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17 Sentences With "gladly received"

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

A day later, on Tuesday, he gladly received an update from a volunteer rescuer in Dickinson.
Peña Nieto stated in an interview that he does not justify the actions of the state and municipal forces, but also mentioned that they were not gladly received by the citizens of San Salvador Atenco upon their arrival.
At Wells they were joined by James Touchet, the seventh Baron Audley, who had already been in correspondence with An Gof and Flamank. As a member of the nobility with military experience he was gladly received and acclaimed as their leader. The rebels then continued towards London, marching via Salisbury and Winchester.
However, with World War I still fresh, and with a slew of German "New Wave" releases encroaching on American movie workers' livelihoods, Lubitsch was not gladly received. He cut his trip short after little more than three weeks and returned to Germany. But he had already seen enough of the American film industry to know that its resources far outstripped the spartan German companies.
Acts 2:41 then reports: "Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls." Paul the Apostle quotes this verse in Romans 10:13, "transferring the reference to the Messianic advent", to describe the universality of Jesus' deliverance without difference between Jew and Greek, that is, "salvation for all who call upon the name of the Lord", to become "citizens of Zion".
To begin with, she described the term as vague and the failure to clarify the position of the public "as media audiences or a body of opinion". She goes on to explain that the social panics are not gladly received by the government. There is also no proof that society has an extensive social anxiety surrounding them. Jewkew, as also mentioned by McRobbie, believes that moral panic is widely used by the media.
The letter urged his brethren to obey Attala, who stayed behind as abbot of the monastic community. The letter concludes: Soon after the ship set sail from Nantes, a severe storm drove the vessel back ashore. Convinced that his holy passenger caused the tempest, the captain refused further attempts to transport the monk. Columbanus made his way across Gaul to visit King Chlothar II of Neustria at Soissons where he was gladly received.
It was widely known that she gladly received the news of the end of the war and then entertained occupying Union soldiers in her home following the surrender of Mobile. This caused her to be ostracized by many in the city, who saw her as a traitor. Her fortune was gone after the war and she soon left Mobile for good. She visited New York City and Washington, D.C., but eventually returned to her birth state of Georgia and attempted a lecture tour.
This brought an end to the indisputable rule that Pari Khan Khanum had enjoyed for two months and 20 days. Although she was still the practical ruler of the state, she would now meet opposition from Mahd-e Olya and her allies. When they reached the city, Pari Khan Khanum gladly received them with great grandeur and a parade, sitting in a golden-spun litter, while being guarded by 4,000–5,000 private guards, inner-harem personal assistants, and court attendants.
Szalay, the attorney for the widow Solymosi, in a speech full of bitter invectives, appealed against the decision; but the supreme court rejected his appeal and confirmed the verdict of the county court. The youthful accuser whom the maneuvers of the accusers had alienated from his faith and his coreligionists, and whose filial feelings they had suppressed, returned to his parents, who gladly received him. Móric fully redeemed his past and supported his father until his father's death in 1905.
Fr Munoz did not limit his work to research. He was involved in the spiritual and moral growth of the university community – teachers, students and other non-academic staff. He was the Parish Priest of the university chapel, Our Lady Seat of Wisdom, an assignment that he gladly received from the Catholic Archbishop of Ibadan. As parish priest, Fr Munoz, celebrated liturgical services and dispensed communion and was involved extensively in individual counselling and offered classes on theology and Christian ethics.
In Acts 2:17, it reads: "'And in the last days,' God says, 'I will pour out my spirit upon every sort of flesh, and your sons and your daughters will prophesy and your young men will see visions and your old men will dream dreams." He also mentions (Acts 2:15) that it was the third hour of the day (about 9:00 am). Acts 2:41 then reports: "Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls." Critical scholars believe some features of the narrative are theological constructions.
Labre was born in 1748 in the village of Amettes, near Arras, in the former Province of Artois in the north of France. He was the eldest of fifteen children of a prosperous shopkeeper, Jean-Baptiste Labre, and his wife, Anne Grandsire. Labre had an uncle, a parish priest, living some distance from his family home; this uncle gladly received him, and undertook his early education for the priesthood. At the age of sixteen, he approached his uncle about becoming a Trappist monk, but his parents told him he would have to wait until he grew older.
His sermons were short and > always well seasoned with a grand exhortation to be more like our Lord and > Master. He was greatly respected by the young and always gladly received by > his many friends. His last days on earth were much clouded with the church > controversy which was carried so far as to cause a division among the > Mennonites. Just at this time came the winged arrow of death and bore the > soul of Bishop Hagey from the scenes of his life's activity, from the > companionship of his faithful circle of followers, and from the worrying of > this world, to the regions beyond the skies where trials and temptations are > no more, where Christ reigns supreme, in Heaven.
Although the South Texas Archives were not officially created until 1981, the systematic accumulation of historical documents was started by Professor John E. Conner when he joined the Department of History shortly after the creation of the South Texas State Teachers College. In 1925, the year that STSTC opened its doors to students, John E. Conner chairman of the Department of History and Dean of the School, began receiving "family treasures" from area residents who were interested in preserving their past and treasures for future historians. As a historian with a keen interest in the history of Texas he gladly received these items and stored them where he could, starting a museum. By the late 1940s the collection had grown to such an extent that Dr. Conner was given additional space.
Thereupon Duff sought distraction in 1808 by volunteering to join the Spaniards in their war against Napoleon. His assistance was gladly received, especially as he came full of enthusiasm and with a full purse, and he was made a major-general in the Spanish service. He served with great distinction at the battle of Talavera, where he was severely wounded in trying to rally the Spanish runaways, and was only saved from becoming a prisoner by the gallantry of his lifelong friend, Major (afterwards Lieutenant-general Sir) S. F. Whittingham. In that year, 1809, he became Viscount Macduff on his father's accession to the Irish earldom of Fife, but he still continued to serve in Spain, and was present during the defence of Cadiz against Marshal Victor, and was again severely wounded in the attack on Fort Matagorda in 1810.
Like many Gaels in the 19th century, Livingstone's grandfather was forced to emigrate to the Lowlands for work: > "Finding his farm in Ulva insufficient to support a numerous family, my > grandfather removed to Blantyre Works, a large cotton manufactory on the > beautiful Clyde, above Glasgow; and his sons, having had the best education > the Hebrides afforded, were gladly received as clerks by the proprietors, > Monteith and Co. He himself, highly esteemed for his unflinching honesty, > was employed in the conveyance of large sums of money from Glasgow to the > works, and in old age was, according to the custom of that company, > pensioned off, so as to spend his declining years in ease and comfort." Andrew Ross says David Livingstone was the second son of Neil Livingston (known as "Niall Beag", wee Neil,MacKenzie, Donald W. R. (16 May 2000) As It Was/Sin Mar a Bha: A Ulva Boyhood Birlinn Ltd or "Niall MacDhun-lèibhe"), who was born on Ulva in 1788, who was in turn the son of another Neil. He also claims that the family stories do not quite fit, and that it is unlikely that he was a descendant of a Culloden combatant.

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