johnson and mace bearers Tony Sansom and Derek Smithers. |
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The scent and taste of mace is often described as peppery or musty with an almost mentholated note. |
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The being that stood up this time held a mace and club and was made of purple fire. |
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Each blow with the mace caused a splatter of Orc, and the spears were used either to skewer or simply as clubs. |
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Shiva was depicted as a Himalayan ascetic, Vishnu as a blue youth holding in his four hands a discus, mace, conch, and lotus. |
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Light cavalry carried a small sword and two or three javelins while the heavy force was equipped with scimitar, mace and a 4 meter lance. |
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Room after room of the Armoury reveals incredible riches, including the imperial crown, mace and sceptre of the Tsars. |
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A spice that increases the body's temperature, like cinnamon, nutmeg, and mace, is a warm spice. |
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The new mace, in the shape of a knobkierie, was designed to reflect the history, tradition, diversity, culture, and languages of South Africa. |
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They wore chain mail into battle, used a lance, sword or mace to fight with and rode horses that were bred to carry such a weight at speed. |
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The one on the right carried a large mace, whereas the leftmost one held a double-handed axe. |
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A light mace hung at his belt, a sword hilt showed at his left shoulder, and he wore chain mail under a green tabard. |
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In the melee, the mace that symbolizes the authority of the legislature was carried away and was later found in a lobby used by parliamentarians. |
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But perhaps the biggest change will be that the new mace will no longer lie on a table with its head directed at the ruling party. |
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At the third offence he shall lose the mace and be permanently removed from office. |
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They depict the pharaoh, or rather the pharaoh's ka, in a striding pose and holding a mace in one hand and a long staff in the other. |
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He carries the mace in the Speaker's Procession each day and also into the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament. |
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I was supposed to sprinkle the top with clove and mace but I was out of mace so I used nutmeg instead. |
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This was for fried fish spiced with all-spice, cloves, turmeric, black pepper, garlic and the other spice that comes with nutmeg, mace. |
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In a wide shallow pan, melt the butter and then add the mace and cayenne pepper. |
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They too were trying to get to the East Indies, where nutmeg, mace, pepper and cloves could be bought. |
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Other spices are produced for local consumption and export, including mace, cinnamon, and cloves. |
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Place the pumpkin, ice cream, milk and cinnamon, nutmeg and mace into a blender. |
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Before La Varenne, court cuisine had over-emphasized the use of sugar and such sweet spices as cloves, mace, cardamom or nutmeg. |
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When cooked, remove the skin and place the fish in a pie dish in layers with the sliced eggs, knobs of butter, pepper and mace. |
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First come the mace bearers, then the officials, pages, horsemen, drummers and trumpeters, all dressed in colorful costumes of the Middle Ages. |
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Henry is shown surrounded by a host of footmen, officials and dignitaries, a mace bearer, a crowd of nobles, and six trumpeters. |
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They were led by their officers, the town clerk, borough beadle Alan Johnson and mace bearers Tony Saunders and Derek Smith. |
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Marlborough mace bearer Bob Dobbs is a great traditionalist, right down to following in the footsteps of his late uncle Fred. |
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Women in Baton Rouge are taking self-defense courses, arming themselves with tasers, pepper spray and mace. |
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Jaime was taught to fight with sword and lance and mace, and I was taught to smile and sing and please. |
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Larson told Bundermann that they needed cover fire before they could make a run for it and try to bring mace to the Aid Station. |
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Methyleugenol, a naturally occurring flavor in basil, cinnamon leaves, nutmeg, mace, pimento, bananas, black pepper, bilberries and blackberry essence. |
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If Joan were really around, she'd skull Le Pen with a spiked mace. |
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When fully mature it splits in two, exposing a crimson-coloured aril, the mace, surrounding a single shiny, brown seed, the nutmeg. |
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Crew mates created a mace from a boat's oar, complete with silver mount decorated with Royal Marines cap badges and decorative knotwork and braiding. |
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It's his cops who mace and pepper spray you and chase you down every time you demonstrate outside the park. |
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Our parliament is probably no more boring than any other, although we could do with a bit more passion, vituperation and maybe even some mace swinging. |
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Chillies, turmeric, ginger, mace, saffron, nutmeg, poppy seeds, garlic, cloves, bay leaves, and curry leaves are among the most commonly used spices. |
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The faculty was splendid in their academic regalia, students all gowned with their mortar and tassel led by a marshal carrying the college's mace. |
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Some later claimed that a cop shook a can of mace, an uncalled for act of aggravation, one man said. |
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The finer spices consist of cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg and mace, which shared the fact that the places where they were grown were rather select, hence, the limited supply. |
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The mace symbolises the authority of the speaker of the national assembly and its presence in the chamber indicates an official sitting of parliament. |
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The full-bodied fragrances of cardamom, mace, fennel, and clove, topped off with a few peppercorns. |
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Michael had his scimitar, Monica her rapier, Eric a mace, and Erin a pick. |
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Marring with his mace, the Foot Soldier could make deep dents in armor and smash it. |
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One of these stones was ball-shaped while the other was perforated and may have been a mace or club. |
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The high jinks consist of handcuffing themselves to the mace in the House of Assembly, or blocking the Prime Minister's path and getting arrested and quietly let go. |
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It's studded with turmeric, cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon, ginger, pimento, mace, bay, you name it. |
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Sweet spices are very popular, particularly cinnamon, with Mohan adding cloves, Murshed and Jaffrey saffron, and Murshed nutmeg and mace. |
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The officers left Sheehan's room and called for backup, but soon after decided to re-enter, with mace and guns drawn. |
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The hon. member across who gave the speech and I are wearing the mace and the maple leaf. |
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Police sprayed him with mace, which also ensnared television reporters as they broadcast live. |
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Then, as technical competence increased, the ellipsoidal head became a cutting edge, and by this process the mace evolved into the ax. |
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It is a life-sized statue of the Pharaoh in the customary royal striding position, wearing the royal head-cloth nemes and holding a mace in one hand. |
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It is not uncommon to find nutmeg, mace, caraway, coriander or ginger in it. |
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Nation wide, women are being provided with a mace spray evaluated to be the best to use during this form of attack. |
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The other is a red, web-like seed membrane called an aril and is sold as the spice mace. |
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Cloves, mace and nutmeg are all used as flavouring agents in cooking. |
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Spices such as coriander, cumin, turmeric, cinnamon, mace and nutmeg are ideal for winter soups and paprika helps provide a rich colour, says Bridget Jones. |
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It was also the only time of year, we would use some of the really wacky spices in our spice drawer, like mace, and allspice and poultry seasoning. |
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The shaft of the ceremonial mace is the whorled tusk of a narwhal, a small Arctic whale. |
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John proudly showed me a photograph of himself in his smart uniform, holding the golden mace and stood alongside the current mayor in full regalia. |
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They rented cars from big rental agencies, and they bought knives and cans of mace for subduing their fellow passengers from the world's cheapest and friendliest stores. |
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The House's mace, which represents royal authority, is placed on the back of the Woolsack. |
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In front of the Speaker's Chair is the Table of the House, at which the clerks sit, and on which is placed the Commons' ceremonial mace. |
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It is among the oldest English cookery books, and the first to mention olive oil, gourds, and spices such as mace and cloves. |
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The Forme of Cury is the first known English cookery book to mention certain ingredients such as cloves, olive oil, mace and gourds. |
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Nutmeg and mace have similar sensory qualities, with nutmeg having a slightly sweeter and mace a more delicate flavour. |
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Add a pinch of mace, the salt, nam pla and rice vinegar and simmer for 20 minutes. |
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In an affront to the dignity of the House and an assault on its order and decorum a member of parliament from the opposition attempted to seize and remove the mace from the table. |
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In the case of nutmegs and mace, the 1995 transfer will be used to make the nutmeg industry more competitive and enable it to diversify into new products and markets. |
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A mace may be used in the assembly as a symbol of authority. |
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Other words in the dictionary are skorts, shoots, mandals, meggings and mace. |
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This refers to the early practice of using the tail of the mace to strike the ball when it lay against a rail cushion. |
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At the edge of a small loch, the reed mace reveal a fresh and light leek-like centre. |
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The idea is to create a series of wetland environments along the length of the river, planted with common reed mace and bullrushes. |
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The broken mace head was found on the ground below the basrelief, so this was a case of vandalism and not looting of artifacts. |
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I've only ever been threatened and spat at in the face by a gangly youth wearing a shell suit and brandishing a can of mace once. |
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Comprehensive expertise is provided for tear gases, mace and pepper sprays. |
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Nutmeg is the pit of the nutmeg tree's fruit, and mace, which commanded and still commands a higher price, is the delicate red aril which comes between the pit and the fruit's husky exterior. |
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Armourers were making gloves with individually jointed fingers, and shoulder defenses had become particularly sophisticated, permitting the man-at-arms full freedom to wield sword, lance, or mace with a minimum of exposure. |
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Then the Nazgûl let fall his mace and broke Éowyn's shield and arm. |
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The weapon smiths' initial response to the helmet was to augment the crushing power of the mace by casting the head in an ellipsoidal form that concentrated more force at the point of impact. |
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Unmasked, the Foot Soldier is ready to make a move with his mace. |
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In the ensuing years, mace would be billed as a humane, yet effective, alternative to police weapons such as the nightstick and the service revolver. |
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The speaker moves to sit beside the throne, the Mace Bearer, with mace in hand, stands adjacent to him or her, and the governor general enters to take the speaker's chair. |
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In this respect the silver oar is the equivalent of a ceremonial mace, representing the authority of the Crown and the Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom. |
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Banda was the world's only source of nutmeg and mace, spices used as flavourings, medicines, and preserving agents that were at the time highly valued in European markets. |
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Cromwell's troops were commanded by Charles Worsley, later one of his Major Generals and one of his most trusted advisors, to whom he entrusted the mace. |
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The ataman's symbol of power was a ceremonial mace, a bulava. |
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Banda was the world's only source of nutmeg and mace, spices used as flavourings, medicines, preserving agents, that were at the time highly valued in European markets. |
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In Scotland, mace and nutmeg are usually both ingredients in haggis. |
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Presented to the Scottish Parliament by the Queen upon Parliament's official opening in July 1999, the mace is displayed in a glass case, suspended from the lid. |
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Pumpkin Pudding Pie Pinch allspice Pinch coriander Pinch mace 2 tsp. |
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Amongst the species at The Greenhouse you can see ash, hawthorn, common reed mace, common water soldier and a range of wildflowers forming a meadow area around the building. |
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Some of the cavalry may have used a mace instead of a sword. |
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Initially, the mace was used to push the balls, rather than strike them. |
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