References in classic literature ?
When I had read it, I stook looking at the Professor, and after a pause asked him, "In God's name, what does it all mean?
The number of pilgrims who do not have vaccination proof of stook at 848 with no cases of suspected infectious diseases among the Iraqi pilgrims recorded.
"Stook" (i.e., "struck") differs from the idea of a sympathetic connection in the violence of its impressing force, and it echoes the imagined power of heavenly bodies with malevolent rays mentioned by Marcellus in 1.1.162-63: "The nights are wholesome, then no planets strike." "Strike" in this sense exists on the continuum of formative pressures, and falls just short of "blast," which could also be used to describe the effect of rays emitted by a planet.
' The 31-year-old currently leads the national side in all three form at stook charge of the ODI side after Azhar Ali stepped down last year.
But cabinet member, and leader of Redcar and Cleveland Council, Sue Jeffrey, stook him to task.
He said ex-servicemen were part of armed forces and they stook with their serving brethren.
Some of the other activities the girls at Saint Joseph's were required to do were to make clothing for the boys and the Brothers; pick olives, grapes and fruit when in season; stook the hay (after harvesting); and make soap.
Embedded in the inviting wall are iconic images from our past, as obvious as a large York boat and church spire, as subtle as the 1817 treaty map, fur traps and a stook of grain.
Meanwhile, Augustus Adams and Philo Scyla from Elgin, Illinois, had received a patent in 1853 for a machine that required a man with a hand rake to sweep each gavel from the platform onto one of two platforms where other men (also riding on the machine) tied them into sheaves before placing the sheaves into a bin that could be manually tripped when enough had accumulated for a shock (or stook).
Results also indicated that one equity Bond stook place with a volume of 118,827 worth BD 118,827.