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45 Sentences With "setting up home"

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

The company said it will help all employees, including hourly workers and contractors, cover expenses for setting up home offices.
On the other side of the fence, the surviving members of Hilltop and the Kingdom are setting up home in Alexandria.
Employees will also receive reimbursements toward expenses for setting up home offices and reimbursements for additional daycare expenses incurred, the company said.
So in 2003, the villagers spent a total of 48 days transporting 73 apes from nearby mountains and setting up home for them in Xianfeng.
He was sentenced to eight years in prison in 2013 after being accused of harming Iran's national security by setting up home-based churches in his native country.
The bonus is meant to help employees who are working remotely with additional expenses, such as setting up home offices or spending on childcare, the company told CNN Business.
Amazon and Microsoft regularly vie for talent with giants like Google and Facebook, and many tech companies — including Uber, recently — have found themselves setting up home bases in the city.
As reported by ZDNet, the page for setting up home Wi-Fi and cable services can display the home address of where the router is located and give away the Wi-Fi password.
Saeed Abedini, a naturalized U.S. citizen, was sentenced by an Iranian court in 2013 to eight years in prison for allegedly compromising Iran's national security by setting up home-based Christian churches there.
Students who are resourceful and hopeful — in some cases already setting up home studios and getting to work — but who are still footing the bills for their studios, specialized equipment, visiting critics, and thesis shows.
Best Buy employees with deep knowledge across product categories and brands go to customers' homes and provide technology advice and guidance on anything from increasing appliance efficiency to improving Wi-Fi connectivity to setting up home assistants that speak to the sound system and thermostat.
Soriot, however, relishes the chance to shake things up by setting up home near world-renowned university labs - where he says the firm is better placed to hire the "best of the best" - while shrinking its operations to focus on core areas like cancer, respiratory and cardiovascular disease.
It was really only in the 1960s that a substantial number of people started setting up home in Darrenwood.
After the war, he lived in Coventry for many years, before finally setting up home in Llanberis, Wales. He died in 1981.
His final RAF appointment came in 1956 when he was placed in command of the ground officers selection board. In 1958 he retired from the air force and emigrated to Australia with his family, setting up home in Sydney.
A flashy journalist introduced in the first book, "Cold Granite" and who spars with McRae, but they end up being friends despite Miller setting up home with Isobel McAlister and Miller losing his fingers to torture by a gangster, an event that he holds McRae responsible for.
In 1894, when Spare was seven, the family moved from Smithfield to Kennington, South London, setting up home at 15 Kennington Park Gardens. Here, Spare attended St. Agnes School, attached to a prominent High Anglican church, and as a child he was brought up within the Anglican denomination of Christianity.Baker 2011. pp. 9, 13.
After his National Service obligation was served as a para- trooper, Rolo studied and qualified as an electronics engineer. In 1970 Rolo emigrated to Australia, setting up home in Sydney, Australia. In March 1985, Rolo married fellow BUGAUP activist Rosalyn Anderson, who became Lady Bloody Wog Rolo. They have two sons: Alex born 1986 and Robin born 1988.
Now she moved back to Hamburg, struggling with a succession of casual jobs. For two months she worked as a stripper in the city's St. Pauli quarter. During this period her appreciation crystallised that "capitalism was the cause of social injustice". With her partner she then moved again, setting up home in Wiesbaden where she worked as a graphics assistant.
In 1978, following Robert Evans's retirement, the family returned to Scotland, setting up home on the isle of Arran, which had been a favourite holiday destination in her childhood. Her husband died 1987. Following a short illness, Jean Evans died in 2000, just two weeks before her ninetieth birthday. She was buried beside her husband, at the Shiskine cemetery on Arran.
Lowinsky was the daughter of Leopold Hirsch (1867-1932), a London banker and art collector.Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, Lot 37, Catalogue for Sotheby's, London, 3 December 2013 She studied at the Slade School of Fine Art before giving up painting on her marriage, and setting up home in Kensington Square. A friend of Rebecca West and Raymond Mortimer, she died in January 1958.
Though she did not finish the transcription, she had ongoing discussions with Jung about its potential publication. She also transcribed and edited his 1925 seminar. In 1925 she met Jung's assistant Helton Godwin Baynes, known to friends as Peter, at the Jungian Conference at Swanage. They married in 1927, setting up home in Hemel Hempstead in England, though they moved to California in 1928.
While Corfield felt that the pair setting up home was moving too fast, in the long-run it would benefit Freya. She added that Freya would mess things up "quite wonderfully" which sets the scene of the relationship that will not run smoothly. It was noted that a Doctors storyline never usually develops without problems. Like Corfield; Henry also believed Freya's "love-hate relationship" with Kevin could cause issues.
Fanny Shedden died in childhood. His father, born in New YorkThe Sydney Morning Herald, 6 Feb 1861, p81851 Census of Scotland for Edinburgh; & 1871 Census of England for St George Hanover Square, London, England. of Scottish paternity and schooled in Scotland, had made his fortune as a merchant in Calcutta, India, before setting up home in Palmira Square, Brighton. William Ralston Shedden-Ralston spent most of his early years there.
While Corfield felt that the pair setting up home was moving too fast, in the long-run it would benefit Freya. She added that Freya would mess things up "quite wonderfully" which sets the scene of the relationship that will not run smoothly. It was noted that a Doctors storyline never usually develops without problems. Like Corfield; Henry also believed Freya's "love-hate relationship" with Kevin could cause issues.
Early in 1934 the party instructed Alfred Benjamin to relocate to Paris where the party leadership had established their headquarters in exile. Davidsohn accompanied him. They arrived in October 1934, setting up home in a small room, later described by Davidsohn as "très étroite et fort sale" ("filthy and very narrow") in the 5th arrondissement in the city's left bank district. The hostel they inhabited had a single tap and a single wc.
Dacre was one of three legitimate children of John King, born Jacob Rey (c.1753–1824), a Jewish moneylender of Portuguese Sephardic origin, who was also a blackmailer and a radical political writer well-known in London society. Her father divorced her mother, Sarah King (née Lara), under Jewish law in 1784 before setting up home with the dowager countess of Lanesborough. Dacre had a sister named Sophia and a brother named Charles.
North exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery and the New Gallery and was a member of Arts Club. He was eventually accepted as a member of the Royal Watercolour Society (RWS) and an associate of the Royal Academy (ARA). In 1884 North married the 21-year-old Selina Weetch at Bicknoller Church in Somerset, setting up home in Beggearn Huish House in Nettlecombe. They went on to have six children, including Roland Arthur Charles North.
In 1820, he succeeded Filippo Taglioni as ballet master and dance director. Leaving Sweden in 1823, Carey danced in Milan and Naples in 1828/29, Moscow in 1838 and finally setting up home in Amsterdam, where he was partner to Madame Montessu. His date of retirement is unknown. For a long while he corresponded with August BournonvilleThis correspondence is held at the New York Public Library, in the legacy from Jerome Robbins.
Royds was the son of the Reverend Francis Coulman Royds, who had been rector of Coddington and Canon of Chester. His mother was Cornelia Frances née Blomfield, daughter of Canon G. B. Blomfield of Mollington Hall in Cheshire. His wife's family was known for "architects, admirals, and bishops". His sister Norah was educated at the Slade School of art, and married Gribble, setting up home first at Henlow Grange; this made Edmund Royds the uncle of several notable people.
The Fallout Trust were formed around the crux of old school friends Guy Connelly and Joe Winter, inspired by a visit to Berlin and the music of Iggy Pop and David Bowie. The band was augmented by Winter's sibling, Matt and sister-in-law Jess, bassist Gavin Ellis and drummer Matt Watson. The band then moved to London, setting up home at 'Q Quarters', a warehouse which served as home, party venue and recording studio. In 2004 they were signed by At Large Recordings.
He is believed to have been the youngest Fellow. He chose medicine as his profession and became a surgeon, but pursued astronomy his entire life and was a skilled observer. He moved to London to study at Guy's Hospital, setting up home at West Norwood. He subsequently practised medicine there as a family doctor. He erected there an observatory with 15-inch (38-cm) aperture reflecting telescope. He concentrated on variable stars, planets and their satellites, and comets, and also observed the remnants of old novae like Nova Persei 1901.
She also wrote a well- received guide for teenagers setting up home for the first time, You're On Your Own. She continued writing short stories, and also wrote a series of stories for children about Mr and Mrs Poppleberry, "an elderly couple who always tackle problems without using any sort of violence". Hilarie Lindsay was president of the Society of Women Writers (Australia) from 1971-1973 and again in 1975-1977. In that role, she drew attention to the difficulties faced by women who write, encouraged Aboriginal women to writeJones, Jennifer Anne (2001).
If Hurd was not influential in White's appointment to Vulture he would certainly have supported the survey work. In the end White was to set roots in Jersey for the rest of his life, marrying Eleanor Egan on 24 August 1811 and setting up home in St. Helier. White was unemployed for a short while in 1812, before later in that year being assigned the 16-ton vessel Fox for survey work around Jersey. Given the larger vessel in 1817; in 1818 he was promoted to post-captain.
Superorganism only officially formed during the development of this album, having never fully met or performed together previously. The core of the band is made up of all the members of an earlier band, The Eversons – Christopher Young, Mark Turner, Tim Shann and Blair Everson. After a number of releases in their native New Zealand, The Eversons decided to move to London in 2015, setting up home in the shared East London house that still acts as the base for Superorganism. Their music was discovered on YouTube by Japanese high school student Orono Noguchi, who was at that time studying in Maine, USA.
Maria Lamb was born on 6 August 1804 to the Quaker family of Dorothy née Wright and her husband Thomas Lamb at Peartree Hill, near Lisburn, Belfast. She married William Webb on 21 August 1828, setting up home in Belfast where the couple had eleven children. Her philanthropic work starts with the creation of the Servants' Friend Society, a charitable organisation which exhorted servants, by offering rewards, to remain with their employers for the long-term. She was active in the Belfast Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society, and was one of the founders in 1847 of the Belfast Ladies' Industrial National School for Girls.
In spite of this, Anatole began his own infidelities. On 17 August 1841, the couple arrived in Paris, where they lived at hôtel Demidoff at 109 rue Saint-Dominique until June 1842, when they moved to spend a year in Saint Petersburg before finally setting up home at the Villa San Donato. Their relationship soon soured, with the princess taking Count Émilien de Nieuwerkerke as a lover, and Demidov taking Valentine de Sainte-Aldegonde, duchesse de Dino, as a mistress. Mathilde made a violent scene with Valentine during a ball and in reply Demidov slapped her twice in public.
From 1921-1925 she was a Geneva-based travelling secretary of the World Student Christian Federation. From 1926 to 1929 she was based in London, setting up home in Golders Green with the anthropologist Margaret Read, and working as a missions secretary for the British Student Christian Movement. A seven-month 1926 tour of sub-Saharan Africa, together with Mabel Carney of Teachers College, Columbia University, led to a longlasting interest in Africa. In 1929 Wrong became head of the new International Committee on Christian Literature for Africa (ICCLA), encouraging the development of African education and written literature.
Nikolai entered the diplomatic service and the young couple moved to Paris, becoming ardent supporters of Napoleon I of France and setting up home in the hôtel de Brancas-Lauragais, at the corner of rue Taitbout and boulevard des Italiens. However, rising Franco-Russian tensions forced his recall and they moved back to Russia via Italy, arriving in Russia in 1812. He fought with distinction in the Russo-Turkish War (1806-1812) and at the start of the French invasion of Russia he financed the creation of an infantry regiment (including his son Pavel as one of its officers, which he then commanded against Napoleon's forces, fighting at Oravais and Borodino.
However, she had made a lifelong friend in another Newnham College student, Susan Lawrence, one of the first three women to be elected to parliament as Labour MPs, and had also met her future husband, Harris Rackham, a lecturer in Classics at Newnham college from 1893. Harris, a brother of the illustrator Arthur Rackham, became a Senior Fellow at Christ's College in 1899. The couple married in 1901 and lived at 4 Grange Terrace before setting up home in a Georgian house at 9 Park Terrace with a pleasant view overlooking Parker's Piece in 1925.The marriage was a happy one and lasted until Harris's death in 1944.
Neeld was one of five sons of Joseph Neeld (1754–1828) and his wife Mary (née Bond) (1765–1857), of Hendon, Middlesex. He was educated at Harrow School and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he took a B.A. in 1827 and an M.A. three years later. In 1840 he was a founder member of the Conservative Club and in 1845 married Lady Eliza Harriet Dickson, setting up home in London. The same year he was appointed to the office of Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Queen Victoria, for which service he was created 1st Baronet Neeld and became entitled to the style "Sir John Neeld" on 20 April 1859.
Siegfried was a feminist. Initially the focus of her energies was on education provision for girls in Le Havre, the major port city of which her husband served as the mayor (1870-1873 and 1878-1886). There was an apprenticeship college and, in 1880, a primary school. Then, in 1885, she was involved in setting up one of the first girls' secondary schools (lycées de fille). Soon after her husband was elected to the Chambre des députés (parliament) in 1885 the couple moved to Paris, setting up home initially in a centrally positioned apartment at 6 rond-point des Champs-Elyses and moving after ten years, to what became the family home at 226 boulevard Saint-Germain in the city's fashionable Left Bank district.
In summer 1962 Frisch met Marianne Oellers, a student of Germanistic and Romance studies. He was 51 and she was 28 years younger. In 1964 they moved into an apartment together in Rome, and in autumn 1965 they relocated to Switzerland, setting up home together in an extensively modernised cottage in Berzona, Ticino. During the next decade much of their time was spent living in rented apartments abroad, and Frisch could be scathing about his Swiss homeland, but they retained their Berzona property and frequently returned to it, the author driving his Jaguar from the airport: as he himself was quoted at the time on his Ticino retreat, "Seven times a year we drive this stretch of road ... This is fantastic countryside"»Siebenmal im Jahr fahren wir diese Strecke, und es tritt jedes Mal ein: Daseinslust am Steuer.
Her first significant exhibition involvement came in 1927 when 11 of her pictures were included in an exhibition at the "Kunsthandlung Vogel" gallery in Heidelberg. A year later her 1926 work "Frühling (Spring) in Rohrbach" was exhibited at the major annual art exhibition in Baden-Baden and was purchased, in the end, by the state for 300 marks. In 1930 the city of Heidelberg purchased her work "Rosen" ("Roses"), after which she held an exhibition at the Heidelberger Kunstverein, which then as now placed its focus on contemporary art. She exhibited delicately colorful drawings, many in the Japonisme style, from which several of the more immediately appealing motifs were reproduced as picture postcards. In 1932 Senta Geißler and Albert Rohrbach finally got married, setting up home in Ludwigshafen, on the west bank of the Rhine which had been vacated by French occupation forces a couple of years earlier.
Vittorini's death in 1966 greatly affected Calvino. He went through what he called an "intellectual depression", which the writer himself described as an important passage in his life: "...I ceased to be young. Perhaps it's a metabolic process, something that comes with age, I'd been young for a long time, perhaps too long, suddenly I felt that I had to begin my old age, yes, old age, perhaps with the hope of prolonging it by beginning it early." In the fermenting atmosphere that evolved into 1968's cultural revolution (the French May), he moved with his family to Paris in 1967, setting up home in a villa in the Square de Châtillon. Nicknamed L'ironique amusé, he was invited by Raymond Queneau in 1968 to join the Oulipo (Ouvroir de littérature potentielle) group of experimental writers where he met Roland Barthes, and Georges Perec, all of whom influenced his later production.

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