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inclemency การใช้

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  • Maybe the inclemency had grounded pizza deliveries.
  • During the recent inclemencies, Jim and I have had the opportunity to do just that.
  • More than 500 men died from starvation or due to the inclemencies of the weather soon after reaching Dari閚.
  • In the Royal Shakespeare Theater at Stratford, the audience sits in comfortable seats and experiences the play without the possibility of inclemency.
  • These virgins are conveyed in the same wagon with himself over which there is an awning, to shelter them from the inclemency of the weather, and from sultry rays.
  • In the summer of 1873, he went in Lower Austria, where he painted six large frescos, well regarded, but which were lost to inclemency and the site.
  • He would not build a cabin, did not cold and the inclemency of the atmosphere force him to it, nor ever quit that cabin, did not necessity thrust him out.
  • See North Downs and South Downs for examples . " Inclemencies " means exactly what you think; the downs are protecting the area from the worst of the March storms.
  • Players have marched off to a variety of conflicts, including the Spanish-American War and World Wars I and II . Hurricanes and other inclemencies have taken bites out of the schedule.
  • Some provision was made to shelter the books and the readers in the alley way, but, most of the time, the books and browsers, suffered the inclemency of the outdoor Philadelphia weather.
  • "The playing area at Murrayfield had been covered throughout the week with straw as a protection against the inclemency of the weather and this covering was removed only just prior to the commencement of the match.
  • This year, I'll base my picks on the assumption that whatever inclemency does befall Belmont on Saturday, it may help or hurt some horses but it won't be the dominant factor in who wins.
  • French missionary traveller 蓈ariste R間is Huc has written that it is they who construct for the Buddhist temples those fine roofs of gilt plates, which resist all the inclemencies of the seasons, and always retain a marvellous freshness and glitter.
  • Whyte recorded seeing one family sheltering under boards by the side of the road and commented that'there is no means of learning how many of the survivors of so many ordeals were cut off by the inclemency of a Canadian winter '.
  • The following Generations, who were not so fond of the Study of Cartography as their Forebears had been, saw that that vast Map was Useless, and not without some Pitilessness was it, that they delivered it up to the Inclemencies of Sun and Winters.
  • Among those he encountered was Desiderus Erasmus, who declared that " The inclemency of the bull ill comports with the moderation of Leo " and also that " Papal bulls are weighty, but scholars attach much more weight to books with good arguments drawn from the testimony of divine Scripture, which does not coerce but instructs ."
  • This with the condition of my soldiers who had only light overalls on, and no stockings, and every way ill provided to endure the inclemency of the region; the bad prospect of killing any thing to subsist on, with the further detention of two or three days, which it must occasion, determined us to return.
  • Should the wind blow from the south, it comes laden with the " spices " of the sea; to the east high " downs " protect it from the " inclemencies " of March; and from the west and north the breezes which reach it travel over miles of aromatic forest and " heather " ."
  • "The Massachusetts Charitable Society, at their quarterly meeting last Monday evening [ in December 1797 ], unanimously voted a blanket for each prisoner now confined in Boston gaol, and as much fuel as will be necessary to keep them comfortable during the inclemency of the season . " In 1805 " the sons of misfortune and penury, the debtors, now in Boston gaol, partook of the joys of Independence, on the 4th inst.
  • :It is by the proper exercise of these powers . . . directed to those objects which seem to be congenial to its nature, that man feels conscious that he constitutes the first of all generated beings; that although excited by appetite and sense, he is nevertheless able to resist, to subdue, and even to act in opposition to those wants; often compelling the body to fast, when it craves for food,  to receive medicines which convey impressions nauseous and painful;  to expose itself to the inclemency of the seasons, and to various dangers : to labor and to fatigue; and patiently to submit to death itself.