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"rutty" Definitions
  1. full of ruts

39 Sentences With "rutty"

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

Through foot-high floodwaters and muddy, rutty park roads, the Sierra barely seemed to notice any obstacles.
In fact, the Raptor is one of the comfiest vehicles for traversing seriously broken pavement and rutty trails.
Rutty was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society 30 June 1720, and became second secretary 30 November 1727. He died on 10 June 1730. The physician John Rutty was a cousin.
Following his college career, Rutty was not drafted in the 2011 NBA draft. He instead moved to Uruguay where he signed with Atlético Aguada. Rutty played well for the club, averaging 16 points and 7 rebounds until being sidelined with a back injury. For the 2012–13 season, Rutty moved to BBC Nyon of the Swiss Ligue Nationale de Basketball.
Rutty was born in Newburgh, New York and starred as a high school player at Newburgh Free Academy. He then moved to Quinnipiac where he became one of the top players in the Northeast Conference (NEC). After leading the conference in field goal percentage as a freshman, Rutty had a breakout year in 2008–09, averaging 14.8 points and 9.8 rebounds per game and earning first team All-NEC honors. In his junior campaign, Rutty improved his output to 15.3 points and 10.9 rebounds per game.
The creation of the ear print identification system (similar to the fingerprint identification system) was developed by a University of Leicester Professor Guy Rutty along with a private forensics company. The team presented its work at the American Academy of Forensic Sciences in Dallas. Rutty measured the ear and observed physical elements such as sex differences in the external auditory canal, where females have shorter canals than males. The discoveries by Professor Guy Rutty of physical variations in the human ear opened the field of identification methods using ear prints.
Jahkeele Marshall-Rutty (born June 16, 2004) is a Canadian soccer player who plays as a forward for Toronto FC in MLS.
Marshall-Rutty received his first international call-up to the Canada national under-15 team for the 2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship.
Marshall-Rutty moved to Toronto FC's MLS side on January 22, 2020. He became the youngest player to sign a first-team contract with the club at age 15.
He flourished there, averaging a 20.8 points and 11.4 rebounds and earning league MVP honors. For the 2013–14 season, Rutty signed with Boulazac of the French LNB Pro B.
In 1999 Rutty flew in his Robinson R44 registration G-BXUK (which had been repaired following a heavy landing incident prior to Rutty's ownership) from Cambridge Airport, Cambridge, England, to Adelaide Airport, Adelaide, Australia. The journey totalled 13,506 nautical miles, and lasted 163 flight hours over 48 days. In purely aviation terms, the journey was largely without incident. However, on October 12 1999 Rutty landed in Gwadar in western Pakistan, the day of the 1999 Pakistani coup d'état.
In Commotion Ltd v Rutty a toy warehouse assistant was refused a reduction to part-time work because, according to the manager, everyone needed to work full-time to maintain "team spirit". The Employment Appeal Tribunal ruled that because "team spirit" was not one of the legitimate grounds for refusal, Rutty should get compensation, which is set at a maximum of 8 weeks' pay.[2006] IRLR 171 (EAT). See Flexible Working (Eligibility, Complaints and Remedies) Regulations 2002 r.
Justin Rutty (born July 6, 1989) is an American basketball player. He is best known for his college career, where he was an All-American and Northeast Conference Player of the Year at Quinnipiac University.
' Rutty then lived in rented rooms at the eastern corner of Boot Lane and Mary's Lane in Dublin. He died on 27 April 1775, and was buried in a Quaker burial-ground on St Stephen's Green.
Marshall-Rutty began playing for Toronto FC Academy in the USSDA in the 2016–2017 season, playing for the U13 team. He has since played for the U15, U16/17 and U18/19 teams as well.
Mrs Rutty was a warehouse assistant in Tonbridge, Kent packing educational toys for Commotion Ltd’s business. She and her husband had to take over care for their grand daughter, Jasmine. Mrs Rutty asked the warehouse supervisor, Mr Wood, for flexible working time, as a three-day week. She was denied on the basis that the employer wanted to keep her as a full-time member, by a Mr Brown. She appealed, and Mr Coote rejected her claim again, writing back saying that the company's policy was to ‘help to create a team spirit by having a uniform working day’.
Commotion Ltd v Rutty [2006] IRLR 171 (EAT) is an Employment Appeal Tribunal case in which an employer, who denied its staff flexible working time, was found in breach of the Employment Rights Act 1996 for failing to have any lawful reason.
Rutty grew up in Forest Hill, in south east London. His father was a general practitioner, and his mother was a housewife. He was the middle of three children. He was educated as a day pupil at the nearby St Dunstan's College, Catford, London.
Martin Ashley Rutty (4 February 1960 – 9 December 2010) was a British entrepreneur in the London courier industry, and an adventurer and British Champion helicopter pilot. He was the first person to fly in a piston engine helicopter from Cambridge, England to Adelaide, Australia, unsupported, in 1999.
Marshall-Rutty signed with Toronto FC II on December 17, 2018, becoming the youngest homegrown player to sign with the club. He made his professional debut for Toronto FC II in USL League One on June 28, 2019, coming on as an 86th minute substitute for Jordan Faria against Forward Madison FC.
Ruttya fruticosa, also known as jammy mouth or jêmbekkie, is a shrub which is native to Africa. It can be found in South Somalia to Tanzania and in the woodlands of Dhofar, Oman. The name Ruttya was named in honour of Dr John Rutty and fruticosa means shrubby and refers to the habit of the plant.
This coincidence of timing led to a night of imprisonment. A last minute change of route to enter Australia at Kununurra instead of Darwin, led to a threat of further arrest, this time by Australian Immigration officials. On 18 May 2000 Rutty was awarded a certificate by the Council and members of The Air League, in recognition of his achievement.
There were both Quaker believers and Presbyterian ministers in the Seend area by about 1648. In 1672 Benjamin Rutty of Seend was licensed to be a Presbyterian teacher and to use his house for that purpose. By 1717 Seend had a congregation of 52 Presbyterians, to whom a minister from Devizes preached once a month. In 1749 John Wesley preached at Seend.
Rutty competed successfully in various helicopter championships events. Together with his navigator Simon Lichtenstein he won the British Helicopter Championships (Club Class) four times in five years up to 2008. He participated as pilot in the FAI World Helicopter Championships 1996 and 1999 with co-pilot Timothy Gilbert, and in 2002, 2005 and 2008 all with Simon Lichtenstein as co-pilot, all as part of Team GB.
John Rutty (1697–1775) was a Dublin Quaker physician and naturalist born in Melksham, Wiltshire, England. He was the author of many texts including A methodical synopsis of the Mineral Waters of Ireland (1757) and An Essay towards the Natural History of the County of Dublin (1772). After his death his spiritual diary was published, and the botanist William Henry Harvey named the genus Acanthaceae Ruttya after him.
He was born of Quaker parents, on 25 December 1698, and after medical education at the University of Leyden, where he graduated M.D. in 1723 and read a thesis 'De Diarrhœa', settled in Dublin as a physician in 1724. There he practised throughout his life. He lived simply and often gave his services to the poor. On 6 April 1775 John Wesley records that he 'visited that venerable man Dr. Rutty.
In March 1722 Rutty delivered the Gulstonian lectures at the College of Physicians on the anatomy and diseases of the urinary organs, and published them in 1726 as A Treatise of the Urinary Passages, with a dedication to Sir Hans Sloane. The work relates two distinctive cases: one in the practice of John Bamber, lithotomist to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, of calcified concretions in the caecum giving rise to symptoms resembling renal colic; and the other of double renal calculus in the daughter of Sir Hugh Myddelton, from a note by Francis Glisson.
Extracts from the Spiritual Diary of John Rutty, M.D., was edited by Fox in 1840, and in 1870 he wrote a small work, On the Ministry of Women. He was largely interested in Cornish mines throughout his life, and latterly was much impoverished by the failure of the greater number of these undertakings. For the last twenty-five years of his life he resided at Trebah, near Falmouth, and died there 18 April 1878, and was buried in the Friends' cemetery at Budock 23 April. He married, 20 December 1825, Sarah, only daughter of William Hustler.
Rutty founded Speed Couriers, a motorcycle despatch company in London, England, in 1978 in a former basement coal cellar under New Oxford Street in London WC1. The company suffered a serious setback in the late 1980s recession, but by 1995 the company's sales were "around £6 million" and the company had moved to the London Docklands and had added offices in Telford, Welshpool Manchester and Cambridge. The company grew by acquisition in the 1990s, and bought a dozen rivals in 1994/5. In 1998 the company claimed on its website to have made 35 acquisitions to date, and was selling franchises.
Weighing around , the sculpture was hollow with a wooden base and was thought to have been made in Europe. When AMP announced plans to demolish the building and erect in its place a modern skyscraper, the National Trust refused to classify the building as in need of protection. The Trust Administrator N.J. Armitage instead applauded the development and the open space that would be created in the forecourt of the new tower. Although the building could not be saved from demolition, the iconic statue atop it was saved by Clive Rutty and purchased by millionaire collector Lew Whiteman, who paid $1000 for it.
Southwest Boulevard originated as two roads, one being the main street of Rosedale, Kansas, when it was platted in 1872 as "Kansas City Avenue", and the second called "The Rosedale Road", or "Kansas City Boulevard", on the Missouri side.Southwest Boulevard - Merriam Lane Corridor Master Plan (2010) Two property owners provided land to link the two roads in 1887, and the entire road was later renamed as "Southwest Boulevard."Landis, Margaret. A History of the City of Rosedale, Ch. 10 - "Southwest Boulevard" (1976)Heeded Plaint of Motorists: Rutty Southwest Boulevard is to be made permanently smooth, The City Hall (October 1910, p.
He led the Bobcats to the final of the 2010 NEC Tournament and was individually recognized as the NEC Player of the Year and as an honorable mention All-American by the Associated Press. In his senior season, Rutty enjoyed another strong year statistically (14.5 points and 9.4 rebounds per game), but suffered an elbow injury midseason which caused him to miss several games. He was still named to first team All-NEC, though he failed in his bid to win back to back NEC Player or the Year honors (Central Connecticut's Ken Horton was the winner).
Harris was educated at Kilkenny College and Trinity College, Dublin. He married Elizabeth Ware, great-granddaughter of Sir James Ware, the historian, in 1716 and became vicar-general to the Archbishop of Meath in 1753. Harris received a government pension in 1748, which enabled him to work on histories and religious writings. In the 1740s he was involved with the Physico- Historical Society, a similar society to the Royal Dublin Society, along with such luminaries as Robert Jocelyn, Dr. Samuel Madden, the philanthropist; Thomas Prior, the founder of the Royal Dublin Society; John Rutty the physician and naturalist; John Lodge, author of Peerage of Ireland; Charles Smith, the topographer and historian.
Rutty was killed in a helicopter accident near Tourrettes-sur-Loup in France on 9 December 2010, while flying from Cuneo in Italy to the UK... The aircraft in which he died (together with Simon Lichtenstein) was a Robinson R22 helicopter registration G-CBVL. The official investigation into the accident concluded that "the accident was likely due to an inappropriate input on the flight controls by the pilot in turbulent conditions. This input caused rotor shaft bumping that resulted in a deviation in main rotor rotation and the failure of the main blades’ droop restrainer". The report lists a number of similar accidents in the history of the R22.
A number of scientific papers have reported, based on both maternal and paternal genetic evidence, that a substantial back-flow of people took place from Eurasia into North-east Africa, including Egypt, around 30,000 years before the start of the Dynastic period.Diversity of 17-locus Y-STR haplotypes in Upper (Southern) Egyptians Ghada A. Omran, Guy N. Rutty, Mark A. Jobling, 2007, Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series 1 (2008) 230–232, at Some authors have offered a theory that the M haplogroup may have developed in Africa before the 'Out of Africa' event around 50,000 years ago, and dispersed in Africa from East Africa 10,000 to 20,000 years ago.
William Morris despite having been a Cromwellian soldier became a Quaker in 1656 and was an active member of the emerging Friends community in Ireland. John Rutty gives an interesting account from the Journal of William Edmondson who describes Captain Morris as a man of talents and influence: During 1656 William formed a Quaker meeting in Belturbet, County Cavan, with William Parker and his wife and Robert Wardell and his father. Sometime later in 1656 he was discharged from his post and returned to Cork. Like many educated men of his time with financial means he used his influence as a vehicle for change. William had published in 1659 a short treatise entitled Tythes no gospel ordinance.
Reverend Edward Connerford Hawkins was one of the first headmasters, when the school was still at Clapton in north-east London. He and his wife Jane Isabella Grahame (an aunt of Kenneth Grahame, author of Wind in the Willows) brought up their family there; their son Anthony Hope, who also grew up to be an author, was educated at the school until he was old enough to be sent to Marlborough College. Despite much progress, it remained essentially a charity school until the significant headmastership of Arthur Rutty (HM 1883-1909) when the school developed all the characteristics of a public school. The school began to attract fee-paying parents while remaining loyal to the sons of poor clergymen.
Rutty describes the death of William in 1680: "This year died William Morris of Castle Salem in the Co of Cork, who though a man of great parts and wisdom, was convinced of Truth by a weak instrument". Following the death of his father in 1680, Fortunatus Morris built a new house on to the fortress at Benduff. It is 'L' shaped, the tower being at the angle of the 'L'. It is built of small pieces of bad stone, with a high outside chimney and two gables. Fortunatus’ house was built at its rear against the old building, and from the first landing of its stairs one could step into the Castle by the ancient doorway which was placed about 12 feet from the ground.
Dave Bartlett and Vanessa Hunt, the two paramedics who were called to the scene of Kelly's death, have since spoken publicly with their opinion that there was not enough blood at the location to justify the belief that he had died from blood loss. Bartlett and Hunt told The Guardian that they had seen a small amount of blood on plants near Kelly's body and a patch of blood the size of a coin on his trousers. They said they would expect to find several pints of blood at the scene of a suicide involving an arterial cut. Two forensic pathologists, Chris Milroy of Sheffield University and Guy Rutty of Leicester University, dismissed the paramedics' claims, saying it is hard to judge blood loss from the scene of a death, as some blood may have seeped into the ground.

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