Horn in A Sentence

    1

    A 20mm dowel was inserted through the antler and buffalo horn base for strength and to take the 12mm brass screw connector fitting.

    2

    A car horn outside woke him in less than five minutes.

    3

    A chrome horn casting grille was added to the horn casting, along with a chrome flash down the center of the front mudguard.

    4

    A driving rhythm section and three-piece horn section give exciting, authentic backing to a young guy with a great soulful voice.

    5

    A great looking jacket for a fuller figure is the longer jacket featuring dropped shoulders, patch pockets and horn toggle closures.

    6

    A horn with a baldric and the motto "Except the Lord keep the city the watchman waketh but in vain" forms the mayor's badge.

    7

    A hump on the forehead probably indicates the existence of a large frontal horn.

    8

    A large variety of materials have been used in their manufacture by different peoples at different times - painted linen and shavings of stained horn by the Egyptians, gold and silver by the Romans, rice-paper by the Chinese, silkworm cocoons in Italy, the plumage of highly coloured birds in South America, wax, small tinted shells, &c. At the beginning of the 8th century the French, who originally learnt the art from the Italians, made great advances in the accuracy of their reproductions, and towards the end of that century the Paris manufacturers enjoyed a world-wide reputation.

    9

    A moment later I saw him sitting down beside the Roman Catholic priest with the dark horn rimmed spectacles.

    10

    A second group led by Major Marcus Reno was sent to attack the encampment via the Little Big Horn River.

    11

    A small winter stream, named the Lycus, that flows through the promontory from west to south-east into the Sea of Marmora, breaks the hilly ground into two great masses, - a long ridge, divided by cross-valleys into six eminences, overhanging the Golden Horn, and a large isolated hill constituting the south-western portion of the territory.

    12

    A telephone earpiece, perhaps with a cardboard horn attached to it, emitted an electronic buzz or whine.

    13

    A traditional handmade leather jerkin with 2 large pockets, English horn buttons and quilted lining.

    14

    According to ancient mythology, the owners of the horn were many and various.

    15

    According to another story, Zeus himself broke off the horn and gave it to Amaltheia, promising that it would supply whatever she desired in abundance.

    16

    After a careful education, completed by the usual grand tour, Magnus learned the art of war under Gustavus Horn, and during the reign of Christina (1644-16J4), whose prime favourite he became, though the liaison was innocent enough, he was raised to the highest offices in the state and loaded with distinctions.

    17

    After the cry of the hounds came the deep tones of the wolf call from Daniel's hunting horn; the pack joined the first three hounds and they could be heard in full cry, with that peculiar lift in the note that indicates that they are after a wolf.

    18

    After the death of Charles (1718) was Horn who persuaded the princess Ulrica Leonora to relinquish her hereditary claims and submit to be elected queen of Sweden.

    19

    Again, in 1683, numbers of them under John Cook departed for the South Sea by way of Cape Horn.

    20

    Alex directed Carmen as he quickly detached the rope from his saddle horn.

    21

    Although the diffusion of epic poetry in England did not actually inspire any new chansons de geste, it developed the taste for this class of literature, and the epic style in which the tales of Horn, of Bovon de Hampton, of Guy of Warwick (still unpublished), of Waldef (still unpublished), and of Fulk Fitz Warine are treated, is certainly partly due to this circumstance.

    22

    Although we are always on the hunt for new and exciting inlays, we primarily use wood, horn, other metals, opalescents, stone and now concrete!

    23

    Amaltheia gave it to Achelous (her reputed brother), who exchanged it for his own horn which had been broken off in his contest with Heracles for the possession of Deianeira.

    24

    Among notable mammals the chimpanzee is found in Unyoro, Toro and north-west Ankole, and has only recently become extinct in Buganda; the okapi inhabits the Semliki forests on the Congo frontier; the giraffe (the male sometimes developing five horn cores) is common in the Northern, Eastern and Rudolf provinces; there are three types of buffalo - the Cape, the Congo and the Abyssinian; two species of zebra (one of them Grevy's), the African wild ass, the square-lipped (" white ") and pointed-lipped (" black ") rhinoceroses, the elephant, hippopotamus, water tragelaph (" Speke's antelope "), Cape ant-bear, aard-wolf (Proteles), hunting-dog, and nearly every genus and most of the species of African antelopes.

    25

    Among the celebrities of Hoorn are William Schouten, who discovered in 1616 the passage round Cape Horn, or Hoorn, as he named it in honour of his birthplace; Abel Janszoon Tasman, whose fame is associated with Tasmania; and Jan Pietersz Coen, governorgeneral of the Dutch East Indies.

    26

    Among the tools of bone and stag's horn were awls, needles, harpoons, scraping tools and haftings for stone axe-heads.

    27

    And out of one of them came forth a little horn (Antiochus Epiphanes) which waxed exceeding great towards the south (Egypt) and towards the East (Babylon) and towards the beauteous land (the land of Israel)."

    28

    And when you get around to wondering, Lori had enough respect for you and I that she wouldn't horn in on our relationship, either.

    29

    Answer- Wind-up or horn gramophones look very nice, but valuable 78's should never be played on them.

    30

    Apart from the salt-mines, its industries include toys and other small articles of wood, horn and ivory, for which the place has long been famous.

    31

    As you've noticed by now, the suggest so far has been more about strengthening your site content rather than bang the drum and blow the horn about the site.

    32

    At first this cumbrous and complicated instrument of government worked tolerably well under the firm but cautious control of the chancellor, Count Arvid Beernhard Horn Political (q.v.).

    33

    At the northern horn of the bay stands Spizza, an Austrian military station.

    34

    At the Scandinavian sacrificial feasts a horn consecrated to Bragi was used as a drinkingcup by the guests, who then vowed to do some great deed which would be worthy of being immortalized in verse.

    35

    Available colors include black or horn, and these plastic frames also feature tonal lenses emblazoned with a small temple logo.

    36

    Beached in the Falklands by a gale off Cape Horn, she became a coal hulk for five years, then rotted.

    37

    Bone or horn, too, was used.

    38

    Bordeaux slung a long leg around his saddle horn and tucked the glasses into his saddlebag.

    39

    But Beautiful imparts a warm, after-hours feeling with Brooks ' subtle inflections behind the leader's comforting open horn.

    40

    By the Tang dynasty, rhinoceros horn cups were given to scholars who were successful in their examinations.

    41

    Carmen barely had the rope unwrapped from the horn before water and debris shoved the tree further.

    42

    Close to Roermond on the west is the village of Horn, once the seat of a lordship of the same name, which is first mentioned in a document of 1166.

    43

    Considerable numbers of bone or horn awls were found in the ashes, as well as fragments of pottery, but no "ceremonial" objects.

    44

    Country Life jacket, which has a rear vent, horn buttons and can be part of a suit with a matching waistcoat, trousers and cap.

    45

    Custer was sent up the Rosebud, and on the morning of the 25th passed over the divide of the Little Big Horn, where the Sioux were soon discovered.

    46

    Dill is another great cabbage companion and supports good cabbage health; however, it should never be planted with tomatoes since dill attracts horn worms (tomato enemy).

    47

    Dorset Horn rams are terminal sires in flocks using natural ' frequent lambing ' to achieve year-round production of top quality fattened lambs.

    48

    Dublin, Ireland, on the rocky hill of Howth, which forms the northern horn of Dublin Bay, 9 m.

    49

    Dupin de Francueil, a farmer-general of the revenue, who married the widow of Count Horn, a natural son of Louis XV., she in her turn being the natural daughter of Maurice de Saxe, the most famous of the many illegitimate children of Augustus the Strong, by the lovely countess of Konigsmarck.

    50

    During the second voyage Cook visited Easter Island, discovered several islands of the New Hebrides and New Caledonia; and on his way home by Cape Horn, in March 1774, he discovered the Sandwich Island group and described South Georgia.

    51

    Each instrument--now resembling a violin and now a horn, but better and clearer than violin or horn--played its own part, and before it had finished the melody merged with another instrument that began almost the same air, and then with a third and a fourth; and they all blended into one and again became separate and again blended, now into solemn church music, now into something dazzlingly brilliant and triumphant.

    52

    Egmont and Horn were sentenced in the hotel de vile, and passed their last night in the Maison du Roi.

    53

    Euphonium The euphonium (or tenor tuba) is larger in size than the tenor horn and can produce a lower range of notes.

    54

    Famous heroes who are specially connected with England are Alfred the Great, Richard Cceur-de-Lion, King Horn, Havelok the Dane, Guy of Warwick, Sir Bevis of Hampton (or Southampton), Robin Hood and his companions.

    55

    Fibroin, which is analogous to horn, hair and like dermal products, constitutes about 75 to 82% of the entire mass, and has a composition represented by the formula C15H23 506.

    56

    Fire Mountain Gems-Choose from large hole beads, bone and horn beads, Czech beads, pearls and more at Fire Mountain Gems.

    57

    Flutes and English horns, along with woodwinds and bass, impart a gentle tone that ends on a quiet note via an English horn solo.

    58

    For all intents and purposes, Constantinople is now the collection of towns and villages situated on both sides of the Golden Horn and along the shores of the Bosporus, including Scutari and Kadikeui.

    59

    For some distance outside the Galata bridge, both shores of the Golden Horn have been provided with a quay at which large steamers can moor to discharge or embark their passengers and cargo.

    60

    For the fame of Paphian oil see Horn.

    61

    For the next eighteen years he so absolutely controlled both the foreign and the domestic affairs of Sweden that the period between 1720 and 1738 has well been called the Horn period.

    62

    For the speedy removal of burning houses each ward was to provide a strong iron hook, with a wooden handle, two chains and two strong cords, which were to be left in the charge of the bedel of the ward, who was also provided with a good horn, " loudly sounding."

    63

    Frank threw the score at me and told me to write several sections of solo horn parts for 1 st baritone.

    64

    From the tip of the unicorn 's horn, John 's eyes roved to the lofty height of the ceiling.

    65

    George Armstrong Custer, known for his military defeat at the battle of Little Big Horn in Montana in 1876.

    66

    German novels also exist on the subject, by Franz Horn, Oeklers, Laun and Schucking, tragedies by Klinemann, Haushofer and Zedlitz.

    67

    Grabbing the saddle horn, he pulled himself up, but didn't get his other foot high enough.

    68

    Grabbing the saddle horn, she vaulted into the saddle and kicked the horse into a run.

    69

    Gradually Durham, Short horn, Hereford and other stock were introduced to improve the native breeds, with results so satisfactory that now herds of threequarters-bred cattle are to be found in all parts of the country.

    70

    Guanaco are found throughout the southern half of South America, from Peru in the north to Cape Horn in the south, but occur in greatest abundance in Patagonia.

    71

    Having reassembled the horn I found I could forgive it these small transgressions - it is such an elegant looking beastie.

    72

    Having straightened his coat and fastened on his hunting knives and horn, he mounted his good, sleek, well-fed, and comfortable horse, Viflyanka, which was turning gray, like himself.

    73

    He finally glanced down at Pete and straightened in the saddle, removing his leg from the horn and placing it in the stirrup.

    74

    He folded his hands over the saddle horn and gazed down at her.

    75

    He followed her slowly, but a couple of horn toots coaxed him to move along.

    76

    He has added to his body modification with horn implants and pierced nipples.

    77

    He is called by the townspeople Jean de Nivelles, a celebrated baron of the 15th century whose title eventually became merged in that of the count de Homes (Horn).

    78

    He lifted a canteen from the saddle horn and took a drink.

    79

    He placed a foot in the stirrup and grabbed the saddle horn.

    80

    He put a foot in the stirrup and grabbed the saddle horn.

    81

    He was promptly "blown to the horn" at the Cross there as an outlaw, but escaped to Dundee, and commenced public preaching in the chief towns of central Scotland.

    82

    He wrestles with Achelous for Deianeira (" destructive to husband "), daughter of Oeneus, king of Calydon, vanquishes the river god, and breaks off one of his horns, which as a horn of plenty is found as an attribute of Hercules in art.

    83

    Here the mountains seized him, and he became a constant visitor and one of the most intrepid and most resolute of explorers; among other feats of climbing he was the first to ascend the Weiss - horn (1861).

    84

    Here, the classic horn shape is coupled with vivid colors of pink and even animal prints.

    85

    His attributes are a pitcher, cornucopiae (", horn of plenty"), rushes, marine animals and a sceptre.

    86

    His father, a ship's carpenter, was frequently out of work owing to illness and the decline of his trade, and his mother had to go out to work soon after her son was horn.

    87

    His most common form is that of a vigorous young man, with wings on his forehead; his attributes a stalk of poppy, and a horn from which he drops slumber upon those whom he puts to rest.

    88

    His personal attributes are an ivy wreath, the thyrsus (a staff with pine cone at the end), the laurel, the pine, a drinking cup, and sometimes the horn of a bull on his forehead.

    89

    His weapons include an explosive micro oxygen spray and a laser horn on his forehead.

    90

    Honk your horn with L3, or even better, bribe the police chief, steal a police car, and turn on the siren with L3.

    91

    Horn had clearly perceived this; and his cautious neutrality was therefore the soundest statesmanship. But the politicians who had ousted Horn thought differently.

    92

    Horn in many respects greatly resembled his contemporary Walpole.

    93

    Horn placed the Rhynchophora (weevils) in a group distinct from all other beetles, on account of their supposed primitive nature.

    94

    Horn Pond Mountain and Indian Hill are about 320 ft.

    95

    Horn tweeter and mid-range drivers The horn-loaded tweeter provides both excellent directivity and very low distortion.

    96

    Horn, hoof-parings, woollen rags, fish, blubber and blood, after treatment with sulphuric acid, are all good manures, and should be utilized if readily obtainable.

    97

    Horn, who was left partially paralyzed by the tiger attack, reportedly needed the aid of his longtime partner Siegfried Fischbacher on stage as they performed their various illusions.

    98

    However, the reason I posed those questions, was to point out that CO is tooting thier own horn.

    99

    Howie had difficulty locating the apartment and nothing untoward occurred before he was awoken by the sound of a horn, seventeen minutes later.

    100

    I am delighted to report that the new MGF has a horn worthy of the great British marque.

    101

    I used a piece of black buffalo horn to make a knob, capped with a slice of lilac wood.

    102

    I was next playing seven-up, by Pearson, on my Tenor Horn.

    103

    I was next playing Seven-up, by Pearson, on my Tenor Horn.

    104

    If ever threatened in a car, take advantage of the horn and blast it loud.

    105

    If, for example, it is the habit of the huntsman to give a single note on his horn when hounds are drawing a covert, and a double note when a fox is found, the pack speedily understand the significance.

    106

    In 1578 Sir Francis Drake first sighted the point which in 1616 was named Cape Hoorn (anglicized Horn) by the Dutch navigators Jacob Lemaire and Willem Cornelis Schouten (1615-1617).

    107

    In 1688 Davis cleared Cape Horn and arrived in the West Indies, while Swan's ship, the "Cygnet," was abandoned as unseaworthy, after sailing as far as Madagascar.

    108

    In addition there is in this particular genus, as indeed in many others, a long tubular spur or horn projecting downwards from the back of the lip, whose office it is to secrete and store a honeyed juice; the forepart of the lip forms an expanded plate, usually larger and more brightly coloured than the other parts of the flower, and with hairs or ridges and spots of various kinds according to the species.

    109

    In addition to the territory enclosed within the limits just described, the suburb of Sycae or Galata, on the opposite side of the Golden Horn, and the suburb of Blachernae, on the 6th hill, were regarded as parts of the city, but stood within their own fortifications.

    110

    In addition to wood, horn and resin, jewelry designers may also use glass or concrete.

    111

    In America cattle suffer much from the horn fly (Haematobia serrata).

    112

    In blowing, the horn reveals a very soulful disposition.

    113

    In Charles XII.'s later years Horn had little to do with the administration.

    114

    In every direction English influence penetrated, and Englishmen before 1603 might be found in every quarter of the globe, following Drakes lead into the Pacific, painfully breaking the ice in search of a north-east or a north-west passage, hunting for slaves in the wilds of Africa, journeying in caravans across the steppes of Russia into central Asia, bargaining with the Turks on the shores of the Golden Horn, or with the Greeks in the Levant, laying the foundations of the East India Company, or of the colonies of Virginia and Newfoundland.

    115

    In his foreign policy Horn was extremely wary and cautious, yet without compromising either the independence or the self-respect of his country.

    116

    In previous centuries ivory along with genuine stag, metal, bone, horn, tortoiseshell, and pearl were all popular options.

    117

    In severe anxiety and depression states, lack of descending inhibition is enough to maintain the dorsal horn in its sensitized state.

    118

    In the Alps and Vosges this resinous semi-fluid is collected by climbing the trees and pressing out the contents of the natural receptacles of the bark into horn or tin vessels held beneath them.

    119

    In the first, which was fought on the 5th and 6th of September 1634, the hitherto invincible Swedish army, commanded by Duke Bernhard of Saxe Weimar and Marshal Horn, was defeated with great loss by a somewhat superior army of Imperialists and Spaniards under General Gallas, Horn and 3000 men being made prisoners and 6000 killed or mortally wounded.

    120

    In the fork of the North and South Platte are the Wild Cat Mountains with contours rising to 53 00 ft., in which Wild Cat Mountain, long reported as the highest point in the state, attains 5038 ft., Hogback Mountain 5082 ft., and various other hills - Gabe Rock (5006), Big Horn Mountain (4718), Coliseum Rock (5050), Scotts Bluff (4662) &c. - rise to heights of 45 00 to 5000 ft.

    121

    In the rue de la Regence are the new picture gallery, a fine building with an exceedingly good collection of pictures, the palace of the count of Flanders, and the garden of the Petit Sablon, which contains statues of Egmont and Horn, and a large number of statuettes representing the various gilds and handicrafts.

    122

    In the second section there is a well-developed nasal, and a small frontal horn separated by an interval.

    123

    In this the feathers of the top of the head are very singular, looking like glossy curled shavings of black horn or whalebone, the effect being due to the dilatation of the shaft and its coalescence with the consolidated barbs.

    124

    It also has but one horn, and mainly differs from the foregoing in being smaller, and having less prominent " shields."

    125

    It had complete control over the Euxine grain-trade; the absence of tides and the depth of its harbour rendered its quays accessible to vessels of large burden; while the tunny and other fisheries were so lucrative that the curved inlet near which it stood became known as the Golden Horn.

    126

    It has also been found convenient to take the boundary between the Atlantic and Pacific, as the shortest line across Drake Strait, from Cape Horn through Snow Island to Cape Gunnar, instead of the meridian of Cape Horn.

    127

    It has but one horn, and is covered with!massive folds of naked skin.

    128

    It is a more fitted jacket, with two slanted pockets, horn buttons and two side vents.

    129

    It is also known as the " Eastern Horn of Africa," because it projects somewhat sharply eastwards into the Indian Ocean, and is the only section of the continent which can be spoken of as a peninsula.

    130

    It is now generally recognized that the king symbolized by the Little Horn, of whom it is said that he shall come of one of four kingdoms which shall be formed from the Greek empire after the death of its first king (Alexander), can be none other than Antiochus Epiphanes, and in like manner the references in ix.

    131

    It is pleasantly situated on and about Sorrento Point, the southern horn of Dublin Bay.

    132

    It must be remembered that the Arabs, who inhabit an extremely hot country, are very fully clothed, while the Fuegians at the extremity, of Cape Horn, exposed to all the rigours of an antarctic climate, have, as sole protection, a skin attached to the body by cords, so that it can be shifted to either side according to the direction of the wind.

    133

    It results from this that the horn has the appearance of a mass of agglutinated hairs, which, in the newly growing part at the base, readily fray out on destruction of the softer intermediate substance; but the fibres differ from true hairs in growing from a free papilla of the derm, and not within a follicular involution of the same.

    134

    It sometimes attains a height of 6 ft.; its horn, which is much prized by the natives for medicinal purposes,.

    135

    It was funny; he knew who blew horn with Coltrane, who played bass for Mulligan and even remembered the date Gerry's set was recorded—August 1955.

    136

    It was funny; he knew who blew horn with Coltrane, who played bass for Mulligan and even remembered the date Gerry's set was recorded—August 1955.

    137

    It was in defiance of this right that Alva refused the claim of Counts Egmont and Horn to be tried by the knights of the Fleece in 1568.

    138

    It works equally well on squash bugs, Japanese beetles, tomato horn worms and bag worms, among others.

    139

    Its curious leaves, hollowed like a horn, are blood-red in color, and form a compact tuft 1 foot or more in height and the same in breadth; the flowers, singular in shape, are not very showy.

    140

    King Rhydderich gave one to Merlin, and Rimenhild made a similar gift to Child Horn.

    141

    Like Fortune, with whom she is often coupled in inscriptions on Roman tombstones, she was also represented with the cornu copiae (horn of plenty).

    142

    Logged Torn ACL, stable, medial meniscus tear of posterior horn.

    143

    Look at the lesson learned by Roy Horn a couple of years ago in my hometown of Las Vegas.

    144

    Magnificent examples are Mozart's trio for pianoforte, clarinet and viola, his quintet for pianoforte, oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon (imitated by Beethoven), his quintet for clarinet and strings, Brahms's clarinet-quintet for the same combination, and his trio for pianoforte, violin and horn.

    145

    Medieval spoons for domestic use were commonly made of horn or wood, but brass, pewter and "latten" spoons appear to have been common about the 15th century.

    146

    Mendelssohn wrote two concert pieces for clarinet, basset horn and pianoforte dedicated to father and son Baermann.

    147

    Most arrived by ship coming around the horn and with the many ships anchoring in the bay off of San Francisco.

    148

    Nail-patella syndrome is also known as Fong disease, hereditary onycho-osteodysplasia (HOOD), Iliac Horn syndrome, and Turner-Kieser syndrome.

    149

    Never short of silver and gold, but often in want of the necessaries of life, they continued their practices for a little longer; then, evading the risk of recrossing the isthmus, they boldly cleared Cape Horn, and arrived in the Indies.

    150

    Not till 1731 was there any appearance of opposition in the diet to Horn's "system"; but Horn, piqued by the growing coolness of the king, the same year offered his resignation, which was not accepted.

    151

    Now, however effective against Plato's contemporary Cynics or Atomists, the reasoning is thrown away upon the Stoics, who take boldly the one horn of this dilemma.

    152

    Of about the size of a turkey, it is remarkable for the curious " horn " or slender caruncle, more than three inches long, it bears on its crown, the two sharp spurs with which each wing is armed, and its elongated toes.

    153

    Of course they don't expect you to tell them how the car runs, but you need to know and be able to demonstrate that the car's headlights, tail lights, brake lights, and horn are in working order.

    154

    Of course, attacking an adult Texas long horn was a little different than a herd of hornless goats, but the cow was supposed to be carrying a calf.

    155

    Of the rhinoceros, three distinct varieties are enumerated, two with a single and one with a double horn.

    156

    On its flags were fought out many feuds between rival gilds; Egmont and Horn, and many other gallant men whose names have been forgotten, were executed here under the shadow of its ancient buildings, and in more recent times Dumouriez proclaimed the French Republic where the dukes of Brabant and Burgundy were wont to hold their jousts.

    157

    On the 2nd of July 1704, with the assistance of a bribing fund, Charles's ambassador at Warsaw, Count Arvid Bernard Horn, succeeded in forcing through the election of Charles's candidate to the Polish throne, Stanislaus Leszczynski, who could not be crowned however till the 24th of September 1705, by which time the Saxons had again been defeated at Punitz.

    158

    On the breach of this condition years afterwards Loherangrin departed, leaving sword, horn and ring behind him.

    159

    On the extinction of the house of Horn in 1540, the countship passed to the famous Philip of Montmorency, who, with the count of Egmont, was executed in Brussels in 1568 by order of the duke of Alva.

    160

    Orange fled from the country, but Egmont and Horn, despite his warning, decided to remain and face the storm.

    161

    Other great features of this frame are the adjustable nose pads and buffalo horn design.

    162

    Other kinds are taken from the South Pacific and South Atlantic Oceans, around Cape Horn, the Falkland Islands up to Lobos Islands at the entrance of the La Plata river, off the Cape of Good Hope and Crozet Isles.

    163

    Oyonnax and its environs, north of Nantua, are noted for the production of articles in wood and horn, especially combs.

    164

    Partial exploration in this region was conducted by the French Mission du Cap Horn in 1882-1883, and the geological foundations are granite and basic volcanic rocks.

    165

    Pascagoula and Point aux Chenes bays; separated from it by the shallow and practically unnavigable Mississippi Sound is a chain of low, long and narrow sand islands, the largest of which are Petit Bois, Horn, Ship and Cat.

    166

    Passing through the strait of Lemaire they came to the southern extremity of Tierra del Fuego, which was named Cape Horn, in honour of the town of Hoorn in West Friesland, of which Schouten was a native.

    167

    Please sound your horn to warn walkers of your approach.

    168

    Possibly this handsome antelope may be the original of the mythical unicorn, a single buck when seen in profile looking exactly as if it had but one long straight horn.

    169

    Princess followed Ed up the steep trail with an eager stride that kept Carmen clinging to the saddle horn.

    170

    Rare and exotic hardwood and Buffalo Horn and bone fine handcrafted handles made-to-order.

    171

    Requiem for voices, organ, horn and string orchestra in March 2005 (see link below ).

    172

    Rumania begins on the seaward side with a band of territory called the Dobrudja; and broadens westward into the form of a blunted crescent, its northern horn being called Moldavia, its southern Walachia.

    173

    Sasha's off-white coat featured brass buttons, while Malia's dove gray coat was accessorized with horn buttons.

    174

    Say Ten that they won't begin playing until after the horn intro.

    175

    See, she's got a little hunting horn!

    176

    Seen from the Adriatic, Monte Corno, as it is someti, mes called, from its resemblance to a horn, affords a magnificent spectacle; the Alpine region beneath its summit is still the home of the wild boar, and here and there are dense woods of beech and pine.

    177

    She hung on to the horn, talking to the horse.

    178

    She is represented in works of art, often together with Ceres, with a cornucopia (horn of plenty) in her arm, and a ship's prow in the background, indicating the transport of grain over the sea.

    179

    She pulled Ed to a stop and curled a knee around the saddle horn, watching the scene.

    180

    She'd been trying to learn the horn using an oboe embouchure.

    181

    Silver chloride, AgC1, constitutes the mineral cerargyrite or horn silver; mixed with clay it is the butter-milk ore of the German miners.

    182

    Sometimes a puppy needs more time to work it's way down the uterine horn after its siblings are out of the way.

    183

    Somewhat later, in 439, the walls along the Marmora and the Golden Horn were brought, by the prefect Cyrus, up to the extremities of the new landward walls, and thus invested the capital in complete armour.

    184

    Somewhere in the distance a horn honked.

    185

    Sotto Voce recorded his Requiem for voices, organ, horn and string orchestra in March 2005 (see link below).

    186

    South of Antofagasta the old rocks form a nearly continuous band along the coast, extending as far as Cape Horn and Staten Island, and occupying the greater part of the islands of southern Chile.

    187

    Southward from i ts northern horn, the rocky headland of Howth, the coast is generally steep, occasionally sheer, and the mountains of county Wicklow approach it closely.

    188

    Sow also in heat mustard and cress for salads, onions for salads; tomatoes, celery to be pricked out for an early crop; and Early Horn carrot and kidney-beans on slight hotbeds.

    189

    Sow Early Horn carrot; also kidney beans and radishes, on hotbeds.

    190

    Specimens in the museum at Tervueren near Brussels show that in fully adult males the horns are subtriangular and inclined somewhat backwards; each being capped with a small polished epiphysis, which projects through the skin investing the rest of the horn.

    191

    Starting with the '68 model, MGBs had the horn push on the left stalk and the windshield washer push on the right stalk.

    192

    Steve Drury is available to assist you on cornet or flugel horn.

    193

    Stewart attended Lawrence High School, where he played french horn in the band.

    194

    Strutt also gives an engraving, assigned by him to the 14th century, in which three hunters, one of whom blows a horn, are represented as unearthing a fox, which is pursued by a single hound.

    195

    The "Severn" failed to round the Horn and returned home.

    196

    The 2003 attack on Roy Horn happened in front of a terrified auditorium of people.

    197

    The album takes on greater heights in the track that follows - a Latin infused horn led swinger that brings proceedings closer to resolution.

    198

    The alto should always sound like a trombone, not a horn or bass trumpet.

    199

    The Arabian, or Nubian, ibex (C. nubiana) is characterized by the more slender type of horn, in which the front edge is much narrower; while the Simien ibex (C. vali) of Central Abyssinia is a very large and dark-coloured animal, with the horns black instead of brownish, and bearing only slightly marked front ridges.

    200

    The Ashurst vamping horn is one of only six to have survived in England.

    201

    The band slowly transformed into Less Than Jake and added a horn player, Jessica Mills, for their Smoke Spot record.

    202

    The Blink Horn collection seems to speak to the inner art critic in everyone.

    203

    The bow was always of wood, in one piece in the prehistoric and early times, also of two horns in the 1st Dynasty; but the compound bow of horn is rarely found, only as an importation, in the XVIIIth Dynasty.

    204

    The buttons on this jacket are genuine horn.

    205

    The celebrated Gascoigne's powder, which was sold as late as the middle of the 19th century in the form of balls like sal prunella, consisted of equal parts of crabs' eyes," the black tips of crabs' claws, Oriental pearls, Oriental bezoar and white coral, and was administered in jelly made of hart's horn, but was prescribed by physicians chiefly for wealthy people, as it cost about forty shillings per ounce.

    206

    The commercial salt is known as salvolatile or salt of hartshorn and was formerly obtained by the dry distillation of nitrogenous organic matter such as hair, horn, decomposed urine, &c., but is now obtained by heating a mixture of sal-ammoniac, or ammonium sulphate and chalk, to redness in iron retorts, the vapours being condensed in leaden receivers.

    207

    The Cordillera de la Costa begins near Cape Horn, which is composed principally of crystalline rocks, and its heights are inconsiderable when compared with those of the trueCordillera of the Andes.

    208

    The cortege would be led through the town accompanied by pipers, horn and flute players and flashlight bearers.

    209

    The cost is $415.00 and they are available in horn with java polar, noir with platinum polar, olive tortoise with midnight express, and tungsten with chrome sapphire.

    210

    The creatures also have a short horn on the tip of the snout.

    211

    The culture prevailing in the Horn of Africa is, naturally, mainly Hamito Semitic; here are found both cylindrical and bee-hive huts, the sword (which has been adopted by the Masai to the south), the lyre (which has found its way to some of the Nilotic tribes) and the head-rest.

    212

    The custom of blowing the wakeman's horn every night at nine o'clock is said to have originated about A.D.

    213

    The development of this undertaking necessitated the establishment of stores and workshops at Stanley, and ships can be repaired and provided in every way; a matter of importance since not a few vessels, after suffering injury during heavy weather off Cape Horn, call on the Falklands in distress.

    214

    The division of the archipelago to the south of Beagle Channel includes the islands of Hoste, Navarin, Gordon, Londonderry, Stewart, Wollaston and numerous islets, disposed in triangular form with the base on Beagle Channel and the apex at the rocky headland of Cape Horn.

    215

    The Dorset and Somerset Horn is an old west-country breed of sheep. The fleece is fine in quality, of close texture, and the wool is intermediate between long and short, whilst the head carries a forelock.

    216

    The dull green was followed successively by amber, white opal, blue opal, straw opal, sea-green, horn colour and various pale tints of soda-lime glass, ranging from yellow to blue.

    217

    The Eskimo engraved poorly, the Dene (Tinneh) embroidered in quill, the North Pacific tribes carved skilfully in horn, slate and cedar, the California tribes had nimble fingers for basketry, the Sioux gloried in feathers and painted parfleche.

    218

    The first ten homilies, which form one division completed in 337, are without polemical reference; Horn.

    219

    The forward edge of the tub carries a projecting pin or horn, with a notch into which the chain falls which drags the tub forward.

    220

    The French Horn is a transposing instrument, usually described as " Horn in F ".

    221

    The handle is made from natural stag horn and the sheath is made from leather which has been embossed with a lattice design.

    222

    The Hats carried everything before them; and the aged Horn was finally compelled to retire from a scene where, for three and thirty years, he had played a leading part.

    223

    The head-rest common in the south-east and the southern fringe of the forest area is not found far north of Tanganyika until the Horn of Africa is reached.

    224

    The horn in the female is little developed, if not altogether absent.

    225

    The horn is advertised as having an underslung crook.

    226

    The horn is sacred in the eyes of the natives.

    227

    The horn would be blown into the hollow thus magnifying its sound.

    228

    The ibex are connected with the wild goat by means of Capra nubiana, in which the front edge of the horns is thinner than in either the European C. ibex or the Asiatic C. sibirica; while the Spanish C. pyrenaica shows how the ibex-type of horn may pass into the spirally twisted one distinctive of the markhor, C. falconeri.

    229

    The illusionists' act features many exotic animals, including the white Bengal tiger named Montecore that mauled Roy Horn in 2003.

    230

    The implements found in the relic bed under it were axe-heads of stone, with their haftings of stag's horn and wood; a flint saw, set in a handle of fir wood and fastened with asphalt; flint flakes and arrow-heads; harpoons of stag's horn with barbs; awls, needles, chisels, fish-hooks and other implements of bone; a comb of yew wood 5 in.

    231

    The interior arrangements of the city were largely determined by the configuration of its site, which falls into three great divisions, - the level ground and slopes looking towards the Sea of Marmora, the range of hills forming the midland portion of the promontory, and the slopes and level ground facing the Golden Horn.

    232

    The knights wore a collar of golden hunting horns, whence the order was also known as the Order of the Horn.

    233

    The lateness of the season forced him to round Cape Horn in very stormy weather, and the navigating instruments of the time did not allow of exact observation.

    234

    The latter is the more serious, as in addition to the actual damage done by the beetle the holes afford entrance to fungus spores, &c. Under the name " horn worms " are included the larvae or caterpillars of species of Protoparce.

    235

    The leading silver minerals are native silver; argentite or silver glance, Ag 2 S, usually containing small amounts of lead, copper and tin; dyscrasite or antimonial silver, Ag 2 Sb to Ag,3Sb, an isomorphous mixture of silver and antimony; proustite or light red silver ore, Ag 3 AsS 3; pyrargyrite or dark red silver ore, Ag 3 SbS 3; stephanite, Ag 5 SbS 4; miargyrite, AgSbS2; stromeyerite, CuAgS; polybasite, 9(Cu 2 S,Ag 2 S) (Sb 2 S 3, As 2 S 3); cerargyrite or horn silver, AgCI; bromite or bromargyrite, AgBr; embolite, Ag(C1,Br); iodite or iodargyrite, AgI.

    236

    The lordship of Horn was a fief of the counts of Loon, and after 1361 of the bishop of Liege; but in 1450 it was raised to a countship by the Emperor Frederick II.

    237

    The Marine Society was organized in 1799, its membership being limited to "persons who have actually navigated the seas beyond the Cape of Good Hope or Cape Horn, as masters or supercargoes of vessels belonging to Salem"; it assists the widows and children of members.

    238

    The Merino resemble the Dorset Horn breed.

    239

    The method declaring a person a rebel was by giving three blasts on a horn and publicly proclaiming the fact; hence the expression, "put to the horn."

    240

    The muzzle is hairy, the ears are of moderate size, and the tail is short, and partially buried among the long hair of the rump. There are no glands on the face; but there is a large globular one at the base of each horn of the size of half a small orange..

    241

    The neolithic station of Butmir, near Ilidze, was probably a lake-dwellers' colony, and has yielded numerous stone and horn implements, clay figures and pottery.

    242

    The northern horn of the bay is formed by Filey Brigg, a narrow and abrupt promontory, continued seaward by dangerous reefs.

    243

    The numerous small lakes in the city (there are about 200 lakes in Hennepin county) have been incorporated in the park system; among them are Lake Harriet (353 acres; in Lake Harriet Park), Lake Calhoun (on which are extensive public baths), Lake Amelia (295 acres), Lake of the Isles (loo acres), Cedar Lake, Powder Horn Lake (in the park of that name) and Sandy Lake (in Columbia Park).

    244

    The only very rugged part of the route is in crossing the Big Horn mountain, which is about 30 miles wide.

    245

    The purpose served by the tusk - or "horn" - is not known; and little is known of the habits of narwhals.

    246

    The reference is to the recantation in Horn.

    247

    The remainder of the population is chiefly made up of English-speaking people horn the other provinces of the Dominion, from the United States, from England and Scotland and the north of Ireland.

    248

    The remarkable North American Ceratogaulus, with a large bony nasal horn, belongs to the same family.

    249

    The river Awe, issuing from the north-western horn of the loch, affords excellent trout and salmon fishing.

    250

    The rustic ambience is magical, with cattle antlers on the rafters, cowboy saddles on the walls, and an enormous deer horn chandelier towering above it all.

    251

    The seaward horn of this bay, however, is formed by a narrow protruding bank of sand and stones, thrown up by a southward current along the Yorkshire coast, and known as Spurn Head.

    252

    The second nocturne is a fleeting scherzo retracing the same ground three times and culminating in a short cadenza for the horn.

    253

    The second thoracic ring is humped, and there is a spine-like horn or protuberance at the tail.

    254

    The shortwool breeds are the Oxford Down, Southdown, Shropshire, Hampshire Down, Suffolk, Ryeland, Dorset and Somerset Horn, Kerry Hill, Radnor and Clun Forest.

    255

    The site features solar key chains, heated seat cushions, MP3 player docking stations, digital key chains, and OOOGAH horn kits.

    256

    The sixth grade, for civilians an egret, for the military a tiger-cat with a mother-of-pearl clasp. The seventh grade, for civilians a mandarin duck, for the military a mottled bear with a silver clasp. The eighth grade, for civilians a quail, for the military a seal with a clear horn clasp. The ninth grade, for civilians a long-tailed jay, for the military a rhinoceros with a buffalo-horn clasp.

    257

    The Sonic Bomb alarm from Sonic Alert has an incredibly loud 113dB alarm, which is the approximately the same decibel level as a live rock concert or car horn at a distance of one meter.

    258

    The specific gravity of this "horn" thallium is 7.02.

    259

    The stops labeled ' flute ', ' horn ' and ' vox angelica ' were pulled out, ready for use.

    260

    The strait is very rarely frozen over, though history records a few instances; and the Golden Horn, the inlet on either side of which Constantinople lies, has been partially frozen over occasionally in modern times.

    261

    The Strategion, devoted to the military exercises of the brave little town, stood close to Sirkedji Iskelessi, and two artificial harbours, the Portus Prosforianus and the Neorion, indented the shore of the Golden Horn, respectively in front of the ground now occupied by the station of the Chemins de Fer Orientaux and the Stamboul custom-house.

    262

    The term "horn of Amaltheia" is applied to a fertile district, and an estate belonging to Titus Pomponius Atticus was called Amaltheum.

    263

    The tomato horn worm and beetles are repelled by the smell and will typically stay away when these other plants are present.

    264

    The town manufactures combs and horn goods, brass and iron wares, leather, malt, bricks and ropes.

    265

    The walls along the Marmora and the Golden Horn represent the great restoration of the seaward defences of the capital carried out by the emperor Theophilus in the 9th century; while the walls between Tekfour Serai and the Golden Horn were built long after the reign of Theodosius II., superseding the defences of that quarter of the city in his day, and relegating them, as traces of their course to the rear of the later works indicate, to the secondary office of protecting the palace of Blachernae.

    266

    The white-faced breeds include the Leicester, Border Leicester, Lincoln, Kentish, Cheviot, Ryeland, Devon Longwool, South Devon, Dorset and Somerset Horn, Limestone, Penistone, Exmoor and Roscommon.

    267

    The young college-aged waitress inserted the tack, placed a quarter beneath it for weight and sounded a horn to call attention.

    268

    The, placing down his now empty horn, he yelled encouragement for the mighty wrestling champion Ivar.

    269

    Then from that spot came the sound of a horn, with the signal agreed on in case of a fight.

    270

    Then, it will be your turn to give someone else the cane with the horn or the hearing horn.

    271

    These include viola, double bass, bassoon, french horn and tuba.

    272

    They are soft (H= 21-) and sectile to a high degree, being readily cut with a knife like horn.

    273

    They continued to watch as the children began tossing small stones at their floating treasure, trying to halt its progress, when the sound of a horn startled them.

    274

    They do contain the occasional goof in the horn section and sometimes the sound is a little boxy.

    275

    They have a passion for fine clothes and ornaments, tricking themselves out with glass trinkets, rings and articles of ivory and horn.

    276

    They were fixed by the butt in a socket of stag's horn, mortised into a handle of wood.

    277

    This animal is hunted and killed for its skin and its horn.

    278

    This bird inhabits the lagoons and swamps of Paraguay and Southern Brazil, where it is called " Chaja " or " Chaka," and is smaller than the preceding, wanting its " horn," but having its head furnished with a dependent crest of feathers; while the plumage is grey.

    279

    This could be fixed, within certain limits, at whatever pitch suited the composition; but on the horn it could be only very partially filled out by notes of a muffled quality produced by inserting the hand into the bell of the instrument, a device impossible on the trumpet.

    280

    This histological and MRI evidence of lesions indicates that the polio virus both damaged and destroyed neurons in CNS territories beyond the anterior horn.

    281

    This Pillow Pet™ Magical Unicorn has a super-soft plush body covered with downy-like lavender chenille accented by a soft and cuddly white horn, muzzle and feet.

    282

    This section was written before 161 B.C., for "the great horn," who is Judas the Maccabee, was still warring when the author was writing.

    283

    This signal is relayed quickly by voice, hand and arm movements, or horn blasts.

    284

    Thus the promontory has the latter sea on the south, and the bay of the Bosporus, forming the magnificent harbour known as the Golden Horn, some 4 m.

    285

    Thus, prepared oystershells, coral, pearls, crabs' " eyes " and burnt hart's horn were regarded as specifics in different complaints, in ignorance of the fact that they all contain, as the chief ingredients, calcium phosphate and carbonate.

    286

    Till the 18th century ships were not allowed to sail round Cape Horn, so that the Chileans had to trade indirectly through Peru and the Argentine.

    287

    To assist his lectures on astronomy he constructed elaborate globes of the terrestrial and celestial spheres, on which the course of the planets was marked; for facilitating arithmetical and perhaps geometrical processes he constructed an abacus with twenty-seven divisions and a thousand counters of horn.

    288

    Transferred to the central point of the administration, he had ample opportunity of regarding with other eyes the situation of the kingdom, and in consequence of his remonstrances he fell rapidly in the favour of Charles Both in 1710 and 1713 Horn was in favour of summoning the estates, but when in 1714 the diet adopted an anti-monarchical attitude, he gravely warned and ultimately dissolved it.

    289

    Trumpets (horn, swegelhorn, byme) appear to have been used chiefly as signals.

    290

    Twitter has become a new way for celebrities to toot, or perhaps tweet their own horn.

    291

    Two of his vessels failed to round the Horn, another, the "Wager," was wrecked in the Golfo de Pallas on the coast of Chile.

    292

    Two theatres, on the eastern slope of the Acropolis, faced the bright waters of the Marmora, and a stadium was found on the level tract on the other side of the hill, close to the Golden Horn.

    293

    Untying the reins, he threw the rope over the saddle horn and mounted in one fluid movement.

    294

    Viramundo can augment to include sax, trombone, trumpet or full horn section.

    295

    Was that a farmer's noon horn which sounded from beyond the woods just now?

    296

    We drove all around Birmingham and tooted the horn at people in the street!

    297

    We grew nasturtiums and eaten the horn off the flower in salads.

    298

    What is the the flat-head screwdriver slot on the threaded bolt sticking out of the front of the horn is for?

    299

    When a small calf accompanies its mother, it always runs in front and she appears to guide it by holding the point of her horn upon the little animal's rump; and it is perfectly wonderful to note how in all sudden changes of pace, from a trot to a gallop, or vice versa, the same position is always exactly maintained.

    300

    When he joined the full band he changed to the tenor horn as 1st horn.

    301

    When it does reach the CNS, inflammation and destruction of the spinal cord motor cells (anterior horn cells) occurs, which prevents them from sending out impulses to muscles.

    302

    Whenever I am not working, I have a one woman show called Reflections in which I actually become 12 legendary black women entertainers, Lena Horn, Eartha Kitt, Mahalia Jackson and so on.

    303

    Where cut surfaces reveal the pith, they need to be capped off with wood, horn or synthetic resin.

    304

    Whilst still in the car check that the horn works by giving a little toot.

    305

    Winding the reins around the saddle horn, he shook out his rope and tied it to the bridle.

    306

    With the possible exception of Horn, Tristan is by far the most accomplished hero in the whole range of knightly romance; a finished musician, linguist and chess-player, no one can rival him in more knightly arts, in horsemanship or fencing.

    307

    With their resinous to adamantine lustre and their translucency they also present somewhat the appearance of horn; hence the name hornsilver.

    308

    With this horn he hunted the first pack of foxhounds then in England fifty-five years.

    309

    Within the hour, a toot of a horn outside told me the deed was done.

    310

    Wrapping the rope around the saddle horn, he nudged Ed into motion, tugging the fallen tree downstream.

    311

    You can alert others by honking a car horn or loudly describing what is happening.

    312

    You can get these for $375.00 in brownstone horn with spice brown, black with grey gradient, or sycamore/oyster pearl with amber bronze.

    313

    You may not be as good at tooting your own horn as others who know and love you!

    314

    Young Nick's Head, the southern horn of the bay, was named from Nicholas Young, his ship's boy, who first observed it.