เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

take in hand การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Eventually, in 1186, it was possible to take in hand the reconstruction-on another site-of Doberan Abbey.
  • His mind could read and grasp any book in the world in any language that he would take in hand and decide to learn.
  • People are " called on to take in hand their self-defense, " it said, adding that protecting oneself against potential assassination has become " justifiable ."
  • "We must not content ourselves with declarations of principle by NATO or the United Nations, but take in hand the putting into practice, " the premier said.
  • It was in 1556 that Cardinal Farnese commissioned Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola to take in hand the half-completed fortress at Caprarola and turn it into a country villa.
  • For a few months at least _ by demonstrating yet again that only it can take in hand, if not resolve, a crisis which threatens the security of the old continent.
  • Maher said he told Powell that he hoped that " what happened will accelerate the process allowing the Iraqi people to recover their sovereignty and take in hand the country's affairs as soon as possible ."
  • Under the French Directory he returned to France in February 1797 to take in hand the electoral campaign of the royalist party, with some success, though he was not elected to the " Council of Five Hundred ".
  • Wise men ought to se what they do, to examine before they speake; to prove before they take in hand; to beware whose company they use; and, above all things, to whom they truste . |  Charles Bailly ."
  • The main objective that the HIPC Initiative addressed was debt relief, and the beneficiary countries had to take in hand their daily debt management responsibilities, among those, to maintain an accurate data base of all public, domestic and external, public debt.
  • "There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things, " wrote the Renaissance political strategist Niccol Machiavelli.
  • Embroidered by a woman named Ann Holewil in silk floss on a natural linen ground, it has a verse, with the spelling of its day, that reads : " Look well to what you take in hand, for larning is better then house or land.
  • Zugaza has also decided to take in hand what is known as the dispersed Prado, 3, 500 or so paintings from the museum's collection of 15, 000 artworks that have long been loaned _ and in many cases forgotten _ to provincial museums, government offices and Spanish embassies around the world.
  • In his private conference room, tucked away beside his formal midtown Manhattan office, Henry R . Kravis keeps a framed quotation : " There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its outcome, than to take the lead in introducing a new order of things ."
  • It was resolved, " That a committee of three be created to take in hand the matter of starting an academy . " On March 27, 1918 through a special session of Oklahoma Convention, the General Conference Mennonite Churches adopted the school as its field of service and the Meno Preparatory School became the Oklahoma Bible Academy, using the original buildings and an expanded curriculum.
  • In a prefatory note to the'Panegyrick'he threatens that'the author, according as these find acceptance, intends a larger book of poems .'Then he enumerates the subjects that he intends to take in hand, among which are'Christ's Love to his Church, shadowed out in Joseph and Potiphar's Daughter in a familiar Dialogue betwixt them, " Two Lovers in one Heart, " The Young Man's speech to a silent Woman,'& c.