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40 Sentences With "starching"

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

Belfort was 6-1, coming in fresh off his starching of Wanderlei Silva.
Browne showed him the kick at least four times en route to starching the Dutch giant.
But with his starching of Michael McDonald at bantamweight, Lineker has moved himself firmly into contention in his new division.
Entering MMA as an accomplished wrestler, Gaethje found out he has the gift for starching people and hasn't looked back.
There might never have been a more uncomfortable moment in MMA than the resounding silence which greeted that thirty second starching.
Starching Alistair Overeem and tapping out Matt Mitrione, Rothwell was suddenly taking on legitimate, skilled heavyweights and dusting them with little trouble.
Meanwhile Charles 'Krazy Horse' Bennett moved his record following his 2015 return to 4-2, starching Minoru Kimura in seven seconds flat.
Sara; her mother; and her sister, Shoshana would spend hours sweeping it clean and tending to the laundry with military precision: washing, starching and ironing.
It's hard to be edgy, Wendy's, and even the most innocuous-looking meme can be a coded message to somebody who's currently starching a white sheet.
This creates enormous collisions which give the Machidas starching knockout power that they probably wouldn't show if they didn't convince their opponents to run onto their blows.
Here she dives into Tudor daily life, trying everything from sewing and starching ruffs ("a huge amount of work") to sleeping on a rush-covered floor ("genuinely comfortable").
Pumpkin (Kristolyn Lloyd, late of "Dear Evan Hansen") is Blue's girlfriend and the club's chatelaine: cleaning, cooking and starching the sheets for the musicians and boarders living upstairs.
We talked to Pettis -- days after moving up to the welterweight division and starching Stephen "Wonderboy" Thompson -- about his next move ... and he says Conor makes a whole lotta sense.
Gustafsson was largely untouched over four rounds, having his way with the Brazilian and starching his man in the fifth round, much to the delight of the arena filled with his countrymen.
Yamamoto had proven that he was the star and after starching Kazuyuki Miyata with the finest and quickest flying knee ever to grace MMA, Yamamoto wanted to return to his natural weight class.
He picked up where he left off after starching Sanchez in 98 seconds on Saturday, his first fight since the tectonic shifts on the promotion through the Reebok outfitting policy and WME-IMG ownership.
Of the dozens of steps involved in his process, some are highly complicated and some are simply tedious, such as the repeated washing and starching and rinsing of the fabric, but all are time-consuming.
Most of the big names of the era are absent from his record and the biggest victory on it: a starching of the great Jerome Le Banner, is outweighed by three losses to the same Frenchman.
Cerrone is an old hand who is coming back down from welterweight, Hernandez burst into the UFC by starching Beneil Dariush on short notice and followed it up with a grindy decision over Olivier Aubin-Mercier.
It seems to me that Apple has been very effective at starching their hat white in 2018, and trying to separate themselves from the rest of big tech and say that privacy is a basic human right.
A couple of rough losses to Will Brooks (himself just picked up by the UFC) followed but Chandler has since gotten back on track: submitting Derek Campos, TKOing Dave Rickels, and outright starching Patricky 'Pitbull' Freire (the one who is actually a lightweight).
Pull up a chair and I will be more than happy to regale you with the tale of how His Fistic Majesty, Michael Bisping walked off of a film set and into the biggest fight of his life, starching the American playboy, Luke Rockhold for blighty.
Johnson's starching of Poirier made the combat sports world stand up and take notice, though he still finds himself assuming the role as the significant betting underdog for Saturday night—which isn't overly shocking considering Nurmagomedov's flawless 23-0 MMA career and top-level sambo credentials.
Yesterday, the Brazilian MMA Sports Court announced that UFC middleweight Kelvin Gastelum has been fined 20 percent of his purse and suspended for 1803 days—retroactive to March 11—after testing positive for carboxy-THC, a metabolite of marijuana, in the wake of starching Belfort at UFC Fight Night 106.
Had Randleman had the opportunity to work with the top coaches today who teach their charges the value of the level change in their boxing to set up their takedowns and vice versa, he could have made a habit out of starching men as they panicked over the thought of him taking them down.
Advertisement for a Cornflour manufacturer, 1894 Until 1851, corn starch was used primarily for starching laundry and for other industrial uses.
Tapioca starch, used commonly for starching shirts and garments before ironing, may be sold in bottles of natural gum starch to be dissolved in water or in spray cans.
The present administrative structure is based on dispositions effected in 1800. During the nineteenth century and well into the first part of the twentieth century, the village experienced a steady prosperity based on the spinning and starching industries.
It is recommended that before the first wash, tant saris should be soaked briefly in warm water mixed with rock salt, to prevent the sari from bleeding colour during subsequent washes. Washing with a mild detergent, followed by starching and then hanging them to dry in a shaded area will ensure the longevity of these cotton saris.
Today's shirt collars descend from the rectangular band of linen around the neck of 16th century shirts. Separate ruffs exist alongside attached ruffled collars from the mid-16th century, usually to allow starching and other fine finishing, or to make collar-laundering easier.Compare: During the medieval period and sporadically thereafter, people wore ornamental collars as a form of jewelry.
They are in charge of cooking and starching. Most importantly the women are in charge of socializing with the children. The men do all labor activities as a group. The male relationships are based on reciprocity and obligation in order to accomplish demanding tasks, such as hunt large forest game, cutting down trees, clearing plots for the gardens, and building dams and fences.
The genuine product can be recognised by feel, smell, taste, sound, a solid colour from dyeing and trademark logos on the reverse side of the fabric, a smaller than average 90 cm fabric width and stiffness of the new fabric from traditional starching which washes out. As at November 2013, shweshwe production by Da Gama Textiles had reduced to five million metres per annum.
Resham work is embroidery done with coloured silk thread. Zardozi embroidery uses gold and silver thread, and sometimes pearls and precious stones. Cheap modern versions of zardozi use synthetic metallic thread and imitation stones, such as fake pearls and Swarovski crystals. In modern times, saris are increasingly woven on mechanical looms and made of artificial fibres, such as polyester, nylon, or rayon, which do not require starching or ironing.
Men also were used as fishermen, canoeists, oarsmen, sailors, and artisans. Up to one-fourth of slaves from 1811–1888 were employed as artisans, and many were men who worked as carpenters, painters, sculptors, and jewelers. Males also did certain kinds of domestic work in cities like Rio, Recife and Salvador, including starching, ironing, fetching water, and dumping waste. On plantations outside of urban areas however, men were primarily involved in fieldwork with women.
Keiran somen in Fukuoka, Japan Fios de ovos bought from a confectionery in Brazil Like other egg-based Portuguese sweets, fios de ovos is believed to have been created by Portuguese nuns around the 14th or 15th centuries. Laundry was a common service performed by convents and monasteries, and their use of egg whites for "starching" clothes created a large surplus of yolks.Marina Alves (2008), Dos deuses. Online article, Jornal da Pampulha, Belo Horizonte, accessed on July 5, 2009.
An escoffion () was a piece of female medieval headwear which was popular during the Late Middle Ages (1250–1500). It originated and was popular in European countries such as England, France and Germany, and other Balkan states. The headpiece was made out of a thick, circular roll of material like wool, felt or silk. The material was shaped, by sewing or starching, into a double-horned configuration, with each horn sometimes being up to a yard long.
The stitches are made with a hem stitch, so that the thread securing the fabric is minimally visible from the front of the work. There are other methods to secure the raw edge of the appliquéd fabric, and some people use basting stitches, fabric-safe glue, freezer paper, paper forms, or starching techniques to prepare the fabric that will be applied, prior to sewing it on. Supporting paper or other materials are typically removed after the sewing is complete. The ground fabric is often cut away from behind, after the sewing is complete, in order to minimize the bulk of the fabric in that region.
Model of a bonsai tree, an engagement present made from is an ancient Japanese artform that uses stiff rice paper cord - also referred to as - to create three dimensional sculptures and models. The cord is created by twisting lengths of rice paper together tightly, before starching them for strength and stiffness, and colouring them for decoration. Methods of colouration include a thin, brightly coloured mylar coating, wrapping the in thin strands of silk, or simply painting the cord. There are a number of different forms of ; it is traditionally used to create decorations given away at special occasions, such as the birth of a child, weddings, and funerals.
Ruffs were often coloured during starching, vegetable dyes were used to give the ruff a yellow, pink or mauve tint.Picard, Liza. Elizabeth's London (2003) A pale blue colour could also be obtained via the use of smalt, although Elizabeth I took against this colour and issued a royal prerogative: "Her Majesty's pleasure is that no blue starch shall be used or worn by any of her Majesty's subjects, since blue was the colour of the flag of Scotland ..."Forbes, T. R. Chronicle from Aldgate (1971) Setting and maintaining the structured and voluminous shape of the ruff could be extremely difficult due to changes in body heat or weather. For this reason, they could be worn only once before losing their shape.
The pastéis de nata were created before the 18th century by Catholic monks at the Hieronymites Monastery () in the civil parish of Saint Mary of Bethlehem, in Lisbon.Pastéis de nata were created before the 18th century by Catholic monks at the Jerónimos Monastery () At the time, convents and monasteries used large quantities of egg-whites for starching clothes, such as friars and nuns' religious habits. It was quite common for monasteries and convents to use the leftover egg yolks to make cakes and pastries, resulting in the proliferation of sweet pastry recipes throughout the country. Following the extinction of the religious orders and in the face of the impending closure of many of the convents and monasteries in the aftermath of the Liberal Revolution of 1820, the monks started selling pastéis de nata at a nearby sugar refinery to bring in some revenue.

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