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110 Sentences With "lost for words"

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

"I feel good ... somewhat lost for words," Mark said.
"That was remarkable, I'm lost for words," Grace told reporters.
I am so moved and completely lost for words and unprepared.
The pussy in Wayne's mouth has him lost for words, indeed.
"I am heartbroken and lost for words," Josephine Yei told Reuters.
After the match, Ernesto Valverde was lost for words at Messi's display.
"I don't know," he says, his uncertainty leaving him lost for words.
"So honored and happy and lost for words!" he wrote in a post.
"I'm a little bit lost for words," said Fiji's British coach, Ben Ryan.
"So profoundly sad and lost for words," Manuel Barange said in a tweet.
In Haynes's script, she is not only lost for words; she is entirely lost.
"This is a special moment, man -- I'm just lost for words," Collins told WVLA.
" After he saw Brown in her dress, Armstrong said: "I was just lost for words.
But what he encountered at the McAllen federal courthouse Tuesday left him lost for words.
When it's a special occasion, but they're lost for words, they can always say it with guns.
The eclipse earlier this week may have found you lost for words, but they are coming to you now.
I'm like, 'how am I gonna tell these kids what to say when I'm at such a lost for words.
"When my church raised funds for me to get to the first audition, I was lost for words," she shares.
"I'm lost for words, because we are so fortunate to get this project," Mayor David Smith told the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Host Chris Matthews asked Weber whether Cox should use the male or female bathroom, and the right-winger was lost for words.
When Joe White first received the call on Friday, April 22, saying his daughter had disappeared, "I was lost for words," he says.
"I'm lost for words, to be honest," Shelton Lewis, a junior who lives near the apartment the two best friends shared, told WSET.
Last week, as shouts of "MVP" rained down from the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Ding Yanyuhang was clearly lost for words.
It is edited to show the other candidates on the stage appear lost for words, with the sound of crickets added to the video.
"For 15 years I was privileged to be part of greatest underground club in the world, I am lost for words right now," he wrote.
Never normally lost for words, Mr Trump stopped short of denouncing Mr Duke in a TV interview, prompting another volley of criticisms from Republicans and Democrats.
It is edited to show the other candidates on the stage to appear lost for words, with the sound of crickets added to the video. Anyone?
"I'm a little bit lost for words at the moment, just because I've been thinking about this one a long time — all weekend, all day," Truex said.
Halep's watching mother, Tania, was lost for words, having instilled in her daughter from a young age that to succeed at tennis would mean reaching a Wimbledon final.
In the video, the Shadow Brexit Secretary is asked a series of questions about Labour's Brexit policy, the last of which appears to leave him lost for words.
Speaking moments after his big win, Fisher was lost for words to describe what it felt like to win, but had plenty to say about his partner Lindsay Arnold.
Little said he has spent the last few days reuniting with his mother, his 8-year-old daughter, and other family members, adding, "I'm lost for words right now."
"The measure of a work of art is how much art it has in it, not how much 'relevance,'" Edward St. Aubyn wrote in his novel "Lost for Words" (2014).
Both showmen spent long stretches of airtime totally lost for words, awkwardly relayed anecdotes of their run-ins with the legend, and discussed various theories about where we go when we die.
Cosima finds herself almost lost for words as she asks how in the hell Susan could ever even consider editing lines of gene code when it can cost so much in human life.
On the same day Empire actor Jussie Smollett was arrested in Chicago for allegedly filing a false police report, filmmaker Tyler Perry wrote on Facebook that he was "lost for words" about the development.
" Family friend Mike Schrader launched a GoFundMe page to support her family, writing, "I'm lost for words right now and I cannot imagine or even begin to think how [her parents] feel right now.
"At a lost for words ... physically, my sister and I are ok but mentally I can't seem to fathom what I experienced and saw today," Micah Washington wrote in a Facebook post a few hours after the incident.
I am so moved and completely lost for words and unprepared," she added, "I am going to share this completely with my husband, John Krasinski, because the entire experience of doing this with you has completely pierced my heart.
He "support[s] holding people who misuse their power accountable," but that thought didn't cross his mind as he stood in the Oval Office and delivered a speech so bizarre and complimentary that even Donald Trump was lost for words.
In one of cricket's most unusual dismissals, Renegade batsman Peter Nevill seemed lost for words after a drive from his batting partner, Dwayne Bravo, glanced off his bat before shooting into Zampa's face and back onto the stumps to claim the wicket.
A photograph of Mr. Osborne, a 45-year-old Conservative politician who once failed to secure a position as a trainee journalist at The Times, addressing his future colleagues was a study in dumbfoundment: a room of journalists literally lost for words.
ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia (Reuters) - Japan coach Akira Nishino said his players were lost for words after their crushing 3-2 defeat by Belgium on Monday in the World Cup last 16 when they were on the cusp of making history but threw away a two-goal lead late in the second half.
Boeing's CEO was lost for words when he was grilled by lawmakers on Wednesday about the company's efforts to move legal cases from one of the fatal 737 Max crashes out of the US.Dennis Muilenburg repeatedly said that he was not familiar with the company's strategy, which it said it would execute back in March, before it opened settlement talks with the families.
Which means that disingenuous doctoring — such as this example from the recent UK General Election (where campaign staff for one political party edited a video of a politician from a rival party who was being asked a question about brexit to make it look like he was lost for words when in fact he wasn't) — will go entirely untouched by the new 'tougher' policy.
The second heat proved to be an "all- out war" with rival Lost For Words, the winner of the other elimination heat. As the gate pulled away, Lost For Words went straight to the lead while Wiggle It Jiggleit sat back in third. Wiggle It Jiggleit then moved to the outside and pulled alongside Lost For Words. The two dueled for the next quarter, then Lost For Words started to inch away as they moved into the stretch.
Lost For Words is the first EP by American rock band Acceptance.
When actually everybody is lost for words, his daughter Lilly, an ambitious diver, utters: "I have to attend training".
Finn, Split Enz) – 5:23 # "Take a Walk" (N. Finn) – 4:20 # "Small World" (T. Finn) – 4:57 # "Lost for Words" (T.
"Jane Mulfinger: Lost for Words," Art Monthly, London: Flaxman Gallery, 1991. Camden Arts Centre,Kent, Sarah. "Northern Adventures," Time Out, London', October 7, 1992, p. 43. Southampton Museum of Art,Stathatos, John.
Armitage married Longden in 1990 and they moved to Huddersfield. This part of Armitage's life was included in Longden's 1989 novel Diana's Story, later made into a TV film Wide-Eyed and Legless (1993). Armitage was played by Welsh actress Sian Thomas whilst Longden was played by Jim Broadbent. Longden's book Lost For Words (1991), which continued the story of his life with Aileen and his eccentric mother, was also made into a TV film, Lost for Words (1999), in which Penny Downie played Armitage and Pete Postlethwaite played Longden.
He is currently co-writing Lost for Words with Jamie Curtis. In 2013 he made his feature film directing debut with the British comedy I Give It a Year. He followed it with the 2016 American comedy Dirty Grandpa.
Stanley J. Orzel () is an American film director and screenwriter based in Los Angeles and Hong Kong, best known for directing "Four Assassins"and Lost for Words. Orzel served as Creative Consultant on "HERO", "House of Flying Daggers", both directed by (Zhang Yimou).
In 1993 she played Annie Longden, mother of Deric Longden in Wide-Eyed and Legless (known as The Wedding Gift outside the UK) and reprised her role in the 1999 TV film Lost for Words, which won her a BAFTA for Best Actress.
Germany also cancelled a planned training session and all interviews after his death. Oliver Bierhoff, the national team's general manager, said, "We are all shocked. We are lost for words." On 15 November 2009, nearly 40,000 attendees filled the AWD-Arena for his memorial service.
Germany also cancelled a planned training session and all interviews after his death. Oliver Bierhoff, the national team's general manager, said: "We are all shocked. We are lost for words." On 15 November 2009, nearly 40,000 attendees filled the AWD-Arena for his memorial service.
"Lost for Words" is the first single released from Irish singer/songwriter Ronan Keating's third studio album, Turn It On. The single peaked at #9 on the UK Singles Chart. The song was written by Wayne Hector, Ronan Keating and David Frank, and was released on November 10, 2003.
Buqun believes that his brother has succumbed to a moment's folly and looks Yuhang up to urge her not to break his brother's family up. He realises Yuhang is his ex-classmate. Yuhang is at a lost for words and can only tactfully turn him away. This deepens Buqun's misunderstanding.
Set at a former armory (now the Armory Center for the Arts), and exposed to wind and weather, the iconically color-coded panels pointedly referenced the nation's political, religious, and social divisions. Jane Mulfinger, Lost for Words (installation detail), 186 second-hand engraved spectacles, glass, spotlights, latex, 36' x 12' x 6', 1991. Installation at Flaxman Gallery, London.
Sikth, PDHM, Electric Eel Shock, Aconite Thrill, Johnny Truant, JOR, The Blueprint, Hiding With Girls, Frowser, Twoday Rule, 17 Stitches, Ako, Kenisia, Project Abner, SiZE, Beecher, Lamb Quartet, Dopamine, Joski, coMA Kai, Needleye, Blind Eye Policy, Fog Donkey, Fourway Kill, My Pet Junkie, The Mirrormen, Severed State, Planet of Women, One Man Down, Lost for Words.
Acceptance is an American rock band from Seattle, Washington, formed in 1998. They released their first EP, Lost for Words, in 2000, followed by Black Lines to Battlefields in 2003 (this EP was also re-released with live bonus tracks). Their debut album, Phantoms, was released in 2005. On January 26, 2015, it was announced that Acceptance had reunited.
After getting a slight breather, Wiggle It Jiggleit was again challenged by Wakizashi Hanover and Lost For Words in the third quarter. Rounding into the final stretch, Wiggle It Jiggleit began to pull away, winning by lengths in a time of 1:, the second fastest mile ever paced at Northfield Park. "I wasn't after the record," said Montrell Teague.
Lender & Stone 2016 pp. 281–286 Expecting praise for a retreat he believed had been generally conducted in good order, Lee was uncharacteristically lost for words when Washington asked without pleasantries, "I desire to know, sir, what is the reason – whence arises this disorder and confusion?"Lender & Stone 2016 p. 289 When he regained his composure, Lee attempted to explain his actions.
During editing, Hooper continued to consult with Firth and Rush by sending them cuts of the film and listening to their feedback. Hooper completed the final cut of the film at the end of August 2010 and presented it a few days later at the Telluride Film Festival.Hoyle, Ben (9 September 2010). "Story of the King who was lost for words is an Oscar favourite".
Deric Longden's first two books were adapted for television, the first retitled Wide-Eyed and Legless. The second, Lost for Words, was screened in January 1999 and won the Emmy for best foreign drama and a BAFTA for Thora Hird as best actress. After the death of his first wife Diana in 1985, he married novelist Aileen Armitage in 1990 and they moved to Huddersfield, West Yorkshire.
Hateley was also in the starting line-up for the Scottish Cup final against Celtic, but Motherwell lost 3–0. After the match, he said the match had left him lost for words. At the conclusion of the 2010–11 season, Hateley had scored three goals in fifty-three appearances. In the 2011–12 season, Hateley scored four goals in all competitions in forty- three appearances.
A sequel dealing with Longden's mother's decline into dementia after his second marriage, Lost for Words, followed in 1999. Wide-Eyed and Legles was the original title of the TV adaptation shown on Screen One (BBC1) starring Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent, Thora Hird, with supporting performances from Andrew Lancel, Moya Brady & Ashley Artu for the American release the film's title changed to "The Wedding Gift".
Dumbfounded, Luan Da attempted to continue his lies; however, the emperor called for the spy to come forth and expose the lies. Lost for words, Luan Da was arrested on Emperor Wu's order, and executed by having his body chopped into two at the waist.Loewe 2005, p. 113 The emperor extended his fury to the Marquess of Lecheng for introducing Luan Da, having him beheaded and his body then defiled.
Midnight Bisou trailed the field during the first half mile then shifted to the outside around the final turn. She closed ground on Elate, who had taken over the lead at the head of the stretch. The two battled down the stretch with Midnight Bisou winning by a nose in a photo finish. "I'm just lost for words describing how amazing this filly is because she's just in a different league all together," said Bloom.
Acceptance formed in Seattle Washington, in 1998, with a line-up of: vocalist/bassit Jason Vena, guitarist Kaylan Cloyd, guitarist Chris DeCastro and drummer Peter Pizzuto. The group released a self-produced EP, titled Lost for Words , in late 2000 through independent label Rocketstar Records. Sometime after this, Pizzuto and DeCastro departed from the group; the pair were replaced by Garrett Lunceford and Christian McAlhaney, respectively. Ryan Zwiefelhofer then joined on bass.
Other comedy shows include There's a Lot of it About, The Hello Goodbye Man, The Clairvoyant, Wyatt's Watchdogs, Dogfood Dan and the Carmarthen Cowboy and Split Ends. In 1999 Bell directed the TV film Lost for Words. The film was adapted from the autobiographical book of the same title by Deric Longden. It was a sequel to Longden's earlier autobiographical film Wide-Eyed and Legless (known as The Wedding Gift in the USA).
Darius counters, "Oh, I'm sure. You're quite loyal to your convictions and compatriots. But I wonder what these men think about that, about convictions and compatriotism now?" MacLeod watches the snow- covered battlefield where men are dying, lost for words. The subsequent flashback, set at Darius' chapel in Paris in 1816 (date from script, Final Shooting Script, p. 20, in Highlander: The Series (season 1) (DVD, Anchor Bay Entertainment, 2001), disc 9.), shows Darius facing three burglars.
Retrieved on 25 June 2008. The superintendent (Geoffrey Hutchings) arrives, proceeding to show Trevor an overview of what he has been through and where he is heading - prison."BFI Screenonline: Made In Britain Review". Retrieved on 25 June 2008. He explains that the assessment centre is Trevor's last chance to change the cycle of poverty, crime and prison. Uncharacteristically, Trevor is not aggressive and is lost for words. The superintendent is extremely articulate and faces little resistance from Trevor.
Lost for Words is a British TV film which premiered on ITV on 3 January 1999. It was adapted from his autobiographical book of the same title by Deric Longden and directed by Alan J.W. Bell. It was a sequel to Longden's earlier autobiographical film Wide-Eyed and Legless (aka The Wedding Gift). It dealt with Deric's mother Annie (Thora Hird), her decline into dementia and how Deric (Pete Postlethwaite) and his wife Aileen (Penny Downie) coped with this.
In these early days, members were further disadvantaged because expenses were not paid to them until 1889. Dooley was a born politician, possessing a ready Irish wit and a gift of rhetoric. He was never lost for words, however he emerged as a compassionate man who was generous to his Church, and caring for the needs of the struggling early settlers on the North West Coast. He put in place the amenities they needed to carve a living out of the wilderness.
The manuscript can be found in the H.B. Jassin Library of Indonesian literature at Taman Ismail Marzuki cultural centre in central Jakarta. See Desi Anwar, 'Desi Anwar: Lost for Words', The Jakarta Globe, 1 September 2012. The book is considered as one of Indonesia's most important modern literary works.The story of the book, and some details of the film that was based on it, are at Olin Monteiro, 'Rethinking Atheism Through an Indonesian Filmmaker's Lens', The Jakarta Globe, 27 March 2012.
"chora," Contemporary Visual Arts, April 2000, p. 58–9. In several series, she etched second-hand prescription eyeglasses with braille, Morse code or musical notation (Spectacles, 1991), poetry (No Vacancy, 1991),Hubbard, Sue and James Hillman, chora, Exhibition materials, London: 30 Underwood Street, 2000. or first-hand accounts of intense sensory experiences (Lost for Words, 1991), often one word or phrase per lens; lined up on glass shelves, the dramatically lit, delicately shadowed pieces formed hard-to-read passages or paragraphs.Dyer, Richard.
He led for the first three- quarters of a mile while setting very fast fractions, but was overtaken in the stretch to finish fourth. It was the first time in his career that he finished out of the money. On August 14, he rebounded in the $405,000 Carl Milstein Memorial Pace at Northfield Park in Ohio, a half-mile track. He was challenged for the early lead by Wakizashi Hanover and Lost For Words, pacing the first quarter-mile in 26 seconds.
An Ancient Lie is a compilation of prior releases by the progressive rock band Mach One. Released in 2002, it included songs like "Into The Pit" from their 1983 LP release Lost For Words (distributed via Pinnacle Records), "No Time To Sleep" from their 1982 cassette release Six of One plus some never before released material such as "Machine In White" recorded in 1984 just before they disbanded. The album cover featured artwork provided by Glenn Fabry, better known for his work as a British Comics artist.
Life on the Refrigerator Door is told through a series of notes and post-its written from a mother to her fifteen-year-old daughter before and during a family crisis. Kuipers' second young adult novel in 2010, The Worst Thing She Ever Did (Lost For Words in the U.S.), sold in 9 territories and won the Arthur Ellis Award, Best Juvenile/YA Crime Book 2011 and the OLA White Pine Official Selection 2011.Medley, Mark (3 June 2011). Winners of Arthur Ellis Awards .
A celebration had been planned for the one year anniversary of the Rejoyning, but with Pomma and Teera still missing there doesn't seem to be anything to celebrate about. D'ol Falla is asked to speak, but is nearly lost for words. The first thing that comes to her mind is that the Kindar should celebrate indeed, for they have managed to free the Erdlings and largely come together as a united society. Suddenly, a figure glides down from above, bringing news that the children have been found.
However, after he aired a live recording of the band playing at the 2003 All Tomorrow's Parties festival on his radio show, he was lost for words and had to put on another record to regain his composure. In 2004 the band did a live session for him at his home "Peel Acres". They played over 30 shows throughout the United Kingdom and Europe, and one in the United States. They also released two albums: Back to the Front (on the London-based ATP Recordings, 2003) and 21st Century Mirror Men (2005).
"Lost for Words" is a song recorded by English rock band Pink Floyd, focused on forgiveness, written by guitarist and lead singer David Gilmour and his spouse Polly Samson for the band's 14th studio album, The Division Bell. It appears as the penultimate track on the album. The lyrics, mostly penned by Samson, are a bitterly sarcastic reflection on Gilmour's then-strained relationship with former bandmate Roger Waters . The song was released to US rock radio the week of the album's release, succeeding "Keep Talking", the previous promotional release, released the week before.
Unlike his friend, the dramatist Friedrich Dürrenmatt, Frisch had little appetite for theatrical effects, which might distract from doubts and sceptical insights included in a script. For Frisch, effects came from a character being lost for words, from a moment of silence, or from a misunderstanding. And where a Dürrenmatt drama might lead, with ghastly inevitability, to a worst possible outcome, the dénouement in a Frisch play typically involved a return to the starting position: the destiny that awaited his protagonist might be to have no destiny.Hellmuth Karasek: Max Frisch, S. 13–15, 98–99.
She was named No 1 in the Observer Newspaper List of the fifty most powerful people in publishing. She won a British Book Trade Award for inspiring wider reading in 2006, and The Bookseller Award for expanding the market in 2006 and 2007, and an Outstanding Achievement Award in 2009. She received an RTS Educational Television Award in 2007 for her role in the Channel 4 ‘Lost for Words Season’ which focused on children's literacy. She was voted in the top five of London's ‘Literary Life’ in the Evening Standard's ‘1000 Most Influential People 2008’.
"Ebony Eyes" begins with a simple beat which leads into a more complex rhythm and the vocals of both Robinson and uncredited background vocalist who repeat falsetto vocals twice before Robinson begins the opening verse. The song chronicles the narrators affection for a certain woman. Lost for words and made weak by the mere presence of this lady, Robinson requires James' vocals to reveal how he really feels about this woman, who James thinks is unaware of his affection and apparent need for her. It is an ode to love for women of color, hence the title "Ebony Eyes".
The biggest censorship controversy was when actress Sally Field accepted her Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series. After giving an acceptance speech which included anti-war statements, partially as a tribute to her Brothers & Sisters character Nora Walker, the audience applauded before she was finished and Field, finding herself lost for words, couldn't remember what she was going to say. When she regained her words, she concluded her speech with "If mothers ruled the world, there would be no goddamn wars in the first place." Fox had cut to the display ball as she began to say "goddamn".
Parry-Jones was the long-term partner of the broadcaster Beti George and lived in Cardiff. From 2009 he suffered from Alzheimer's disease, and Beti George raised awareness of the condition through the Welsh media. In 2013 S4C showed a programme about the disease, Un o Bob Tri ("One in Every Three"), and Beti George presented a programme, The Dreaded Disease - David's Story, on BBC Radio Wales. In February 2017, BBC One Wales produced a documentary, Beti and David: Lost for Words, that followed the couple over a number of months, and looked at the challenges and frustrations faced by carers in Wales.
In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Fred and George are members of the Order of the Phoenix and serve as two of Harry's six decoys when he escapes Privet Drive. George loses one of his ears to Snape's Sectumsempra curse (which was aimed at a Death Eater's wand hand, but missed). Mr. Weasley and Fred force their way into The Burrow – Kingsley Shacklebolt didn't want to let them in until they proved who they were – and Fred is described as being lost for words for the first time since Harry met him. He remains pale and terrified, until George wakes up.
Dame Thora Hird, (28 May 1911 – 15 March 2003) was an English actress and comedian of stage and screen, presenter and writer. In a career spanning over 70 years, she appeared in more than 100 film and television roles, becoming a household name and a British institution. A three-time winner of the BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress, she won for Talking Heads: A Cream Cracker Under the Settee (1988), Talking Heads: Waiting for the Telegram (1998) and Lost for Words (1999). Her film credits included The Love Match (1955), The Entertainer (1960), A Kind of Loving (1962) and The Nightcomers (1971).
Promotion for the single included a Melbourne instore appearance in which Goodrem signed autographs for a record eight hours to an estimated crowd of 10,000 people.Herald Sun, June 2003. Retrieved 28 January 2007. Two CD singles were released to stores in Australia, the first CD featured the title track and the two B-sides "Hear Me Calling" (written by Goodrem and Pizzinga) and "Lost for Words" (written by Goodrem), while the second CD featured remixes of "Lost Without You", a free Delta Goodrem phone logo and a choice of ringtones between "Born to Try", "Lost Without You" and "Innocent Eyes".
Turn It On is the third studio album released by Boyzone frontman and Irish singer-songwriter Ronan Keating. The album was released on 17 November 2003, a week after the release of the lead single, "Lost for Words". The album became the worst performing album of Keating's career to date, only peaking at #21 on the UK Albums Chart. The album spawned two further singles: a cover of Kenny Rogers' "She Believes (In Me)" and a duet with American country superstar, LeAnn Rimes, "Last Thing on My Mind", which both became top ten hits in the United Kingdom.
Dylan James Wilson is the son of Violet Wilson (Jenny Platt) and Sean Tully (Antony Cotton) and first appeared on 22 February 2008, having been delivered by Sean and his partner Marcus Dent (Charlie Condou) in the Rovers. He was four weeks premature. Violet and her boyfriend Jamie Baldwin (Rupert Hill) intended for him to be born in London after they planned to leave Weatherfield as they felt suffocated by Sean. When he was born in the Rovers, Sean bonded with his son and said that when he was born, he looked straight at him and was lost for words at the fact he was the first person his son saw.
Jaik Campbell (born 31 December 1973) is a British comedian, and an Edinburgh Festival Fringe regular since 2001 edfringe.com : official site of the edinburgh festival fringe and performed his first solo show "I've Stuttered So I'll F-F-Finish" in 2005. He performs stand-up regularly in London at prestigious venues such as The Comedy Store, Banana Cabaret and Headliners, and has appeared on BBC and ITV television. Campbell performed a new show "L-L-Lost for Words: My Life with a Stutter" at the 2007 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Jaik's 3rd one-man comedy show, “The Audacity Of Hopelessness” was performed at the 2008 Edinburgh Fringe.
Alongside the discussions and programme features, the novels contended for the Richard & Judy Book of the Year Award, presented at the British Book Awards, where the winner was chosen by votes from the public. The Richard and Judy Book Club debuted as a website in autumn 2010, run in conjunction with retailer WH Smith. In 2007, Richard and Judy hosted a special Children's Book Club edition of the show as part of Channel 4's "Lost For Words" season. The featured books were chosen with the help of pupils from several schools around the UK. The New Writers Book Club was a feature launched in October 2008 focussing on debut authors.
Stevenage's manager Mark Stimson, celebrating his third consecutive FA Trophy success, told the players to "believe in themselves" at half-time, and felt that his side were always going to go on and win the match once Mitchell Cole had halved the two-goal deficit just after half-time. Steve Morison stated he was "lost for words" after scoring the winning goal in the 88th minute — "I can't explain how it feels, I can't describe scoring a goal anytime let alone at Wembley in front of 50,000 people. The boys out there were all part of it, it was a tremendous effort. I just did what I'm paid to do and that's score goals".
"What she did today was incredible, I mean everything she does is incredible, but I'm lost for words... He (Red Excitement) certainly made a race of it. He left no stone unturned. I was comfortable in the first quarter of the race but I could see what was happening so I started to make my way a bit closer from the 900-metre mark but I still had to stay within myself... I'm concentrating on just keeping her balanced but when she hit the afterburners at the 150-metre mark today, I just can't explain the feeling." On 16 September, Winx was entered in the George Main Stakes where she was installed as the heavy favorite.
In July 2005, the Samoan Head of State, Malietoa Tanumafili II, honoured Ah Koy with the Papalii title, in recognition of his contribution to the economy of Pacific Island nations. His Datec Group has subsidiary companies in Samoa, Tonga, Vanuatu, Australia, and New Zealand. Ah Koy, who was described by the Fiji Times as "speechless and lost for words" when he received the award, spoke of the importance of contributing to the economies of other countries, employing local people, and obeying their laws. In the Queen's Birthday Honours of 2006, Ah Koy was knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE), on the nomination of the Papua New Guinea Prime Minister, Sir Michael Somare.
Alice Kuipers (born 29 June 1979) is a British-born author living in Saskatchewan, Canada who is best known for her young adult novels. Life on the Refrigerator Door won the Grand Prix de Viarmes, the Livrentête Prize, the Redbridge Teenage Book Award in 2008 and the Saskatchewan First Book Award in 2007, was narrated as an audio book by Amanda Seyfried and Dana Delany, and has been adapted for theater in England, France and Japan. 40 Things I Want To Tell You won a Saskatchewan Book Award for Young Adult Literature in 2013. The Worst Thing She Ever Did (Lost For Words in the U.S.) won the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Juvenile/YA Crime Book in 2011.
After witnessing a rendition of "You'll Never Walk Alone" at Anfield in 2007, the President of the Spanish Olympic Committee (COE), Alejandro Blanco, said he felt inspired to seek lyrics to "La Marcha Real" ahead of Madrid's bid to host the 2016 Olympic Games.Liverpool fans help inspire Spain to write words to anthem Reuters, 5 June 2007Spain to add lyrics to wordless national anthem NBC News, 26 June 2007"Lost for Words", The Economist, Vol 384 Number 8539. That same year Telecinco, enticed by the COE, organized a National contest and posted 25 different lyrics on their website which they thought best matched COE's requirements. The winner was chosen after 40,000 people voted.
The Division Bell deals with themes of communication and the idea that talking can solve many problems. In the Studio radio host Redbeard suggested that the album offered "the very real possibility of transcending it all, through shivering moments of grace". Songs such as "Poles Apart" and "Lost for Words" have been interpreted by fans and critics as references to the estrangement between Pink Floyd and former band member Roger Waters, who left in 1985; however, Gilmour denied this, and said: "People can invent and relate to a song in their personal ways, but it's a little late at this point for us to be conjuring Roger up." The title refers to the division bell rung in the British parliament to announce a vote.
The department had commissioned the demolition of several older buildings in which it was housed, to make way for a newly commissioned landmark building. Fraser visited Oxford twice a month for two and a half years making photographs at first in the midst of the demolition process using lower saturation colour film, and then changing to brighter colour film once the construction phase began. In 2009 Fraser was commissioned by Ffotogallery, Wales, to make new work across the entire country during that year. This resulted in the exhibition and publication Lost For Words, the first time Fraser had worked entirely digitally. These works were shown and published in spring 2010, of which Mark Durden in his accompanying essay observed that: > There is a dark strain running through many of Frasers new pictures.
Further proposed cuts include, reducing winter gritting, suspending 'park and ride' services, stopping funding for Citizens Advice, cutting adult social care and support for people with learning difficulties, cuts to funding, and jobs, cuts from the GetSet programme which helps stop vulnerable young people needing social care.Somerset County Council proposes 130 job losses and cuts BBC There will be reduction to help for vulnerable families and children with special educational needs, youth services, road-gritting, flood prevention, among other cuts.'Lost for words': Somerset cuts £28m of help for most vulnerable The Guardian In July 2018 two senior Conservatives councillors resigned over concerns regarding the Council's handling of financial matters. Dean Ruddle and Neil Bloomfield had previous held roles as the respective chair and vice chair of the audit committee.
It was referenced in an article by The Onion that alluded to the song's ubiquity in the late 1990s. In Season 4, Episode 2 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer Buffy's new college roommate (who turns out to be a demon) listens to the song on repeat. In the 2009 film Land of the Lost, the characters Rick Marshall and Will Stanton (played by Will Ferrell and Danny McBride respectively) jokingly sing the chorus of song whilst placing their hands on a large energy-radiating crystal structure, creating a distorted vibration effect on their voices, as if it were an Auto-Tune-like device. In December 2018 Adam Lambert performed a 'stunning' ballad version of Believe in honor to Cher during the 41st annual Kennedy Center Honors which left Cher 'at a lost for words' and moved her to tears.
The Language Report first appeared at a time when there was concern in some quarters about a perceived decline in the use of written English due, in part, to the growth of e-mail and text messaging. Others, such as the broadcaster John Humphrys and the lawyer and ethicist Sir Ian Kennedy, were concerned about what Humphrys called “sloppy, overblown, cliché-ridden language” John Humphrys (2004) Lost for Words and Kennedy saw as the undermining of the "symbolic importance of language" (for example, in the field of health, talking about "the patient experience" rather than "the experience of patients").Learning from Bristol: are we? (an essay by Professor Sir Ian Kennedy, 2006) The novelist Kingsley Amis (1922-1995), an admirer of Fowler's Modern English Usage (1926), was apt, as he himself put it, to "spot some fresh linguistic barbarism and [I] am off again".
The band toured nationally and shared stages with the likes of The Juliana Theory, Anberlin, Finch, Further Seems Forever, and Seether as well as performing successfully on the Warped Tour and Cornerstone Festival. When the band's debut record, Lost for Words came out on Seattle indie, Rocketstar Records, and quickly approached the 5000 sales mark, the industry at large began taking notice. When the band recorded a new 5-song demo with Aaron Sprinkle, this industry interest turned into serious courting by several major labels. After putting a professional management team in place to help determine the band's course of action, the band signed to Sony owned, Columbia records, who then released the Black Lines To Battlefields EP (produced by Aaron Sprinkle) through The Militia Group who had been a long-time supporter of the band and was distributed through Sony owned Red Distribution at the time.
In the space of some ten minutes, his confidence gave way to alarm as he encountered a straggler bearing the first news of Lee's retreat and then whole units in retreat. None of the officers Washington met could tell him where they were supposed to be going or what they were supposed to be doing. As the commander- in-chief rode on ahead, he saw the vanguard in full retreat but no sign of the British. At around 12:45, Washington found Lee marshalling the last of his command across the middle morass, marshy ground southeast of a bridge over the Spotswood Middle Brook.Lender & Stone 2016 pp. 281–286 Expecting praise for a retreat he believed had been generally conducted in good order, Lee was uncharacteristically lost for words when Washington asked without pleasantries, "I desire to know, sir, what is the reason – whence arises this disorder and confusion?"Lender & Stone 2016 p. 289 When he regained his composure, Lee attempted to explain his actions.
Mach One are a British neo-progressive rock band, founded in 1980 by a group of students attending Burlington Danes High School in West London. After a series of studio demos, school gigs and lineup changes, the band attracted the attention of Keith Goodwin (notable as publicist for Yes, Rod Argent, Black Sabbath, in the 1970s, and Marillion in the 1980s) who represented them through 1983-85. During this time Mach One embarked on a series of live shows at pubs and clubs around London, and universities across England, while releasing two albums Six of One and Lost for Words that featured prominently in underground progressive rock fanzines (such as the Genesis Fanzine called Afterglow) and specialist progressive rock catalogues. However, in the more mainstream press they received mixed reviews for their second album, including a humorous 1-star review by Mary Anne Hobbs in Sounds (a British music paper), although their live show was given a positive write-up in the same paper a few weeks thereafter by journalist Gareth Thompson.
Wright began playing Scrabble at 17 and has competed in U.S. national tournaments (under his nickname, Trey Wright) since 1992."Music Student is S-E-R-I-O-U-S About Scrabble" by David Kaplan, Rice News, 25 February 1999 (link ), retrieved 11/30/2007 He won the $25,000 first prize in the National Scrabble Championship of the United States in 2004, defeating former champion David Gibson by winning the first three games in a best-of-five final.2004 National SCRABBLE Championship (link ), retrieved 11/30/2007 During the 2004 finals a controversy arose as the result of a Scrabble play by Wright. He placed the word "LEZ" (slang for lesbian) on the board but was compelled by tournament officials to retract the move and play a different word, because the finals were being run with a list of over a hundred forbidden words (allowed during the preliminary rounds), instituted as a precondition to ESPN's plan to televise the finals at a later date. The incident was widely reported in the media, including on the BBC"TV Scrabble ruling lost for words," BBC News, 6 August 2004 (link ), retrieved 11/28/2007 and in Slate.
" Grey hired ex-London drummer Tim Yasui (stage name Timothy Jay) in late 1990 to replace departing drummer Ernie Machado during the writing of a third album, and decided to change the name of the project to "Spiders & Snakes" to reflect the heavier sound that Yasui brought the band, as well as to quell confusion and fan dissatisfaction the name "Ultra Pop" was creating. The name "Spiders & Snakes" is taken from the song of the same name by country/western artist Jim Stafford. Under the name Spiders & Snakes, the band released two EP's, Arachnomania (1991) and Arachno 2 (1992), followed by the full-length album 2000 Retro (1993). The album's single "Lost For Words" reached number one on the import singles charts in Denmark in 1994. Leigh Lawson was added as bassist to the touring lineup in 1993 in support of the 1993-1994 tour for 2000 Retro. Oddities: The Glitter Years was produced by Kim Fowley and released in 1995. Astro Pop (1997) was produced by Flipside magazine contributor Martin McMartin and former The Humpers guitarist Mark "Anarchy" Lee, who together went for a fast, punk rock-influenced sound with minimal production. According to Yasui, the album has become a fan favorite "because it does have that punk edge.

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