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    Use "land up" in a sentence

    land up example sentences

    land up


    1. But it must be considered, that the price of any instrument of husbandry, such as a labouring horse, is itself made up of the same time parts ; the rent of the land upon which he is reared, the labour of tending and rearing him, and the profits of the farmer, who advances both the rent of this land, and the wages of this labour


    2. from the land upon which it stood, and any income it


    3. She prohibits the exportation from one province to another by water, and even the canriage by land upon horseback, or in a cart, of hats, of wools, and woollen goods, of the produce of America; a regulation which effectually prevents the


    4. Such stamp duties as those in England upon cards and dice, upon newspapers and periodical pamphlets, etc


    5. I could not in a million years ever have imagined that their paths would cross and he would land up in her nest of seduction


    6. My head felt a bit woozy and, rather than land up sick in bed, I went straight to the cupboard in Dena’s kitchen where I knew she kept her medicines and took some anti-allergy pills


    7. We have more than a hundred acres of farmland up


    8. “He asked me to come up and tell you that he has decided to put his land up for sale


    9. And there were thousands to behold, now falling ‘round Me everywhere, most passing blithely down and down to land upon the Sea below


    10. At that, he said that, in the end, she would land up with some bigwig

    11. After finishing his cigarette, he said, “I took a risk on some land up in North Carolina just outside of Charlotte


    12. Though Lady Jane would surely be upset that she was not overdressed for the occasion, she would find this the ideal setting in which to explore the social structure of the South and compare it to the aristocracy of England upon which it had presumably been based


    13. There's a new land up there!


    14. Cherry hauled Roland up into the air just in time


    15. ‘Promise what,’ said Sandhya with a smile, ‘to land up in your arms in Hyderabad, or to kiss and tell about our honeymoon


    16. ‘But I couldn’t help it, knowing that we would land up late in the evening


    17. ‘What an amazing development though! But how on earth did Sathyam land up with such a dame! Maybe, owing to my destiny to have her, who knows? Whatever, won’t his friendship prove to be a thoroughfare to her favors? Just the same, won’t she need some wooing as well? I might as well dazzle Roopa straight away by flaunting my credentials right away


    18. "Yes," he answered, grunting as he bent over to gather the materials, "we were in Bestial land up north, no water in sight and very little food


    19. Unbeknown to the happy purchasers, the land upon which their homes had been built was once a quarry that had later been filled in


    20. If it falls of its own accord it is clearly tall enough to land upon the roof of my house or of my nearby furniture workshop

    21. Some several minutes later the boys were relieved to observe the falcon circle and then land upon its perch after apparently conducting a fruitless hunt


    22. He looked toward the approaching ground and saw the perfect gap in the bushes; they were now aligned perfectly to land upon it


    23. user would not land up to the same page over and over again and thus it would


    24. “I’d like to plant a small nuclear device square in the middle of that heap and blow the whole bloody island up


    25. God guide thee, Sancho, and govern thee in thy government, and deliver me from the misgiving I have that thou wilt turn the whole island upside down, a thing I might easily prevent by explaining to the duke what thou art and telling him that all that fat little person of thine is nothing else but a sack full of proverbs and sauciness


    26. It was approximately six miles across, its blue interrupted only by the top of a small volcano, Wizard Island, that rose 700 feet above the water, forming a conical island upon which twisted foxtail pines grew


    27. Nobody had heard anything quite like Bob Quine’s guitar playing in England up to that point


    28. The massive desk of a dean’s office now did nothing to reduce the Runcible dazzle, but Mercer felt his undergraduate laurels as a withered garland upon his brow


    29. In the flare that lighted the thin air of this dried-up sea of Mars he looked over his shoulder and saw the rocket that had brought them all, Captain Wilder and Cheroke and Hathaway and Sam Parkhill and himself, across a silent black space of stars to land upon a dead, dreaming world


    30. “Men like that’d litter the land up,” he said

    31. And by way of preaching this Christian gospel and confirming it by Christian example, we imprison, we execute, guillotine, hang; we encourage the masses in idolatrous religions calculated to stultify them; the government authorizes the sale of brain-destroying poisons—wine, tobacco, opium; prostitution is legalized; we bestow land upon those who need it not; surrounded by misery, we display in our entertainments an unbridled extravagance; we render impossible in such ways any semblance of a Christian life, and do our best to destroy Christian ideas already established; and then, after doing all we can to demoralize men, we take and confine them like wild beasts in places from which they cannot escape, and where they will become more brutal than ever; or we murder the men we have demoralized, and then use them as an example to illustrate and prove our argument that people are only to be controlled by violence


    32. But if we had abandoned or deferred our resistance to the injuries of England and as a pretext for it assailed France, would not the act have been idle and weak? Would it not have been wicked, to borrow one of the epithets which gentlemen have applied to the war with England, so to have sported with the public feelings and the national resentment as to have declared war against France, the minor aggressor, whom we could not touch, and to have suppressed our resentment against Great Britain, whose injuries were unlimited and unceasing, and whom alone we could reach? But why, sir, are the injuries these nations have done contrasted, and those of the one made an apology for those of the other? Why are we partisans of either? Have we no country of our own? Is there a land upon the globe so fair, so happy, and so free? And, beholding and enjoying these blessings,


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