tyrannise การใช้
- Furthermore, the image of the English prince being a dragon figure is connected to a literary tradition of heroes slaying a dragon that has tyrannised a country.
- The Midrash consequently regards Adah as having been treated as a slave, tyrannised by her husband, who was at the beck and call of his mistress, Zillah.
- Searching for answers, the novel leaves us with a final, its most anguished, question-can there be any hope for a land in which the tyrannised become the new tyrants?
- When these magistrates " connive at kings when they tyrannise and insult over the humbler of the people " they " fraudulently betray the liberty of the people " when God has appointed them guardians of that liberty.
- Anne's dislike of him was partly the product of her dislike for the Whig Junto-the " five tyrannising lords ", which William III had shared to some extent, but far more to his debauched and irreligious character.
- Edwards took the part of Professor James Edwards, M . A ., the drunken, gambling, devious, cane-swishing headmaster who tyrannised staff and children at Chiselbury public school ( described in the opening titles as " for the sons of Gentlefolk " ).
- But, in support of this position, he looked not to western Marxism but rather into the Russian past, to the likes of Mikhail Bakunin, who argued that people were tyrannised in the first place not by economic systems but by the state and the church.
- Rong, the son of Weishi, fled and made submission to the Han, who named him : Marquis Who Maintains Virtue . A general from Suoju ( Yarkand ), named Junde, had been posted to Yutian ( Khotan ), and tyrannised the people there who became indignant.
- Unsurprisingly it is to be found in his political poetry, most notably in the portrait of the proud, triple-crowned Romania, the companion of the tyrannising Sir Burbon in stanzas 38-9 of the first Spenserian canto, and in the stanza devoted to the Roman Inquisition ( 12 ) in the second.
- Not overly impressed by Eton, as a lower boy he and his roommates occupied " an old battered warren betwixt the chapel cemetery and Wise's horse yard . . . [ T ] he food was wretched and tasteless . . . As for thrashings which tyrannised rather than disciplined our house, they were excessive.
- No huts but those constructed in the boughs of trees, or by a few hides and mats, are to be seen; no provisions are to be obtained but those from the Portuguese, or the chase; and no protection is to be afforded but that of a small guard of militia, to awe and tyrannise of the colonists.