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50 Sentences With "death dealing"

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

After all, Francy isn't a Witcher, a superhero millionaire, or a death-dealing assassin.
If that's not the finest way to diversify death dealing in a game, I don't know what is.
I'd moved south to cast just one more vote against "Senator No," to publicize his death-dealing record.
Refuse to play, refuse decorum, refuse accusation, refuse distraction, which is a tolerance of death-dealing by another name?
By AI one can mean a Roomba vacuum cleaner, a self-driving truck, or one of those death-dealing Terminator robots.
He finished papers just around the time of his death dealing with theories of the early universe, and physicists remembered him fondly.
But McBride also reminds us of why Carol remains human, even in the face of her evolution into a death-dealing machine.
To date, the debate has primarily focused on death-dealing accidents and raised important questions about who gets to decide who lives and dies.
We thought we had relieved America of a death-dealing substance, asbestos, but it keeps finding its way into lungs with the aid of an accomplice.
His name is Harry (Mark Addy, first-rate), who has the complacent, well-fed look of an eater of beef and death-dealing servant of the crown.
Just in time for the rise in global military tensions, Russian officials have released video that's sure to calm fears all around: a death dealing humanoid robot that shoots handguns.
There still will be accidents that cause: Assume that the smart system driving your car is presented with various options that allocate these costs according to the logics reflected in the death-dealing accident scenario.
Like other Americans, New Yorkers know something the death-dealing jihadists will never understand: that the blessings and benefits of a thriving culture -- one based on compassion, prosperity and openness -- is the wave of the future.
"Red Sparrow" is based on the novel (the first in a trilogy) of the same title by Jason Matthews, a former C.I.A. officer who presumably knows something about the death-dealing world of spy versus spy.
It was written during World War I, and that epochal conflict no doubt informed these plays' vision of a world of mechanized death-dealing, a point that Mr. Hurlin underscores with video footage toward the production's end.
The first trailer for Brightburn is here, and it looks like Starman meets Species: creepy outer space kid found and raised by baby-obsessed husband-and-wife but he turns out to be some kind of death-dealing monster.
When a squadron of death-dealing foes bursts into the room, she sits on a railing, swings her legs like a kid on a jungle gym, and says, "Oh, hey, guys," before laying into them with her photon fists.
The death-dealing, all-voyeurism-all-the-time world that De Palma has been imagining in some form or another since the late '60s, has, he recognizes, finally come into actual being, and it's worse than he, or anyone, ever imagined.
Sure, she is just a teenage poet denouncing Mom and Dad and God and Society, but she has a force field of death-dealing noise to back her up and no one is about to get cute with her or deny a word.
By the time von Braun's rocket team propelled Apollo 11 to the moon in 1969, the team members moved to Huntsville and completed their transformation from death-dealing agents of fascist totalitarianism to gleaming American Cold Warriors and redeemers of the Free World.
They were not even moved to have a serious conversation about gun safety after self-proclaimed Islamist terrorists attacked law-abiding American citizens in California using weapons obtained in the free market of death-dealing instruments so highly prized by the National Rifle Association and those who do its bidding.
Just as before, I would again give birth at fifty-five, a process aided by my post-graduate innovation, the egg-extending Invitro10, which allowed me to breed in the romantic, and burdensome, death-dealing way of our beloved ancestors, garnering the great appreciation and endless gratitude of Don, your father, my better half and partner-in-genomic-crime.
At the opening of the 1959 general election campaign, Moss made a speech criticising the Conservative government's foreign policy, specifically in Cyprus which he claimed had seen a "series of Tory death-dealing blunders" and in Nyasaland where he said the Government had been condemned by its own Devlin Commission. He looked forward confidently to re- election, having dealt with 456 problems brought by constituents."Reg Moss attacks Tory 'Death Dealing Blunders'", Atherstone News and Herald, 25 September 1959, p. 9. Later in the campaign, echoing a Labour campaign theme, he pledged to support an increase in state pensions.
Robert warred with Pepin II in his later years. In 863 he again defended Autun from Louis the German; he campaigned in Neustria in 865 and again in 866, shortly before his death, dealing with Bretons and Vikings ravaging the environs of Le Mans.
Annie and the Old One is an American children's fictional book, written by Miska Miles. It was first published in 1971, illustrated by Peter Parnall. In 1972 the book received the Newbery Medal Honor Book award. The novel uses Native American culture to explore themes of family death, dealing with grief, and the family relationships.
A Death-Dealing Famine:The Great Hunger in Ireland. Pluto Press, 1997. . p. 59. A group that became known as the Manchester Liberals, to which Richard Cobden (1804–1865) and John Bright (1811–1889) belonged, were staunch defenders of free trade. After the death of Cobden, the Cobden Club (founded in 1866) continued their work.
In 1961, Hurwitz directed the television coverage of the Adolf Eichmann trial in Jerusalem, whose summary program, Verdict for Tomorrow, won Emmy and Peabody Awards. From 1964 to 1966 he made a group of films for National Educational Television, including Essay on Death, dealing with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, The Sun and Richard Lippold and In Search of Hart Crane.
Her first novel "Sad Lovers" was a great success winning her wide recognition. Afterwards she published "The White Death" (dealing with the loss of his little brother). She contributes to El País, El Mundo, La Revista de occidente, La Nouvelle Revue Francaise and Der Spiegel. She has been the first Spaniard selected as a resident in the prestigious International Writing Program at the University of Iowa.
At first, the poor law commissioners and inspectors viewed the clause as a valuable instrument for a more cost-effective administration of public relief, but the drawbacks soon became apparent, even from an administrative perspective. They would soon view them as little more than murderous from a humanitarian perspective. According to Donnelly, it became obvious that the quarter-acre clause was "indirectly a death-dealing instrument".
She embodies both aspects of the dual goddess, life-giving and death-dealing at once. The Titan Orion was represented as "marrying" Side, a name that in Boeotia means "pomegranate", thus consecrating the primal hunter to the goddess. In the fifth century BC, Polycleitus took ivory and gold to sculpt the seated Argive Hera in her temple. She held a scepter in one hand and offered a pomegranate, like a "royal orb", in the other.
Unfortunately at this time, the then Prime Minister Lord John Russell adhered to a strict laissez-faire economic policy, which maintained that further state intervention would have the whole country dependent on hand- outs, and that what was needed was for economic viability to be encouraged. Despite Ireland producing a net surplus of food, most of it was exported to England and elsewhere.Kinealy, Christine. A Death-Dealing Famine: the Great Hunger in Ireland. Page 304.
In The Church and the Second Sex, Daly argued for the equality between the sexes and stated that the church must acknowledge the importance of equality between men and women. She wrote that women and men were created equal. In Gyn/Ecology (1979), Daly claimed that male culture was the direct, evil opposite of female nature, and that the ultimate purpose of men was death of both women and nature. Daly contrasted women's life-giving powers with men's death-dealing powers.
In 1965, Metro Toronto Chief Coroner Morton Shulman released a report criticizing the lack of safety in the design of the parkway. In the first five months of 1965, there were 136 accidents on the parkway, with four deaths and 86 injuries. Among the "death- dealing" deficiencies that had to be corrected were inadequate guardrails, exposed steep slopes and light standards that were exposed to collision from passing high-speed traffic. Call boxes with emergency telephones were installed on the parkway in 1966.
As described in a summary in a film publication, the serial involves the mystery of the murder of William Stillman (Wells) and the finding of the heir to his fortune. Silent Joe (Farnum) arrives in an effort to discover the murderer and prove that he is the true heir. He and the heroine Lou (Anderson) have their adventures in the mountainous terrain with its "vanishing trails." They are aided by The Shadow (Orlamond), a demented scientist with his trained dog, and several remarkable, death-dealing inventions.
Cox et al. (2009) discuss mortality salience in terms of suntanning. Specifically, the researchers found that participants who were prompted with the idea that pale was more socially attractive along with mortality reminders, tended to lean towards decisions that resulted in more protective measures from the sun. The participants were placed in two different conditions; one group of participants were given an article relating to the fear of death, while the control group received an article unrelated to death, dealing with the fear of public speaking.
At Fenton's funeral the local priest, Father Tom Toner, criticised the role of Special Branch in Fenton's death stating: > The IRA is not the only secret, death-dealing agent in our midst. Secret > agents of the state have a veneer of respectability on its dark deeds which > disguises its work of corruption. They work secretly in dark places unseen, > seeking little victims like Joe whom they can crush and manipulate for their > own purposes. Their actions too corrupt the cause they purport to serve.
The Telchines, for example, were a class of half-human, half-fish or dolphin aquatic daemons said to have been the first inhabitants of Rhodes. These beings were at once revered for their metalwork and reviled for their death- dealing power of the evil eye. In Aeschylus's Prometheus Bound, the imprisoned craftsman is aided by the daughters of Ocean; and Hephaestus had his forge on "sea-girt Lemnos". The nexus of sea, otherworld and craft is most strikingly embodied in the Cabeiri of Samothrace, who simultaneously oversaw salvation from shipwreck, metalcraft, and mystery-rites.
On the right and > the left my men were falling under the death-dealing crossfire like trees in > a hurricane...." Capt. Matthew Manly of Company D, 2nd North Carolina wrote - > "During the battle in this bloody lane Colonel Charles Courtenay Tew was > killed, his body falling into the hands of the enemy . . . . He was shot > through the head and placed in the sunken road . . . Here he was found, > apparently unconscious, the blood streaming from a wound in the head, with > his sword held in both hands across his knees.
UGO placed the film (and the Tall Man) at #7 out of 11 in its Top Terrifying Supernatural Moments. Phantasm has become a cult film; Coscarelli attributes its cult following to nostalgia and its lack of answers, as repeated viewings can leave fans with different interpretations. USA Today described three characteristics that make it a cult film: "the touching portrayal of two brothers in danger, an iconic villain in The Tall Man (Angus Scrimm) and a floating metallic sphere that's a death-dealing weapon." The name of Star Wars: The Force Awakens villain Captain Phasma was chosen as a reference to Phantasm.
In his earlier appearances, he typically carried Olympian weapons like battleaxes, spears, swords, daggers, and a javelin (which has been said to at least once be his "favorite" weapon), but his most recent appearance shows him favoring a mixture of ancient, like the jawbone of an ass, and modern weapons, like gases, rays, firearms, and high-explosives, as well as "Hydra blood bullets", which contain the lethal blood of a Lernaean Hydra. He is an aficionado, expert, and collector of the most unusual instruments and methods of death dealing, as well as being well-versed in torture, interrogation, and combat tactics.
His book presents a view that, ironically, from Robert Fulton's submarine Nautilus in the 18th century to the death-dealing weaponry of the late 20th century, superweapons ostensibly designed to end war have proved capable of exterminating the human species. The expanded 2008 edition explores how this cultural history led to the seemingly permanent state of warfare of the 21st century. War Stars is informed by Franklin's own earlier experience as a navigator and intelligence officer in the Strategic Air Command. In 1990 he was named the Distinguished Scholar for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts.
Bullumm remembers the > horror of the time, of being seized by a gin and carried to cover, of > cowering under the cliff and hearing the shots ringing overhead, of the rush > through the scrub to get away from the sound of the death-dealing guns. In > this affair only two were killed, an old man and a gin. Those sheltered > under the cliff could hear the talk of the black troopers, who really did > not want to kill, but who tried to impress upon the white officer in charge > the big number they had slaughtered. In 1855 an incident caused by a local tribesman sparked off a running spree of killings as troopers sought to kill the culprit.
Hastein disappeared from history in around 896, by then an old man having already been described as "the lusty and terrifying old warrior of the Loire and the Somme", when he arrived in England several years earlier. He was one of the most notorious and successful Vikings of all time, having raided dozens of cities across many kingdoms in Europe and North Africa. The Norman monk Dudo of Saint-Quentin was very critical of Hastein: > This was a man accursed: fierce, mightily cruel, and savage, pestilent, > hostile, sombre, truculent, given to outrage, pestilent and untrustworthy, > fickle and lawless. Death-dealing, uncouth, fertile in ruses, warmonger > general, traitor, fomenter of evil, and double-dyeded dissimulator ... Dudo > of St. Quentin's.
Reviews of the film were varied, with Variety's Tony Scott stating "[The] film lurches on without much credibility" before going on to say "blood spurts, but director (and co-writer with Marc B. Ray) Guy Magar doesn't make the horror convincing. The simplistic story line and the unconvincing portrayal by Wightman haven't been enhanced by indifferent production values." Entertainment Weekly's Doug Brod gave the film a D+, referring to it as "a poorly scripted, all-too-familiar chiller", also calling Robert Wightman "robotic" and "a weak substitute for previous death- dealing dad Terry O'Quinn". Time Out Film Guide stated that the film "is far better than one might expect" and called Wightman's performance "more barmy than ever" and "with that prissy, scary, whiny voice makes a good fist of it".
William Thomas Stead, editor of Review of Reviews, published a brief article in October 1891 that discussed a story found in Lucifer magazine, describing a plant in Nicaragua called by the natives the devil's snare. This plant had the capability "to drain the blood of any living thing which comes within its death-dealing touch." According to the article: > Mr. Dunstan, naturalist, who has recently returned from Central America, > where he spent nearly two years in the study of the flora and the fauna of > the country, relates the finding of a singular growth in one of the swamps > which surround the great lakes of Nicaragua. He was engaged in hunting for > botanical and entomological specimens, when he heard his dog cry out, as if > in agony, from a distance.
Overall, the skeleton is an important symbol in Mexican culture that represents a celebration of departed loved ones; yet, Hernández twists this positive Mexican image into an eerie symbol of poison. Being such a recognizable symbol, the skeletal woman bearing poisonous grapes represents the looming faith of the farm workers who worked in a polluted environment and of the people of Dinuba who drank contaminated water and ate contaminated food. Specifically, in the screen print, the dark shading of the grapes may illustrate the “lethal consequences of pesticides.” If Hernández were to draw naturally grown grapes, there may be less harsh shading and instead lighter shading to enhance a wholesome and nourishing appearance. Although many people associate Sun-Maid raisins with “the innocent pleasure of childhood,” this subversive alteration of the vibrant Sun-Maid depicts the “death-dealing lie” fed to the innocent people of Dinuba.
Running to the spot whence the animal's cries > came. Mr. Dunstan found him enveloped in a perfect network of what seemed to > be a fine rope-like tissue of roots and fibers... The native servants who > accompanied Mr. Dunstan manifested the greatest horror of the vine, which > they call "the devil's snare", and were full of stories of its death-dealing > powers. He was able to discover very little about the nature of the plant, > owing to the difficulty of handling it, for its grasp can only be torn away > with the loss of skin and even of flesh; but, as near as Mr. Dunstan could > ascertain, its power of suction is contained in a number of infinitesimal > mouths or little suckers, which, ordinarily closed, open for the reception > of food. If the substance is animal, the blood is drawn off and the carcass > or refuse then dropped.
In 2005, Lundgren starred and directed his second picture The Mechanik (The Russian Specialist), playing a retired Russian Special Forces hit man Nikolai "Nick" Cherenko caught in the crossfire with Russian mobsters. Sky Movies remarked that The Mechanik is "hardcore death-dealing from the Nordic leviathan" and said that "The Mechanik delivers all the no-nonsense gunplay you'd want of a Friday night". In 2006, Lundgren played gladiator Brixos in the Italian-made historical/biblical drama, The Inquiry (L'inchiesta) a remake of a 1986 film by the same name, in an ensemble that includes Daniele Liotti, Mónica Cruz, Max von Sydow, F. Murray Abraham and Ornella Muti. Set in AD 35 in the Roman Empire, the story follows a fictional Roman general named Titus Valerius Taurus, a veteran of campaigns in Germania, who is sent to Judea by the emperor Tiberius to investigate the possibility of the divinity of the recently crucified Jesus.
Craig Brandon The Electric Chair: An Unnatural American History page 82 At the request of death penalty commission chairman Gerry, Medico-Legal Society members; electrotherapy expert Alphonse David Rockwell, Carlos Frederick MacDonald, and Columbia College professor Louis H. Laudy, were given the task of working out the details of electrode placement.Terry S. Reynolds, Theodore Bernstein, Edison and "The Chair", Technology and Society Magazine, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (Volume 8, Issue 1) March 1989, pages 19 – 28Mark Essig, Edison and the Electric Chair: A Story of Light and Death, Bloomsbury Publishing USA – 2009, pages 225Sarah Davis., A "Bungled" Execution and a Doctor's Guilt: The Horrifying Debut of the Electric Chair, December 4, 2014 They again turned to Brown to supply the technical assistance. Brown asked Edison Electric Light to supply equipment for the tests and treasurer Francis S. Hastings (who seemed to be one of the primary movers at the company trying to portray Westinghouse as a peddler of death dealing AC current) tried to obtain a Westinghouse AC generator for the test but found none could be acquired.
New York Times film critic Howard Thompson gave Battle in Outer Space a mixed, but generally positive review, stating, "The plot is absurd and is performed in dead earnest... some of the artwork is downright nifty, especially in the middle portion, when an earth rocket soars to the moon to destroy the palpitating missile base... the Japanese have opened a most amusing and beguiling bag of technical tricks, as death-dealing saucers whiz through the stratosphere... and the lunar landscape is just as pretty as it can be." Boxoffice magazine rated the film much more highly, hailing it a "science-fiction adventure drama on a grand scale... and spectacular special effects... can be exploited to attract the youngsters and mature action fans in huge numbers. Like similar Japanese-made thrillers, 'Rodan', 'H-Man' and 'The Mysterians' (all produced by Toho), this can pay off boxoffice-wise if exhibitors stress the amazingly realistic trick photography of flying saucers, moon exploration and a full-scale attack on U.S. cities which results in skyscrapers being destroyed, etc..." and makes note of the film's "explosive action, of which there is plenty, particularly in the climatic battle..." Boxoffice also cited Shinichi Sekizawa's "imaginative screenplay.""Feature Reviews" section. Boxoffice.

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