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51 Sentences With "find again"

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

It's one of those LPs you'll never find again in that condition.
"Besties" like these will be hard to find again, no matter who is elected.
It is to seek and find, again and again, what does and ought to guide me.
Skiing gave me a renewed passion for life that I didn't think I would ever find again.
And what they find again and again is, as an employee, companies don't want you thinking about that.
"We will have to find again the party atmosphere, that has been our protein for 11 years," he said.
Kazarian says he saw an "anomaly" in the pricing of Greek bonds at the time that he may not find again.
That's why Hall thinks researchers find again and again that exercise can help maintain weight loss, but it doesn't help people lose weight.
Talking to other parents in the same situation, we find again and again a sense that our grief is not recognized as valid.
We meet, again, hardscrabble poor folk and ambitious politicians; we find, again, creepy totems left at the crime scene and intimations of the occult.
So when you look at a cat video, what you're really seeing is this receding identity that you want to cling to and find again.
It felt like a delirious privilege, one I never imagined having, and one I worried I might not find again in a shaky job market.
Second-wave feminism has made a particular mission of doing so, starting with poets and novelists, who were in some ways the easiest to find again.
ExceptionAlly will let you scan or send it all these docs, which it helps you organize into the various categories and find again should you need them.
While the glitter makeup of years past is relatively easy to find again, it's rose-tinted highlights and cotton-candy braids that are fully back in focus after New York Fashion Week.
The archive collection — a solid foundation of products you want to find again and again — is reimagined in varying materials, colors, and proportions to create an update on the everyday uniform for warm-weather.
Over the next two hours, as they attempted to rebuild the domain controllers to re-create a more long-term, secure network, the engineers would find again and again that the servers had been crippled.
"We do find, again much like in equities, expensive traditional active fixed income management is a bust; however, the same factors we find effective elsewhere (value, momentum, carry, defensive/quality) show up in bonds," Asness wrote.
And look, it's certainly our hope that we're going to be able to work with government officials both in the U.S. and China to find again, the right path forward to work our way through the current issues.
"What is fascinating is that the representation of the human body is at a level of detail and musculature that one doesn't find again until the classical period of Greek art 1,000 years later," Davis explained to UC Magazine.
Of course, what we find, again and again, is that these platforms are not truly open, these decisions are not truly democratic, and even if they were, it would still be possible for us to loathe what they have wrought.
And I find again and again, as I try and think through, like, what's it like to cover this president, that the basic separation that allows you to assume that there's an object you're trying to report on is evaporated in the case of this president, so that makes it harder.
Luger was given a bus (the Lex Express) and American flag attire; he slammed Yokozuna on the deck of an aircraft carrier, and generally seemed to be ready to turn into the family-friendly, red-white-and-blue muscle hero that McMahon loves so dearly, and wouldn't find again until John Cena.
Standing around in the yard, after the escape, we explain to the guy from WorldStar –– who is very quiet and seemingly nice, and who has just moved here from Connecticut –– that a good number of the Industry Events he'll be invited to will take place up north, in some city he's never heard of, but which is only about 20 minutes away, and which he'll probably never be able to find again if/when he wants to recreate the experience for visiting friends.
Now I can wash my hands of you, I can wash my hands of all this, because you see there is some kindness, some saneness in me that I can find again and use.
Eric decides to respect Stephanie's choice and goes back to her. The two again find again happiness. In March 2012, Eric and Stephanie remarry in the presence of Gladys Pope. That October, Doctor Lewis told Stephanie that her lung cancer has returned.
Its impression was a high quality one and it was done in the printing house Oliva de Vilanova. Its price was 2.50 pesetas.GIVANEL, Joan. Bibliografia catalana: premsa. Barcelona: Institució Patxot, 1931-1937(878, 905) One year later, in 1917, we find again the same title directed too by Josep Maria Junoy.
If the aspirant has experienced enlightenment, his work will continue on another level, because illumination is not liberation. He will then have to struggle patiently to find again and again this other state of being and consciousness that he has recognized in himself until he arrives to stay permanently within it. Only then will he have reached liberation.
The Los Angeles Meteorite is a martian meteorite fallen in California's Mojave Desert. It was found around 1980 by Bob Verish and consists of two stones of and . Verish stored the meteorites in his rock collection before examining the find again on October 30, 1999 when he recognized it as a meteorite. He removed small samples for analysis by Alan Rubin at UCLA.
28 "...the minor strategic value of the Palaus left troubling questions about overall American decision making in the Pacific. Intended to support subsequent operations against the Philippines, the airfields and ports of Peleliu and Angaur ultimately proved less than essential." but did show Americans the pattern of future Japanese island defense and provided experience in assaulting heavily fortified positions such as they would find again at Iwo Jima and Okinawa.
Tico Parks ficha con el Liberec checo - Nación After spending six years in Europe he decided to moved back to Costa Rica looking for more minutes on the field in other the get in shape and find again his game and ability. He signed with Alajuelense in summer 2007,Winston Parks a la Liga - Nación but he has had a lot of injuries and only scored two goals in the Apertura's tournament.
Ioan P. Culianu, "Mahaparanirvana", in El Hilo de Ariadna , Vol. IIEllwood, p.98–99 Recalling his entrance into a drawing room that an "eerie iridescent light" had turned into "a fairy-tale palace", he wrote, > I practiced for many years [the] exercise of recapturing that epiphanic > moment, and I would always find again the same plenitude. I would slip into > it as into a fragment of time devoid of duration—without beginning, middle, > or end.
He adds that he discovered he has "tellurgia", an ability to make his thoughts come true; he learned about it when he was a baby wishing for milk, and his father grew breasts in order to feed him. Biba does not believe Robert, so he takes her to the island the following night. There they find again the three aliens. The aliens are in their spaceship, which resembles a blue glowing sphere.
Alexander,Storm Landings, p. 95. Frogmen performing underwater demolition at Iwo Jima confused the enemy by sweeping both coasts, but later alerted Japanese defenders to the exact assault beaches at Okinawa. American ground forces at Peleliu gained experience in assaulting heavily fortified positions such as they would find again at Okinawa. On the recommendation of Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., the planned occupation of Yap Island in the Caroline Islands was canceled.
"Clark, Philip, "The Gramophone Interview – Pierre Boulez", Gramophone, October 2010, p. 49 Other composers have found more merit in Poulenc's work; Stravinsky wrote to him in 1931: "You are truly good, and that is what I find again and again in your music".Poulenc (1991), p. 94 In his last years Poulenc observed, "if people are still interested in my music in 50 years' time it will be for my Stabat Mater rather than the Mouvements perpétuels.
This time it's Diana's place of worship which is invaded and challenged by Cupid. The goddess implores Jupiter to support her, but as in the prologue of Orion, he is favorable to Cupid and justifies himself with the edict of destiny. So, we find again Diana who grants her nymphs the freedom to love and the ballet dedicated to Cupid. The goddess swears to protect Hippolytus and Aricia, but refusing to "lower her pride", does not stay to observe the party.
While portraiture was Hardman's livelihood, his real photographic interest was landscape photography, which he pursued throughout his life alongside his commercial practice. The 1930s was a prolific period for Hardman's landscape photography. He recalled later, "Most of my childish dreams were of landscapes; usually of some remote and spectacularly sired lake, which I could never find again." In 1930, not long after Hardman and Margaret discussed starting a portrait business together, Margaret wrote that she had fallen in love with 'Tony'.
The song deals with a man reminiscing about a lost love he hopes to find again someday. Will Jennings reportedly wrote the lyrics while thinking about singer Valerie Carter, whose career was declining, in part, because of drug use. On its original release, the single reached number 51 on the UK Singles Chart and number 70 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. In 1987, a remix by Tom Lord-Alge was included as a single from Winwood's compilation album Chronicles.
She meets with the mysterious Beatriz (Nathalia Timberg), her only friend. He meets Renato (Rafael Cardoso), a friend in love with her, who will help her in her revenge plan against seven people: Sophia, Gael, the sensual and dangerous sister-in-law Livia (Grazi Massafera), Judge Gustavo (Luís Melo) and his wife Nádia (Eliane Giardini), psychiatrist Samuel (Eriberto Leão) and delegate Vinicius (Flávio Tolezani), while trying to find again her son Tomaz (Vitor Figueiredo), father and grandmother, some of Clara's foes.
Two years later, a chance remark by the pastor of a neighboring village contrasting his way of life to that of St. Benedict re-ignited the religious fervor of Delaveyne's youth. He returned to his monastery in Autun for a spiritual retreat, in order to find again the focus of his life. From this experience he returned to his parish a changed man. In his re-found religious mindset, Delaveyne began to see the misery of the poor of the parish, especially those in the countryside.
Two years after her death, friends were still concerned that he was suicidal. Winston Churchill thought him maimed by her death, and later said of her "she was a remarkable woman on whom Rosebery leaned, she was ever a pacifying and composing element in his life which he was never able to find again because he could never give full confidence to anyone else."Ferguson. Sir Edward Hamilton, Rosebery's closest friend, wrote: ..."for the dead alone the Taj is of course supreme."Lord Rosebery writing just after his wife's death; Crewe, Vol 2, p. 379.
NBC broadcast of 1972 AFC Divisional Playoff Pittsburgh sportscaster Myron Cope, in a 1997 article and in his 2002 book Quintuple Yoi!, related that two days after the game he reviewed film taken by local Pittsburgh TV station WTAE-TV, and that the film showed "[n]o question about it – Bradshaw's pass struck Tatum squarely on his right shoulder." Cope stated that the local film would be next to impossible to find again, because of inadequate filing procedures. In 2004 John Fetkovich, an emeritus professor of physics at Carnegie Mellon University, analyzed the NFL Films clip of the play.
One of these is by Brunetto Latini, who was a close friend of Dante. His Tesoretto is a short poem, in seven-syllable verses, rhyming in couplets, in which the author is lost in a wilderness and meets a lady, who represents Nature and gives him much instruction. We see here vision, allegory, and instruction with a moral object—three elements we find again in the Divine Comedy. Francesco da Barberino, a learned lawyer who was secretary to bishops, a judge, and a notary, wrote two little allegorical poems, the Documenti d'amore and Del reggimento e dei costumi delle donne.
Journal of Labor Economics, 30(2), pp. 367-414. This result is largely replicated in Israel, where Lavy, Schlosser and Daniele Paserman study the effect of the proportion of low achievers in a class on their peers and find again a negative impact of bad peers on their classmates, especially on classmates who are low achievers themselves, mostly by disrupting teachers' teaching, deteriorating inter- student and student-teacher relationships, and making violence and classroom disruptions more likely to happen.Lavy, V., Paserman, M.D., Schlosser, A. (2012). Inside the Black Box of Ability Peer Effects: Evidence from Variation in the Proportion of Low Achievers in the Classroom.
His Tesoretto is a short poem, in seven-syllable verses, rhyming in couplets, in which the author professes to be lost in a wilderness and to meet with a lady, who represents Nature, from whom he receives much instruction. We see here the vision, the allegory, the instruction with a moral object, three elements which we shall find again in the Divine Comedy. Francesco da Barberino, a learned lawyer who was secretary to bishops, a judge, and a notary, wrote two little allegorical poems, the Documenti d'amore and Del reggimento e dei costumi delle donne. The poems today are generally studied not as literature, but for historical context.
The court enmities provoked by his twenty years unbroken intimacy and influence with the king, and the denigration of less gifted or less fortunate soldiers, followed him in death. Prince William expressed the bitterness of his hatred in almost his last words, and Prince Henry's memoirs give a wholly incredible portrait of Winterfeldt's arrogance, dishonesty, immorality and incapacity. Frederick, however, was not apt to encourage incompetence in his most trusted officers, and as for the rest, Winterfeldt stood first among the very few to whom the king gave his friendship and his entire confidence. On hearing of Winterfeldt's death, he said, I will never ever find again another Winterfeldt,and a little later, He was a good man, a soulful man; he was my friend.
" Michael Hindle of Comingsoon.net observed of Vause and Chapman's relationship, while "one has always had power over the other in some form or another now [Vause and Chapman] are more or less on an even playing field". Joshua Alston of The A.V. Club said that Vause's return to prison "lands with a surprisingly soft impact". The character Stella "appears right on time to drive a wedge between [Chapman] and [Vause] just as a functional relationship becomes possible", and the show "manages to make [the looming love triangle] feel consequential." In her review of the third season, Jessica Kiang of Indiewire wrote that Vause and Chapman "come spectacularly together but find, again with some insight, that they’re a couple whose fire can burn on hate much easier than on routine.
Though a practicing Catholic, with "untroubled faith" and "devotion to our Lady," von Balthasar had remained largely uninterested in theology and spirituality until his university years. At the University of Vienna—where atheism was prevalent—he was influenced in his religious thinking by Professor Hans Eibl and, more decisively, his friend Rudolf Allers, a convert to Catholicism. While studying in Berlin, too, he heard lectures by the theologian Romano Guardini.Peter Henrici (1991), p. 10. In 1929, von Balthasar attended a retreat for students in Wyhlen, Germany, and sensed what he believed to be a sudden call to follow Jesus Christ: > Even today [in 1959], after thirty years, I could still find again the tree > on the lost path in the Black Forest, not far from Basel, under which I was > struck as if by lightning.... [I]t was neither theology nor the priesthood > that, at that moment, appeared in a flash before my mind; it was this alone: > You have nothing to choose; you are called.
Thus, when you were on the point of returning to the country, the people as a whole entertained the hope that it would find again under your guidance the peace that is necessary to give meaning to existence, to reconstruct the destroyed homes, put to the plow again the abandoned lands. The people hoped no longer to be compelled to pay homage to one regime in the morning and to another at night, not to be the prey of the cruelties and oppression of one faction; no longer to be treated as coolies; no longer to be at the mercy of the monopolies; no longer to have to endure the depredations of corrupt and despotic civil servants. In one word, the people hoped to live in security at last, under a regime which would give them a little bit of justice and liberty. The whole people thought that you would be the man of the situation and that you would implement its hopes.
At the same time, it should put an end to all forms of human exploitation in the work camps of the agrovilles. Then only the economy will flourish again; the citizen will find again a peaceful life and will enjoy his condition; society will be reconstructed in an atmosphere of freedom and democracy. Mr. President, this is perhaps the first time that you have heard such severe and disagreeable criticism—so contrary to your own desires. Nevertheless, sir, these words are strictly the truth, a truth that is bitter and hard, that you have never been able to know because, whether this is intended or not, a void has been created around you, and by the very fact of your high position, no one permits you to perceive the critical point at which truth shall burst forth in irresistible waves of hatred on the part of a people subjected for a long time to terrible suffering and a people who shall rise to break the bonds which hold it down.
Wild spaces and dreams of primitive men accord but ill with orderly parterres and velvet lawns, and in the country along the Berkshire border we find again a modern England we all know and some us do not care about, the England of "desirable residences within easy reach of the railway station", and "on gravel soil," not forgetting "with fine views"; and the sport if the "sport" of syndicates. But as the railway line is left behind the country grows wilder, and the Downs are again approached; the rough lanes twine and tumble in and over the spurs and valleys that run up the dominating heights of Walbury and Inkpen. On one such rise stands the church of East Woodhay, well above that village. The grey, ivy-covered stones in the graveyard look venerable enough, but the church, as a table on the tower announces, was rebuilt in 1823, and the only possible word in its favour is that the brick of which its partly composed gives a touch of colour among the elms of the litten, where the rooks caw evident approval of the water-wheel that protrudes itself within a few feet of the tower.

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