Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"truckle" Definitions
  1. to act in a subservient manner : SUBMIT

32 Sentences With "truckle"

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

Within those two weeks, Truckle transformed his resumé and gained further internship opportunities. Networking.
Flory's Truckle is a raw cow's milk Cheddar made in Missouri and aged in Iowa (I, too, have curds in different area codes).
As your humble cheese genius, allow me to guide you in the medicinal ceremony of Cheddar snarfage, and introduce you to this week's brain-bending bliss bundle: Flory's Truckle.
By simply talking to a fellow passenger on his subway commute, Michael Truckle ended up connecting with a banker at Credit Suisse who offered him a two-week work experience.
Ted Cruz, Mr. Trump's chief primary rival, has emerged as one of the few Republicans to look beyond this political cycle, consider his own honor, and refuse to truckle to the nominee.
For reassurance, she glanced at her parents' sleeping forms in the bed at whose foot her own little truckle was made up, but they were only mounds under the white sheet, their stillness for the moment too monumental to disturb.
Chicken-liver pâté, whipped to the consistency of butter (and served with grilled slices of She Wolf Bakery's miche, the it-bread of the moment), was as nutty and pungent as an aged cheddar—which, incidentally, was also on the menu, craggy little boulders of a complex crystalline variety called Flory's Truckle, imported from Missouri.
The Fosse Way Roman road crosses the parish as a minor road. There was a Roman villa at Truckle Hill. Danks Down and Truckle Hill is a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest, as is Out Woods.
There were but two inodorous rooms, the innermost of which contained a truckle bed.
He was made to array himself in mourning habiliments, and to sleep on a truckle bed.
A truckle of farmhouse Cheddar cheese A truckle of cheese is a cylindrical wheel of cheese, usually taller than it is wide, and sometimes described as barrel-shaped. The word is derived from the Latin trochlea, 'wheel, pulley'. Truckles vary greatly in size, from the wax-coated cheeses sold in supermarkets, to 25-kilogram or larger artisanal cheeses.
Martin donated the second truckle of cheese he had won to his former running club Home Counties Harriers, where he holds the record for the 40 yard dash.
By the riverside is Enfield Park; hamlets in the parish include Helstone, Tregoodwell, Valley Truckle, Hendra, Lanteglos, Slaughterbridge, Tramagenna, Treforda and Trevia. The economy depends largely on agriculture and tourism. There was a china clay works at Stannon.
There are rare truckles aged up to 36 months. Sometimes the crust is flavoured with marcs. The truckle has a parallelepiped shape with a plain squared side 11/13 cm or 17/19 cm long and a straight bowed side from 9 to 15 cm. The average weight spaces from .
Rockefeller disagreed, saying that he saw no reason to "truckle" to Stone. In a fit of pique, Stone sold all his Standard Oil shares, making him ineligible to continue serving on the board. Rockefeller never regretted his actions. He later said that he "probably saved two or three million dollars" in profit by getting rid of Stone.
William Trumbull, the English envoy in the Low Countries, after first attempting to cover for him – but later fearing for his own position if he continued to do so – wrote to the King in early 1614: The Archbishop of Canterbury had said of him the previous year: "the man hath more music than honesty and is as famous for marring of virginity as he is for fingering of organs and virginals." The archbishop described the case to Trumbull; Bull slept in a bed with his wife and two maidservants slept in a truckle bed underneath. One summer morning Bull made one of the maids take his place by his wife, while he slept with the other maid in the truckle bed. Bull had also assaulted a church minister in front of the congregation.
Dorset Drum was a small farmhouse cheddar made in Dorset, England. The cheese was of a medium-strong flavour and the clothbound truckle was usually matured for between 6 and 9 months. They varied in size from 400g to 2kg but were always cylindrical in shape, hence the name. The cheese was produced by Denhay Farm near Bridport in west Dorset.
A trundle bed—the lower bed has no box-spring. A trundle bed (or truckle bed) is a low, wheeled bed that is stored under a normal bed and can be rolled out for use by visitors or as just another bed. A pop-up trundle bed can be raised to meet the height of the normal bed, effectively creating a wider sleeping surface when positioned side-by-side.
The bed in the chamber of dais was now described as 'ane stand bed of eistland tymmar with ruf and pannell of the same', a bed made from imported Baltic oak.Thomas Thomson, ed., A Collection of Inventories, (Edinburgh 1815), p.299 By 1644, when John Sempill was made keeper the 'Chamber of deisse' still contained a bed with a chamber pot and truckle bed for a servant, but it also contained armaments.
King's first professional victory was over Bill Clamp, an accomplished dockyard fighter in 1859. He then met Thomas Truckle around 28 November 1860 at the Kentish Marshes for a purse of £300 to be split. King had about a fifteen pound weight and three inch height advantage. He took an early lead in the fighting and though the bout went 49 rounds before Truckle's seconds ended the contest, there was little doubt that King would prevail.
Lack of a fireplace and unpanelled walls would have made it cold in winter, although warmth from the kitchen below would keep the stored food dry. The inventory of 1611 records the household had 17 beds of different types, truckle beds for the servants and grand tester beds for members of the family. Older beds were relegated to less important rooms. The Little Parlour Chamber is furnished with older furniture and used as a second-best bedchamber.
His audience, on the other hand, says Bishop, "wondered if King knew their town": white community leaders knew the SCLC's strategy. They also knew that bigger and stronger cities had eventually had come to agreements with King in return for peace on the streets. St. Augustine, though, was "prepared to die on its feet rather than truckle to King", comments Bishop. King had made a tactical decision to get arrested in order to intensify the struggle.
Truckle, for the same promise of riches; Merrilee Fancy, the most popular harlot in the bay town, finds herself in the family way and hopes to marry Sly for his wealth. None of them realize the trick, and even Able, Sly’s closest confidant and student, is unable to outfox the master of deception. It premiered on Broadway December 14, 1976 at the Broadhurst Theatre. Directed by Arthur Penn, the play featured George C. Scott, Bob Dishy, Hector Elizondo, Jack Gilford, Gretchen Wyler, and Sandra Seacat.
The Silver Horde is a group of barbarian heroes, featured in Interesting Times and The Last Hero, who see Cohen the Barbarian as their leader. The name of the group is a play on the Golden Horde and a reference to the age of its members. They are Truckle the Uncivil, Caleb the Ripper, Mad Hamish, Boy Willie, Old Vincent (both relative terms, presumably), and Mr. Ronald Saveloy (geography teacher turned barbarian adventurer), or, as the Horde call him, Teach. They are rumoured to be "the legendary Seven Indestructible Sages", previously unheard of, but "Perhaps legends have to start somewhere".
The parish church of St Julitta, Lanteglos The church of St Thomas of Canterbury A Cornish cross in the churchyard at Lanteglos; it was found in a blacksmith's shop at Valley Truckle The parish church of Camelford is at Lanteglos by Camelford though there is also a Church of St Thomas of Canterbury (opened in 1938) in the town. Lanteglos church is dedicated to St Julitta.Cornish Church Guide (1925) Truro: Blackford; p. 133 (At Jetwells near Camelford is a holy well; Jetwells derives from "Julitta's well".) Arthur Langdon (1896) recorded the existence of seven stone crosses in the parish, including three at the rectoryLangdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses.
Mine conveyances run on the guides in a similar way to how a steel roller coaster runs on its rails, both having wheels which keep them securely in place. Some shafts do not use guide beams but instead utilize steel wire rope (called Guide ropes) kept in tension by massive weights at shaft bottom called cheese weights (because of their resemblance to a truckle or wheel of cheese) as these are easier to maintain and replace. The largest compartment is typically used for the mine cage, a conveyance used for moving workers and supplies below the surface, which is suspended from the hoist on steel wire rope. It functions in a similar manner to an elevator.
Ye Horn's Inn Two miles out of Goosnargh village is Ye Horn's Inn, noted for its roast duck and incorporating the Goosnargh Brewing Company. The brewery produces a number of beers including Goosnargh Gold, Goosnargh Truckle and Real Goosnargh Bitter (RGB). Five of the 10 Lancashire cheese dairies listed on the British Cheese Board's website in 2009 are located in Goosnargh parish: Butler's, Greenfields, Mrs Kirkham's, Shorrocks and Carron Lodge.The Lancashire Dairies, British Cheese Board, accessed 27 June 2009 In July 2015 an outbreak of bird flu was officially confirmed at Field Foot Farm on Eaves Green Lane in the parish and a exclusion zone was established, within which movement of poultry, birds and mammals was forbidden without licence.
Jenkins, Nets and Coracles, page 83 Stop-nets are another type of net which are used along the Severn and Wye from boats which are anchored to withstand the force of the tide.Jenkins, Nets and Coracles, page 96 Coracle fishing also took place on the Severn, Usk and Wye but ended in the 1930sJenkins, Nets and Coracles, page 170 The coracle used on the Usk and Wye was known as the Monmouthshire truckle and was similar in design to the Tywi coracle.Jenkins, Nets and Coracles, page 174 On the Severn, three types of coracle were used: the Ironbridge coracle, the Shrewsbury coracle and the Welshpool coracle.Jenkins, Nets and Coracles, page 186 Drift netting and seine fishing also took place on the lower, wider stretches of these three rivers, where the current is stronger.
Sly Fox is a comedic play by Larry Gelbart, based on Ben Jonson's Volpone (The Fox), updating the setting from Renaissance Venice to 19th century San Francisco, and changing the tone from satire to farce. The play revolves around the character of the very wealthy Foxwell J. Sly, and his indentured servant Simon Able. Sly has the town duped into believing that he is dying, and four citizens vie for his inheritance. Jethro Crouch is willing to will away his son’s inheritance to Sly on the promise that he receives Sly’s money after Sly has died; Abner Truckle solicits his wife to Sly under the impression that it will sway Sly to name him as his heir; Lawyer Craven defends the dignity of Sly in court after the Captain discovers him molesting Mrs.
Also, the Wicked Witch was once able to annul their abilities entirely, by capturing a red Luminary (teardrop-shaped creatures who control all color in Oz) and forcing him to drain the red color from the slippers themselves. However the slippers regained their powers after the Luminary escaped. This series also proposes that the slippers do not necessarily have to be on the user's feet for their powers to work, as Dorothy once used them by tapping the heels together when she held the shoes in her hands (since the ground's sandy surface prevented her from clicking the heels together). Also worth noting in a single episode, is that Truckle, the series' lead Flying Monkey, was once able to wear the Ruby Slippers and thus utilize their powerful magic for his own whims.
In one such letter, Rev. Power wrote, "Their chief Redmond O'Hanlon is described as a cunning, dangerous fellow, who, though proclaimed an outlaw along with the rest of his crew and sums of money on their heads, yet he reigns and keeps in subjection so far that is credibly reported, he raises more in a year by contribution than the King's Land, Taxes, and Chimney-Money come to; and thereby is enabled to bribe Clerks and Officers, if not their masters, and makes all to much truckle for him."Dunford (2001), page 276. According to Ulster's oral tradition, Redmond O'Hanlon travelled to visit his family in Letterkenny, County Donegal, where they were prospering as merchants under the protection of the Chief of Clan O'Doherty and Sir John Conyngham, whose brother David had married the Count's sister.
By the 1950s it continued in only a few places, and only survives at Durweston due to a bequest in 1925. The shroving chant which was repeated at each door in the expectation of a gift of confectionary: "We be come a shroving For a piece of truckle-cheese Or a piece of bacon Of your own making So light the fire and het the pan For we be come a shroving" For many generations the people who live in Durweston have sung a collection of carols unique to their village, now known as the Durweston Carols. These were probably composed between 1750–1850, and form part of a forgotten repertory from English parish churches. These came to be known as 'gallery carols' because they were often performed by groups of voices and instruments in the west gallery of country parish churches and, until 1877, there was a gallery in Durweston Church.

No results under this filter, show 32 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.