bestirs उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- This page agrees that the Dole tax-cut plan is misguided, but even we have to admit that it is possible to make a better argument for it than Dole could bestir himself to offer Sunday.
- And with telephone companies planning to wire neighborhoods with fiber-optic or other superior communications lines at breathtaking cost for a digital future, it is perhaps not surprising to see cable, at last, bestir itself.
- This is that sacred day in November when a democratic people bestirs itself to the nation's polling places, there to elect _ from the president to local council members _ the best representatives money can buy.
- Still, for every Kosovo or East Timor the world eventually bestirs itself to save, there is some Rwanda that the " international community " stays out of, or a Somalia that it just gives up on.
- At the same time, double the summertime tax cut, reducing taxes on average families again in time for Christmas purchasing, to which no liberal could object; add in a capital gains cut to move the markets and bestir optimism.
- Quayle and Clinton are both right when they argue-- as the president, for his part, did in a recent speech to the National Baptist Convention-- that for effective change, the most directly impacted community must bestir itself.
- Discouraged, Hingis went into a summer funk from which she was not quite able to bestir herself at the United States Open, where her slam campaign concluded on the meek note of a 6-3, 7-5 loss to Davenport.
- "In contrast to the locals, when they did bestir themselves they moved on with a lightness and skirt-swirling swiftness that made you wonder if what you'd just seen wasn't a handful of confetti flung over the gray cityscape.
- But then we remembered how clear and still the park's palette of pinks, greens, reds and golds might appear early the next morning-- a sight even Champlain might bestir himself to witness-- and we overcame our happy inertia to head home.
- But several observers say the bill, written by Senator John H . Chafee, a Rhode Island Republican, and cosponsored by nine others, could bestir a Congress that has been largely hostile to efforts to slow the two-century increase in the Earth's carbon dioxide levels.