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4 Sentences With "be favoured with"

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

The quotative particle chi is used to mark speech or thought that is being directly quoted (e.g. something someone else said) or indirectly quoted (e.g. paraphrasing what someone else said or indicating hearsay). While both this particle and the particle to largely overlap in usage, the particle chi tends to be favoured with verbs of speech or communication such as yu "to say" or kiʔ "to hear".
Some of the earliest graduates included "two chief justices of the Liberian Supreme Court and three associate justices, one minister of education and many civil servants". In 1948, the college moved to Suacoco in Bong County, 120 miles north of Liberia's capital of Monrovia. Prior to the First Liberian Civil War, 45% of government officials were alumni of the college. In the wake of the 1980 military coup, the college continued to be favoured with government assistance, as the Ministry of Action for Development and Progress provided approximately $1.5 million for the college's 1981-1982 budget.
A report on the hotel appeared in the Western Mail in July:York Notes dated 5 July published in the Western Mail, 17 July 1886, p. 21. The hotel was opened on 8 July 1886, but the event received only a brief sentence in the local newspaper with the comment that the place "seems to be favoured with a fair share of public patronage".The Eastern District Chronicle, 10 July 1886, p. 2. An advertisement that appeared in the Western Mail in October 1886, describes the hotel as having private dining rooms, special suites of rooms, sample rooms for commercial travellers, plunge and shower baths, a splendid billiard room fitted with one of Alcock’s best tables, and good stabling and loose boxes with an attentive ostler in attendance.
In response to Wentworth's proposal to create a hereditary peerage in New South Wales, Deniehy's satirical comments included: "Here, we all know the common water mole was transferred into the duck-billed platypus, and in some distant emulation of this degeneration, I suppose we are to be favoured with a bunyip aristocracy." (The bunyip is an Ancestral Being of Aboriginal Dreaming.) Deniehy's ridicule caused the idea to be dropped. Among those singled out in his speech by Deniehy was James MacArthur (1798–1867), the son of John MacArthur, who had been nominated to the New South Wales Legislative Council in 1839 and was later (1859) elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly (the lower house was only created in 1856): > Next came the native aristocrat James MacArthur, he would he supposed, > aspire to the coronet of an earl, he would call him the Earl of Camden, and > he suggests for his coat of arms a field vert, the heraldic term for green, > and emblazoned on this field should be a rum kegThis is a reference to the > Rum Rebellion in which John Macarthur played a major role. of a New South > Wales order of chivalry.

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