beggarly उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The review of " Nartaki " by Baburao Patel titled, " Debaki Bose Runs Amok ", described the story as " too poor in development and almost beggarly in intellectual conception ".
- I have all my Henry VIII books here, and if you told me some particular thing you wanted it may be horrible conceit but somehow I think I might be of some beggarly service to you.
- In Calcutta, when someone wants to be in a clean and safe place, where politeness is considered important and the beggarly, the ornery and the drug-addled are absent, they can go to the subway.
- Ne Win had been widely despised for turning Myanmar, known in his time as Burma, from one of Southeast Asia's richest nations into a beggarly police state, a condition from which it has yet to emerge.
- When morning dawned his friends wished to renew the encounter but he wisely said " No I have drunk with Piping Pebworth, Dancing Exhall, Papist Wixford, Beggarly Broom and Drunken Bidford and so, presumably, I will drink no more.
- Author Robert Louis Stevenson also battled TB there in 1887 and 1888, watching ink freeze and temperatures plunge to minus 25, calling it " a bleak, blackguard, beggarly climate, of which I can say no good except that it suits me ."
- In a letter to the " Mining Journal ", Mushet's son David attacked Upton, referring to his " " beggarly and impertinent account of my father's circumstances " " and stating that his father had left his family considerable property.
- He was described in " Flagellum Parliamentarium ", a satire attributed to Andrew Marvell, as " a poor beggarly fellow who sold his vote to the treasurer for ?0 bribe " while in " A Seasonable Argument " he was called " a pensioner for ?0 a session, etc ., meat and drink, and now and then a suit of clothes ".
- After a series of adventures ( including a stint in prison ), Edward interrupts the coronation as Tom is about to celebrate it as King Edward VI . Tom is eager to give up the throne; however, the nobles refuse to believe that the beggarly child Edward appears to be is the rightful king until he produces the Great Seal that he hid before leaving the palace.
- When morning dawned his friends wished to renew the encounter but he wisely said " No I have drunk with Piping Pebworth, Dancing Exhall, Papist Wixford, Beggarly Broom and Drunken Bidford and so, presumably, I will drink no more . " The story is said to date from the 17th century but of its truth or of any connection of the story or the verse to Shakespeare there is no evidence.