Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

50 Sentences With "bacons"

How to use bacons in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bacons" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bacons". Mastering all the usages of "bacons" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Take a trip to Bacons, Delaware or Raisin City, California.
They look more like police sketch artist drawings than Francis Bacons.
The Bahamian lawyers and investigators were not paid by the Bacons directly.
Since then, no one besides guests of the Bacons have been allowed on the property.
Eventually, the Bacons paid the two about $1.5 million, mostly for secretly recording five meetings with Mr. Nygard.
The Bacons said they were disturbed by stories they heard about Mr. Nygard having sex with teenage girls.
And then there's fourth sibling, teenage Kristin (13 Reasons Why's Sosie Bacon, of the Sedgwick-Bacons), who is white.
Zombie Bacons It's hard to find any pro-America memorabilia that doesn't involve tacky fonts, debatably ironic guns, or generally low-hanging fruit.
Despite the Bacons' efforts, the Homeland Security investigation fizzled after nine months, suspended because of "unforeseen circumstances" and "lack of prosecutorial evidence," according to an agency email.
And what if you want to exhibit them — or your four Bacons, 2000 Warhols, four Lichtensteins and three Twomblys — alongside some of your 290 Renaissance and Baroque bronzes?
To help the inquiry, the Bacons moved five witnesses — two former Bahamian employees of Mr. Nygard and three former girlfriends — to the United States and covered their living expenses.
Russian plutocrats buy plenty of pricey Western art, too, but like a dowager who wears only her paste jewels in public, they tend to stash their Picassos, Bacons and Richters abroad.
Drawing inspiration from March Madness, Scott Gold named a Final Four for the top bacons in America, and number one on the list is Vande Rose Farms Applewood-Smoked Artisan Dry-Cured Bacon.
Two self-described former gang members, Livingston "Toggie" Bullard and Wisler "Bobo" Davilma, told the Bacons' investigators that Mr. Nygard had hired them for dirty work, like torching his ex-girlfriend's hair salon and staging anti-Bacon rallies, according to court records.
In 1870–72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described the village as: > HESSETT, a parish in Stow district, Suffolk; 2½ miles S of Thurston r. > station. The church was built by the Bacons; is in good condition; has a > beautiful window and a tower; and contains tombs of the Bacons.
Ruth E. Bacon died in 1985, aged 77 years. Her grave is in Shawsheen Cemetery in Bedford, Massachusetts, with those of many other Bacons, for several generations.
Such use is common in areas with significant Jewish and Muslim populations as both religions prohibit the consumption of pork. Vegetarian bacons such as "soy bacon" also exist.
Francis Bacon High School is a high school attended by Peter Pilaf and also Tony's daughter Olive. Their school's team name is the Shakin' Bacons. Several students there were killed in a food fight.
The village has, in succession, been the patrimonial possession of the Mortimers, the Poles and the Bacons. It retains the elements of several elegant mansions from as Hull merchants started to build large houses (such as Ferriby House) with cottages for workers.
In 2006, the brothers partnered with the Red Scorpions, another Vancouver gang. The aim of their association was to help the Bacons compete with the United Nations gang. The authorities believed that the brothers took leadership control of the Red Scorpions shortly thereafter.
New Jersey Municipal Boundaries, New Jersey Department of Transportation. Accessed November 15, 2019. Unincorporated communities, localities and place names located partially or completely within the township include Bacons Neck, Bayside, Caviar, Davis Mills, Othello, Sheppards Mill, Springtown and Stathams Neck.Locality Search, State of New Jersey.
Eilert Ekwall, ' 'The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place- names, p.201. Historically the town was in the county of Suffolk. In the Middle Ages it had two manors, and a small manor called Bacons. In 1832, it became a part of Great Yarmouth for electoral purposes.
Throughout its history many of Evansville's most prominent citizens have been members of the church, including the Bacons, the Carpenter family (which built Willard Carpenter House and Willard Library), the Ingles, the Igleharts, Congressman Lee H. Hamilton (whose father served as Trinity's pastor from 1943 to 1953), and William Bartelt.
Having grown to 150 outlets, in 1964 Stylo bought W Barratt and Company, and merged the two businesses in Bradford. Developing under the better known Barratts brand, the company developed to over 400 retail outlets. In the 1996 Barratts purchased Bacons Shoes, ran. The Bacon family in the West Midlands.
There have also been numerous attempts on the lives of youngest brother James. The United Nations gang is believed by police and media to be the group responsible for these attacks. The Bacons are linked up with Michael Le's Red Scorpion gang from the Lower Mainland. On Sunday August 14, 2011 Jonathan Bacon was shot dead in Kelowna.
According to the surveys carried out by NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer with its subsequent NEOWISE mission, Bacon measures 8.953 kilometers in diameter and its surface has an albedo of 0.055, which is typical for carbonaceous C-type asteroids. It has an absolute magnitude of 14.3. As of 2017, Bacons rotation period and shape, as well as its spectral type remains unknown.
The factory was formerly the Bedford Brewery premises which became the Beechwood factory in 1921, producing Devonshire bacons and hams. In 1959, it came under Unigate Dairies ownership when they took over Cow & Gate. The plant was subsequently sold to Bowyer's, who opened a new factory on the Newnham Industrial Estate in 1979 and the old factory was demolished; the chimney was taken down in May 1980.
Plumrose USA, Inc. produces sliced meats, deli hams, and bacon in the United States. The company offers its products to food distributors, retailers, warehouse stores, institutions, and restaurants. What started out as a sliced ham company in 1932, has expanded into a business that offers a multitude of product lines including premium bacons, packaged deli meats, quality deli counter hams, cooked ribs and canned hams.
Bacon's shoes brand was phased out by the Managing Director, Ron Arthur Stark, from 1997 and converted the Bacons stores to Priceless. The first Priceless store conversion was in Sunderland, from a Hush Puppies store and was an instant success, selling self service shoes. The Shoe and Sport Depot brand, ran by Peter Peregrine Lee were converted to Priceless brand, originally created by Ron Arthur Stark. The Priceless brand was fully operational by 1999.
Bacons is an unincorporated community located 4 miles north of the Maryland line in Sussex County, Delaware, United States. Also known as Bacon Switch, the site was once a thriving railroad switch point in the late 19th century. The site between Delmar, Delaware and Laurel, Delaware had a number of small stores. It was named after the Bacon family, who started a farm there, before expanding into the sawmill and basket making business.
Jonathan (also known as Jon), Jarrod, and Jamie Bacon, were a trio of gangsters born in Abbotsford, British Columbia, suspected of multiple firearms and drug trafficking charges. Known as the Bacon Brothers, they were initially members of the United Nations gang. In 2006, the brothers partnered with the Red Scorpions, major rival to the United Nations. The aim of their association was to help the Bacons compete with the United Nations gang.
Then, on 22 February, the convoy ran into one of the worst storms ever recorded in the Barents Sea. Once again the convoy began to split up and was blown apart. The weather deteriorated to Beaufort scale force 12 with winds at 70 to 90 knots and temperatures 40 below zero. During this storm, one of the main springs on the Henry Bacons steering gear was broken, and the retaining pin was sheared.
Yamakawa began her studies at Vassar College in September 1878, the fourteenth year of the still-new women's college. To her regret, the Bacons couldn't afford to send Alice to college, but she was reunited with Nagai. The two of them were the first nonwhite students at the school, and the first Japanese women to enroll in any college. Nagai enrolled as a special student in the music department, while Yamakawa pursued a full four-year bachelor's degree.
George Blagden Bacon (May 22, 1836 in New Haven, Connecticut - September 15, 1876) was a United States clergyman and author of texts on religious issues. Bacon was a congregational pastor in Orange, New Jersey. The ministry ran in the Bacons' blood: George B. Bacon was the son of Leonard Bacon and the brother of Leonard Woolsey Bacon, both Congregationalist pastors; two other brothers were also preachers, Thomas Rutherford Bacon of New Haven, and Edward Woolsey Bacon of New London, Connecticut.
As had been the case in his wife's family, H. D.'s parents had been estranged and divorced soon after Frank inherited his father's estate. The couple married over their family objections, as their union caused H.D. to quit school in his senior year at the Virginia Military Institute. The Bacons first lived in California, where their daughter Mabel, known as "Bell", was born in 1898, but were living in Scotland in 1900, when their son Henry Douglas Jr. (1900–1925) was born.
To ensure that Nagai and Yamakawa practiced their English, they were placed in separate households, Nagai living with the minister John S. C. Abbott and Yamakawa living with the minister Leonard Bacon. Yamakawa would spend the next ten years as part of the Bacon family, growing particularly close with his youngest daughter of fourteen children, Alice Mabel Bacon. Likely due to the Bacons' influence, Yamakawa converted to Christianity. Yamakawa attended Grove Hall Seminary, a primary school for girls, with Alice Bacon.
Areas that were not productive however, yielded clay for pottery and bricks. The 1860s saw the development of Preston's industrial capacity, with a bacon-curing factory opening in 1862, followed by a tannery in 1865. These original establishments would be followed by several larger factories, including Huttons Hams and Bacons and Zwar's Parkside Tannery. By the 1860s, the area had a population of around 200, and five hotels, three of which survive: The Preston Hotel (1856), The Junction (1861), and nearby Reservoir's Rose Shamrock (1854).
They were built in 1941 to be used as air raid shelters, but were decommissioned and sealed up before World War II ended. The tunnels were largely forgotten for many years and, although periodically over the last decades there are calls for them to be opened up, nothing has happened (probably purely for logistical reasons). There were large tunnel entrances at the top of Victoria street, adjacent to the Art Gallery on Wellesley Street and from Constitution Hill. One can still be seen on Kitchener Street between Courthouse and Bacons Lane.
It was built for Robert Bacon, who had been using the water privilege on the Aberjona River since 1824 for the manufacture of felt hats. He purchased the land on the west side of the river in 1825, and had this house placed with a view toward his mill and worker village. The mills supposedly burned down in 1843, but were rebuilt and leased to other industrial operations by the Bacons. Winchester's Bacon Street is named for him, and the area of the mill village was known for many years as Baconville.
The lower Beaverdam Formation is characterized by a Quercus-Carya pollen assemblage, very few non-arboreal pollen, and the exotic constituents Pterocarya and Sciadopitys. The upper Beaverdam has a very high non-arboreal pollen concentration, and the sole exotic constituent is Pterocarya. Other significant taxa include Cupuliferoidaepollenites fallax, Tricolporopollenites edmundii, and Tsuga diversifolia-type. The pollen assemblage of the lower Beaverdam is similar to that of the Bethany Formation in Delaware, the Brandywine Formation in Maryland, and the Eastover Formation in Virginia; and the pollen assemblage of the upper Beaverdam is similar to that of the Bacons Castle Formation in Virginia.
Wedgemere station around 1910 The Boston and Lowell Railroad (B&L;) opened to Lowell on June 24, 1835. Many of the present stations on the line opened soon after; however, the B&L; did not open a station at Bacon Street in southern Winchester until the early 1850s. The station, located near a bridge over the Aberjona River, was variously known as Mystic, Bacons Bridge, and Symmes Bridge (the latter after a nearby landowner). After 1887, the B&L; was leased to its former rival, the Boston and Maine Railroad, as its New Hampshire Main Line.
The Bacons' early married life was disturbed several times by quarrels between Sir John Pakington and Dorothy, when Dorothy would appeal to her powerful son-in-law, and Francis Bacon would try to stay out from between them. Once Bacon was even a judge on the High Commission and had to reject a lawsuit from Dorothy against John which had put John in prison. Alice Bacon and her mother Dorothy were both reported by contemporaries as having extravagant tastes, and being interested in wealth and power. However, early in the marriage, Bacon had money to spare, "pouring jewels in her lap", and spending large sums on decorations.
That meeting had been secretly videoed by Stretford who went to the police, leading to Hyland and the Bacons being charged with attempted blackmail. When the case came to court in October 2004, however, it collapsed when it was revealed that Stretford had given misleading evidence. Stretford had told the jury that he had not represented Rooney before December 2002, but documents came to light revealing that their association dated to at least September of that year when the player was still contracted to McIntosh's Pro-Form Sports Management Limited. The prosecution barrister said "we do not feel able to rely on Paul Stretford as a witness in this case".
The Bacons had four children, Susan, Fannie, Sallie, and Jeremiah Martin Bacon (1894-1970), who was married to Z. Thelma Bacon. Martha Bacon was previously married to John Wesley Russell, by whom she had three children, Webb, Dena and Bertha. The community of Heflin is named for Charles Heflin, an Alabama native and a veteran of the Confederate Army who operated a cotton gin and engaged in the mercantile business there after the American Civil War. J. S. Bacon's brother-in-law from Charles Heflin's second marriage, William Thomas Heflin (1868-1936), was a businessman engaged in the timber industry who in 1916 was elected sheriff of Winn Parish in North Louisiana.
Still from Sergei Eisenstein's 1925 silent film Battleship Potemkin The inspiration for the recurring motif of screaming mouths in many Bacons of the late 1940s and early 1950s was drawn from a number of sources, including medical text books, the works of Matthias GrünewaldSchmied, 73 and photographic stills of the nurse in the Odessa Steps scene in Eisenstein's 1925 silent film Battleship Potemkin. Bacon saw the film in 1935, and viewed it frequently thereafter. He kept in his studio a photographic still of the scene, showing a close-up of the nurse's head screaming in panic and terror and with broken pince-nez spectacles hanging from her blood-stained face. He referred to the image throughout his career, using it as a source of inspiration.
Among others who had large lands in the county with co-extensive jurisdiction were the lords of the honor of Clare, earls of Gloucester and Hereford and the lords of the honor of Eye, held successively by the Bigods, the Uffords and the De la Poles, earls of Suffolk. The Wingfields, Bacons and Herveys have been closely connected with the county. For the purposes of civil government the Liberty of Saint Edmund and the remainder (or "body") of the county were quite distinct, each providing a separate grand jury to the county assizes. The county was further divided into "geldable" land, in which fines and forfeitures were payable to the Crown, and the liberties and franchises where they were payable to the lord of the liberty.
In 2011, James Franco made reference to Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon while hosting the 83rd Academy Awards. In the summer of 2012, Google began to offer the ability to find an actor's Bacon number on its main page, by searching for the actor's name preceded by the phrase "bacon number". EE began a UK television advertising campaign on November 3, 2012, based on the Six Degrees concept, where Kevin Bacon illustrates his connections and draws attention to how the EE 4G network allows similar connectivity. The most highly connected nodes of the Internet have been referred to as "the 'Kevin Bacons' of the Web," inasmuch as they enable most users to navigate to most sites in 19 clicks or less.
The hall's library consisted of one of the most extensive collections of first-edition books of any stately home in the UK with works by William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens and Miquel de Cervantes. As was fashionable with large households, records show that the Longe family kept animals including a large monkey who used to live in the stable block and a bear who lived in the butler's cottage and the wine cellar. The Lordship of the Manor is still held by the Longe family as well as much of the surrounding parkland. There are in existence, but now dispersed, a number of paintings of notable Bacons and Longes, perhaps the most famous being the Gainsborough of the Longe family in Spixworth Park.
Henry was a prolific builder himself, though little of his work survives, but the prudent Elizabeth (like her siblings) built nothing herself, instead encouraging her courtiers to "...build on a scale which in the past would have been seen as a dynastic threat."Airs, 50, quoted Others see the original Somerset House in the Strand, London as the first prodigy house, or at least the first English attempt at a thoroughly and consistently classical style.Summerson (1993), 43–44; Williams, 208–210; Airs, 46 With some other Châteaux of the Loire Valley, the Château de Chambord of François I of France (built 1519–1547) had many features of the English houses, and certainly influenced Henry VIII's Nonsuch Palace.Airs, 33 Important political families such as the Cecils and Bacons were serial builders of houses.
In 1681 Thomas Denton described Douglas as "the place of greatest resort" on the Isle of Man, and by 1705 a clear picture of the early town emerges, with hints that its residential, market, and military defence functions were growing in importance alongside the port facility. The town thrived in the next 60 years, as imposing merchants' houses, large warehouses, quays and a pier were built to accommodate the burgeoning "running trade" (smuggling): one of the stimuli for the town's expansion. Other forms of trade also grew, and after the Revestment Act 1765, Douglas began to reap the benefits of transatlantic trade, due in part to co- operation at a local level with Liverpool. Legitimate merchants who rose to prominence over the period included the Murreys, the Moores, and the Bacons.

No results under this filter, show 50 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.