If we read further in Matthew, we find the familiar story of the wise men, following the star and carrying gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. |
|
When spraying borders adjoining cropland, be sure to read and follow harvest and grazing restrictions. |
|
You can read it anywhere, you can highlight words or cross them out and scribble your own comments alongside. |
|
The frater, or refectory, retains its wall pulpit from which the monks were read to while they ate in silence. |
|
The file may be read on a personal computer, a personal digital assistant, or on an electronic device designed specifically for reading e-books. |
|
I would strongly advise her to go back and read her history books once again as she has got her wires crossed from a historical point of view. |
|
On the way home on the train, my brother read a racing form, my sister-in-law and I gossiped, and we were all grateful we didn't have to move. |
|
As I read history, most of the founders were sensible and pragmatic men rather than visionary idealists. |
|
The biographer must always be doubted, cross-questioned, read between the lines. |
|
He said that people should take time to read the Best Value performance plan and send in a Freepost questionnaire detailing their thoughts. |
|
First, they needed an optical pickup able to read the data from a particular layer without crosstalk from adjacent layers. |
|
Students may read your published work in order to find proof that you don't always practise what you preach. |
|
While I haven't read the story in question, as described here it freezes my blood. |
|
This is one for me to read again in a few weeks' time and then to re-read at frequent intervals after that. |
|
As a frequent visitor to Pattaya, I read your column regularly on the Internet. |
|
No, don't read anything into that, I don't have a crush on my best friend, I'm not that sadly tortured, but I can admit he is cute. |
|
If you have read this far and I haven't managed to frighten you off and you'd still like to hire me, then great! |
|
Is it any more reliable than the advert we read for crystal healing suggesting that the forces of quartz will remove tumours? |
|
We read that what's on and where can be obtained from the tourist information centre. |
|
Brother Hugh McKinney read the first scripture reading and the gospel was read by Canon Mark Diamond. |
|
|
It was the most insightful piece of literature Peter had ever read, and he read diligently through the pages one at a time. |
|
And I kid you not, she could not even read her lines from the cue card she was obviously looking at off camera! |
|
Don't ask me how that last one happened, because I couldn't tell you even if you had me read the actual answer off a cue card. |
|
Lunar Park is a lush, mature novel that is also a frothy read full of gossip and blood. |
|
I found one, took it home and a few weeks later, in the mood for something frothy and light, actually read it. |
|
Judging by the tales I have read around and about recently, I surmise that some of my readers are rather culinarily challenged. |
|
Whilst frowsting in this refuge, I used to read the files on those boys, senior to me, who had been sent for to fill in their career forms. |
|
He also quotes a writer in 1939, who read a scene of nude figures carved upon a bowl as representing worshippers in a mystery cult. |
|
I recently read somewhere that many fruitarians actually get addicted to all the sugar in fruit. |
|
She sighed and rumbled softly while I showed her how to rub and pinch flesh between the fingers, how to read the muscles. |
|
Of course, the failed indicator light was frustrating our efforts to read the indication. |
|
They are designed to be read sequentially and cumulatively, so that the reader gains knowledge in the reading. |
|
She was full of it, spouting out a load of rubbish she probably read in The Sun. |
|
I will be interested to read the full report and see whether it makes any specific proposals. |
|
Firstly, why would anybody want to read this sort of toe-curlingly painful stuff for any sustained period of time? |
|
Given the ease of desktop publishing, use a font that people can read and provide adequate space for writing responses. |
|
The previews I read were all excited by this new idea technique of treating history as current affairs. |
|
I went with an open mind, having read the blurb about it being a non-sexual show with full-frontal male nudity. |
|
Forget anything you may have read about the supposed advantages of Atkins, the dangers of dairy or, for that matter, the curse of cholesterol. |
|
He slides his thumb under the sealed envelope, pulls out the notebook piece of paper, and begins to read the loopy, girly cursive. |
|
|
I really never figured out why we had to learn it, the only people I see who use cursive, I can't read their handwriting anyway. |
|
A woman read the gospel with a helper at her side to pronounce the difficult words. |
|
You need to take certain oaths, read prescribed texts, pass tests, and undergo initiatory rites. |
|
Social workers told me that until they read it they hadn't understood fully the feelings of carers. |
|
Just read the Letters page of this newspaper, full of fulminations against the unionists and the Democratic Unionists. |
|
After take off she pulled on her earphones and listened to her Walkman and read your book for the entire flight. |
|
Any officer conducting a custodial interrogation is required to read the Miranda rights. |
|
The House adopted gag rules to prevent these petitions from being read out loud on the House floor. |
|
Instead, earnest students of public policy are expected to read them onscreen as retrieved via the internet. |
|
It is doubtful whether the functionaries of the Maharashtra government have read it either. |
|
This is actually kind of ironic since I first read it in the print edition but cut and pasted the text from the online edition. |
|
I read this book over and over, and there is one beautiful cutaway picture of a cell, beautifully airbrushed in bright colors. |
|
When it is published, letters begin pouring in from people all over who read her story and loved it and want more like it. |
|
Some hospitals now have special rooms, where patients can go to read humorous books and watch funny videos. |
|
A couple years ago I read about Anna Morris who works as a hotel concierge at the Westin Santa Clara. |
|
A Metropolitan Sunday Newspapers study found that 113 million Americans read the funnies. |
|
Make sure you read the funnies to each other and you must use appropriate voices for different characters! |
|
The best test screenings are for film-makers who read the room and go back into the cutting room. |
|
I figured you had poured your soul out in that letter, and if I would've read it, I wouldn't have been able to do what I did. |
|
There was the mausoleum, with LENIN spelled out over the door in red, the first word I'd learned to read in Cyrillic. |
|
|
Ex-parish priest Cannon Francis Lynn read the gospel while Skreen native Fr. Brian Conlon delivered a beautiful homily. |
|
Today, almost a century later, the Futurist manifestos read like the rantings of poetic speed freaks. |
|
I have read the manual 10 times, and been futzing with this thing for the past 2 hours, I need a senior engineer. |
|
Since then she has read each of the first three books three times and the fourth one twice. |
|
Should they read the liturgical gospel, prepare the bread and wine at the altar, say the dismissal, and so on? |
|
We have the Greek alphabet, most of the Slavic countries write in Cyrillic, the Arabs read their newspapers in their own script, and so on. |
|
I read the rest of this report, looking at why we're increasingly cynical about elections and governments. |
|
Someone else read the gospel, then I walked in from the back of the church. |
|
For The Book Show journalist Rachel Carbonell read Flat Earth News with a healthy dose of cynicism. |
|
We showed him how to make Gaelic coffees with Drambuie and he promptly changed his menu to read Gaelic instead of Irish Coffee. |
|
I couldn't see to read it, I wouldn't have understood it anyway, I was pumped full of morphine. I just held on to it for dear life. |
|
I read the woodworking journals because, while we don't use wood, we do use pultruded fiberglass, which is worked the same way as wood. |
|
It was always my favorite, to read about Cyclopes, gorgons, heroes, and goddesses. |
|
Having read that she despises interviews, I'm not surprised when she delays ours as long as possible by asking me loads of questions. |
|
Cache miss buffer adapted to satisfy read requests to portions of a cache fill in progress without waiting for the cache fill to complete. |
|
But when the children began to read the names, two years disappeared in an instant. |
|
Perhaps if those who reviled and insulted Said could have read this book, they might have desisted. |
|
I might have read a lot about the tiger, but may not be able to recognise its pug marks if I am left in a jungle. |
|
Don't read this book if you want a detailed description of any particular mission to space. |
|
Livi's neighbor's brow puckered thoughtfully as she read the instructor's criticisms. |
|
|
One problem for me as a blogger is that I read voraciously but write very dilatorily and distractedly. |
|
I will not read out that first paragraph on page 295 which is the judge's instructions to the jury. |
|
I read that in the papers somewhere that the trial judge actually gave some instructions to the jury about the role of the foreman. |
|
She could read simple instructions but more complicated information was still beyond her. |
|
As for the seats themselves, it's instructive to read the Royal Commission report. |
|
He read most of the closed and silent-e-pattern words and had the most difficulty with vowel digraphs and diphthongs. |
|
As for insurgents from other countries, the reports I've read said they constitute about 10 percent of the insurgent forces. |
|
What essentially is the debate about how to read a text that's written in plain English? |
|
Asked by the castle guard to read his work, the poet refuses because it is beneath his dignity to perform in the open air. |
|
He can catch, he can dive, he can read the game, and his kicking is good enough to take the pressure off his defence. |
|
Lewis says he may take a look at any good reviews but he doesn't read a lot of his own press. |
|
Does it make you uncomfortable that people can read your innermost thoughts? |
|
Or think of the pet psychic who claims she can read your dog's mind by looking at a photo of the dog. |
|
Even if I've read about a movie, I don't get really psyched until I see the trailer. |
|
His highlighting of the paradoxes arising from human free will, creativity and depravity made me keen to read on. |
|
His whole aspect and deportment is such that it suggests that he can't even sit still and read a book in a quiet and un-cheeky manner. |
|
I read that certain games are to be banned in school playgrounds, including conkers and skipping, for fear of accidents. |
|
To all you knuckle headed, conscienceless conservatives out there, read my first post again and allow yourself to ask the obvious question. |
|
You read it for the atmosphere, the smoky, urban settings that enshroud his helpless or conscienceless characters. |
|
He said I should read his profile and give him a shout back if I was interested. |
|
|
I have no sympathy for whatever cause they think they are fighting for when I read or hear of such senseless acts of murder against innocents. |
|
Then they learned to read by pronouncing nonsense syllables formed by combining consonants with vowels, such as ba-he-bi. |
|
I am a firefighter based at Bispham fire station and was horrified and a little upset to read what one of your readers had written in to say. |
|
He gazed goggle-eyed at the monuments to the great and good interred there, and read their epitaphs with awe. |
|
You know it's quite difficult to contain the impulse to break Godwin's Law when I read things like this. |
|
Mary and her conspirators openly discussed their plans in these encrypted letters, as they believed no one else would be able to read them. |
|
I read someplace about a neolithic site in a cave somewhere with a lot of charred hemp seeds found in the fire pit. |
|
In fact, to read through most rap lyrics is to wonder which adults or political constituencies wouldn't take offense. |
|
The only possible operation is to read data when Read-Only Mode is invoked. |
|
Just how many of them have read the addled, interminable book that first described his adventures, however, is debatable. |
|
We read the opening psalm in the book of Psalms and we meet there the blessed man. |
|
It's times when I feel myself really start to get down that I know I need to read a book and get my mind off the internal conflict. |
|
For the most part, people read books to construct a favorable self-image for themselves. |
|
In particular, you should read it just to understand the depth of belief in god-men and the supernatural that exists even today in India. |
|
Then the tabloids will read about Rita Lin and all that pagoogle and make me out as some raving drug fiend and make my life more interesting. |
|
She began to catch up after those wasted years and read books and consulted the dictionary constantly. |
|
I should interpolate that his friends generally read to him to save his eyes. |
|
The current crop of contactless chips have a read rate eight times higher than contact chips. |
|
Two-way radio transmitter-receivers called interrogators send a signal to the tag and read its response. |
|
The ingredients for a decent read are there, but Egleton bogs us down with too much detail so Cry Havoc never gets out of first gear. |
|
|
Nobody really knows how they got there, which, rather pleasingly, negates the need to read lots of tedious literature on the subject. |
|
I try to read as deadpan as possible, like an academic intoning a hallowed text. |
|
What they will do is read out a death sentence, intone a chant, then set upon the hostage from all sides. |
|
The three lines of cases can be read to point to a very specific definition of the Fifth Amendment privilege. |
|
Meanwhile, go read some of the fine blogs at the side there, and I'll just nip off and quietly drink myself insensible in the hiatus. |
|
But if you read it closely, you'll see I'm using the intransitive plural subjunctive tense. |
|
I have read about the magic of Solomon, and it seems very complicated and intricate to me. |
|
She hasn't read any of Shaun's books but was intrigued by his story and the possible endings. |
|
In fact it is likely that Coleridge, who was himself a contributor to the Monthly Magazine, read some or all of these correspondences. |
|
If you've never read about this sort of thing, this is a good basic introductory article. |
|
My wife Amy sings and I read from the texts of my poems, as music plays which Stan controls at a soundboard. |
|
Gnostics read their revelations in private, or discuss them in small conventicles with those who are similarly enlightened. |
|
I respond becoming even more unnerved, not one bit liking the idea of her being able to read my innermost thoughts. |
|
With a hot chocolate in my hand, I selected one of the plush seats near the door and settled down to read a book. |
|
Again, all my mates have read it and I haven't, which can lead to an embarrassing conversational hiatus in the pub. |
|
His writing in the 60s which I read in my late schooldays had the urgent fizz of newly discovered and prohibited drugs. |
|
As a Piscean, you are usually too busy to read these things, but today you will find the time. |
|
Having read many of Mr Brown's letters I am firmly convinced that he cares little for animal welfare. |
|
I was invited to read some of it at School Assembly and after that my stutter went. |
|
This is a short pocket-sized book that can be read quickly and offers good basic insights into relaxation techniques and meditation. |
|
|
As usual, you can either follow the links, or read the cut and paste articles below. |
|
They are as likely to read something online instead of watch the news, or listen to a podcast instead of read a magazine. |
|
Few people will read them in full, so for most people their main sources of information are executive summaries, digests, and press reports. |
|
Jeff had read between the journalist's lines, and seen the pictures of flaming cars in the south. |
|
This is a genuinely stimulating book that all of us should read and inwardly digest. |
|
And you have not read him, they say, until you have read him enwreathed with Blake's furious scribbling. |
|
Dylan's a tough cookie, and you can read all about it on his very engaging and frequently updated website. |
|
The Index reveals an alternative literary canon of the poets most widely read in printed miscellanies. |
|
For poets and those who read poetry, the poetic form can be relatively obscure as a discipline and as an art. |
|
Although it is possible to read his poems without needing specialized jargon or poetics, his writing is full of erudition and learning. |
|
It was patterned on the poetry slam, which offers an open mike to unpublished poets to read their poems before a literature-prone audience. |
|
You then read other letters and you find out he's surrounded by bright young things, flappers. |
|
And I just realised I probably won't post again in 2001, so this is by way of being a New Year's greeting to all of you out there who read this. |
|
If I read this latest letter correctly, I am on the point of losing the right to drive. |
|
Universal Time, UTC may be read from the atomic clock at the US Naval Observatory. |
|
Today we can read the course of this evolution in the development of a flatfish. |
|
You were supposed to read it once and then remember it, as if you were an eidetic reader who recalled every single word with equal intensity. |
|
I'd been meaning to write a piece on it for years, ever since I read that someone had made a panda out of a black bear and a polar bear. |
|
They had asked me to climb on and read the information so they could copy it down. |
|
This file is read and processed by a program written in the python language. |
|
|
Ali rolled her eyes, imagining being ordered to read and copy chapters about having proper posture. |
|
Even those monks who spent their days copying manuscripts could barely read or understand them. |
|
The latter may be because I'd always prefer to read a punchy polemic against ideas I hold than a dull defence or clunky statement of them. |
|
Pythagorean natural philosophers read musical harmonies into the universe at large. |
|
I read that you can make a tea with a common cooking ingredient for flatulence. |
|
A two, to three-minute extract from each of the 20 short-listed pieces was read to give the audience a flavour of the writing. |
|
Blogging isn't great fun if you're using a dial-up system where it takes longer to load a page than read it. |
|
But my favorite books to read are generally on political history and political science. |
|
Before opening the quarterly, I expected to read the work of fledgling student poets. |
|
Much that was read and sung celebrated prowess in war and the glorious deeds of ancestors. |
|
The other angle I read into this is that of the child-abduction by goblins and fairies in the tales of yore and of today. |
|
I read comic books and graphic novels and frankly, I don't care what you think about that. |
|
Unfortunately the stain cannot be read by densitometers that measure only white light. |
|
In the densimeter a thermometer is built to correct the value read at different temperatures from that of calibration. |
|
Under lighting restriction orders, a Naval officer at Yarmouth was fined for striking matches in a telephone box to read the dial. |
|
I held it up to the light and read the slightly smudged neat italic handwriting. |
|
The French consume densely intellectual tomes with the fervour that we read Jackie Collins. |
|
If you read Dirtbike Manifesto first, however, and discover The Couriers at a later date, you'll probably flip your wig. |
|
I had the sudden urge, a sudden itch, to pull the journal from my pack and read in the safety of my bath. |
|
I am computer savvy, and had read other blogs and thought it'd be worth a shot. |
|
|
Although I doubt crackers are attempting to break into your PC as you read this, there's always the possibility. |
|
The first time I read this New York Sun story, I almost figured it was a put-on. |
|
Back in college, we read Kolatkar in dhabas and cafes the way I imagine another generation elsewhere must have read Lorca and Neruda. |
|
But the text was so dense and so long that I imagine few people will have read it. |
|
Got some interesting events to relate to the blog and the people that read it, but I've come out on top. |
|
Apathy was probably the word she learned in school that day or had read in the latest book she was devouring. |
|
When I read again what I wrote over a week ago, it does look a little stupid or corny. |
|
I don't think anyone could read this behaviour in any other way than being pompous and patronising. |
|
Spent the day sleeping, reading comics, forgetting I'd read them, and poodling around on the computer. |
|
I once read an article about a guy who corralled a herd of particularly wily mustangs by just quietly pushing them from 3 miles back. |
|
It means it's hardly surprising that, generally, people don't read long, dense texts espousing positions that are the opposite of their own. |
|
My goal, therefore, is to read these two theorists as potential correctives to one another. |
|
You won't just read me complaining about morning sickness, stomach flus, truncated naps, and poopy diaper emergencies. |
|
The test itself required users to click on pictures on a computer screen corresponding to a word that was read out. |
|
They are read from and written to just like a large floppy or small hard drive. |
|
In fairness, I was caught up in this book and wanted to devour it as if I hadn't had anything to read but comic books for a year. |
|
His literate sense of the handgun equates to a read you will find yourself devouring as you would a fine steak at a world-class eatery. |
|
People who in other countries would read light novels and popular magazines devoured works on art, science, history, and above all philosophy. |
|
You can't read them without making a flow chart showing each justice's position first. |
|
But if you read on, you find that this only means that some of the long-standing evidence deniers merely keep on denying the evidence. |
|
|
Today, however, he discussed my demurral on the air in such a way that indicated he had not read my letter. |
|
So, she hid her femininity behind demureness, read her poems with eyes downcast and scuttled back to the safe haven of domesticity. |
|
I read an article which claimed that bare-knuckle fighting in barns is safer than official boxing with gloves on. |
|
Many of the physical theories and cosmologies of the Greeks read like rational revisions of the early myths. |
|
You could read that in a cosmological way, as a belief that the universe is cyclical and is going to recur. |
|
Amanda read the pamphlet with great interest, devouring every word and photograph. |
|
He has produced a comfortable read with flowing prose and bite-sized chapters. |
|
Most they put immediately back because they were written in Dimish and the Neraks could not read the graceful, flowing script. |
|
He read Aristotle, Plato, Marx and Lenin and devoured both great European novels and contemporary pulp fiction in binges of late-night reading. |
|
Wednesday's win was a pleasing, restorative result at a time when it was badly needed, but it would be delusive to read too much into it. |
|
The only sort of training I had as any kind of exegete or glossator was being taught for A-level how to read Shakespeare, Milton and Dickens. |
|
I do not suffer fools gladly, especially not critics who can neither read accurately nor write grammatically. |
|
If, like me and so many other people, you've read the books over and over, the movies irritate every time they deviate from the original. |
|
I was in grade school at the time, and fortunately had a teacher who forced us to read biographies. |
|
Her face felt hot and flushed, and she was certain that everyone could read her thoughts and see directly into her heart. |
|
I once read that in battle the most dangerous thing you could do was run away. |
|
Chris was standing with Chrissy on his arm, both of them watching the large digital countdown clock, which read five minutes. |
|
Benglis's photograph can be read in various ways, appealing to the libertarian feminist as surely as it repelled the more puritanically minded. |
|
The couple now hope to travel, read and relax away from the shop counter and the routine of a small business. |
|
She read one sentence and could hardly believe that such abomination could possibly exist let alone be described. |
|
|
If you read the Puritans regularly, their Bible-centeredness becomes contagious. |
|
I've seen the rot in schools myself, kids can barely read and write and grade inflation is the norm. |
|
The Thursday Programming Schedule is now posted but you don't need to read it since you'll only be going to my panels. |
|
If you read it before this notice was posted, you might take another look at the second half. |
|
By the General's orders, officers are going to read every letter that is posted, so I must be very careful what I write to you. |
|
Such structures can be read as dramas of redemption, of deliverance from the chaotic environment of an unreasoning nature. |
|
In the past he has delegated someone to read those that are written in languages he finds difficult. |
|
You can't shop, bank or read many newspapers online without being prompted for a password. |
|
I found it by pure chance and I ask you all humbly to please go read and consider helping this man in a time of real need. |
|
I haven't read the other two books in the trilogy, and that's a keen regret that I intend to do something about post-haste. |
|
Or was she so strapped for time that she had to write it in post-haste and not even proof read it once. |
|
It must be nearly thirty years since I have read it but I could almost quote it as soon as the first line prompted me. |
|
Certainly, having read it once, I could dip into it at random and enjoy the writing and description without lamenting too much the loss of plot. |
|
The Proclamation which you have just heard read by the Governor-General's Official Secretary was countersigned by Malcolm Fraser. |
|
Still, counterterrorism specialists and Middle East foreign area officers should read this book. |
|
The impressionist's take on the folksonomy discussion between them is the best text for time-pressured people to read today. |
|
And every day we read about delays, postponements, difficulties in the trial, terrible security problems. |
|
I mean, even the last book I read was so deadly dull I had to skim the last third just to get it over with. |
|
The nurse didn't even raise an eyebrow, continuing to read from her silly ladies' romance gazette. |
|
As a leader, your job is to read the tea leaves, set a direction, and move like a gazelle, not an elephant, into the future. |
|
|
Consequently, I then began to read the therapist notes, the daybooks, and the expert reports by a variety of mental health professionals. |
|
This is a dauntingly monumental volume, and it shouldn't be read in one gulp. |
|
Haven't seen the preggie base jumper story yet, will have to google it and have a read while I have a cuppa. |
|
We read and replace gas meters for customers, using information provided to us by our clients. |
|
Going yet further, because events in the Old Testament are read as foreshadowing parts of the life of Christ, Noah prefigures Christ. |
|
Each data type has a host of associated read commands and data-processing commands. |
|
The dashboard shows all your email messages, when they were sent, when they were read and how much time elapsed between the two events. |
|
He had met the dark-haired girl some months before in Nottingham, where he had gone to read his poems. |
|
The new font is easy to read but I mourn the passing of Helvetica and Garamond. |
|
I've never been as ashamed of my fellow countrymen as I was when I read this story. |
|
Healy still goes online to read it from time to time, to stoke his ire anew. |
|
The boys eat dinner together with each set of grandparents, say grace before meals, and read or share stories at night. |
|
I am going to read into the judgment the following paragraphs of the circular. |
|
Even before he moves I know how it's going to happen, I've read their postures and attitudes and I already have it planned. |
|
Because it's too hard to read in my scan, I note that the return address for the coupon is in Kent, England. |
|
Many of the children read over 20 books in the course of a four week period. |
|
I think the right thing to do is what I suggested a moment ago, namely, read the cases out of court and give you an answer in writing. |
|
Though The Times continued dutifully to print a court circular, it is doubtful whether it was as much read as the sports page. |
|
At his honor's request, the court reporter just read back the Facts of the Case. |
|
He asked about her marriages and, when her memory proved faulty, had the court reporter read her interrogation into the record. |
|
|
Alexander Games, who compiled the anthology, obviously intended it to be dipped into rather than read straight through. |
|
I just hope that they actually read it instead of dipping into it, though the excellence of the index may well encourage the latter. |
|
I am also of the view that the court cannot read down or limit the application of the covenants to a reasonable level. |
|
I pulled out my favorite book, How to Kill a Mockingbird, and started to read it for the billionth time. |
|
Yep, I'm using an attention grabbing headline again to get you to read the article. |
|
One need not read the books from cover to cover to benefit from their findings. |
|
He took the rule book, read it from cover to cover, and then forgot all about it. |
|
This book is deeply interesting to read while still being informative and instructive. |
|
People usually want obvious inclusions everyone has read about eleventy billion times. |
|
I did not read the book from cover to cover, but I spent time flipping through its pages. |
|
I enjoy your articles, and I usually read the magazine from cover to cover. |
|
For one, Economics in One Lesson can be read by anyone who can perform elementary logical exercises in his mind. |
|
By the way, anyone who needs total coverage of this ought to read Griffiths. |
|
A precocious child, he read voraciously and soon revealed an extraordinary aptitude for languages. |
|
The suppression of detail causes the stepped facade of the building to read like forbidding ridges or dangerous protective fins. |
|
His determination to spice up his story makes it sometimes read like a dime novel about a drink-crazed mafia don. |
|
A good linguist, from an early age he read and studied widely, and in 1901 wrote a letter of profound admiration in Dano-Norwegian to Ibsen. |
|
I had read a lot about Mumbai gangsters, even seen movies made on them, but had never met one. |
|
I don't care if I never read any of them again, they're old comrades and I like to have them around. |
|
Wendy noted the crabbed scrawl of her uncle's signature immediately above the notarization seal, then read the introduction. |
|
|
As soon as they pick up the phone from the cradle, however, or read an incoming text message, they would be liable for prosecution. |
|
Some Welshman told me I had to read this book, though forewarned me that page 136 would induce an embolism. |
|
Most of you have probably read that I was arrested recently on charges of forgery and fraud in suburban Philadelphia. |
|
I haven't proof read it or anything, so forgive me if there are grammatical errors and stuff. |
|
I cried with laughter the first time I read this, and I still go there when I feel cranky, because it always makes me giggle. |
|
The building is organised as a series of layers, allowing it to be read as several slender parallel forms. |
|
If only he had read the fine print on the medical release form at the hospital. |
|
The missus read it with fevered excitement since she has previously expressed an interest in playing the piano. |
|
I've accidentally underscored every argument a book retailer has ever made, in every forum where I've read them, against odd sizes and formats. |
|
In both cases, learning to read was one of the great formative experiences of their lives. |
|
Never, in a long life have I read so many statements of the crashingly obvious. |
|
Why don't we begin by asking crassly and blatantly why anyone would care to read this interview? |
|
She read a wedding planner for inspiration, and learned about a new craze for hot air balloon weddings. |
|
The relevant text of the preamble to Chapter 6 and of paragraph 6.2 should therefore be amended to read as follows. |
|
Summer smoothed out the creases in the paper and began to read what it said. |
|
Like most people past their mid forties, he uses spectacles to read and write. |
|
So, as you read this book, challenge yourself to rethink what you have been offered concerning evolution and creationism. |
|
One group of four people were actually observed to sit down for a good few minutes and read all of them in-depth. |
|
The very fact that I visit this site and read these articles lends credence to the assumption that I do find useful and true ideas here. |
|
Their mission statements read like political manifestos rather than educational credos. |
|