Often in A Sentence

    1

    A comfortable bed replaced the cot utilized in Peabody and absolute darkness proved more conducive to sleep than the leaked light that often snuck into our old quarters.

    2

    A craftsman often adopted a son to learn the craft.

    3

    A form of apocentricity extremely common and often perplexing may be termed pseudocentric; in such a condition there is an apparent simplicity that tive anatomy.

    4

    A fourth while seemingly overwhelmed with work would often come accidentally under the Emperor's eye.

    5

    A pleasant humming and whistling of bullets were often heard.

    6

    A single case of homicide often leads to a series of similar crimes or to protracted warfare between neighbouring families and communities; the murderer, as a rule, takes refuge in the mountains from the avenger of blood, or remains for years shut up in his house.

    7

    A slave often ran away; if caught, the captor was bound to restore him to his master, and the Code fixes a reward of two shekels which the owner must pay the captor.

    8

    A snow-capped mountain ridge or an arid desert forms a barrier between different forms of life which is often more effective than an equal breadth of sea.

    9

    A third chamber above the second does not often occur.

    10

    A walk through the woods thither was often my recreation.

    11

    Adaptive characters are often hereditary, for instance, the seed of a parasite will produce a parasite, and the same is true of a carnivorous plant.

    12

    After meeting Princess Mary, though the course of his life went on externally as before, all his former amusements lost their charm for him and he often thought about her.

    13

    After that journey to Ryazan he found the country dull; his former pursuits no longer interested him, and often when sitting alone in his study he got up, went to the mirror, and gazed a long time at his own face.

    14

    Alex always seemed to know the right thing to say in any moment, and his silence often felt awkward.

    15

    All these affluents are on the right, and with the exception of the Arige, which descends from the eastern Pyrcnees, rise in the mountaitis of Auvergne and the southern Cvennes, their sources often lying close to those of the rivers of the Loire and Rhone basins.

    16

    Already Mozart divides his violas into two parts quite as often as he makes them play with the basses.

    17

    Although nations create governments to establish such protections, history shows that all too often, governments fail to do so.

    18

    Although this idea had often been expressed by others, and by Seward himself in his speech of 1848, yet he was severely criticized, and four days later he sought to render this statement innocuous also.

    19

    Among agricultural tribes in Africa one day of the week, which varies from place to place, is often a rest-day, visiting the market being the only work allowed.

    20

    An officer still less often acts directly himself, but commands still more frequently.

    21

    An old peasant whom Prince Andrew in his childhood had often seen at the gate was sitting on a green garden seat, plaiting a bast shoe.

    22

    And as often happens with old people, Kutuzov began looking about absent-mindedly as if forgetting all he wanted to say or do.

    23

    And I haven't shown up on your doorstep so often because I want you out of my hair.

    24

    And with the decision and tenderness that often come at the moment of awakening, she embraced her friend, but noticing Sonya's look of embarrassment, her own face expressed confusion and suspicion.

    25

    And, in fact, Bilibin's witticisms were hawked about in the Viennese drawing rooms and often had an influence on matters considered important.

    26

    Anna Mikhaylovna, who often visited the Karagins, while playing cards with the mother made careful inquiries as to Julie's dowry (she was to have two estates in Penza and the Nizhegorod forests).

    27

    Aristotle has impressed the ordinary mind chiefly by his criticism of Plato's ideal theory; and therefore he is often ranked as the father of empiricists.

    28

    Aristotle's teleological conception of organic evolution often approaches modern mechanical conceptions.

    29

    As an only child growing up with aging parents and no relatives, life had often been lonely.

    30

    As much and as often as Annie wrote, the letters and numbers must have almost become a second language to her.

    31

    As often as he touched the charcoal to the smooth board, the picture grew.

    32

    As often happens after long sleeplessness and long anxiety, he was seized by an unreasoning panic--it occurred to him that the child was dead.

    33

    As often happens in early youth, especially to one who leads a lonely life, he felt an unaccountable tenderness for this young man and made up his mind that they would be friends.

    34

    As often happens, the horses of a convoy wagon became restive at the end of the bridge, and the whole crowd had to wait.

    35

    As she listened to it she saw before her his smooth handsome forehead, his mustache, and his whole face, as she had so often seen it in the stillness of the night when he slept.

    36

    As soon as historians of different nationalities and tendencies begin to describe the same event, the replies they give immediately lose all meaning, for this force is understood by them all not only differently but often in quite contradictory ways.

    37

    At dinner the prince usually spoke to the taciturn Michael Ivanovich more often than to anyone else.

    38

    At each pole of this spindle figure there often occur fibres radiating in all directions into the cytoplasm, and sometimes a minute granular body, the centrosome, is also found there.

    39

    At first while they were still moving along the Kaluga road, Napoleon's armies made their presence known, but later when they reached the Smolensk road they ran holding the clapper of their bell tight--and often thinking they were escaping ran right into the Russians.

    40

    At Sodankyla rain or snowfall was often unaccompanied by change of sign in the potential.

    41

    Attached to it or the neighbouring frontal is often a supraorbital; infraorbitals occur also, attached to the jugal or downward process of the lacrymal.

    42

    Baby Claire was often in evidence in our work place, sleeping on mother's arm or in her file cabinet remodeled crib, or supping on Martha's breast.

    43

    Beauties like Gams don't come around very often.

    44

    Before I790 France was divided into thirty-three great and seven small military governments, often called provinces, which are, however, to be distinguished from the provinces formed under the feudal system.

    45

    Believe me in war the energy of young men often shows the way better than all the experience of old Cunctators.

    46

    Besides the stream of tendency which flowed from Kant in the direction of idealism, two other streams emerged from him, often but not always blending.

    47

    Besides the types forming this series, there are a number of others (Medulloseae and allied forms) which show numerous, often very complex, types of stelar structure, in some cases polystelic, whose origin and relationship with the simpler and better known types is frequently obscure.

    48

    Between these, resting vertically upon the rostrum, appears the vomer; very variable in shape and size, often reduced to a mere trace, as in the Galli, or even absent, broken up into a pair of tiny splints in Pici.

    49

    Brilliantly colored spots and patches follow the action of acid fumes on the vegetation near towns and factories, and such particoloured leaves often present striking resemblance to autumn foliage.

    50

    But he is always ingenious, often witty, and nobody has carried farther than he the harmony of diction, sometimes marred by an affectation of symmetry and an excessive use of antithesis.

    51

    But he was still headstrong and ill-tempered; and he was often in trouble with the other sailors.

    52

    But his brilliantly white, strong teeth which showed in two unbroken semicircles when he laughed--as he often did--were all sound and good, there was not a gray hair in his beard or on his head, and his whole body gave an impression of suppleness and especially of firmness and endurance.

    53

    But of course the 3 In actual life the Sabbath was often far from being the burden which the Rabbinical enactments would have led us to expect.

    54

    But the fishes that swim in our brooks we can see, and often we catch them to eat.

    55

    But the same person was often official of both courts.

    56

    But there is any quantity of oatmeal, which we often cook for breakfast.

    57

    But they were too often successful.

    58

    But while Nicholas was considering these questions and still could reach no clear solution of what puzzled him so, the wheel of fortune in the service, as often happens, turned in his favor.

    59

    But with all these often opposed conditions, we find less variation than might be expected, the main and really important divergence being due to the necessity of transposition, which added a very high pitch to the primarily convenient low one.

    60

    But, though she noticed it, she was herself in such high spirits at that moment, so far from sorrow, sadness, or self-reproach, that she purposely deceived herself as young people often do.

    61

    But, with all my love for Shakespeare, it is often weary work to read all the meanings into his lines which critics and commentators have given them.

    62

    Cells of this type are often called trumpet-hyphae (though they have no connection with the hyphae of Fungi), and in some genera of Laminariaceae those at the periphery of the medulla simulate the sieve-tubes of the higher plants in a striking degree, even (like these latter) developing the peculiar substance callose on or in the perforated cross-walls or sieve-plates.

    63

    Chinquapin or prinoides, a dwarf species, often only I ft.

    64

    Cold dry winds, often of great violence, occur in the Rhone valley (the Mistral), in Istria, and Dalmatia (the Bora), and in the western Caucasus.

    65

    Consider the pan you most often cook in today.

    66

    Cynthia confessed they didn't attend as often as they should— as much as she did when her son was at home.

    67

    Dean often wondered to himself why their romantic attraction to one another never grew to something permanent.

    68

    Deidre crossed to him, unafraid of the creature whose appearance often made grown Immortals quake and grovel.

    69

    Despite the multitude of slaves, hired labour was often needed, especially at harvest.

    70

    Did people often respond that way to Rob?

    71

    Disputed cases of contract were more often tried in the secular courts.

    72

    Does he bring you up here often?

    73

    Does that happen often?

    74

    During that fortnight of anxiety Natasha resorted to the baby for comfort so often, and fussed over him so much, that she overfed him and he fell ill.

    75

    During the reign of Edward, the title of superintendent was often adopted instead of bishop, and it will be recollected that John Knox was an honoured worker in England with the title of superintendent during this reign.

    76

    Each strand of spiral or annular first-formed tracheids is called a protoxylem strand, as distinct from the metaxylem or rest of the xylem, which consists of thick-walled tracheids, the pits of which are often scalariform.

    77

    Eight very broad radial canals; ex-umbrella often provided with lateral outgrowths; tentacles differing in size, but in a single row.

    78

    Elsewhere local surface currents are developed, either drifts due to the direct action of the winds, or streams produced by wind action heaping water up against the land; but these nowhere rise to the dignity of a distinct current system, although they are often sufficient to obliterate the feeble tidal action characteristic of the Mediterranean.

    79

    Equally disastrous are those climatic or seasonal changes which involve temperatures in themselves not excessive but in wrong sequence; how many more useful plants could be grown in the open in the United Kingdom if the deceptively mild springs were not so often followed by frosts in May and June!

    80

    Even on the quietest days irregular changes are always numerous and often large.

    81

    Even though some of the destinations might have been more effi­ciently visited by plane, Byrne always took a company car, often resulting in very long workdays.

    82

    Expropriation often is accompanied by infringements of the third ingredient, individual liberty, as well.

    83

    Exudations and Rotting.The outward symptoms of many diseases consist in excessive discharges of moisture, often accompanied by bursting of over-turgid cells, and eventually by putrefactive changes.

    84

    False etiolation may occur from too low a temperature, often seen in young wheat in cold springs.

    85

    First he rings his bell fearlessly, but when he gets into a tight place he runs away as quietly as he can, and often thinking to escape runs straight into his opponent's arms.

    86

    For convenience the judge often sits at the royal courts of justice.

    87

    For example, it has often been said that the extent to which their orchestral viola parts double the basses is due, partly to bad traditions of Italian opera, and partly to the fact that viola players were, more often than not, simply persons who had failed to play the violin.

    88

    For options that comprise of an array of dishes that often make up a meal, media raciones are available.

    89

    Frazer formerly held Virbius to be a wood and tree spirit, to whom horses, in which form tree spirits were often represented, were offered in sacrifice.

    90

    Fred O'Connor's usual behavior was often erratic.

    91

    Fred was referring to a coffee klatch of elderly town patriarchs whose words and advice on just about anything was often quoted in the local paper.

    92

    Fresh-water forms, however, are also known, very few as regards species or genera, but often extremely abundant as individuals.

    93

    From its source to the city of Kabul the course of the river is only 45 m., and this part of it is often exhausted in summer for purposes of irrigation.

    94

    From the archaic style in which these mythological tales are usually composed, as well as from the fact that not a few of them are found in Brahmanas of different schools and Vedas, though often with considerable variations, it seems pretty evident that the groundwork of them must go back to times preceding the composition or final redaction of the existing Brahmanas.

    95

    From the first, however, it had a military significance, and its usual Latin translation was miles, although minister was often used.

    96

    Fumago, Antennaria is not surprising, and the leaves of limes are often black with them.

    97

    Gabriel's visits weren't often, but Rhyn had grown to like him.

    98

    Good. Maybe you won't do it too often.

    99

    Granted, what we accomplished was monumental, but coming across a similar situation and duplicating what we were able to do might not occur very often.

    100

    Haydn finds the pianoforte so completely capable of expressing his meaning that he is at a loss to find independent material for any accompanying instruments; and the violoncello in his trios has, except perhaps in four passages in the whole collection of thirty-three works, not a note to play that is not already in the bass of the pianoforte; while the melodies of the violin are, more often than not, doubled in the treble.

    101

    He asked her to sing them often.

    102

    He danced with you that often and didn't tell you his name?

    103

    He didn't have that position because he was a male, as her friends often thought.

    104

    He glanced once at the companion's face, saw her attentive and kindly gaze fixed on him, and, as often happens when one is talking, felt somehow that this companion in the black dress was a good, kind, excellent creature who would not hinder his conversing freely with Princess Mary.

    105

    He had always been hot headed, but never mean like he often was now.

    106

    He left early each Friday afternoon, often returning late on Monday morning.

    107

    He never allowed anyone but Sarah to see that side of him, and she often felt sorry for his inability to let the rest of the world in.

    108

    He often did that.

    109

    He often does that when he's out of town even though he's always home before they get here.

    110

    He often fell asleep unexpectedly in the daytime, but at night, lying on his bed without undressing, he generally remained awake thinking.

    111

    He often surprised those he met by his significantly happy looks and smiles which seemed to express a secret understanding between him and them.

    112

    He often thought, If Beethoven or Chopin had centuries to compose music, imagine the treasures we would have.

    113

    He or she must not, as had been so often the case in the past, be forced to marry some royal favourite, or some one who had paid a sum of money for the privilege.

    114

    He started changing his name as often as his shorts.

    115

    He taught me Latin grammar principally; but he often helped me in arithmetic, which I found as troublesome as it was uninteresting.

    116

    He then abandoned himself to pleasure; he often visited London, and became an intimate friend of the prince of Wales (afterwards George IV.); he brought to Paris the "anglo-mania," as it was called, and made jockeys as fashionable as they were in England.

    117

    He took part in the nomination of the counts and dukes; in the king's absence he presided over the royal tribunal; and he often commanded the armies.

    118

    He understands the matter so well that Daniel and I are often quite astounded, said Simon, well knowing what would please his master.

    119

    He used to frown at her when she acted outside the Immortal Laws, unable to appreciate that a deity charged with managing a domain often had to take steps outside the rules to protect one's underworld.

    120

    He was always gentle and forbearing, no matter how dull I might be, and believe me, my stupidity would often have exhausted the patience of Job.

    121

    He was no follower of their ideas, indeed often opposed to them; but he derived from Bacon an increasing stimulus towards the investigation of certain great problems of history and philosophy, while Grotius proved valuable in his study of philosophic jurisprudence.

    122

    He was no more expressive around Mary than anyone else, but he often asked her opinion on things.

    123

    He was often called the Ettrick Shepherd, because he was the keeper of sheep near the Ettrick Water.

    124

    He was often identified with Zeus, Apollo and Dionysus.

    125

    He was often making trouble among his neighbors.

    126

    He was often sighted strutting down the roadside.

    127

    He was often woken from the crime scene by honking horns or outside noises.

    128

    He wasn't in Scranton very often and the papers would pile up.

    129

    He wears it often.

    130

    He'd often wondered if he had more family somewhere.

    131

    Hearing this, Dorothy and the Wizard exchanged startled glances, for they remembered how often Eureka had longed to eat a piglet.

    132

    Her father was hard to read and often unapproachable, but he cared for her in his own special way.

    133

    Her hieratic and most general form was still lioness-headed, but a popular form, especially in bronze, was a cat-headed women, often holding in her right hand a lion aegis, i.e.

    134

    His face twitched, as often happens to soldiers called before the ranks.

    135

    His high social position, his influence at court, his character, as well as his undoubted abilities and learning, not often in Austria found in a man of his rank, gave him great influence.

    136

    His image and name are often found on "votive hands," a kind of talisman adorned with emblems, the nature of which is obscure.

    137

    His infernal cunning often defeated its own aims, checkmating him at the point of achievement by suggestions of duplicity or terror.

    138

    His master usually found him a slave-girl as wife (the children were then born slaves), often set him up in a house (with farm or business) and simply took an annual rent of him.

    139

    His mother spoke of a rich woman often, one who sent her on errands when his mother was not wanted at the whorehouse where she made what living was afforded a poor woman beyond the marriage age.

    140

    His mother was descended from a family named Styward in Norfolk, which was not, however, connected in any way, as has been often asserted, with the royal house of Stuart.

    141

    His new schedule often sent him to bed early and kept him there until the last moment.

    142

    His position, indeed, often necessitated his presence at games and shows, but on these occasions he occupied himself either in reading, in being read to, or in writing notes.

    143

    How can he remember well his ignorance--which his growth requires--who has so often to use his knowledge?

    144

    How often did these storms strike?

    145

    How often do your duties place you in danger?

    146

    How often had he watched her sunbathing?

    147

    How often had she heard how dangerous abandoned mines were?

    148

    How often was Byrne out of the office?

    149

    I had a French grammar in raised print, and as I already knew some French, I often amused myself by composing in my head short exercises, using the new words as I came across them, and ignoring rules and other technicalities as much as possible.

    150

    I had often read the story, but I had never felt the charm of Rip's slow, quaint, kind ways as I did in the play.

    151

    I had often since seen its crumpled red velvety blossom supported by the stems of other plants without knowing it to be the same.

    152

    I have noticed that a portion of Walden which in the state of water was green will often, when frozen, appear from the same point of view blue.

    153

    I have often been asked, "Do not people bore you?"

    154

    I have often held in my hand a little model of the Plymouth Rock which a kind gentleman gave me at Pilgrim Hall, and I have fingered its curves, the split in the centre and the embossed figures "1620," and turned over in my mind all that I knew about the wonderful story of the Pilgrims.

    155

    I just wish it could happen more often.

    156

    I need to visit more often.

    157

    I often think of the pleasant time we had all together in Boston last spring.

    158

    I often wonder how

    159

    I should start charging you for taking the edge off as often as I do.

    160

    I used them a lot over the years, not always to the FBI liking which didn't help my career but I found they often work.

    161

    I want to be happy and not worry about creatures trying to kill me or how often I'll be wandering into one of your massacres!

    162

    I would not be silly and afraid of things, I would simply embrace him, cling to him, and make him look at me with those searching inquiring eyes with which he has so often looked at me, and then I would make him laugh as he used to laugh.

    163

    I'm sure you don't have to deal with rejection very often.

    164

    I'm used to planes being late more often than on time.

    165

    I've pondered the events of those few months so often and so deeply I know if I don't at least commit the experience to paper I'll never move forward.

    166

    If a man was obliged to go from one city to another, he often rode on horseback.

    167

    If the king were a minor, the mayor of the palace supervised his education in the capacity of guardian (nutricius), and often also occupied himself with affairs of state.

    168

    If we keep cool and moist, and meet with no accidents, we often live for five years.

    169

    In all the upland valleys of the Abruzzi snow begins to fall early in November, and heavy storms occur often as late as May; whole communities are shut out for months from any intercourse with their neighbours, and some villages are so long buried in snow that regular passages are made between the different houses for the sake of communication among the inhabitants.

    170

    In America it seldom attains the large size it often acquires in England, and it is there of less rapid growth than the prevailing form of the western plains; the name of "cotton-wood" is locally given to other species.

    171

    In common with the okapi, giraffes have skin-covered horns on the head, but in these animals, which form the genus Giraffa, these appendages are present in both sexes; and there is often an unpaired one in advance of the pair on the forehead.

    172

    In connexion with the stability of portable cranes, it may be mentioned that accidents more often arise from FIG.

    173

    In discussing nutrition, not only is there little agreement on the nature of the solutions, there is often disagreement on the nature of the problems.

    174

    In English churches these stairs generally run up in a small turret in the wall at the west end of the chancel; often this also leads out on to the roof.

    175

    In fact, his workday often began before he arrived at the clinic.

    176

    In her self-revelations she followed Rousseau, her first master in style, but while Rousseau in his Confessions darkened all the shadows, George Sand is the heroine of her story, often frail and faulty, but always a woman more sinned against than sinning.

    177

    In history he is often called the Grand Monarch.

    178

    In later times, towns have been more often founded in proximity to valuable mineral resources, and at critical points or nodes on lines of communication.

    179

    In many cases externai protophloem, usually consisting of narrow sieve-tubes often with swollen walls, can be distinguished from metaphloem.

    180

    In New South Wales the body is often burned and the ashes buried.

    181

    In other cases it does not differ histologically from the parenchyma of the rest of the cortex, though it is often distinguished by containing particularly abundant starch, in which case it is known as a starch sheath.

    182

    In particular the remarkable frontier lines which bounded the Roman provinces of Upper (southern) Germany and Raetia, and which at their greatest development stretched from near Bonn on the Rhine to near Regensburg on the Danube, are often called the Limes Germanicus.

    183

    In places where the low ground is marshy, roads and railways often follow the ridge-lines of hills, or, as in Finland, the old glacial eskers, which run parallel to the shore.

    184

    In previous years I had often gone prospecting over some bare hillside, where a pitch pine wood had formerly stood, and got out the fat pine roots.

    185

    In rural areas, first responders were often neighbors, which was the fortunate case with them.

    186

    In size the male African elephant often surpasses the Asiatic species, reaching nearly 12 ft.

    187

    In some cases where there is apparently a well-marked plerome at the apex, this is really the young pith, the distinction between the stelar and cortical initials, if it exists, being, as is so often the case, impossible to make out.

    188

    In some places, within my own remembrance, the pines would scrape both sides of a chaise at once, and women and children who were compelled to go this way to Lincoln alone and on foot did it with fear, and often ran a good part of the distance.

    189

    In such cases the immediate damage done may be slight; but the effects of prolonged action and the summation of numerous attacks at numerous points are often enormotis, certain of these leafdiseases costing millions sterling annually to some planting and agricultural communities.

    190

    In that world, the handsome drunkard Number One of the second gun's crew was "uncle"; Tushin looked at him more often than at anyone else and took delight in his every movement.

    191

    In the Armenian and Coptic rites the vestment is often elaborately embroidered; in the other rites the only ornament is a cross high in the middle of the back, save in the case of bishops of the Orthodox Church, whose sticharia are ornamented with two vertical red stripes (7rorayof, " rivers").

    192

    In the Barbargia the men have a white shirt, a black or red waistcoat and black or red coat, often with open sleeves; the cut and decorations of these vary considerably in the different districts.

    193

    In the fat years, agricultural prices are pushed downward by the abundance, often below the cost of harvesting and transporting the crops.

    194

    In the future, massive new amounts of information will begin to resolve the debate, instead of just adding noise to it as too often occurs today.

    195

    In the higher plants the structures which have been often described as centrosomes are too indefinite in their constitution.

    196

    In the midst of Charles's debauched and licentious court, she lived neglected and retired, often deprived of her due allowance, having no ambitions and taking no part in English politics, but keeping up rather her interest in her native country.

    197

    In the morning, when he went to call at Rostopchin's he met there a courier fresh from the army, an acquaintance of his own, who often danced at Moscow balls.

    198

    In the province of Naples, Caserta, &c., the method of fallows is widely adopted, the ground often being left in this state for fifteen or twenty years; and in some parts of Sicily there is a regular interchange of fallow and crop year by year.

    199

    In the Spanish plains, however, the young are often produced in nests built in trees, or among tall bamboos in FIG.

    200

    In the yeast cell the nucleus is represented by a homogenous granule, probably of a nucleolar nature, surrounded and perhaps to some extent impregnated by chromatin and closely connected with a vacuole which often has chromatin at its periphery, and contains one or more volutin granules which appear to consist of nucleic acid in combination with an unknown base.

    201

    Individual species are extremely numerous and often very restricted in area.

    202

    It contains few old buildings, though relics of antiquity are often found on the abandoned site of the old city.

    203

    It does not, of course, follow that increase of bulk is always conspicuous; in such trees death is present side by side with life, and the one often counterbalances the other.

    204

    It happens too often that your trumpet call is unheeded.

    205

    It is by no means certain that he made the remark often attributed to him, "Let us enjoy the papacy since God has given it to us," but there is little doubt that he was by nature devoid of moral earnestness or deep religious feeling.

    206

    It is often still warm.

    207

    It is often vacuolar, sometimes granular, and in other cases it is a homogeneous body with no visible structure or differentiation.

    208

    It is often very desirable to have the quay space as little obstructed by the cranes as possible, so as not to interfere with railway traffic; this has led to the introduction of cranes mounted on high trucks or gantries, sometimes also called " portal " cranes.

    209

    It is possible, however, that the absence of sunken stomata, and the occurrence of some other halophytic features, are related merely to the succulent habit and not to halophytism, for succulent species often occur on non-saline soils.

    210

    It is propagated by offsets, which are often planted in September or October, but the principal crop should not be got in earlier than February or the beginning of March.

    211

    It is represented either by a spina interna or by a spina externa, or by both, or they join to form a spina communis which is often very large and sometimes ends in a bifurcation.

    212

    It is to be noted that often no absolute line of demarcation can be drawn in regard to these regions, their definitions being rather convenient than morphological.

    213

    It must be conceded as no small merit in Lydgate that, in an age of experiment he should have succeeded so often in hitting the right word.

    214

    It often left them partially paralyzed, in wheelchairs or iron lungs (a term that's now all but forgotten and will likely send younger readers to Wikipedia).

    215

    It very often happened that in a moment of irritation husband and wife would have a dispute, but long afterwards Pierre to his surprise and delight would find in his wife's ideas and actions the very thought against which she had argued, but divested of everything superfluous that in the excitement of the dispute he had added when expressing his opinion.

    216

    It was for some while the frontier of the Roman territory and was often in the hands of Veii.

    217

    It was obvious he was used to running things, but his help often became an attempt to take over the barn.

    218

    It was something she had been told often, but never expected to be asked.

    219

    It wasn't often that they had time to themselves.

    220

    It wasn't something she had often heard.

    221

    It would have been well if Kossuth had had something more of Gdrgei's calculated ruthlessness, for, as has been truly said, the revolutionary power he had seized could only be held by revolutionary means; but he was by nature soft-hearted and always merciful; though often audacious, he lacked decision in dealing with men.

    222

    Italy only too often became the theatre of desolating and distracting wars.

    223

    Its furry tail stood up firm and round as a plume, its bandy legs served it so well that it would often gracefully lift a hind leg and run very easily and quickly on three legs, as if disdaining to use all four.

    224

    Jackson often joked that the day would come when she would spend more on a pair of shoes than he did on a car.

    225

    June is often wet, but most favourable for the springing crops; July and August are warm, but, excepting two or three days at a time, not uncomfortably so; while the autumn weeks of late August and September are very pleasant.

    226

    Knowledge often consists of the rolled-up conclusions from many pieces of data.

    227

    Landolt and others, made it at first appear that the change in weight, if there is any, consequent on a chemical change can rarely exceed one-millionth of the weight of the reacting substances, and that it must often be much less.

    228

    Large landlords are usually represented by ministri, or factors, who direct agricultural operations and manage the estates, but the estate is often let to a middleman, or mercante di campagna.

    229

    Like all officers created to meet an emergency, the limitations to his power are illdefined, and he is often little better than an autocrat.

    230

    Live entertainment is often scheduled to appear on the dining patio.

    231

    Mademoiselle Bourienne was often touched to tears as in imagination she told this story to him, her seducer.

    232

    Mademoiselle Bourienne, too, seemed passionately fond of the boy, and Princess Mary often deprived herself to give her friend the pleasure of dandling the little angel--as she called her nephew--and playing with him.

    233

    Many forms, even when multicellular, have all their cells identical in structure and function, and are often spoken of as physiologically unicellular.

    234

    Maps of the 16th and 17th centuries often show Cambaluc in an imaginary region to the north of China, a part of the misconception that has prevailed regarding Cathay.

    235

    Marriages rarely produce more than three children and often none at all.

    236

    Massive colonies may assume, ' various forms and are often branching or tree-like.

    237

    Maybe hearing Mary say it so often had burned it into his brain.

    238

    More often than I care to admit.

    239

    My thoughts would often rise and beat up like birds against the wind, and I persisted in using my lips and voice.

    240

    Mysticism is often the expression of a revolt against authority, but in Luria's case mysticism was not divorced from respect for tradition.

    241

    Nay, I often did better than this.

    242

    Next in importance comes a mountain range, but here there is often difficulty as to the definition of the actual crest-line, and mountain ranges being broad regions, it may happen that a small independent state, like Switzerland or Andorra, occupies the mountain valleys between two or more great countries.

    243

    No sharp line can be drawn between these diseases and some of the preceding, inasmuch as it often depends on the external conditions whether necrosis is a dry-rot, in the sense I employ the term here, or a wet-rot, when it would come under the preceding category.

    244

    No, only often enough to keep things interesting.

    245

    Notwithstanding their complete subjection, women are treated with a certain respect, and are often employed as intermediaries in the settlement of feuds; a woman may traverse a hostile district without fear of injury, and her bessa will protect the traveller or the stranger.

    246

    Now her face and body were often all that one saw, and her soul was not visible at all.

    247

    Now we are certainly on the fuzzy edges, a place where words, often fuzzy in their meanings, begin to fail us.

    248

    Obviously it wasn't something he often did.

    249

    Of a far more complicated nature than these offerings are the Soma-sacrifices, which, besides the simpler ceremonies of this class, such as the Agnishtoma or "Praise of Agni," also include great state functions, such as the Rajasuya or consecration of a king, and the Asvamedha or horse-sacrifice, which, in addition to the sacrificial rites, have a considerable amount of extraneous, often highly interesting, ceremonial connected with them, which makes them seem to partake largely of the nature of public festivals.

    250

    Of the three sons of Count Franz, the eldest, Friedrich (1810-1881), entered the diplomatic service; after holding other posts he was in 1850 appointed president of the restored German Diet at Frankfort, where he represented the anti-Prussian policy of Schwarzenberg, and often came into conflict with Bismarck, who was Prussian envoy.

    251

    Often after collecting alms, and reckoning up twenty to thirty rubles received for the most part in promises from a dozen members, of whom half were as well able to pay as himself, Pierre remembered the masonic vow in which each Brother promised to devote all his belongings to his neighbor, and doubts on which he tried not to dwell arose in his soul.

    252

    Often everything in the room was arranged in object sentences.

    253

    Often in a snow-storm, even by day, one will come out upon a well-known road and yet find it impossible to tell which way leads to the village.

    254

    Often it reaches the keel of the sternum, with subsequent syndesmosis or even synostosis, e.g.

    255

    Often it's a judgment thing—the court weighs all the facts and makes a determination.

    256

    Often seeing the success she had with young and old men and women Pierre could not understand why he did not love her.

    257

    Often the bones, teeth and scales of fishes are to FIG.

    258

    Often the poor man is not so cold and hungry as he is dirty and ragged and gross.

    259

    Often they made fun of them.

    260

    Often times both are absent when love is involved.

    261

    Often when all sitting together everyone kept silent.

    262

    Often when he went his rounds I clung to his coat tails while he collected and punched the tickets.

    263

    Often when I dream, thoughts pass through my mind like cowled shadows, silent and remote, and disappear.

    264

    Often, a buying decision hinges on a piece of arcane information about a product that is difficult to locate.

    265

    Often, however, her sober ideas are not to be laughed at, for her earnestness carries her listeners with her.

    266

    Often, in the repose of my mid-day, there reaches my ears a confused tintinnabulum from without.

    267

    Often, listening to the pilgrims' tales, she was so stimulated by their simple speech, mechanical to them but to her so full of deep meaning, that several times she was on the point of abandoning everything and running away from home.

    268

    Often, when he was a little lad, he took long walks among the trees with his mother.

    269

    Oh, well, you know people often invent things.

    270

    On account of this difficulty, the atomic weights published by Dalton, and the more accurate ones of Berzelius, were not always identical with the values now accepted, but were often simple multiples or submultiples of these.

    271

    On her walks at Lover's Lane near Evelyn's row house, she'd often seen couples entranced by the rhythmic movement of waves stand at a railing, the man's arms wrapped around the woman in front of him, his chin on her head.

    272

    On rich loams and the alluvial soils of river-valleys, when well drained, the tree attains a large size, often rivalling the giant oaks of Europe; trunks of 3 or 4 ft.

    273

    On the continent of Europe they often lead out of the interior of the church and are enclosed with tracery, as at Rouen or Strassburg.

    274

    On the European continent the courts Christian often carried.

    275

    On the other hand, even if we admitted that words could be the cause of events, history shows that the expression of the will of historical personages does not in most cases produce any effect, that is to say, their commands are often not executed, and sometimes the very opposite of what they order occurs.

    276

    One is struck by the unanimity with which, working individually and often in lands far apart, Church.

    277

    One of these, the processus orbitatis posterior, often combines with an outgrowth of the alisphenoid, and may be, e.g.

    278

    One section of the law expresses the fact that the weights of two substances, not necessarily elements, that are equivalent in one reaction, are often found to be equivalent in a number of other reactions.

    279

    Or because you and I went there so often.

    280

    Our conception of the degree of freedom often varies according to differences in the point of view from which we regard the event, but every human action appears to us as a certain combination of freedom and inevitability.

    281

    Over-transpiration in bright wintry weather, when the roots are not absorbing, often results in yellowing.

    282

    P. canadensis, the "cotton-wood" of the western prairies, and its varieties are perhaps the most useful trees of the genus, often forming almost the only arborescent vegetation on the great American plains.

    283

    People are often victims of their own natures.

    284

    People would wonder how often she had slept here.

    285

    Physical characteristics differ widely; but as a whole the Italian is somewhat short of stature, with dark or black hair and eyes, often good looking.

    286

    Pledges were often made where the intrinsic value of the article was equivalent to the amount of the debt; but antichretic pledge was more common, where the profit of the pledge was a set-off against the interest of the debt.

    287

    Political geography has been too often looked on from both sides as a mere summary of guide-book knowledge, useful in the schoolroom, a poor relation of physical geography that it was rarely necessary to recognize.

    288

    Poor people are often sick.

    289

    Practically speaking, governments often act as if their first duty is to protect the government, not the people.

    290

    Preparing food wasn't something human-Deidre did often.

    291

    Prince Andrew blushed, as he often did now--Natasha particularly liked it in him--and said that his son would not live with them.

    292

    Regardless, Clarissa's sugar coated barbs hit their mark all too often.

    293

    Scattered single stereids or bundles of fibres are no imnrornmnn in the rnrtev of the root The innermost layer of the cortex, abutting on the central cylinder of the stem or on the bundles of the leaves, is called the jthloeoterma, and is often differentiated.

    294

    Seafood is caught in the morning and shipped or flown to the restaurants, often on the same day.

    295

    Second, monarchs themselves often have only a financial risk in war.

    296

    Several days of festivity and merry-making followed, for such old friends did not often meet and there was much to be told and talked over between them, and many amusements to be enjoyed in this delightful country.

    297

    She can make a great many combinations now, and often invents new ones herself.

    298

    She could not find fault with Sonya in any way and tried to be fond of her, but often felt ill-will toward her which she could not overcome.

    299

    She cried so often that when she finally went to bed, she was exhausted.

    300

    She endeavoured unsuccessfully to eke out her irregularly paid allowance by those expedients to which reduced gentlewomen are driven - fancywork and painting fans and snuff-boxes; she lived in a garret and was often unable to allow herself the luxury of a fire.

    301

    She flushed, her beautiful eyes grew dim, red blotches came on her face, and it took on the unattractive martyrlike expression it so often wore, as she submitted herself to Mademoiselle Bourienne and Lise.

    302

    She gasped, recognizing it as the one he wore often, the heirloom passed down through his ancestors.

    303

    She had a cradle, and I often spent an hour or more rocking her.

    304

    She had always been a recluse at heart, often declining a social outing with her friends so that she could be alone with a book or her writing.

    305

    She had no choice in these matters, which were often decided in her childhood.

    306

    She had said that often enough.

    307

    She had told him often enough that he was the best looking man she had ever seen.

    308

    She lay back on the bed, imagining the wedding as she had done so often before.

    309

    She lifted her lips to his ear, and through tears, whispered, "Promise you'll play for me often."

    310

    She returned to this thought often as they traveled for two days.

    311

    She vividly pictured herself as Prince Andrew's wife, and the scenes of happiness with him she had so often repeated in her imagination, and at the same time, aglow with excitement, recalled every detail of yesterday's interview with Anatole.

    312

    She wandered the mansion as she often did, restless and starving.

    313

    She was a horrible liar, uncertain enough in her attempts that he assessed she didn't do it often.

    314

    She worked hard at taking care of her husband and children, yet how often had someone told her she was a good wife and mother - or even a nice person?

    315

    Slaves were often adopted and if they proved unfilial were reduced to slavery again.

    316

    Some geographers distinguish a mountain from a hill by origin; thus Professor Seeley says " a mountain implies elevation and a hill implies denudation, but the external forms of both are often identical."

    317

    Some things never grew boring no matter how often they were repeated.

    318

    Sometimes countries simply nationalize industries, so that an enterprise once owned by a private company, often a foreign-based one, is taken over by the government or "the people."

    319

    Spotted Leaves, &c.Discoloured spots or patches on leaves and other herbaceous parts are common symptoms of disease, and often furnish clues to identification of causes, though it must be remembered that no sharp line divides this class of symptoms from the preceding.

    320

    Starch grains may often be seen in contact with the pigment crystals.

    321

    Stomata are often absent, absorption and excretion of gases in solution being carried on through the epidermal layer.

    322

    Stomata are often situated at the bottom of pits in the surface of the leaf.

    323

    Subdivisions may be, and often are, named according to the particular duties to which they are assigned, as la police politique, police des mceurs, police sanitaire, &c. The officers of the judicial police comprise the juge de paix (equivalent to the English police magistrate), the maire, the commissaire de police, the gendarmerie and, in rural districts, the gardes champtres and the gardes forestiers.

    324

    Such are the " guard-polyps " (machopolyps) of Plumularidae, which are often regarded as individuals of the nature of dactylozoids, but from a study of the mode of budding in this hydroid family Driesch concluded that the guard-polyps were not true polyp-individuals, although each is enclosed in a small protecting cup of the perisarc, known as a nematophore.

    325

    Terenty, when he had helped him undress and wished him good night, often lingered with his master's boots in his hands and clothes over his arm, to see whether he would not start a talk.

    326

    That sincerity which often comes with waking showed her clearly what chiefly concerned her about her father's illness.

    327

    The agitation had begun some fifteen years before, and the men had at various times demanded better pay and shorter hours, often with success.

    328

    The animals are used to seeing us, and the horses often graze with them, so I don't think we will have any problems with the safari animals or the natural wildlife.

    329

    The area he was watching was where she often saw deer in the early morning hours.

    330

    The armory was not the collection of a wealthy connoisseur; this was the personal armory of a man accustomed to killing often.

    331

    The beds made partly of old mushroom-bed dung often contain sufficient spawn to yield a crop, without the introduction of brick or cake spawn, but it is advisable to spawn them in the regular way.

    332

    The British oak is one of the largest trees of the genus, though old specimens are often more remarkable for the great size of the trunk and main boughs than for very lofty growth.

    333

    The Buen was nearly full, but as the season crept toward the Fourth of July and the heart of summer, finding a dinner seat anywhere in Ouray would often require patience.

    334

    The catkins appear soon after the young leaves, usually in England towards the end of May; the acorns, oblong in form, are in shallow cups with short, scarcely projecting scales; the fruit is shed the first autumn, often before the foliage changes.

    335

    The cells of these sheaths are often distinguished from the rest of the mesophyll by containing little or no chlorophyll.

    336

    The centre of the leaf is often occupied by a midrib consisting of several layers of cells.

    337

    The climate of Caracas is often described as that of perpetual spring.

    338

    The coasts are fairly indented, and, protected by these reefs, which often support a chain of green islets, afford many good harbours and safe anchorages.

    339

    The coasts of the Andamans are deeply indented, giving existence to a number of safe harbours and tidal creeks, which are often surrounded by mangrove swamps.

    340

    The Code does not say what would be the penalty of murder, but death is so often awarded where death is caused that we can hardly doubt that the murderer was put to death.

    341

    The conjunctive of a root-stele possessing a pith is often sclerized between the pith and the pericycle.

    342

    The costume of the women is different (often entirely so) in each village or district.

    343

    The death, sufferings, and last days of Prince Andrew had often occupied Pierre's thoughts and now recurred to him with fresh vividness.

    344

    The debtor could also pledge his property, and in contracts often pledged a field, house or crop. The Code enacted, however, that the debtor should always take the crop himself and pay the creditor from it.

    345

    The dialects differ very much in different parts of the island, so that those who speak one often cannot understand those who speak another, and use Italian as the medium of communication.

    346

    The difference in level between the outcrop of the assumed eastern intake and of the wells is often so small, in comparison with their distance apart, that the friction would completely sop up the whole of the available hydrostatic head.

    347

    The drawn or etiolated condition of over-shaded plants is a case in point, though here again the soft, watery plant often really succumbs to other disease agentse.g.

    348

    The epiotic is often small, ossifies irregularly, and fuses with the supra-occipital.

    349

    The fact that parliament continued to meet fairly often so long as Morton lived, and was only summoned once by Henry VII.

    350

    The fact that the kings were often absent from England, and that the justiciarship was held by great nobles or churchmen, made this office of an importance which at times threatened to overshadow that of the Crown.

    351

    The finest glass is made in Tuscany and Venetia; Venetian glass is often colored and of artistic form.

    352

    The first consists of cutting up the various fabrics and materials employed into shapes suitable for forming the leaves, petals, &c.; this may be done by scissors, but more often stamps are employed which will cut through a dozen or more thicknesses at one blow.

    353

    The foot by which it is attached often sends out root-like processes - the hydrorhiza (c).

    354

    The forewings have at least a single longitudinal nervure - often two - reaching from base to tip of the wing.

    355

    The general construction of wooden screens is close panelling beneath, on which stands screen-work composed of slender turned balusters or regular wooden mullions, supporting tracery more or less rich with cornices, crestings, &c., and often painted in brilliant colours and gilded.

    356

    The geological structure and the mineral composition of the rocks are often the chief causes determining the character of the land forms of a region.

    357

    The hair is long, black or very dark auburn, wavy and sometimes curly, but never woolly, and the men have luxuriant beards and whiskers, often of an auburn tint, while the whole body inclines to hairiness.

    358

    The Hausa are often traders, traversing the country in large caravans.

    359

    The houses are often of one storey only.

    360

    The jibs of transporters are often made to slide forward, or lift up, so as to be out of the way when not in use.

    361

    The latter are often swollen at the ends, so that the cross-wall separating two successive cells has a larger surface than if the cells were of uniform width along their entire length.

    362

    The latter is often sclerized, especially opposite the phloem, and to a less extent opposite the xylem, as in the stem.

    363

    The leaves are large, often irregular in form, usually with a few deep lobes dilated at the end; they are of a bright light green on the upper surface, but whitish beneath; they turn to a violet tint in autumn.

    364

    The letters of Khammurabi often deal with claims to exemption.

    365

    The lower districts are hot and often unhealthy in the summer, while the climate of the mountainous portion of the island is less oppressive, and would be still cooler if it possessed more forest.

    366

    The man in her dreams often started out as Josh, but always ended up being Alex.

    367

    The manganese ores of the Bathurst district of New South Wales often contain a small percentage of cobalt - sufficient, indeed, to warrant further attempts to work them.

    368

    The meat and spices vary widely by region but often use beef, lamb, dill or oregano.

    369

    The mesogloea is greatly developed in them and they are often of very tough consistency.

    370

    The metals comprising this group are never found in the uncombined condition, but occur most often in the form of carbonates and sulphates; they form oxides of the type RO, and in the case of calcium, strontium and barium, of the type R02.

    371

    The milkers would let me keep my hands on the cows while they milked, and I often got well switched by the cow for my curiosity.

    372

    The most anterior part of the ilium often overlaps one or more short lumbar ribs and fuses with them, or even a long, complete thoracic rib.

    373

    The mountain streams often contain small but good trout.

    374

    The name "firefly" is often applied also to luminous beetles of the family Lampyridae, to which the well-known glow-worm belongs.

    375

    The name is often in popular literature written Cambalu, and is by Longfellow accented in verse Cambeilic. But this spelling originates in an accidental error in Ramusio's Italian version, which was the chief channel through which Marco Polo's book was popularly known.

    376

    The names of leading legislators, which we so often find recorded in the history of primitive peoples, are symbols and myths, merely serving to mark an historic period or epoch by some definite and personal denomination.

    377

    The officer of the Horse Guards went to a general with whom Ermolov was often to be found.

    378

    The old court-house in which Abraham Lincoln often practised is still standing.

    379

    The old horse panted a little, and had to stop often to get his breath.

    380

    The old instinctive idea of symmetry must often have suggested other oekumene balancing the known world in the other quarters of the globe.

    381

    The penny-post is, commonly, an institution through which you seriously offer a man that penny for his thoughts which is so often safely offered in jest.

    382

    The people of Antium were enemies of the Romans and had often been at war with them.

    383

    The Persians are not mentioned in history before the time of Cyrus; the attempt to identify them with the Parsua, a district in the Zagros chains south of Lake Urmia, often mentioned by the Assyrians, is not tenable.

    384

    The Phddon was an immediate success, and besides being often reprinted in German was speedily translated into nearly all the European languages, including English.

    385

    The philanthropist too often surrounds mankind with the remembrance of his own castoff griefs as an atmosphere, and calls it sympathy.

    386

    The population of the town itself is distinguished from that of its commune, which often includes a considerable portion of the surrounding country.

    387

    The potentials that have to be dealt with are often hundreds and sometimes thousands of volts, and insulation troubles are more serious than is generally appreciated.

    388

    The pouch is often absent, and may open backwards.

    389

    The presidential election of 1874 resolved itself, as so often before, into a struggle between the provincials and the poytenos (Buenos Aires).

    390

    The priests of the Greek Church, on whom the rural population depend for instruction, are often deplorably ignorant.

    391

    The registry of the citizens, the suppression of litigation, the elevation of public morals, the care of minors, the retrenchment of public expenses, the limitation of gladiatorial games and shows, the care of roads, the restoration of senatorial privileges, the appointment of none but worthy magistrates, even the regulation of street traffic, these and numberless other duties so completely absorbed his attention that, in spite of indifferent health, they often kept him at severe labour from early morning till long after midnight.

    392

    The royal family, especially the queen and the infanta Isabella, often stayed at Segovia, and Torquemada became confessor to the infanta, who was then very young.

    393

    The Royalist cavalry was disorganized by victory as often as by defeat, and illustrated on numerous fields the now discredited maxim that cavalry cannot charge twice in one day.

    394

    The sea produces three different seals, which often ascend rivers from the coast, and can live in lagoons of fresh water; many cetaceans, besides the " right whale " and sperm whale; and the dugong, found on the northern shores, which yields a valuable medicinal oil.

    395

    The second methodology error that futurists often commit is the exact opposite of the first.

    396

    The seed is a new structure characteristic of this group, which is therefore often referred to as the Seed-plants.

    397

    The sense-cells form, in the first place, a diffuse system of scattered sensory cells, as in the polyp, developed chiefly on the manubrium, the tentacles and the margin of the umbrella, where they form a sensory ciliated epithelium covering the nerve-centres; in the second place, the sense-cells are concentrated to form definite sense-organs, situated always at the margin of the umbrella, hence often termed " marginal bodies."

    398

    The sensory cells are slender epithelial cells, often with a cilium or stiff protoplasmic process, and should perhaps be regarded as the only ectoderm-cells which retain the primitive ciliation of the larval ectoderm, otherwise lost in all Hydrozoa.

    399

    The sound was rough, as if he didn't laugh often.

    400

    The South African sub-region has a flora richer perhaps in number of species than any other; and these are often extremely local ant restricted in area.

    401

    The stairs had become narrower and Zeb and the Wizard often had to help Jim pull the buggy from one step to another, or keep it from jamming against the rocky walls.

    402

    The story of Silenus was often the subject of Athenian satyric drama.

    403

    The tank is placed above the level of the topmost draw off, and often in a cupboard which it will warm sufficiently to permit of its being used as a linen airing closet.

    404

    The term tertia minore, or inferiore, is used by Praetorius to describe a low pitch, often preferred in England and the Netherlands, in Italy and in some parts of Germany.

    405

    The terrible losses sustained by whole communities of farmers, planters, foresters, &c., from plant diseases have naturally stimulated the search for remedies, but even now the search is too often conducted in the spirit of the believer in quack medicines, although the agricultural world is awakening to the fact that before any measures likely to be successful can be attempted, the whole chain of causation of the disease must be investigated.

    406

    The territorial divisions and subdivisions often survive the conditions which led to their origin; hence the study of political geography is allied to history as closely as the study of physical geography is allied to geology, and for the same reason.

    407

    The timid viscacha (Lagostomus trichodactylus), living in colonies, often with the burrowing owl, and digging deep under ground like the American prairie dog, was almost the only quadruped to be seen upon these immense open plains.

    408

    The town's poor seem to me often to live the most independent lives of any.

    409

    The trains are few and the speed on all these lines is moderate, but the gradients are often very heavy.

    410

    The true balsam poplar, or tacamahac, P. balsamifera, abundant in most parts of Canada and the northern States, is a tree of rather large growth, often of somewhat fastigiate habit, with round shoots and oblong-ovate sharp-pointed leaves, the base never cordate, the petioles round, and the disk deep glossy green above but somewhat downy below.

    411

    The type is often used in foundries, or to serve heavy hammers in a smithy, whence the name.

    412

    The typical members of the group are the cuscuses (Phalanger), ranging from the Moluccas and Celebes to New Guinea, in which the males are often different in colour from the females.

    413

    The whole of the cortex, stereom and parenchyma alike, is commonly living, and its cells often contain starch.

    414

    The winds are liable to little variation; they blow from the west, often with great violence, for nine months in the year, and at other times from the north; and they moderate the summer heats, which are chiefly felt during the months of July and August, when the hot winds blow from the coast of Anatolia.

    415

    The words rush through my hand like hounds in pursuit of a hare which they often miss.

    416

    The younger sisters also became affectionate to him, especially the youngest, the pretty one with the mole, who often made him feel confused by her smiles and her own confusion when meeting him.

    417

    Then, unexpectedly, as often happens, the sound of the hunt suddenly approached, as if the hounds in full cry and Daniel ulyulyuing were just in front of them.

    418

    There is daily steam communication (often interrupted in bad weather) with Civitavecchia from Golfo degli Aranci (the mail route), and weekly steamers run from Cagliari to Naples, Genoa (via the east coast of the island), Palermo and Tunis, and from Porto Torres to Genoa (calling at Bastia in Corsica and Leghorn) and Leghorn direct.

    419

    There is no proof that any direct emolument was ever attached to the office, while the expense and trouble entailed by it must often have been very great.

    420

    There was little hibernation in the town often called the Switzerland of America.

    421

    These are often available at a lower price than you would have to pay even at a fast food establishment.

    422

    These assumptions are often wrong.

    423

    These children could be legitimized by their father's acknowledgment before witnesses, and were often adopted.

    424

    These countries, particularly in the Balkans, were often small and tended toward war.

    425

    These hairs often occur in tufts, and are so colored and arranged that they were long taken for Fungi and placed in the genus Erineum.

    426

    These rocks form the greater part of the central range, and they are often - especially the granite - decomposed and rotten to a considerable depth.

    427

    They are composed of a homogeneous proteid substance, and often contain albuminoid or proteid crystals of the same kind as those which form the pyrenoid.

    428

    They are still proud of their former Wizard, and often speak of you kindly.

    429

    They did talk, but often when she saw them they were silently enjoying each other's company.

    430

    They do this for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is that it often works.

    431

    They don't come out into the water very often when people are swimming.

    432

    They had given Martha a telephone card and asked she contact them as soon and as often as she could.

    433

    They may not bump into them very often in what we call "everyday life" but do know them well enough to friend them.

    434

    They often cause a considerable hypertrophy of the tissue.

    435

    They often end in a cul-de-sac. The principal street is the rue de la Kasbah, which leads up to the citadel by 497 steps.

    436

    They often used to visit him at Avila, where in 1498, still in office as inquisitor-general, he held his last general assembly to complete his life's work.

    437

    They serve to conduct water through the thallus, the assimilating parts of which are in these forms often raised above the soil and are comparatively remote from the rhizoid-bearing (water-absorbing) region.

    438

    They upheld the cause of the people against the moneyed interests, but the charge was often brought that they appealed to the baser passions.

    439

    They were so synchronized and fluid that Carmen asked Alex if they danced often.

    440

    This may be due to frost, especially in thin-barked trees, and often occurs in beeches, pears, &c.; or it may result from bruising by wind, hailstones, gun-shot wounds in coverts, &c., the latter of course very local.

    441

    This method in one shape or another has been often employed.

    442

    This point is dwelt upon, because the speed limitations of the hand-crane are often overlooked by engineers.

    443

    This tree acquires large dimensions, the trunk being often from 4 to 6 ft.

    444

    This type of stern is therefore often spoken of as protoslelic. In the Ferns there is clear evidence that the amphiphloic haplostele or protostele succeeded the simple (ectophloic) protostele in evolution, and that this in its turn gave rise to the solenostele, which was again succeeded by the dictyostele.

    445

    This was in many cases true, and it is equally true that Mozart and Haydn often had no scruple in following the customs of very bad composers.

    446

    This, of course, means that a new station, where clearing, digging, and building are in progress, is often unhealthy for a time, and to this must be attributed the evil reputation which the peninsula formerly enjoyed.

    447

    Though she blamed herself for it, she could not refrain from grumbling at and worrying Sonya, often pulling her up without reason, addressing her stiffly as "my dear," and using the formal "you" instead of the intimate "thou" in speaking to her.

    448

    Though votes were often cast for ten names, there were but two real candidates before the convention, Grant and Blaine.

    449

    Thus, there may be a platform round the nuraghe, generally with two, three or four bastions, each often containing a chamber; or the main nuraghe may have additional chambers added to it.

    450

    To do things "railroad fashion" is now the byword; and it is worth the while to be warned so often and so sincerely by any power to get off its track.

    451

    To make matters worse, the pen which records the motion of the plate is often connected with it by an extensive system of chains and levers.

    452

    To the north as far as the rocky point of St Gildas, sheltering the mouth of the Loire, the shore, often occupied by salt marshes (marshes of Poitou and Brittany), is low-lying and hollowed by deep bays sheltered by large islands, those of Olron and Re lying opposite the ports of Rochefort and La Rochelle, while Noirmoutier closes the Bay of Bourgneuf.

    453

    Today he is cheerful and in good spirits, but that is the effect of your visit--he is not often like that.

    454

    Too often, I think, children are required to write before they have anything to say.

    455

    True, Kant refers often to the ideal of a " perceptive " or " intuitive understanding," whose thought would produce the whole of knowledge out of its native contents.

    456

    Two encyclopaedic treatises, dealing with philosophy, are often mentioned.

    457

    Unfortunately, his efforts were all too often thwarted by a sympathetic judge or a system that could not find jail space for the numbers of criminals brought before it.

    458

    Useful and suggestive as they often are, teratological facts played, at one time, too large a part in the framing of morphological theories; for it was thought that the monstrous form gave a clue to the essential nature of the organ assuming it.

    459

    Very often a wounded animal, hearing a rustle, rushes straight at the hunter's gun, runs forward and back again, and hastens its own end.

    460

    Vestal virgins were not supposed to have children, yet they could and often did marry.

    461

    Vico has been generally described as a solitary soul, out of harmony with the spirit of his time and often directly opposed to it.

    462

    Virtue is often held up for admiration, and vice painted in revolting colours or derided.

    463

    We are often reminded that if there were bestowed on us the wealth of Croesus, our aims must still be the same, and our means essentially the same.

    464

    We came home in horse cars because it was Sunday and steam cars do not go often on Sunday.

    465

    We can distinguish (I) digestive endoderm, in the stomach, often with special glandular elements; (2) circu-, latory endoderm, in the radial and ring canals; (3) supporting endoderm in the axes of the tentacles and in the endodermlamella; the latter is primitively a double layer of cells, produced by concrescence OC-- = w.?"

    466

    We choose it much more often than we should.

    467

    We made it look like he was drunk—which he often was.

    468

    We may often distinguish between primary symptoms and secondary or subordinate symptoms, but for the purposes of classification in an article of this scope we shall only attempt to group the various cases under the more obvious signs of disease exhibited.

    469

    We often see other technologies race toward a point and then stop growing along that axis.

    470

    We think of you so, so often! and our hearts go out to you in tenderest sympathy; and you know better than this poor letter can tell you how happy we always are to have you with us!

    471

    We'll have to do this more often.

    472

    Well, he has a home office and he goes there pretty often, but I can't figure out what he's doing.

    473

    When by the aid of man they surmount these, they often dominate with unexpected vigour the native vegetation amongst which they are colonists.

    474

    When I crossed Flint's Pond, after it was covered with snow, though I had often paddled about and skated over it, it was so unexpectedly wide and so strange that I could think of nothing but Baffin's Bay.

    475

    When I was a little older I felt the need of some means of communication with those around me, and I began to make simple signs which my parents and friends readily understood; but it often happened that I was unable to express my thoughts intelligibly, and at such times I would give way to my angry feelings utterly....

    476

    When otocysts are present, they are at least eight in number, situated adradially, but are often very numerous.

    477

    When picking up her mail at the post office, she often talked to Adrena.

    478

    When she finished, he stood, held her and repeated her words softly, "Promise you'll sing for me often."

    479

    When she is out walking she often stops suddenly, attracted by the odour of a bit of shrubbery.

    480

    When the diameter of the stele is greater, parenchymatous conjunctive tissue often occupies its centre and is frequently called the pith.

    481

    When the guest parted from his host he was often presented with gifts (EEvta), and sometimes a die (avr pay aXos) was broken between them.

    482

    When the little princess had grown accustomed to life at Bald Hills, she took a special fancy to Mademoiselle Bourienne, spent whole days with her, asked her to sleep in her room, and often talked with her about the old prince and criticized him.

    483

    Where a large-celled pith is developed this often becomes obvious very early, and in some cases it appears to have separate initials situated below those of the hollow vascular cylinder.

    484

    Whether you want a snack with a cocktail or to sit down to a luxurious meal, the retaaurant's options are always delicious and often entertaining.

    485

    While the tendency is for the living forms to come into harmony with their environment and to approach the state of equilibriumby successive adjustments if the environment should happen to change, it is to be observed that the action of organisms themselves often tends to change their organisms environment.

    486

    While the tropics preserve for us what remains of the preTertiary or, at the latest, Eocene vegetation of the earth, which formerly had a much wider extension, the flora of the North Temperate region is often described as the survival of the Miocene.

    487

    While they drove past the garden the shadows of the bare trees often fell across the road and hid the brilliant moonlight, but as soon as they were past the fence, the snowy plain bathed in moonlight and motionless spread out before them glittering like diamonds and dappled with bluish shadows.

    488

    Witches-brooms are the tufted bunches of twigs found on silver firs, birches and other trees, and often present resemblances to birds nests or clumps of mistletoe if only seen from a distance.

    489

    With a complexion like hers, he was often mistaken as her brother, a similarity they'd used in the past to keep people from finding out she was Damian's mate.

    490

    With closed stoves much less heat is wasted, and consequ;ntly less fuel is burned, than with open grates, but they often cause an unpleasant sensation of dryness in the air, and the products of combustion also escape to some extent, rendering this method of heating not only unpleasant but sometimes even dangerous.

    491

    With his extra sensitive senses, he often found himself lost in the feel or scent of things.

    492

    With skin cancer, like all diseases, over time some people get better and some people get worse, and often we really don't know why.

    493

    Within the town the streets are often dark and narrow, and, apart from the cathedral and the hotel de ville, the architecture is of little interest.

    494

    Worse men had been less detested, but Danby had none of the amiable virtues which often counteract the odium incurred by serious faults.

    495

    Years from now, when he was comfortably ensconced in his Ouray, Colorado bed and breakfast, he'd often look back on this day as the turning point in his life, but for now it was only the start of yet another five work days.

    496

    Yes, you know between cousins intimacy often leads to love.

    497

    Yet the Australian is capable of strong affections, and the blind (of whom there have always been a great number) are cared for, and are often the best fed in a tribe.

    498

    You don't see that too often in women her age.

    499

    You finish your thoughts out loud pretty often.

    500

    Young children are often not buried for months, but are carried about by their mothers.