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11 Sentences With "threatenings"

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

It was surging and bounding alarmingly over the uneven track, not without threatenings of derailment.
The same awful impressions excited by the divine threatenings and punishments recorded in Scripture, and by the moral order of the world.
He acted every part of an orator, and I could observe many periods of threatenings, and others of promises, pity, and kindness.
He made it a point to identify all of them, receiving, while he did so, scowls and mutterings, and reciprocating with cocky bullyings and threatenings.
She in her turn holds out the threat of exile and prison. It was her endurance of these that drew men to her; now she imposes her faith by violence. She craves for favours at the hand of her communicants; once it was her consecration that she braved the threatenings of persecutors.
When she received it, she stated that it is contradictory this very fact of receiving it. Reaction against her activism consisted in threatenings, defamations and even three aggressions. In January 2018, she was attacked as a reprisal for uncovering the hiding of criminal actions by the authorities. Quintana went into exile from her country with her romantic partner, Fernando Valadez.
London, Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper 1836 Hall M. On the Diseases and Derangements of the Nervous System in their Primary Forms and in their Modifications by Age, Sex, Constitution, Hereditary Predisposition, Excesses, General Disorder, and Organic Disease. London, Baillière 1841 including stroke (apoplexy) and epilepsy.Hall M. On the Threatenings of Apoplexy and Paralysis; Inorganic Epilepsy; Spinal Syncope; Hidden Seizures, the Resultant Mania; etc. London, Longman, Brown, Green, and Longman 1851 In Asphyxia, its Rationale and its Remedy (1856), Hall developed a technique for preventing victims of drowning by freeing their respiratory airway and by providing immediate ventilation, as the initial steps in resuscitation.
At that time, after many terrible threatenings of being shot to death, roasted at a fire, and the like, and some short confinement, he was dismissed. In the year 1677, he was, with Aikenhead and many other gentlemen, cited before a court in Glasgow. Finding that severity was designed against all that appeared in court, Mr Spreul absented, and was with several other persons denounced and intercommuned, though nothing was laid to their charge but mere nonconformity. This obliged him to quit his house and shop, and go abroad, sometimes to Holland, France and Ireland, and merchandise.
211 Swift emphasises the wording of St. Matthew when he says, "whose Hearts are waxed gross, whose Ears are dulled of hearing, and whose eyes are closed," and he uses "eyes are closed" to connect back to those sleeping in Church. People not attending Church is another problem addressed in the sermon. Swift states: > Many men come to church to save or gain a reputation; or because they will > not be singular, but comply with an established custom; yet, all the while, > they are loaded with the guilt of old rooted sins. These men can expect to > hear of nothing but terrors and threatenings, their sins laid open in true > colours, and eternal misery the reward of them; therefore, no wonder they > stop their ears, and divert their thoughts, and seek any amusement rather > than stir the hell within them.
It is the work of bloodthirsty fools.... Night after night those > Europeans who risk their liberty to listen can hear the emetic threatenings > and boastings of bloody-minded and reactionary civilians. They contrast the > alacrity and satisfaction which attend each contemptible operation with the > subterfuge and sloth which we have displayed in such tasks of constructive > policy as the admission to sanctuary of the Jewish refugees. In a letter to Horizon, Comfort claimed that a Nazi victory over the United Kingdom would lead to a literary renaissance, for which he was fiercely criticized by George Orwell in the Partisan Review. Comfort was an active member of the Peace Pledge Union (PPU) and Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and a conscientious objector in World War II. In 1951 Comfort was a signatory of the Authors' World Peace Appeal, but later resigned from its committee, claiming the AWPA had become dominated by Soviet sympathisers.
This is the gain which is laid up for > me. . . . Permit me to be an imitator of the passion of my God. (Epistle to > the Romans 4-6) Tertullian believes that martyrdom is necessary at times in order for soldiers in God's army to obey the command to not worship idols. > If, therefore, it is evident that from the beginning this kind of worship > [of idols] has both been forbidden—witness the commands so numerous and > weighty—and that it has never been engaged in without punishment following, > as examples so numerous and impressive show, and that no offense is counted > by God so presumptuous as a trespass of this sort, we ought further to > perceive the purport of both the divine threatenings and their fulfillments, > which was even then commended not only by the not calling in question, but > also by the enduring of martyrdoms, for which certainly He had given > occasion by forbidding idolatry. . . .

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