However, I can resent having to wade through a piece only to come to the end and find nothing of value was said. |
|
Dropping down abaft the bridge, the first thing to come into view was the funnel. |
|
He's like a wandering spirit waiting for an opening, allowing him to come back to life. |
|
And I didn't want to be a woman that stayed at home to wait for my husband to come home every night. |
|
It reminded me of a time many years before when a guy asked me did I want to come in for coffee. |
|
It is time for us to come together and communicate our common wants, needs, desires and goals. |
|
Refrigerate for a good hour or so before serving, so that the whole thing has time to come together. |
|
All welcome to come and view the activities and premises on offer or to book a place for your child. |
|
He refused to make a formal announcement of his abdication or to come to the capital. |
|
I hope this is not a harbinger of 4 a.m. wake-up calls to come, but I'm probably kidding myself. |
|
They seemed content to sit back and invite Arsenal to come on to them, and the league leaders were not about to spurn the invitation. |
|
Steve and Lori Ellsworth like to come to San Diego to play in our wallyball tournaments. |
|
We heard the ship fire a gun, and make a waft with her ensign as a signal for the boat to come on board. |
|
The woman is over here from Ireland for the wake, she explains, and she just had to come over and talk. |
|
I think that trying to find a major turning point of this rather one-sided affair is hard to come by. |
|
Time was when the big man, a steamfitter by trade, would have thought it mad folly to come to Ed Massey's for anything but a haircut. |
|
There may be more consolidation to come, which might even see some of the smaller players absorbed into their larger rivals. |
|
Thomas Young lived in a pivotal time. The explosion of knowledge that was soon to come made it impossible to be a true polyhistor. |
|
After a great deal of anguished consideration, and at great personal risk, I have decided to come forward and reveal my secret. |
|
Andover Academy started offering Mandarin and they accepted two people from the local high school to come study. |
|
|
He invoked a New York to come like the New York that once was, before chaos and crime gave liberalism a bad name. |
|
If the goal is to move from brinksmanship to bipartisanship, these picks are a troubling sign of things to come. |
|
A soldier asks all the men to come off the bus, but only half do, and he decides not to bother with rest. |
|
We were on her roof talking and trying to come up with ideas, to think of alternatives to renting a studio. |
|
Another piece might cause people to come up short is an elaborate green Burmese Buddhist alms bowl on a stand covered in gold. |
|
Still to come are Honeymoon in Vegas, Diner, The bodyguard, Back to The Future, Beaches and so many more. |
|
So where Tony and Thorne and aidan are could best be described as on shore waiting for me to come back. |
|
Blum and his producing partner, Steven Schneider, told CAA they wanted to come on as producers. |
|
Instead, renegade Newt threw haymakers at also-rans like Michele Bachmann, but was still smart and agile enough to come out ahead. |
|
All are welcome to come along and enjoy a walk with good company. |
|
My agent at the time sent that tape to SNL and then they asked me to come in for an audition. |
|
Their cheesehead Wisconsin counterparts gobbled up less-healthy foods and were allowed to come back for seconds. |
|
That affinity has to come from somewhere besides just the entertainment value. |
|
David Prowse, the actor who portrayed Darth Vader, wished to come back but had to turn down the role because of ill health. |
|
Here, now, are some achievable resolutions that will help you be sort of, basically, more-or-less decent in the year to come. |
|
The hardest thing to come to terms with is that ultimately you cannot make everything all right for people, Blaine says. |
|
In years to come, the country will refer to July 8, 2014, as among the blackest days in its history. |
|
I invited a biologist friend who studies human gut bacteria to come take a look with me. |
|
In these days of corporate austerity, economic gloom and wafer-thin margins, it is brave to post substantially increased profits and claim there is still more to come. |
|
Despite the rapid growth, Bhutan is still trying to keep its traditions alive and preserve the heavens for generations to come. |
|
|
Then he told me where it was to be and who were to be there, and made me promise to come and be best man. |
|
That means a lot of kids are going to come to baton Rouge and try college for a while, not like it, and leave. |
|
I predict that someone tall, dark, and handsome is going to come into your life. |
|
So I think that that kind of concentration, and focus, and attentiveness, is hard to come by. |
|
She also got a few students from the local university ASL class to come and sign with me. |
|
Heroin used to come in the same way, either packed in bundles of wax baggies or as chunks resembling sticks of chalk. |
|
I've just happened to come across quite a few wackadoos in my time. |
|
Don't expect me to come running every time you want something. I'm not your servant. |
|
Improper mining could kill the Kabul River and poison the aquifer for generations to come. |
|
Pour into the stockpot, being careful to stop before the broth is all in and the fat starts to come out. |
|
His hero, Bruce Springsteen, is a gazillionaire, but he still manages to come across as a regular guy, so perception is reality. |
|
The Brazilian superstar has found playing time hard to come by at the San Siro, but perhaps his latest stunt will get coach Carlo Ancelotti to wake up and smell the coffee. |
|
Dan won't be able to come to the party, since he broke his leg last week and is now on crutches. |
|
Many found work in the mills and factories and encouraged other family members to come over as there were jobs waiting for them. |
|
Migrants now tend to come from an increasing number of regions of origin in China. |
|
Citations and publications in a language different from English are harder to come across. |
|
Supplies were supposed to come in through it and so it was also called, descriptively, the Porta Quaestoria. |
|
In case of attack, arrows, javelins and sling missiles could be fired down at an enemy tiring himself to come up. |
|
A long siege could slow down the army, allowing help to come or for the enemy to prepare a larger force for later. |
|
The conquest of the area by the Oromo ended in the contraction of both Adal and Abyssinia, changing regional dynamics for centuries to come. |
|
|
As meat cooks, the structure and especially the collagen breaks down, allowing juice to come out of the meat. |
|
He encouraged Dutch mezzotinters to come to Britain to copy his work, laying the foundations for the English mezzotint tradition. |
|
Laing, and though Waters personally drove Barrett to the appointment, Barrett refused to come out of the car. |
|
The rest of the band were ready to record when Mercury felt able to come into the studio, for an hour or two at a time. |
|
The Rolling Stones would become the biggest band other than the Beatles to come out of the British Invasion, topping the Hot 100 eight times. |
|
The period also marked the debut of two acts who, along with Massive Attack, would define the Bristol scene for years to come. |
|
Arthur Clues was the first Australian to come and play in Britain after the war and the great Australian second rower was signed by Leeds. |
|
These expressions had to come either from a central government or a national golf governing body. |
|
A quinella boxes an exacta, allowing the first two finishers to come in any order and still win. |
|
Button was the first to come in for slick tyres on a damp but drying track, which lifted him to second place after the other drivers had pitted. |
|
However, rather than buying the Vikings off, payment of Danegeld only encouraged them to come back for more. |
|
Another was sent to France, asking her not to support Russia if it were to come to the defence of Serbia. |
|
Consequently, they have had to come up with stronger arguments faster in order to win a vote. |
|
The equivalent of the royal assent is not sufficient to cause an Act of Tynwald to come into full force of law in the Isle of Man. |
|
In response, Austrian commander Leopold von Daun collected a force of 30,000 men to come to the relief of Prague. |
|
The Norwegian soldiers from FSK Forsvarets Spesialkommando were the first to come in contact with the Russian troops at the airport. |
|
At first sales were very difficult to come by, and the project was due to be cancelled. |
|
And this path he opened to all who choose to follow him in time yet to come, thus saving the human race. |
|
In the 19th century the dioceses of the Church of England began gradually to come under review again. |
|
From the 1980s onwards, crossover artists such as Katherine Jenkins, Charlotte Church and Aled Jones began to come to the fore. |
|
|
I was never so astonished as when on one occasion he put off some of his own friends to come with Mrs. |
|
Gielgud was initially uncertain about selecting Burton and asked him to come back the following day to repeat his audition. |
|
The time was still to come when the Royal Navy would be an unchallenged dominant force on the oceans. |
|
The newest drug to come out in 2014 is zohydro, an intense dosage of hydrocodone medication, the strongest yet created for pain management. |
|
The Somali writer Nuruddin Farah has also garnered acclaim as perhaps the most celebrated writer ever to come out of the Horn of Africa. |
|
In 1150, it looked like Caithness and the whole earldom of Orkney were going to come under permanent Scottish control. |
|
The king summoned Louis to him from his exile in Burgundy, but the Dauphin refused to come. |
|
Although he asked the Dauphin to come to his deathbed, Louis refused, instead waiting at Avesnes, in Burgundy, for his father to die. |
|
Worse was to come for the Covenanters when Charles II was restored nine years later. |
|
The blazer had to come from Gwilym Evans in Ponty pridd, as did the Aertex PE top and voluminous navy gym knickers. |
|
When I was an apprentice many years ago, the 125 used to come through Markinch station in Fife at 1.27pm every weekday. |
|
Yet one must be careful not to come to the conclusion that Akiva used only esoteric ways of interpreting the Torah. |
|
You've got to come to Chicago to meet Duell, and see Wilson, who's going to angel the show. |
|
We asked John if he wanted to come down the pub with us, but he couldn't be arsed. |
|
They were ashenly miserable for some time. Then the life began to come back. |
|
I'd love to come and visit you but aviophobia means that it'd have to be by boat, and that just takes too long! |
|
Insecure about his infirmity, the Bashaw decreed that all who desired to come into his presence must first submit to having their eyes put out. |
|
The most famous sportsman rumoured to come for a round here was basketballer Michael Jordan, who flew in just for the midnight golf experience. |
|
But no more of this blubbering now, we are going a-whaling, and there is plenty of that yet to come. |
|
So without my visit, if Simon didn't attend, a minyan would be hard to come by. |
|
|
It really brings home the amount of deprivation you lived through, and it's very common for grief to come up like this. |
|
There was nothing to be seen, but he could hear loud thumpings and bumpings which seemed to come from the back of the house. |
|
The government thinks these stupid camel jockeys are going to come to America and take revenge. |
|
The baby or toddler who goes to sleep alone learns valuable self-quieting behaviors that can be used for many years to come. |
|
And so when Cassandra foretold the evils that were to come upon Troy, even her own people would not credit her words. |
|
Timothy and Natalie ran back to their Mom asking her and Aden to come and play chasey with them. |
|
Do thy diligence to come before winter. Eubulus greeteth thee, and Pudens, and Linus, and Claudia, and all the brethren. |
|
He signaled for me to come over, but I was no cockblocker or third party, so I didn't move. |
|
In the old days of his colthood, a barelegged boy used to come into the pasture and jump on his bare back. |
|
A business suit and briefcase help her to come across as the competent professional she is. |
|
I still had strong feelings for him, but didn't tell her because I didn't want to come between him and his happy family. |
|
Perhaps it is only fair to come clean at the start and confess that I found J.R.R. Tolkien's Unfinished Tales a disappointment. |
|
The damage sustained in the fire is so great that the whole building will have to come down. |
|
Wait for the temperature to come down to a reasonable level before touching the lid. |
|
Girls who like to cut a wide swath ought to come out to China, for they will have enough flattery and attention to turn their heads. |
|
But Jason, as the sun sets, they wouldnt want to come near me as I WILL dezionize anyone instantly. |
|
Yes sir, at one minute after midnight, that holiday was over, donezo, finished, and it was time for the tree to come down. |
|
By the time they're seniors they don't get doodied up anymore to come into the Duane Reade. |
|
I don't call in Bill Wyman to come in and do him over for me, with one of his vicious ankle-twisters or Chinese burns. |
|
And they STILL refuse to come out with the Cartman shirts in sizes for famine resistant sysadmins like me. XXL, please! |
|
|
The rise of the Internet poured gasoline on the fire, creating spaces for feminerds to come out of the woodwork and share their passions. |
|
A certain fleet.. through which little boats used to come to the aforesaid town. |
|
The brakes on my bike failed, so I had to come to a Flintstonian stop, that is, by dragging my feet on the pavement. |
|
I want him to barely remember that this is the form factor that dictionaries used to come in. |
|
Lang, lang I sought and graped for my pack, Till night and hunger forced me to come back. |
|
Christ's coming from the heavens has entered into the life of humanity as the Founder of the world to come. |
|
If this were so, he argues the left hemiliver would be deprived of depatotrophic factors, thought to come principally from the pancreas. |
|
The first and third were called off due to revolts elsewhere in the empire, the second because the Britons seemed ready to come to terms. |
|
Its members were stripped of their ceremonial armour and forbidden to come within 100 miles of the city on pain of death. |
|
Why don't we ask him and his ladies to come over in a family way and dine with some other plain country gentlefolks? |
|
Henry's father advised him to come to terms with Louis and peace was made between them in August 1151 after mediation by Bernard of Clairvaux. |
|
Louis fell ill and withdrew from the campaign, and Geoffrey was forced to come to terms with Henry. |
|
The reality of political differences between Rome and England allowed growing theological disputes to come to the fore. |
|
The Council of Officers at first attempted to come to some agreement with the leaders of Parliament. |
|
On 30 June 1688, a group of seven Protestant nobles invited the Prince of Orange to come to England with an army. |
|
Having seen off competition from other canal companies, the next major threat was to come from the railways. |
|
When he brought me home and volunteered to come with me while I walked my dog, Max, I knew he was a keeper. |
|
His mother rarely visited him, and he wrote letters begging her either to come to the school or to allow him to come home. |
|
During the later decades of the fourteenth century English started to come back into official use. |
|
Impeachment was originally used to try those who were too powerful to come before the ordinary courts. |
|
|
The trees began to come fully alive. The larches and birches were covered with green, the laburnums with gold. |
|
Despite being deep diving beaked whales, they are known to come, play, and rest in shallow waters in small numbers. |
|
Arsenio da Silva, who had emigrated with the exiles from Madeira, to arrange to resettle those who wanted to come to the United States. |
|
In the eastern part of the church, it took much of the fifth century also to come to agreement, but in the end it was accomplished. |
|
When asked to come to the king's manor to pay a trading tax on their goods, they murdered the official. |
|
The oil crisis sent a signal to the auto industry globally, which changed many aspects of production and usage for decades to come. |
|
On the 28th of March, the river overflooded the high pier along the Main, and rising higher and higher, began to come into the gates and alleys. |
|
The modern name for amber is thought to come from the Arabic word, ambar, meaning ambergris. |
|
The Soviets had intelligence of what was to come and prepared massive defenses in huge depth in the Kursk salient. |
|
In one of the OWS emails, liberal writer Matt Taibbi encouraged protesters to come up with some demands. |
|
Tame badgers can be affectionate pets, and can be trained to come to their owners when their names are called. |
|
It may stand motionless in the shallows, or on a rock or sandbank beside the water, waiting for prey to come within striking distance. |
|
Again pang seh after I buy tickets to movie. I never ask her to come again. |
|
So, for instance, a good deal of the Greek language literature can be read as an attempt to come to terms with Hellenistic culture. |
|
They began to come upon from time to time small cairns of rock by the roadside. They were signs in gypsy language, lost patterans. |
|
Despite the efforts of middlemen and charities to raise money to provide ransoms, they were still very difficult to come by. |
|
Several navies have Rescue Salvage vessels which are to support their fleet and to come to the aid of vessels in distress. |
|
He's such a slave-driver! I can't believe he wants us to come in on Saturday. |
|
The shape of the Short Empire, a British flying boat of the 1930s was a harbinger of the shape of 20th century aircraft yet to come. |
|
However, Vespasian used his time in North Africa making friends instead of money, something that would be far more valuable in the years to come. |
|
|
Crocodiles are ambush predators, waiting for fish or land animals to come close, then rushing out to attack. |
|
For propagation, the seeds need to come from a mature fruit, and be dried or fermented before germination. |
|
By 2004, ITV plc had decided that regional programming would be phased out in the years to come. |
|
Nipper Read then secretly interviewed each of the defendants, and offered each firm member one chance to come onto the side of law and order. |
|
The parts of the old Kingdom not within the French controlled Duchy tended to come under different names, except for the County of Burgundy. |
|
For centuries to come, the Emperors of both West and East would make competing claims of sovereignty over the whole. |
|
The first Dutch people to come to Canada were Dutch Americans among the United Empire Loyalists. |
|
The Stabilization Fund helped Russia to come out of the global financial crisis in a much better state than many experts had expected. |
|
Bo was about played out and I hollered up for that Hutchens to come help me. |
|
As debates raged in an attempt to come up with a new formula, three camps evolved among the opponents of the Nicene creed. |
|
Jehuda Cresques, a noted cartographer, has been said to have accepted an invitation to come to Portugal to make maps for the infante. |
|
An invitation to come back to Qufu was extended to the southern Duke Yansheng Kong Zhu by the Yuan dynasty Emperor Kublai Khan. |
|
Those writers were an important influence the many Moroccan novelists, poets and playwrights that were still to come. |
|
The city's name is said to come from Tingis, the daughter of Atlas, the mythical supporter of the Heavens. |
|
As Western Europe entered the 16th century, the age of Crusading began to come to an end. |
|
In years to come, it was Amerigo Vespucci's name that became associated with the new continent. |
|
When the Orsini offered to admit the French to their castles, Alexander had no choice but to come to terms with Charles. |
|
But a promise of French help quickly forced the confederates to come to terms. |
|
Radio Seville opposed the uprising and called for the peasants to come to the city for arms, while workers' groups established barricades. |
|
The treaty was written in 2008 and was to come into force 30 days after the date of receipt of the ninth instrument of ratification. |
|
|
Outside this Pratchettian sub-genre it is actually rare to come across novels that treat Arthurian material from a humorous perspective. |
|
Ghosts often appear in the narrative as sentinels or prophets of things to come. |
|
During the second half of the 19th century, the archipelago began to come under Chilean and Argentine influence. |
|
They may represent part of the oceanic crust and are believed to come from the Pacific Ocean realm. |
|
Any Spanish assault would have to come through the causeways, where the Aztecs could easily attack them. |
|
Although there are different accounts as to what Valverde said, most agree that he invited the Inca to come inside to talk and dine with Pizarro. |
|
Maurice also provided diplomatic support, pressing both the Protestant German princes and James I to come to Frederick's aid. |
|
Still not willing to give up the promise of wealth, he convinced his wife to come, bringing their surviving daughter. |
|
The rough geographical outlines of this same trade route would dominate the pepper trade into Europe for a millennium and a half to come. |
|
At the same time, linguists have begun to come to the realization that creole languages are in no way inferior to other languages. |
|
Many if not most believe the Portuguese, en route to Brazil, were the first Europeans to come upon the island. |
|
By contrast, Luther did not expect anything to come out of the meeting and had to be urged by Philip to attend. |
|
Injunctions in the United States tend to come in three main forms, temporary injunctions, preliminary injunctions and permanent injunctions. |
|
It took many years for this to come about however, because of the lack of money. |
|
Now, when the first paroxysm of your grief is past, I would advise you to come with me, and we will never rest till the Corn Laws are repealed. |
|
The upheaval of Indian independence in 1947 was well in the past, and the wave of decolonising of the 1960s was yet to come. |
|
The NDP then added another series of over 700 amendments, each proposing a different date for the bill to come into force. |
|
The object of collective bargaining is for the employer and the union to come to an agreement over wages, benefits, and working conditions. |
|
The mill owners recruited young Yankee farm girls from the surrounding area to come work the machines at Waltham. |
|
The Thirlmere scheme, which by its boldness ensured cheap and plentiful water to South Lancashire for years to come, was the right solution. |
|
|
The name itself is said to come from a local witch, Meg of Meldon, who was alive in the early 17th century. |
|
In the UK, melas provide an opportunity for communities to come together to celebrate and share their cultures. |
|
A burnt patch allows fresh shoots to come through which are ideal nutrition for grouse. |
|
I went into my own version of Ali's rope-a-dope, ducking as many of the heavy blows as I could, and waiting for some kind of idea to come to me. |
|
New manager, same old story, even if the home crowd would like to trust there is better to come. |
|
The first to come up was the scurvywort, only an inch high, but vital to seamen who live on ship's biscuit. |
|
Everyone drank gimlets and the hostess hired an oyster shucker to come up from Baltimore with crates and crates of oysters. |
|
I saw Glenn wrapping up his speech, and told Baynes to come back that evening for the simul. |
|
His rendezvous for his fleet, and for all slugs to come to, should be between Calais and Dover. |
|
The water was soon slushing merrily over the deck, while the smoke pouring from the cabin stove carried a promise of good things to come. |
|
If you want people to come back and turn you on every week, you have to come up with a socko ending. |
|
After being arrested and humiliated for being straight, Owen organizes a Straight Pride Parade for himself and others to come out of the closet. |
|
Provided that report is true, when our border neighbors visit Lawrence again they will need to come strong-handed. |
|
I would like to come back to the idea of making a distinction between so-called 'superdominant' companies and 'just dominant' companies. |
|
I stood there waiting for the three remaining Rottweilers to come barreling toward the fence, fangs switchbladed open. |
|
It shouldn't be hard to come up with a musical syllabary in which pitches code for vowels and timbres code for consonants. |
|
By the time he reached the first talus slides under the tall escarpments of the Pilares the dawn was not far to come. |
|
The teacher accepted her tardy slip and allowed her to come into the classroom after the bell. |
|
The terrified looks on everyone's face when it was time to play that game was enough incentive to come to Thanksmas. |
|
He thoughtlessly invited her to come jogging, as he knew she hated excercise. |
|
|
Yet on January 10th, only weeks before the charter was due to come into force, the prime minister said his government was tweaking the draft. |
|
And a big reason we were able to come together with such decisiveness is we were both emphatically, unadulteratedly, unadulterously single. |
|
Here, under the marine layer, time and space are illusory, and definition is as hard to come by as an uncloudy day in June. |
|
Now the charity is appealing for daredevils to come forward to make the event the biggest abseil ever conducted in North Wales. |
|
There would be no need for any of the animals to come in contact with human beings, which would clearly be most undesirable. |
|
The amount of debt keeps rising so it seems that we'll be suffering from affluenza for a while to come. |
|
I was proud of the effort and there were lots of positives but to come away with nothing is an absolute ballbreaker. |
|
But there is an underlying feeling that the worst is yet to come. |
|
Her epic road trip is due to come to an end on Sunday when she reaches Waltham Forest. |
|
We urge the Minister to come forward and announce whether or not the Government will stick to their pledge to introduce a code and adjudicator. |
|
I'm sure a big winceyette nightie would be comfy for you but would he like you to come to bed wearing one? |
|
He said that the entire windshield will have to come off to replace that little piece of rubber. |
|
It's just going to come in through the airbricks and then whoosh up through the floors. |
|
The present number one said that the wisdom tooth was due to come out in the near future. |
|
I'm demanding they are accessible to everyone and allow working dogs to come into the restaurant. |
|
And suddenly, we were able to come up with all these scenes for it. |
|
Simon Cowell, Cheryl Cole and the other judges waited for an ambulance to come and take the unnamed 16-year-old to hospital to be X-rayed. |
|
A revised model of the philosophy of action is unlikely to come from analytic philosophy, Pippin contends. |
|
Take the latest bill to come down the pike, a proposal to anesthetize fetuses before they are aborted. |
|
We welcome all Angelenos and visitors to our city to come and experience the new Hotel Angeleno. |
|
|
But let's be clear, when it comes to shrinking and streamlining the quango state there's plenty more to come. |
|
The pair sat at a piano and played for hours trying to come up with a good track. |
|
In this area of the world people relied on hunting and gathering for several millennia to come. |
|
Llywelyn and Owain were able to come to agreement and the reduced territory of Gwynedd were divided between them. |
|
Once a case came to court, the method used to come to a decision was usually by compurgation. |
|
Casualty figures are hard to come by, but some historians estimate that 2,000 invaders died along with about twice that number of Englishmen. |
|
Llywelyn was forced to come to terms, and by the advice of his council sent his wife Joan to negotiate with the king, her father. |
|
Bernanke's policies will undoubtedly be analyzed and scrutinized in the years to come, as economists debate the wisdom of his choices. |
|
This is a favorable policy of Putin to appeal Russian investment to come back. |
|
The coffee has to come from a certified Fairtrade cooperative, which pays certification and inspection fees. |
|
The smoking of tobacco, as well as various hallucinogenic drugs, was used to achieve trances and to come into contact with the spirit world. |
|
It is also undesirable to come to the mosque after eating something that smells, such as garlic. |
|
Men are supposed to come to the mosque wearing loose and clean clothes that do not reveal the shape of the body. |
|
He was a religious cleric and judge who was invited to come to Saada from Medina to arbitrate tribal disputes. |
|
The story begins in the Paleolithic, and was intended to come right up to modern times, always focusing on ordinary people. |
|
From 1 January 2007 to 16 January, temporary idents were used which gave a nod towards what was to come for the new presentation on the station. |
|
After being contacted by the band to come to audition in Cardiff for the role, Pat learned their whole setlist in 7 days for the audition. |
|
Finally, another major influx of Scots into northern Ireland occurred in the late 1690s, when tens of thousands of people fled a famine in Scotland to come to Ulster. |
|
In the event that a state government is unable to function, the Constitution provides for the state to come under the direct control of the central government. |
|
Elsewhere, including in very different ways the United States and Russia, feelings that great change was underway or just about to come were still possible. |
|
|
In 1101, after Earl Hugh's death, Gruffudd and Cadwgan came to terms with England's new king, Henry I, who was consolidating his own authority and also eager to come to terms. |
|
This, called Richmond Palace and now completely lost, has been described as the first prodigy house, and was influential on other great houses for decades to come. |
|
Once the rebus principle is accepted by a language in its written form, it is a natural step for such symbols to come to represent the sounds of syllables. |
|
Ultimately, at the end of the campaign, Owain was forced to come to terms with Henry, being obliged to surrender Rhuddlan and other conquests in the east. |
|
Societies tend to come and go, depending on the special enthusiasms of the masters and boys in the school at the time, but some have been in existence many years. |
|
At this point, the Six Nations living on the Grand River began to come out to fight for the British as an American victory no longer seemed inevitable. |
|
Sorry, have to come out of my state of lurkership to respond, completely off-topic, and say as far as I know it's actually only America that has a silent 'h' in herbs. |
|
Seeds of carrots, parsnip, and brassicas were also discovered, but they were poor specimens and tend to come from white carrots and bitter tasting cabbages. |
|
These preparations being completed, Hannibal sought to induce the Saguntines to come to arms with him and thereby declare war on Rome through her proxy. |
|
The government invited French engineer Peter Blondeau who worked at the Paris mint to come to London in 1649 in hope of modernising the country's minting process. |
|
Alfred Stieglitz was the best photographer ever to come down the pike. |
|
He goes to the park to come away from the hustle and bustle of the city. |
|
Its cogenerator at One Bryant Park, a glassy 54-story skyscraper rising at the corner of 42nd Street and the Avenue of the Americas, is scheduled to come online this summer. |
|
Those to whom the king had entrusted me, observing how ill I was clad, ordered a tailor to come next morning, and take measure for a suit of clothes. |
|
Although at odds with the scientific establishment for most of his life, Heaviside changed the face of telecommunications, mathematics, and science for years to come. |
|
I was the only unicyclist in my English class, but it turned out there was another in my school class, and two more due to come in with next year's class. |
|
The word cawl in Welsh is first recorded in the 14th century, and is thought to come from the Latin caulis, meaning the stalk of a plant, a cabbage stalk or a cabbage. |
|
However, as the media frenzy develops the truth has to come out. |
|
Wanting to come back home, the native Alabaman interviewed and was hired as CEO of Alabama Corporate Credit Union before it became Corporate America. |
|
Later, Gimli's vivid description of the Glittering Caves of Aglarond moved Legolas to promise to come back and visit the caves when the War was over. |
|
|
It's not even a real bus stop, just a gas station where the bus drops off whoever's stupid enough to come to this shitbucket town and picks up whoever's smart enough to leave. |
|
The final challenge to the Union in this era was the Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848, which largely failed to come off and which was suppressed after minor military action. |
|
This theme would influence Irish politics for centuries to come. |
|
The Prime Minister and the cabinet are appointed by the President of the Republic, but must pass a vote of confidence in Parliament to come into office. |
|
And the stars from Saturday Night Live Arabia, Shady Alfons and Khaled Mansour provided the audience a taste of what's to come when the comedy launches next year. |
|
Third World countries, where debt problems make a transactions-supply of currency hard to come by, frequently trade cashlessly with other countries. |
|
Some of the words that came into use are among the most common in English, such as to go, to come, to sit, to listen, to eat, both, same, get and give. |
|
In the third round the WPA forged ahead 15-9, winning seven games out of the eight but, with 24 games to come, there was still everything to play for. |
|
But when a friend accidentally let slip on Twitter the time and location of the event, many of Sam's 'Callafans' planned to come along at 5.30am to take a peek. |
|
It is theorised that because the grey squirrel spends more time on the ground than the red, that they are far more likely to come in contact with this predator. |
|
John requested safe conduct, but Philip only agreed to allow him to come in peace, while providing for his return only if it were allowed to after the judgment of his peers. |
|
He claimed that they should have marched to the Maryhill Barracks and tried to persuade the troops stationed there to come out on the protesters' side. |
|
A fine powder filled the air and caressed the cheek with a tingle in its touch, and the black boles of the trees showed up in a light that seemed to come from below. |
|
It was decided that all offensive actions were to be halted immediately as the French opted to fight a defensive war, forcing the Germans to come to them. |
|
Unless their candidates can amass a considerable campaign chest, one assumed to come from big money donors, they do not stand a chance of winning. |
|
She was too modest to come downstairs dressed only in her nightdress. |
|
After a brief illness, which may have presaged his illnesses to come, George settled on Lord Rockingham to form a ministry, and dismissed Grenville. |
|
These explosions seemed to come from an unnamed seamount on the northern side of the ridge and are thought to be unrelated to the Tristan hotspot. |
|
The new Indonesian government under President Sukarno pressured for the territory to come under Indonesian control as Indonesian nationalists initially intended. |
|
While it takes courage to come out, the acceptance of parents and other family members can really help the person coming out to accept themselves. |
|