machinate การใช้
- He was soon sacked and arrested due to political machinating by his opponents.
- On 17 April, she moved up the coast and fired on the Machinate air field.
- Meanwhile, Nanjunda achieves a breakthrough as he machinates a picnic to, where else Edakallu gudda, with Devaki.
- She cited the example of Marguerite-Louise, adding that the Pope did not bother himself to machinate a reconciliation.
- With this strength, he is finally able to defeat the Machina Vanguard that were " pro-machinating " each of the floating continents.
- However, Pollock's own attitude toward OSCAR was more machinating : he looked forward to future cognitive taxonomies that would classify OSCAR generously as a legitimate anthropomorphic form.
- Mr . Outside, while no stranger to City Hall, prefers to sit in judgment from afar, machinating among those who seek to reallocate that power _ power they claim is rightfully theirs.
- See CIC 1917, nn . 19, 49 50, translated in; see commentaries in and . } } so canon 2335 applied only to Catholics who were members of Masonic associations that machinate against the Church.
- It was said that while serving as chancellors, Li Xun and Shu often machinated together on how they could seize more power, including in the plot that Li Xun, Zheng, and Emperor Wenzong were forming against the powerful eunuchs.
- He once fell in love with a tiger on a picture of a magazine advertisement for Brazil, and tried to machinate a plan involving Klaus'retirement just to get to go see her, before being reminded by Hayate that there are no tigers in Brazil.
- "' Mexican Catholic Apostolic Church "'( ICAM ) was a church founded in 1925 to bolster revolution and machinate a schism from the Catholic Church in Mexico with the support of the Regional Confederation of Mexican Workers ( CROM ) and Mexican President Plutarco El韆s Calles'approval.
- Again like Wotan, Sachs is an authority figure with a streak of the revolutionary, machinating against the establishment in favor of a new order, represented in " Die Meistersinger " by Walther von Stolzing, a young knight who sings songs as his heart prompts him rather than according to codified rules.
- In 1911, " The Chinese in England : A Growing National Problem " ( an article distributed around the Home Office ) warned of " a vast and convulsive Armageddon to determine who is to be the master of the world, the white or yellow man . " After the First World War, cinemas, theatres, novels, and newspapers broadcast visions of the " Yellow Peril " machinating to corrupt white society.