Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: May 5, 2025
"Oh, missus, missus!" and Mac blurted out the whole tale of the edict concluding rather ambiguously by saying: "Don't you go thinking it's made any difference to any of us, because it hasn't. We're not saints, but we're not pigs, and, besides, it was a pleasure."
The bitterest censure is bestowed on the hair-splitting dialectics that "loquacious science of inability to speak" whose finished master, for sheer fear of expressing himself ambiguously, at last no longer ventures to pronounce his own name. The Greek school-terminology is throughout and intentionally avoided.
The first entry of the Court's minutes were made in 1742 at a session held in Colchester. This was an order removing the county records from Colchester to the new court house two miles north of Vienna. This court house, where the Fairfax Resolves were written, was called "Freedom Hill". Ambiguously, a gallows was constructed here and death sentences were carried out promptly.
This came as such a surprise to Amherst that before he had collected himself he found Truscomb ambiguously but unmistakably offering him with the practised indirection of the man accustomed to cover his share in such transactions a substantial "consideration" for dropping the matter of the road-house.
The boys gathered around him, all curiosity. "Tell us about it, Professor. We are very much mystified?" said the Pony Riders. "A long time ago I remember to have read, somewhere, of a certain grass in this region that possessed peculiar narcotic properties " "What's narcotic?" interrupted Stacy. "Something that makes you go to sleep when you can't," explained Tad Butler, rather ambiguously.
Sometimes it happened that the language of the firmán was so ambiguously worded as to allow the holder to take all that he could get by bribing the Kázís and the provincial Sadr. Hence, in the interests of justice and the interests of the crown and the people, he had a perfect right to resume whatever, after due inquiry, he found to be superfluous.
If not hindered, he is sure to help the enemy, much more if he talks ambiguously talks for his country with 'buts' and 'ifs' and 'ands." In any case, Lincoln stood clearly and boldly for repressing speech or act, that could help the enemy, with extreme vigour and total disregard for the legalities of peace time.
Indeed, I am quite unable to imagine how the periodical, and more especially the intermittent form, of headache is to be explained by what Dr. Sieveking describes rather ambiguously as a "change in the constitution of the blood."
Yes. . . ." Mr. Mousley tried to focus his glassy eyes upon the arcana of spiritualism, rocking ambiguously the while upon the kerb. Mark murmured something more about the need for going in quietly. "It's very kind of you to come out and talk to me like this," the drunken priest went on.
Carewe was not at home, and had announced that though he intended to honor the evening meal by his attendance, he should be away for the evening itself; as comment upon which statement Mrs. Tanberry had offered ambiguously the one word, "Amen!"
Word Of The Day
Others Looking