Sentence Examples
Maud had a lovely manner and kind nature and she was very popular with her neighbours in Kilbeg. |
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Mrs. Burns-Cooper, spurred by her mother-in-law, escalates the attack by criticizing Maud Martha's potato parings as too thick. |
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Maud Reeves was very involved in the Fabian Society and was an active suffragist and sociologist. |
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Maud sat on her cream deckchair every day, shading her face with a big floppy sunhat, and sipping cool pink lemonade through a yellow straw. |
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Maud, William the Conqueror's queen, held the town and soke as part of the king's demesne. |
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He twice proposed marriage to Maud Gonne, and when she refused him he transferred his affections to her teenage daughter. |
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Maud Martha's refusal to purchase the millinery concoction, even at a substantially discounted price, reaffirms her sense of self. |
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For Maud Martha, the house serves dual roles as the site of both her distress and her succor. |
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Don't you recognise your old shipmate?' It was Maud, by that time of flag rank. |
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Maud smiled distantly, as if reveling in some personal dream. |
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The frogs occupy a 16-ha stand of remnant native forest on Maud Island. |
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It's easy to put a Pollyanna stamp on Anne, but I think it's a generalization which does a disservice to what Lucy Maud wrote. |
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Mrs. Maud Debien: I was wondering what this anti-dumping instrument should be, concretely. |
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While many people dismiss this Lucy Maud Montgomery tale as just a children's book, its popularity is staggering. |
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Would you believe that Maud has the temerity to lie about her birthday? |
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Maud Seghers briefly introduced this subject, and outlined the five Strategic objectives of ADEA which should accommodate the objectives of the working groups. |
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In 1138, King Stephen successfully besieged the castle held by William FitzAlan for the Empress Maud during the period known as the Anarchy. |
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Among these, the most notable are Cecil Sharp, Maud Karpeles, and Mary Neal. |
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East Antarctica lies on the Indian Ocean side of the Transantarctic Mountains and comprises Coats Land, Queen Maud Land, Enderby Land, Mac. |
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The 29-year-old wanted her portrayal of Maud in Suffragette to be realistic, and for her character to appear malnourished. |
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Hardened by his arduous experiences at sea, Van Weyden develops strength of both body and will, protecting another castaway, Maud Brewster, and facing down the increasingly deranged Larsen. |
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The meridian defines the eastern limit of the New Swabia area in Queen Maud Land, Antarctica. |
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Though Aunt Maud had always maintained she was not long for this world, she outlived all her generation. |
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At first Maud, so afraid for her husband and baby, was unable to eat, but within a few days she tore into burnt cowflesh like any soldadera. |
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On Saturday 26 August 1911, Alice Maud Boyall became the first woman to swim the Humber. |
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The calving grounds of the Beverly caribou herd are located around Queen Maud Gulf but the herd shifted its traditional birthing area. |
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An intrepid Maud sits sidesaddle on a donkey while an armed dragoman, kitted out in nattily checked pants, awaits, like the dromedary, the party's pleasure. |
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He went on to star in the freewheeling A Man and a Woman, then shot the gorgeous My Night With Maud for Eric Rohmer and The Conformist for Bernardo Bertolucci. |
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In the photo, one can see how he can barely take his eyes off Maud Welzen who struts by in itty-bitty lingerie, the New York Post reported. |
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Norway also lays claim to a section of Antarctica known as Queen Maud Land. |
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Visitors may be interested to learn that the title of this piece takes inspiration from the poet Alfred Lord Tennyson's Maud, A Monodrama. |
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On most maps there had been an unclaimed area between Queen Maud Land and the South Pole until June 12, 2015 when Norway formally annexed that area. |
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The Dependency Act, passed by the Parliament of Norway on 27 February 1930, established Bouvet Island as a dependency, along with Peter I Island and Queen Maud Land. |
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Dromio of Ephesus. Maud, Bridget, Marian, Cicely, Gillian, Ginn! |
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I'm a fair judge, well used to the good grub and knacky manipulation of sauce and meat by my mother, who cooked at one time for Maud Gonne MacBride. |
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Maud Kells, 75, from Co Tyrone, was hit at point-blank range after grabbing hold of the gun as a bandit opened fire during a bungled robbery at her home last month. |
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On most maps, there had been an unclaimed area between Queen Maud Land and the South Pole until 12 June 2015 when Norway formally annexed that area. |
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Examples from Classical Literature
But, Charlie, I think you're dead right about what you say concernin' maud and her father and you. |
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But, to be real honest now, maud, would you have been satisfied to have it that way? |
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It won't mean that you mustn't make a clean breast of everything to maud and to Sam. |
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But, maud, can't you see why he didn't come and tell you before he went to enlist? |
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Opposite the window was the door, and beside the door a bookcase, while over the piano there extended one of the masterpieces of Maud Goodman. |
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All this, in frankness, to show my first impression, after long denial of women in general and of Maud Brewster in particular. |
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Do you think you can convey him, without suspicion, to his nurse Maud, at skipton? |
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Patsy, however, was taught the use of the hypodermic needle, which Maud and Beth quite understood. |
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The purloiner of love had introduced herself under cover of the pity in which Maud had believed. |
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Mrs. Brereton wondered in her own mind where Maud could have got her tactlessness from. |
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And Maud put her skipping-rope into the brown paper, and laid it on the bench. |
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When she saw Maud in Deborah's grip she flew at her sister like a tigress and dragged her off. |
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Few else could have written that unsurpassable lyric, Come into the Garden, Maud. |
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She sighted the Maud Mary at once, and fired some sort of popgun to arrest us. |
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It was obvious that he was tepidly in love with Maud, or rather that he was anxious she should be in love with him. |
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I can't say I'm happy, exactly, but Maud is and I'm goin' to make-believe be, for her sake. |
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Indeed, on second thoughts he decided 'twould be best for Maud to-be set free from the classes for her ordinary music lessons. |
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But after a minute or so he got up, thereby interrupting the blissfulness of sensation, for Maud would wonder why he tarried. |
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I have a wax doll named Maud, and a china doll named Nellie, and another named Linnie. |
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His long poems besides In Memoriam are The Princess, Maud, and the Idylls of the King. |
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The sound of his voice made Maud quickly draw close to me, as for protection, and she rested one hand on my arm while we parleyed. |
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Maud was ready first, and holding up an oddly shaped linen bag, with a big blue F embroidered on it, demanded her story. |
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And Maud dived among the pillows to smother a wail of anguish at the prospect of being bereft of her treasures. |
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There was his wife, Alice, and then there were his children, Weedon and Maud, toddlers of four and six. |
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If Maud had taken the stones, jun would recognise them, Michael knew. |
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She asked a good deal about the ratting, and about jun and Maud. |
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When he saw Maud and Sam his tallowy face flushed, in spots, with delight. |
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When the Playhouse opened, its box office second assistant, Maud Carpenter, had never previously entered a theatre. |
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Again Maud rectified the twist with the watch-tackle, and again she lowered away from the windlass. |
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Calling to Maud to cease lowering, I went on deck and made the watch-tackle fast to the mast with a rolling hitch. |
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The possibility of meeting Mr Shute had not occurred to Maud. |
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Everything was wet except Maud, and she, in oilskins, rubber boots, and sou'wester, was dry, all but her face and hands and a stray wisp of hair. |
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At length, when Maud was old enough to be my companion, Lemuel ran away. |
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From these we have Mawson and Malleson, the former also belonging to Maud. |
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Souffl of nightshade for Alice this evening, said Maud cheerfully. |
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Jealous as Arthur Welsh was of all who inflicted gay badinage, however gentlemanly, on Maud Peters, he never forgot that he was an artist. |
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The tables set for the wedding breakfast of Princess Maud of Wales. |
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Maud, the eldest girl, had very straight, well-formed features. |
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And pouncing upon Polly, Maud dragged her away like a captured ship towed by a noisy little steam-tug. |
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Maud, give me my Shetland shawl, and put a cushion at my back. |
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Lovely it was,' went on Maud, dully conscious of failure, but stippling in like an artist the little touches which give atmosphere and verisimilitude to a story. |
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