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"wreathe" Definitions
  1. [transitive, usually passive] to surround or cover something
  2. [intransitive] + adv./prep. (literary) to move slowly and lightly, especially in circles synonym weave

19 Sentences With "wreathe"

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

The update featured a very festive photo of Burnham, wearing a long red dress and posing by a poinsettia and Christmas wreathe.
"It's not going to be decided on the first ballot," said Michael White, a DNC member from the Northern Mariana Islands who was wearing a traditional Mwarmwar head wreathe.
Not the Pegasus on his chest or the skeleton astronaut floating on his back, though he gamely described those, but the onyx-inked adornments that cover his arms and hands, that wreathe his neck, that wrap around his shaved head.
A decade after she was honored, she is the only woman to be declared a national hero and is recognized, along the other designees with an annual wreathe–laying on their graves.
Egertorget square is a retail shopping area. Many outdoor cafes wreathe the square, with Presseklubben and 3 brødre being the most well-known. In summer, Egertorget is also home to many street musicians and jugglers.
Larvae perch on the undersides of leaves and along stems and petioles. At rest, the abdominal segments are often looped upward. When alarmed the larva essentially jumps from the host and continues to wreathe and wriggle wildly. Prepupal larvae take on a pinkish cast.
As the name suggests, mobilida cells are mobile, capable of moving about on the body of a host organism, and of swimming between hosts. This sets them apart from the predominantly sessile peritrichs of the order Sessilida, such as Vorticella and Epistylis, which, during the feeding, or vegetative, phase of the life cycle remain attached to submerged surfaces, often by means of a stalk. Like all peritrichs, the mobilids possess a spiral wreathe of cilia running counterclockwise around the oral region (peristome), at the anterior of the cell. Ciliature on the body is restricted to a posterior wreathe called the "trochal band," made up of three rings of cilia girdling the aboral region of the cell.
Another, later, example is from Lord Byron's Youth and Age: 'Tis but as ivy-leaves around the ruin'd turret wreathe, All green and wildly fresh without, but worn and gray beneath. But in the English poetry the lines have mostly masculine rhyme whereas in Greek poetry the fifteen syllable feminine line is the norm of the Political verse.
In 2007, Bedford became the first compositional recipient of a Paul Hamlyn Artists' Award since David Sawer in 1993. 2007 also saw him receive a nomination for the Royal Philharmonic Society large-scale composition prize, for his song cycle On Voit Tout En Aventure. In 2008, Bedford received his second British Composer Award for his 2007 orchestral work Wreathe.
Horace, Odes 3.4.49-51; Lyne, p. 51. The late fourth-century AD Latin poet Claudian in his Gigantomachia has Gaia, imagining the Giants victorious, propose that "Porphyrion, wreathe thou thy head with Delphi's laurel and take Cirrah for thy sanctuary",Claudian, Gigantomachia 34-35 (pp. 282-283). and has Porphyrion attempt "to uproot trembling Delos, wishing to hurl it at the sky".
Flag of Nevis. The flag of Nevis island incorporates the flag of the Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis in the top left corner. The golden field stands for sunshine. The central triangle represents the conical shape of Nevis, with the blue being the ocean; the green being the verdant slopes of the island; and the white being the clouds that usually wreathe Nevis Peak.
Prismatic clouds wreathe the > cinnabar auroras; Numinous cumuli bestrew the Eight Hollows. The Perfected > Ones on high chant in rose-gem abodes; Lofty Transcendents carol in blue-gem > chambers. Nine phoenixes sing through the vermilion sounding-pipes; The > rhythms of the void commingle in the plumed bells. With our necks entwined, > within the Golden Court I'll unite with my mate amidst the unseen realm.
Corinea wore a "watrie habit yet riche riche and costly, with a Coronet of Pearles and Cockle shelles on her head." Amphion was "a grave and judicious Prophet-like personage, attyred in his apt habits, every way answerable to his state and profession, with a wreathe of Sea-shelles on his head, and his harpe haging in fayre twine before him."Anthony Munday, London's love, to the Royal Prince Henrie meeting him on the river of Thames (London, 1610), pp. 14, 19.
However, it may also be white or wreathe or just stalks of a grass of the types found in other cultures and believed to offer similar apotropaic value. It is typically tied to the wrist or worn like a necklace, but occasionally it may be worn in conjunction with a headband or turban-like gear. Similar threads are tied to various items and the neck of vessels during a Hindu puja ceremony. The ritual thread is traditionally worn on the right wrist or arm by the males and on the left by the females.
The limestone is covered by various densities of saline sand, capable of supporting only the hardiest desert vegetation such as chiefly thorn trees and scrubs. A wide fertile strip of land exists along the northern coast on which date, almond, fig, and pomegranate trees grow. The interior contains an escarpment that rises to , the highest point on the island, to form the Mountain of Smoke, named as such due to the mists that often wreathe the summit. Most of the country's oil wells are situated in the vicinity of the mountain.
Today the award is a laurel wreathe, a diploma and a book gift worth 2500 DKK. The award is handed at a ceremony arranged by the publishing house which has published the winning book and by the Committee De Gyldne Laurbær. Early in January every year the committee sends out ballot to all the Danish bookshops, which then give their vote for a Danish book which was published the year before. An author can only win The Golden Laurel once-in-a-lifetime, so the bookshops can not vote for an author who has already won the prize once before.
It could also be the God Apollo, a "Learned" Hermes holding a caduceus and declaiming, an athlete holding some sort of prize (a spherical lekythion), or a sphere, a wreathe, a phiale, or an apple. The statue could even be the funerary statue of a young man. NAMA The statue, dated to about 340-330 BC,NAMA is one of the most brilliant products of Peloponnesian bronze sculpture; the individuality and character it displays have encouraged speculation on its possible sculptor. It is, perhaps, the work of the famous sculptor Euphranor, trained in the Polyclitan tradition, who did make a sculpture of Paris, according to Pliny: > By Euphranor is an Alexander [Paris].
He denies this, but she gradually convinces him that she can assist him with his household duties and he brings her into his home. During the construction of his most recent project, which includes towering steeples, Hilde learns that Solness suffers from acrophobia, a morbid fear of extreme heights, but nonetheless encourages him to climb the steeples to their very heights at the public opening of the newly-completed building. Inspired by her words, Solness begins his ascent to the top of the steeples. At this point the viewer discovers that most of the movie has actually been played out in the head of Hilde; Solness never left his bed from the movie's first scene and he died at the moment that Hilde, in her head, believes he has Hung the Wreathe on the new house he built for his wife.
In English heraldry, they are used in many different ways, and can be the cadency mark of the sixth son. Additionally, it features in a large number of royal arms of the House of Plantagenet, from the 13th century onwards to the early Tudors (Elizabeth of York and the de la Pole family). The tressure flory–counterflory (flowered border) has been a prominent part of the design of the Scottish royal arms and Royal Standard since James I of Scotland. > The treasured fleur-de-luce he claims > To wreathe his shield, since royal James > —Sir Walter Scott > The Lay of the Last MinstrelSir Walter Scott (1833) The Complete Works of > Sir Michael Scott, Volume 1 of 7, Canto Fourth, VIII, New York: Conner and > Cooke In Italy, fleurs-de-lis have been used for some papal crowns and coats of arms, the Farnese Dukes of Parma, and by some doges of Venice.

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