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"tread-softly" Definitions
  1. SPURGE NETTLE

41 Sentences With "tread softly"

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

Tread softly, I think, because you tread on my dreams.
These are global companies now with global reach and we should tread softly.
"Tread softly" was a good start to the Philharmonic's ambitious and timely project.
That said, EU regulators are clearly going to tread softly on the enforcement front in the short term.
I would kind of tread softly, just because, again, I live in a small town, so to speak.
" Her 14-minute piece takes its title from a line of Yeats: "Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
Beijing has had to tread softly in the region because it has close energy ties with both Iran and Saudi Arabia.
The first fruit is Nina C. Young's "Tread Softly," appearing here along with Haydn's Cello Concerto No. 8543 and Mozart's "Great" Mass.
But the HQ2 project might force the company to tread softly, especially since state (if not city) officials can still theoretically stop or at least stall their plan.
She may tread softly on human-rights issues, though surely not as softly as her predecessor—her early promise to press for gay rights will displease many African members.
"If Mr. Mulvaney tries to get $54 billion out of nondefense cuts, he will have to tread softly," Dyer said of popular programs on the nondefense side of the budget.
It was not clear if Washington had made an official request to Beijing, which has had to tread softly in the Middle East due to its close energy ties with both Iran and Saudi Arabia.
China has tread softly with North Korea, in part for fear that making it unstable could result in a massive refugee flow across the Yalu River separating the two countries, destabilizing its own provinces and creating a domestic crisis.
S. Lewis "Sleep soft, beloved!" we sometimes say Who have no tune to charm away Sad dreams that through the eyelids creep… —Elizabeth Barrett Browning, "The Sleep" I have spread my dreams under your feet; Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
That said, given how freshly fixed in place the rules are, some EU regulators may well tread softly on the enforcement front — at least in the first instances, to give companies some benefit of the doubt and/or a chance to make amends to come into compliance if they are deemed to be falling short of the new standards.
The eponymous theme tune was sung by Jim Dale. Tread Softly Stranger received its first DVD release in the UK in 2008.
Tread softly is a composition for orchestra by the American composer Nina C. Young. The work was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic as the first part of their "Project 19," an initiative commissioning new works by 19 female composers in honor of the centennial of the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. It was first performed by the New York Philharmonic under the direction of Jaap van Zweden at David Geffen Hall on February 5, 2020.Tread softly.
He followed it with Tread Softly (1952). MacDonald returned to documentaries with Operation Malaya (1953), about the Malayan Emergency. He did the science fiction film Devil Girl from Mars (1954). MacDonald directed episodes of Saber of London and worked on many other TV shows.
He was a doctor again in No Time for Tears (1957) and played a royalist swashbuckling hero of the English Civil War in The Moonraker (1958). He supported Diana Dors in Tread Softly Stranger (1958). Baker's later films included Lancelot and Guinevere (1963) and Curse of the Fly (1965).
Phil Decker is a fictional character in Heinz Werner Höber's Jerry Cotton novels. He is Cotton's sidekick and a fellow FBI agent. Subsequently, he appeared in the films Manhattan Night of Murder (1965), Tread Softly (1965) and six other films starring George Nader as Jerry Cotton. In all these films he was portrayed by Heinz Weiss.
There are some fluttering, Debussyan woodwinds—and an extended violin solo, almost a cadenza. It smacks of the Gypsy, and I wrote in my notes, 'Czardas?'" He added, "There are many musical ideas in Tread softly, and whether they cohere, I'm not sure. The work is about ten minutes long—our program booklet said so—but it sounded longer to me.
Cnidoscolus urens var. stimulosus, the bull nettle, spurge nettle, tread- softly or finger rot, is a perennial herb covered with stinging hairs, native to southeastern North America. A member of the family Euphorbiaceae (spurge family), it is not a true nettle. It prefers sandy, well-drained soil and mostly exists in pine/blackjack oak forests on sandhills, rims of Carolina bays, dunes, dry pastures, fields and roadsides.
Nader had the title role in a European swashbuckler, The Secret Mark of D'Artagnan (1963). He made Zigzag (1963) and The Great Space Adventure (1964) for Albert Zugsmith; both films were made in the Philippines. He starred in The Human Duplicators (1965) and regularly guest-starred on TV shows. Nader went to Germany to star as FBI agent Jerry Cotton in the German film Tread Softly (1965).
Parkgate pumping station is a Newcomen engine house, built circa 1823. The building is intact and houses an electric pump. Parkgate and Rawmarsh railway station and the adjoining steel works, together with other locations in the Rotherham area, were featured in the 1958 film Tread Softly Stranger starring Diana Dors. Diana Dors's co-star George Baker is seen arriving at platform 1 of "Rawborough" station.
Tread Softly is a 1952 British crime film with music, directed by David MacDonald and starring Frances Day, Patricia Dainton and John Bentley. A chorus girl investigates a series of mysterious happenings at a derelict theatre. It was made at Marylebone Studios and at the Granville Theatre in Fulham. While made as a second feature it also had aspirations to top the bill in some cinemas.
Maud Gonne's gravestone, Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin. May 2015 Many of Yeats's poems are inspired by her, or mention her, such as "This, This Rude Knocking." He wrote the plays The Countess Cathleen and Cathleen ni Houlihan for her. His poem "Aedh wishes for the Cloths of Heaven" ends with a reference to her: > I have spread my dreams under your feet; > Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
Tread Softly Stranger is a 1958 British crime drama directed by Gordon Parry and starring Diana Dors, George Baker and Terence Morgan. The film was shot in black-and-white in film noir style, and its setting in an industrial town in northern England mirrors the kitchen sink realism movement coming into vogue in English drama and film at the time. The screenplay was adapted from the stage play Blind Alley (1953) by Jack Popplewell.
Baker finally broke away from supporting parts when cast as the lead in Hell Drivers (1957), a truck driving drama directed by Endfield. Before it was released he played another villain role for Box and Thomas, Campbell's Kingdom (1957), opposite Dirk Bogarde, shot in Italy (substituting for Canada). Following this he was meant to make Tread Softly Stranger with Diana Dors but George Baker was cast instead."New Loren Subjects Revealed; Elizabeth Taylor in 'Quixote'" Schallert, Edwin.
Her last television role was in 1973 as Catherine Alan in an adaptation of A Room with a View. Her cinema films included Tread Softly (1952), Raising a Riot (1955), A Town Like Alice (1956), The Captain's Table (1959), Law and Disorder (1958), The Captain's Table (1959) and Say Hello to Yesterday (1970). In 1973 Nicholson published an autobiography, Chameleon's Dish, described by The Times as "quietly witty and generous". She died in London in the same year, at the age of eighty.
Through his words, his deeds, and the work of > his firm, he has brought to a national audience a glimpse of the unique > character and architectural culture of his home state... Frank cares about > how his buildings enhance the lives of those who use them. He cares about > how they are crafted and detailed. He cares about how they tread softly upon > their sites, and he cares deeply about the contribution his buildings make > to the architectural legacy of North Carolina.
In Tread Softly in this Place, Cleeve explores the effect of economic and political change on the various strands within the Irish population. The residual Anglo-Irish community, once powerful, try to retain a semblance of their former lives in post-independence Ireland. They fear that the eruption of Republican violence in Northern Ireland will spill into the South and affect their stability and security. The Catholic majority have risen from their peasant roots to become prosperous and politically powerful.
Crystal skippers rely on flowers for nectar and seaside little bluestem for hostplants. Retaining native vegetation in your yard, especially dune grasses such as seaside little bluestem, can help create habitat for the crystal skipper and other native animals. Alternately, you could try actively planting seaside little bluestem. Native flowers that are commonly used for sources of nectar during the spring crystal skipper brood include: Yellow thistle (Cirsium horridulum), risky tread-softly or spurge nettle (Cnidoscolus stimulosus), southern dewberry (Rubus trivialis), and coastal prickly pear (Opuntia pusilla).
Popplewell was born and grew up in Leeds, West Riding of Yorkshire. He published his first song in 1940, and his first play, Blind Alley was staged in London in 1953. Blind Alley opened to positive reviews, and was later adapted to the cinema in Tread Softly Stranger, released in 1958, and starring Diana Dors and George Baker. Popplewell owned Manor Farm, Churwell, Leeds, where he farmed rhubarb, later moving with his wife, Betty, and two daughters (Juliet and Vanessa) to Vaynol Gate, Morley, West Yorkshire.
He once told Washingtonian magazine: "To be the primary critic of a monopoly newspaper is an overwhelming role. You have to tread softly and be fully aware that your taste is not the only valid taste. All these years, I pasted in the front of my mind that there are many ways to be good." In addition to serving as chief music critic for the Post, McLellan wrote a chess column, wrote for Book World and covered White House parties and other society events for the Style section.
She was also a sculptor of portrait busts. Her sculpture of Charles Butler, done in marble, was donated to New York University. She said: "Beauty in art, in my opinion, does not consist in simply copying nature, but in retaining the true features of the subject, and breathing on them a breath of spiritual life, which should bring them up to their ideal form." An example of her poetry which showed her interest in literature: ::IN THE LIBRARY ::Speak low, tread softly through these halls; ::Here genius lives enshrined, ::Here reign, in silent majesty, ::The monarchs of the mind.
Born in Fareham, Hampshire, England, she appeared in Goody Two Shoes at the Prince's Theatre in Bristol during 1930–31, and in the musical play Balalaika, which opened in London at the Adelphi Theatre on 22 December 1936 and which ran for 569 performances. In 1945, she appeared in the 'musical extravaganza' Magic Carpet at the Princes Theatre in London. Warren's first film appearance was in Magyar Melody in 1939. This was followed by The Farmer's Wife (1941), Secret Mission (1942), Variety Jubilee (1943), They Met in the Dark (1943), Champagne Charlie (1944, as Bessie Bellwood), The Magic Bow (1946), Passport to Pimlico (1949, with Stanley Holloway), So Long at the Fair (1950), and Tread Softly Stranger (1958).
Liquid music continued its growth from 2006–09 with a rise of artists such as Eveson, Alix Perez, Zero T, Lenzman and Spectrasoul to name a few. Like the Liquid preceding it, it came predominately from the UK. These artists tended to steer away from the Amens and 808's and brought new sounds to the drum and bass scene. On 1 October 2007 High Contrast brought liquid funk back to the mainstream with his album, Tough Guys Don't Dance, releasing tracks such as "If We Ever" (featuring Diane Charlemagne) which made Radio 1's Dance singles chart, "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang", and "Tread Softly". This ended up "crossing over" and becoming one of the most listened to drum and bass albums of 2007.
Tread Softly Stranger did reasonable business at the box-office on its original release but received little critical attention, being seen as a typical crime potboiler which would be watched once and then forgotten. Its reputation was upgraded in later decades, with critics finding much to admire, particularly the cinematography by Douglas Slocombe with its authentic feel of everyday life in a steel town of the era. The main incongruity in the film is cited as the noticeable lack of Yorkshire accents in characters who were supposedly born and brought up in the area. It is also questionable whether a town such as Rawborough in the 1950s would have been the venue for a nightclub of the type in which Calico is employed, a far cry from the working men's club it purports to be.
The players faced the prospect that their wages might not be paid from one month to the next, as Leeds United seemed on the verge of terminal liquidation. In the event under Krasner's stewardship Leeds United managed to tread softly until they could be thrashed out for their now clearly unrepayable debts, large amounts of which had to be effectively written off by the club's debts as they had been taken out in the name of the now insolvent LUFC plc. Krasner and his consortium eventually sold the club to former Chelsea supremo Ken Bates, a flamboyant character who had himself recently sold Chelsea FC to billionaire Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich. Chelsea had reportedly been carrying similar levels of debt to Leeds before Abramovich transformed the west London team into a strong force in English football.
In 1953 he again played a villain in Turn the Key Softly as a crook who gets his girlfriend a prison sentence for helping him in a burglary. More nasty roles quickly followed with Always a Bride (1953) where he played a Treasury Investigator who turns bad as well as Forbidden Cargo in 1954 as a smuggler and Tread Softly Stranger (1958) where he is an embezzler. Two films he made in 1955 saw him cast in more positive roles—in March Hare he played an impoverished aristocrat riding a horse for the Derby, and in the espionage melodrama They Can't Hang Me, (which used Sidney Torch's theme music from The Black Museum for its own Title and Incidental music), he starred as a dapper Special Branch officer charged with discovering the identity of an enemy agent. One of his nastiest roles was in 1959, The Shakedown, when he played a pornographer and blackmailer.
Harvey was taken on as an assistant editor by the Boulting Brothers (Roy Boulting and John Boulting). He soon found himself in high demand, and went on to edit a sequence of British films in the 1950s and early 1960s, developing fruitful working relationships with several major directors of the period including Anthony Asquith, Roy and John Boulting, Bryan Forbes, Martin Ritt, and UK-based American director Stanley Kubrick. Harvey's first film as editor was the Anthony Asquith short On Such A Night (1956), followed by his first feature assignment, the Ealing war comedy Private's Progress (also 1956), starring Richard Attenborough and Terry-Thomas. His subsequent work as an editor included Roy Boulting's comedies Brothers in Law (1957) and Happy Is the Bride (1958), the drama Tread Softly Stranger (1958) directed by Gordon Parry, the political comedy Carlton-Browne of the F.O. (aka The Man in the Cocked Hat, 1959), and I'm All Right Jack (also 1959).

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