1.
” Sam went to shower whilst Tatania arose from the massage table with some relief, shaking her head
2.
Matt: 9:7: And he arose, and departed to his house
3.
Samuel arose and went to Eli, and said, here am I; for thou
4.
And he arose and went to Eli, and said, here am I; for thou
5.
That morning, when the light arose, God came upon Adam like a father to a crying child
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Weak instead of strong – When challenges to the Almighty God arose, Zedekiah
7.
Every time the need arose I concentrated on the geography of my new home for a moment or two and then struggled up onto my knees
8.
In (Acts 6) when a need arose concerning some needy widows the apostles had the
9.
But the roiling water sloshed and splashed, and more grunts and slobbers arose from it
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He arose, went to the window and looked out; amid the wind and the swirling snow he could just make out Rayne at the West gate
11.
Rayne arose and made her way to their bed
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20And he arose, and came to his father
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7Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed their lamps
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He stretched and arose from his slumber
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The next incident of note arose from so unexpected a source, it set the family on their chairs, so to speak
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finding out more when the opportunity arose
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he arose early, washed and dressed quickly, then climbed the stairs to
18.
“But I must bring it home, or my mother will die!” Li-en looked alarmed, and a flurry of whispers arose in the room
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day - if the opportunity ever arose - he would have his
20.
Just such an opportunity arose
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safely if the need arose
22.
There were signed portraits of past Presidents of the United States who had rested their weary heads in the bed he arose from
23.
Dozens of giant stone slabs arose from the ground
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other giants arose, but it was not for him to kill more giants
25.
The pulleys squealed, and though drenched in grease, a wisp of smoke arose as the axle and bearings ground against one another
26.
At her words, a great murmur arose through the room and all eyes seemed to fall on him
27.
How could they? Having shared her bed before, over and over again, he had grown accustomed to quenching his lust as soon as it arose
28.
"Aaaaaa," he sucked in the air as he arose, his hair and beard dripping wet, spilling water all around him
29.
Brice had seen the destruction of Lock Core first hand, watched as the darkness arose and swallowed the night
30.
She arose as soon as it was light enough to see
31.
Whatever, therefore, may have been the increase in the quantity of the precious metals, which, during the period between the middle of the fourteenth and that of the sixteenth century, arose from the increase of wealth and improvement, it could have no tendency to diminish their value, either in Great Britain, or in my other part of Europe
32.
But the darkness arose once more
33.
But some weren’t convinced, nervous murmurs arose (so too did flaming halos) as the ship decelerated and prepared to enter the shield wall
34.
A short time later he arose, completely restored
35.
Even the Brother Moons stood sentry over the Gate; first Harbos arose in the eastern sky, the massive crater on its face like a watchful eye, followed shortly by his little brother, Minos, just barely peeking over the Gorian Range to the north
36.
“We should not be held responsible for the direct communication Of the subject” Monk-Key 1 continued speaking as it gazed at The red letter picture, “such arose out of new linguistic games Which magnified consciousness beyond human comprehension—
37.
He did go for it now, getting what he wanted every present moment that the urge arose
38.
That part of the king's revenue which arose from such poll-taxes in any particular town, used commonly to be let in farm, during a term of years, for a rent certain, sometimes to the sheriff of the county, and sometimes to other persons
39.
The burghers themselves frequently got credit enough to be admitted to farm the revenues of this sort winch arose out of their own town, they becoming jointly and severally answerable for the whole rent
40.
If you except Venice, for of that city the history is somewhat different, it is the history of all the considerable Italian republics, of which so great a number arose and perished between the end of the twelfth and the beginning of the sixteenth century
41.
But though this institution necessarily tended to strengthen the authority of the king, and to weaken that of the great proprietors, it could not do either sufficiently for establishing order and good government among the inhabitants of the country; because it could not alter sufficiently that state of property and manners from which the disorders arose
42.
The crowd was silent for a while and then an audible murmuring arose
43.
A buzz of excitement arose among the onlookers who heard her words
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Not only no great convulsion, but no sensible disorder, arose from so great a change in the situation of more than 100,000 men, all accustomed to the use of arms, and many of them to rapine and plunder
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arose with a face of adherent focus
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After the music had finished Alistair arose and with a brief raise of his eyebrows indicated that Monty was to follow
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Hatred arose in him, a raw animal anger
48.
The invitation to become a permanent resident arose soon after, and that’s when I decided it was time to move on
49.
In an ancient battle, there was no noise but what arose from the human voice ; there was no smoke, there was no invisible cause of wounds or death
50.
The first English embassies to Russia arose altogether from commercial interests
51.
Early the next morning before the sun arose, we began our journey across the Plain
52.
Rather than just send audio transmissions via these masts, the electronics boffins of the colony had set up a wide area wireless data network to allow all the different geographical locations to remain in constant contact, allowing both voice communication and data flow between them, even video when the need arose
53.
As he did, I arose, straightened my clothing and started to place my hair on top of my head
54.
” We were used to being around our animals at home, even sleeping with them when the need arose
55.
The court of the Mayor of Calcutta, originally instituted for the trial of mercantile causes, which arose in the city and neighbourlood, had gradually extended its jurisdiction with the extension of the empire
56.
principles of good and bad reasoning, necessarily arose out of the observations which a scrutiny of this kind gave occasion to ; though, in its origin, posterior both to physics and to ethics, it was commonly taught, not indeed in all, but in the greater part of the ancient schools of philosophy, previously to either of those sciences
57.
I arose and stretched in the freshness of the morning air
58.
Till about the time of Marcus Antoninus, however, no teacher appears to have had any salary from the public, or to have had any other emoluments, but what arose from the honorarius or fees of his scholars
59.
And in this manner ecclesiastical establishments, though commonly they arose at first from religious views, prove in the end advantageous to the political interests of society
60.
The power of the church was, by that time, very nearly reduced, through the greater part of Europe, to what arose from their spiritual authority ; and even that spiritual authority was much weakened, when it ceased to he supported by the charity and hospitality of the clergy
61.
When the followers of the reformation in one country, therefore, happened to differ from their brethren in another, as they had no common judge to appeal to, the dispute could never be decided; and many such disputes arose among them
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I arose, picked up his hand and squeezed it
63.
Jesus and His disciples were in Peter"s boat when a storm arose
64.
I arose, staggered, more than walked, back to the table
65.
In the morning we arose and had breakfast with our fellow mates who formed the second batch of men going on leave we mounted the transport and first it dropped us at the delousing centre then when we were finished it took us on the first stage of our leave journey
66.
In the morning Helen had already got up and dressed and was about the house doing something when I arose so the first thing I did on getting dressed was to go and see how Rosie was
67.
To these must be added several other sums, which, as they arose out of the late war, ought perhaps to be considered as deductions from the expenses of it
68.
His fame always arose from knowledge of war
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And it came to pass, when the Philistine arose, and came, and drew nigh to meet David, that David hastened, and ran toward the army to meet the Philistine
70.
After Lincoln was shot and he lay dying, the argument arose again, but in this case, less than three hours after Lincoln’s death, precedence prevailed and Andrew Johnson was sworn in
71.
Did that include him? Did she just see him as entertainment whilst she was in this country? If the opportunity to return to Japan arose, would she cast him aside? He wanted to throw these questions at her, to demand some answers
72.
her success arose from the ruthlessness for which she prosecuted her missions—a ruthlessness that
73.
“The situation arose quickly, and I just left, that’s all
74.
I cannot see why the need arose to spray them because they are so easy to arrest
75.
In Cuba it was frequently impossible even to discover the regiment of a wounded or dead man, countless mistakes arose, and for weeks families at home endured a terrible suspense, when some loved one, whose body had probably been buried without identity by a fatigue party, was posted as missing
76.
Before she could decide whose troops approached, another collection of voices and clanking armor arose from the other side of the yard
77.
She shuffled forward, tensing to spring if an opportunity arose
78.
I don't know of a single instance where the need arose for him to do so which is also for the better as a MAG spews out hundreds of bullets per minute and it would have killed many including some of us though it is an accurate weapon
79.
ambassador of Spain, the Count of Gondemar, arose in the place of
80.
Meeting infrequently, usually when a crisis arose, they promulgated their decisions and of necessity, most badgers accepted their rulings
81.
Then slowly, from somewhere deep inside him, a darkness arose
82.
It was this family that I wanted to bring to Poland, but only when the opportunity arose
83.
Other terrorists arose during Reconstruction, the Red Shirts in Mississippi and the White League in Louisiana
84.
Heat arose from Caroline’s neck and she could feel her ears and her cheeks reddening
85.
There was another pivoting pin, and an arm, and a cable to release it when the need to re-load arose
86.
If the need arose they disciplined and re-enlightened
87.
They would have a completely private dinner out on deck as most of the other boats were unoccupied, their owners, who arose before dawn, home resting with their families
88.
He was then mildly but forcibly pushed, as if he had to be reminded that they were there to ensure his concordance and cooperation, or club him unconscious and fetch him themselves in front of the Patriarch, if the need arose
89.
He would just have to swim through the wave of the coming difficulties as they arose stoically
90.
They arose early each morning and were usually moving shortly after the sun was above the horizon
91.
Before Colling left, the major asked if he would be available as an interpreter, if the need arose, and Colling agreed that he would do so
92.
It has nurtured the city-state of Ur, in the south-central part, “the land between the rivers” and many of the successor civilizations including Babylon and Assyrian Nineveh, which arose at the base of the northern plateau and in the uppermost portion of this long plain
93.
She stood as she reached for her own supply and poured out a little over her fingers in reply as she said, “Water!” He shouted his word again as he also arose
94.
Suddenly an answer arose from there, rising in volume in support of her anguished cry
95.
Colling asked questions of the young officer when the occasion arose, and feigned enthusiastic envy when Pankovski boasted that he had once been selected to serve in an honor guard for the Great Comrade Stalin, and had stood “no more than three meters from the Great Man himself
96.
Could this be another example of the shortcomings of oral history, a story told and retold countless times until only a parabolic shell is left of what really happened in the desert of the Exodus? If I’m correct in my understanding that the Hebrews of the Exodus who fled Egypt of necessity reverted to an oral history tradition, as well as pastoral ways, then this story after a myriad of repetitions would have lost much of the context out of which it arose
97.
Nicole simply nodded and the guard stood behind her holding his rifle with both hands, the butt of the stock extended, ready to smash a couple of bones if the need arose
98.
But, also in 300 years from Constantine’s institution of the new faith in AD 325, a source of extreme threat arose to smite Christians who seemed more diligent in their warring with each other than they were with those who surrounded them
99.
[It] arose out of dissensions at Carthage over readmission to the church of those who, during the persecutions of Diocletian, had denied the faith by counseling moderation or by giving up the sacred Christian books