And here we will take leave of the Umbrians and pass northward into the great plains of Emilia and Lombardy. |
|
But when time no longer entails an opportunity cost, people take leave of their senses. |
|
The chances are that producers will take leave of their senses entirely and that their optimism will reach new heights. |
|
The relatives of the victims are entitled to take leave of their loved ones in a dignified manner. |
|
I can nowise explain what sort of whim, prank, or perversity it was, that, after all these leave-takings, induced me to go to the pig-stye and take leave of the swine! |
|
He instructs the archangel Gabriel to go down and tell the president that it is time for him to take leave of his people. |
|
On the contrary, we take leave of ourselves and of our creative capacity and let time pass us by. |
|
She truly does take leave of her senses where her Earl is concerned. |
|
Some would take leave of their senses while others would put an end to their lives. |
|
Is it not fitting that we take leave of one another with this real-life image in mind? |
|
We first meet them as they blithely take leave of each other. |
|
The grant is allowing him to take leave of a full-time position in another province and concentrate on the research, under the mentorship of his research supervisor. |
|
Marie and her camera, however, quickly take leave of reality. |
|
The bishop of Darien, Romulo Emiliani, has often given warning about armed groups crossing into Panama, so often indeed that he has now been persuaded, or forced, to take leave of absence from the bishopric. |
|
She plainly said that men seemed to take leave of their senses as soon as women were concerned. |
|
We take leave of season four with ambivalence. |
|
However, as I take leave of my testing responsibilities at the head of the Executive Board, I am overcome by a grand dream, a broader and more universal dream. |
|
He was inciting voters to take leave of their senses. |
|
Montreal's musical and gourmet scene take leave of the city and are transported to the mighty St. Lawrence, with a special serving of legendary songs, and the best of the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth menu! |
|
The right to take leave of absence to take care of a sick child: authorization to take paid leave in the event of illness affecting one or several children is granted to the mother or father. |
|
|
At the Banko ceremony, three years after the death, the same catafalque is prepared and the living take leave of the deceased, who then becomes an ancestor. |
|
So saying, he called for a reckoning for the wine, and throwing down the price of the additional bottle which he had himself introduced, rose as if to take leave of us. |
|
The church has been unmoored and should joyfully take leave of the settledness of Constantinian social arrangements that gave it privilege and power. |
|