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35 Sentences With "haling"

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

Madrid taxi drivers want their city to adopt ride-haling service regulations similar to those passed in Barcelona.
Careem's investors include German carmaker Daimler , China's largest ride-haling firm DiDi Chuxing, and Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal's Kingdom Holding.
Careem's investors include German carmaker Daimler, China's largest ride-haling firm DiDi Chuxing, and Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal's Kingdom Holding.
So far, its largest bets have been on office sharing firm WeWork, ride-hailing giant Uber Technologies and Chinese ride-haling firm Didi Chuxing.
So far, its largest bets have been on office sharing firm WeWork, ride-hailing giant Uber Technologies and Chinese ride-haling firm Didi Chuxing.
It will also factor in more personalized features, like which ride-haling app you use (if you don't have Uber installed, Snapchat will show links to Lyft).
One of the biggest fights has been over whether to repeal the state and local tax deduction -- a move opposed by members haling from high-tax states.
" What they're saying: Mayor Bill de Blasio stressed in August that the city's e-haling caps "have resulted in increased wages and families finally have some relief.
The chilling tale is a nightmare scenario for customers of any ride-haling app, and fake drivers are an ongoing scam the company warned about nearly two years ago.
Oregon Live reported at the time that officials with the City Commissioner's office couldn't seem to book a ride, leading them to theorize that they'd already been blocked by the ride-haling provider.
For example, the federal government announced Thursday a partnership with the ride-haling service Lyft to provide its drivers in 190 cities — none of whom get health care through their company — information about signing up.
New York's cap was designed to limit the number of vehicles on the road, reducing congestion and helping taxi drivers, who say their livelihoods were hurt by the influx of ride-haling drivers in the city.
It will mark the first time the general public will be able to invest in one of the major ride-haling companies, which have grown exponentially over the past five years, but still manage to generate huge losses.
Kingzkid is a Fante, haling from Elmina. He is an alumnus of Central University College, Ghana.
Harris Academy Purley (formerly Haling Manor High School) is an academic secondary school in South Croydon, England. It is also part of the Harris Federation. Haling Manor High School was one of only fifteen schools in the country to be awarded specialist status as a music school.
The timber for the Whitfgift almshouses came from Waddon ward's Haling Manor. In 1931, Whitgift School moved to its current site in Haling Park, which was once home to Lord Howard of Effingham, the Lord High Admiral of the Fleet sent against the Spanish Armada. St George's Church was built in the heart of the Waddon housing estate, being erected in 1932. The architects were W. Curtis Green, R.A. and Partners.
Gage, born after 1582, seems to have been son of John Gage of Haling, Surrey, and brother of Sir Henry Gage, to whom he erected a monument. cites: Collins, Peerage, ed. Brydges, viii. 256–7; Cal.
Before becoming an 'Academy' the school was named Haling Manor High School. There were two wings to the school for many years: Pampisford Wing which was originally Croydon Secondary Technical School; and the Kendra Wing which was originally South Croydon Secondary Modern School. Origins went further back to what was Waddon Secondary School. (There was a famous entry in the punishment book from that era: 'X' received 6 strokes of the cane for letting off a paper bag during an air raid' - cited by Michael Round, previously headmaster.) The first headteacher of Haling Manor was a Mr. Fox (not to be confused with Richard Fox, Head of Science and Senior Master who spent his entire career at the school) and the first Deputy Head was J.R.Piper.
A horse towing path (or haling path) along the navigable Trent, from Shardlow to Gainsborough was approved as part an Act of Parliament in 1783. But unlike canal towing paths, towpaths along rivers were not usually fenced off from the land alongside and required these self-closing gates where the path crossed the field boundaries.
Reports concerning the substantial value of the ship's cargo led to many early salvage attempts and also several lawsuits. No sooner had Islander sunk than efforts began to locate the wreck. Within days, another ship, the SS Haling, was sounding the area in order to determine the wreck's depth. The first attempt to locate Islander was a failure.
The area of the original borough included part of Norwood and Addiscombe, Bensham, Croham, Coombe, Haling, Norbury, Shirley, Waddon and Woodside. From 1894 to 1915 it was adjacent to Croydon Rural District to the south, east and west and the County of London to the north. The rural district was abolished in 1915, but the county borough was unsuccessful in its attempt to annex the area.
The centre was officially opened in October 1970 by the Duchess of Kent. The original Whitgift School there had moved to Haling Park, South Croydon in the 1930s; the replacement school on the site, Whitgift Middle School, now the Trinity School of John Whitgift, moved to Shirley Park in the 1960s, when the buildings were demolished. The borough council unsuccessfully applied for city status in 1965, 2000 and again in 2002.
2, "Southbourne Villas". In the 1890s he moved to "Hurstleigh", 23 South Park Hill Road and after his retirement in 1896 to "Foxley Lodge", 2 Higher Drive, Purley. Benjamin Densham, like Alfred, lived in St Peter's Road at "Britannia Villa" (now no. 46), then moved to "Homeside", 26 Friends Road; "Sunnyside", 45 Birdhurst Rise; and in the 1890s to "Minard", 19 Chichester Road; then to "Bramley Croft", Haling Park Road, a splendid house.
Later Sherwood Oaks was added to this so that there is now one large area of public land. Three of Alfred's homes remain: 2 "Southbourne Villas" (now 15 St Peter's Road), "Hurstleigh", 23 South Park Hill Road and "Foxley Lodge", 2 Higher Drive, only the Dingwall Road house having been demolished. Of Benjamin's homes, two have gone (26 Friends Road and "Minard", 19 Chichester Road) but the others remain. "Bramley Croft", Haling Park Road is now "St John’s Nursing Home".
Gage was born at Haling, in Surrey, the son of John Gage and Margaret Copley. The family were Catholic and long intermarried with other prominent Catholic families, including that of Sir Thomas More, the former Lord Chancellor. At the age of twelve Henry was sent abroad for a Catholic education at the English Jesuit College in St Omer, where he was a student from 1609 to 1614.Geoffrey Holt, St Omers and Bruges Colleges, 1593-1773: A Biographical Dictionary (Catholic Record Society Publications 69, 1979), p. 109.
Born 1 February 1621, he was son of John Gage of Haling, Surrey, by his second wife, Mrs. Barnes, a widow. He was half-brother of Sir Henry Gage, governor of Oxford, of George Gage and of Thomas Gage, missionary and traveller. He was a student in the English College, Douay from 1630 to 1641, when he went to Paris to pursue theological studies under William Clifford at Tournai College, which had been granted by Cardinal Richelieu to Richard Smith for the education of the English clergy.
James Watney portraitJames Watney (18 December 1800England, Births and Christenings, 1538–1975.-16 March 1884England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1966 [database on-line].) was a brewer and landowner who resided at Haling Park, Croydon, and Beddington, Surrey. He was born to Daniel Watney (1771–1831) of Mitcham, Surrey and Mary Galpin (1771–1830), daughter of James Galpin (died 1789) of Mitcham, Surrey. He was the grandson of John Watney (1747–1814) and great- grandson of Daniel Watney (1705–1780) of Wimbledon, Surrey who was an ale conner.
For many centuries the River Wandle rose from a spring by Brighton Road to enter and flow through the Haling neighbourhood in the south of Croydon. It ran along Southbridge Road and upon reaching Old Town it reached a maximal across and began to divide into smaller channels. The grounds of the Old Palace and Scarbrook Hill had springs engineered with ponds, streams and canals where fish swam, especially trout. Over the years it became renowned for its fish, appearing in chronicles, such as, William Camden's Britannia (1586) and Izaak Walton's The Compleat Angler (1653).
The school's first home was in Church Road, central Croydon, and then from 1931 to 1965 it was at North End, Croydon, in the old premises of Whitgift School, which moved to Haling Park, South Croydon. The "romantic Gothic towers and verdant lawns" at North End, a building of historical significance, dominated the area, but in 1968 the whole edifice was torn down for redevelopment, despite public opposition. Today, the Whitgift Centre stands on the site, in a stark modernist contrast to the old building. The school's current home was built in 1965 on the site of the former Shirley Park Hotel.
A horde of 25,000 Afghan horsemen swooped down upon the sacred city of Muttra during a festival, while it was thronged with peaceful Hindu pilgrims engaged in their devotions. "They burned the houses," says the Tyrolese Jesuit Tieffenthaler, who was in India at that time, "Together with their inmates, slaughtering others with the sword and the lance, haling off into captivity maidens and youths, men and women. In the temples they slaughtered cows (the sacred animal of the Hindus), and smeared the images and pavement with the blood." The borderland between Afghanistan and India lay silent and waste.
Gower had two wives, first, Elizabeth Howard, daughter of Sir William Howard of Naworth Castle, sister to Charles Earl of Carlisle, and second, Frances Leveson, daughter and coheir of Sir John Leveson, of Haling in Kent, and of Lilleshall in Shropshire, by Frances his wife, daughter and heiress of Sir Thomas Sondes, of Throwley in Kent, (elder brother of Sir Michael Sondes, who was grandfather to George Sondes, 1st Earl of Feversham) by Margaret, sister of Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham. By which last Lady, this Sir Thomas Gower had two sons, Edward, and William, ancestor to George Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Marquess of Stafford; also a daughter Frances; but by his first wife he had no issue.
In 2014 the ward returned three Labour councillors, Robert Canning, Andrew Pelling & Joy Prince on a swing from the Conservatives to Labour of 7.1%. In July 2017, the Local Government Boundary Commission for England altered, subject to the formality of Parliamentary approval, the boundaries of the ward as from May 2018 so as to exclude roads including and surrounding Pampisford Road and Haling Park Road to the south of Whitgift School and to include some additional parts of what is geographically Waddon including retail and industrial areas to the south of Beddington Park Road, Wandle Marsh tramstop, the gasometers at Factory Lane, New South Quarter, Waddon Marsh tramstop, Wandle Park and properties between Wandle Park and the Roman Way.
He played an important role in breaking the French Siege of Saint-Omer (1638).DNB. He was known for his ability and was described by Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, as "a man of great wisdom and temper, and one among the very few soldiers who made himself universally loved and esteemed".Quoted in George Steinman Steinman, Some Account of the Manor of Haling, in the Parish of Croydon, Surrey (1835), pp. 42-43. He was also noted for his piety (he attended Mass daily) and in the later years in the Low Countries and in England had as his chaplain the Jesuit Peter Wright, later to be sentenced to death on the evidence of Henry's own brother Thomas Gage, an ex-Catholic renegade.
Pogwisch was at an early age the owner of Ås (Børglum Herred) but already sold it in 1633. He received Jernit as dowry and succeeded his heaily indebted father-in-law as owner of the estates Palstrup, Aldrupgård, Hagsholm, Løjstrup and Ørs but in 1662-65 had to sell most of them to Mogens Friis; Pogwisch was again the owner of Palstrup in 1665-72). He was also the owner of Torpegård (until 1669), Haling Hovgård (1665–68), Tyrrestrup (1662–68), Lerbæk ( 1665–72), Ryumgård (1666–72), Hjermeslevgård (1666(?)-68), Hollufgård ( 1667–69), Fodbygård (), Frydendal (from 1671), Saltø (1668-1684), Kongsdal (Tygestrup (1672-), Toftholm () and Vennergård (a share, 1680–84). In spite of his many estates, Pogwisch struggled with economic difficulties, some of which he had probably taken over from his father-in-law.
The railway is frequently referred to as a tramway, but the original name of the company of proprietors was the Oystermouth Railway or Tramroad Company, the word tramroad being used in its pre-railway context. The original right of way was unique and it was only after the construction of the turnpike road in the 1820s that the line assumed its roadside character. The introduction of steam locomotion in the 1870s was facilitated by a clause in the original Act which authorised the "haling or drawing" of waggons by "men, horses, or otherwise" and owed nothing to the Tramways Act of 1870. The passenger rolling stock used in steam days bore little resemblance to conventional railway carriages, employing open-top, "toast-rack" and "knifeboard" seating, and being built by companies more commonly associated with the construction of urban tramcars, such as G.F. Milnes & Co., Starbuck & Falcon, etc.

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