troublous การใช้
- Troublous Elaman is looking for the ways out of the impasse.
- Stephens says he did this " to provide a strong fortress for himself and his successors against troublous times ".
- We are not so happy in the world, when all things go well with us, as we are with Jesus in troublous times.
- He held the office during the early " troublous " years of the Colony and left the College in 1654 after it had become a well-established institution.
- Little is known of the fortunes of the Belarusian Jews during the troublous times that followed the death of Hiedzimin and the accession of his grandson Vitaut ( 1341 ).
- Probably in troublous times this subterraneous chamber was used for worship but later it appears to have been used as a charnel house : piles of human bones were found within.
- They viewed comedy as simply the " art of reprehension ", and made no reference to light and cheerful events, or troublous beginnings and happy endings, associated with classical Greek comedy.
- Of that troublous period which extended to the time of Charlemagne and later until the beginning of Romanesque art, few monuments remain that give a clear conception of the window architecture then in vogue.
- She retired finally at the age of sixty, but troublous times had put an end to the pension which she received from Louis XVI and from the theatre, and she died in abject poverty.
- He was descended of a noble Scottish family, whose younger branches, like many other scions of nobility, had found themselves obliged, in impoverished and troublous times, to seek their fortune in the new world.
- The blues, born out of the troublous mind of an oppressed people, have become a kind of universal flag of sound . . . Created as a balm and safety valve, they still serve the same purpose.
- Commenting on the rise of Shahi dynasty in Kabul / Kapisa, Charles Frederick Oldham observes : " Kabulistan must have passed through many vicissitudes during the troublous times which followed the overthrow of the great Persian empire by the Alexander.
- After a troublous stretch working as a Baptist minister he turned his back on Nonconformity to join the Church of England, where he worked as editor of " Yr Haul ", the magazine of what was then the Anglican Church in Wales.
- Snow later revisited some places from the Retreat from Mons with Haldane, who recorded in his diary ( 10 November 1917 ) Though he is an old friend of mine I have never felt the same towards him since that time & when he showed what a poor spirited man he was when troublous times were upon us.
- Leo echoed the words of the oldest known Marian prayer ( known in the Latin tradition as the Sub Tuum Praesidium ), when he wrote, It has always been the habit of Catholics in danger and in troublous times to fly for refuge to Mary . He then gives a brief history of the rosary.
- A president of the Community Welfare Council of Ontario, Dr . Conboy many times stated he felt public officials should be part of a church community . " I know my work there has been a worthwhile task ", he said, regarding his position as Sunday school superintendent at Westmoreland church . " Never did a church school have as much responsibility as it has today in these troublous times ."
- You can also meet the likes of Isaac Nathan, an English composer who collaborated with Byron before he was " ruined financially by some unspecified services to William IV " and emigrated to Australia, where his opera, " Merry Freaks in Troublous Times, " had some success; or Wojciech Zywny _ the last entry in the dictionary _ a Polish piano teacher whose students included Chopin.
- His administration of the financial affairs of the college was noted to be remarkable for its skill and success " . . . in spite of adverse conditions and troublous times . " On his retirement from Harvard in 1899, he received the degree of LL . D . After his retirement, Hooper devoted his time to the care of large trust properties and was one of the original trustees of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
- At last they stopped payment altogether; but the distress was so acute that, recollecting one or two forced loans they had made to the monarchs of England in the troublous times of old, they petitioned parliament in 1747 for assistance . [ . . . ] At Michaelmas 1745 they found themselves indebted to the said charities and their other creditors 100, 000l .; they were liable for present annuities to the extent of 7, 620l .; for annuities in expectancy, 1, 000l . a year; the whole of their income being 4, 100l .'