Sentence examples for English feast from inspiring English sources

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Purim, ( Hebrew: "Lots", ) English Feast of Lots, a joyous Jewish festival commemorating the survival of the Jews who, in the 5th century bc, were marked for death by their Persian rulers.

Planning to be on the Strip on Christmas Eve? Then consider indulging in an Italian dinner tradition — "Festa del Sette Pesci" or, in English, "Feast of the Seven Fishes" — at Giada at the Cromwell.

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Life was good in his "hotel room," as Kolesnikov jokingly called his cell: he was sleeping well, doing a hundred pushups a day, studying English, and feasting on the sausages that Viktoria supplied to him through the prison commissary.

Among the most distinguished works in this genre, which might well be called dictator lit, are Gabriel García Márquez's "The General in His Labyrinth" and "The Autumn of the Patriarch," Augusto Roa Bastos's "I, the Supreme," Tomás Eloy Martínez's "The Novel of Perón," and Mario Vargas Llosa's "La Fiesta del Chivo" (due out later this year in English, as "The Feast of the Goat").

These days, though, there's a new opportunity for Russian and English speakers alike to feast on blini without much formality or a long ride down Brooklyn's spine.

You could argue that Johnson had his "tour from hell" moment in the autumn of 2009, when player after player dropped out of his autumn squad with injury and the southern hemisphere feasted on English bones.

An English statesman arrived for a feast he'd arranged to give for the Jews who were there as guests & the Araba who were their hosts.

January 25 , 1540London, England December 1, 1581 London, England Saint Edmund Campion, (born Jan . 25 , 1540London died Dec. 1, 1581, London; canonized Oct. 25, 1970; feast day October 25), English Jesuit martyred by the government of Queen Elizabeth I.

City are coming off the back of a 5-0 trofNewcastleNewcandle and Spanish newspaper Mundo Deportivo said the English club will "have a feast" against Luis Enrique's side.

Saint Boniface, Latin Bonifatius, original name Wynfrid or Wynfrith (born c. 675, Wessex, England died June 5, 754, Dokkum, Frisia [now in the Netherlands]; feast day June 5) English missionary and reformer, often called the apostle of Germany for his role in the Christianization of that country.

C. 675 Wessex, England June 5, 754 Dokkum, Netherlands Saint Boniface, Latin Bonifatius, original name Wynfrid or Wynfrith (born c. 675, Wessex, England died June 5, 754, Dokkum, Frisia [now in the Netherlands]; feast day June 5) English missionary and reformer, often called the apostle of Germany for his role in the Christianization of that country.

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