18 adverbs to describe how to recruiting

The war lasted two years, the army on each side being continually recruited as necessity required, so that the numbers were regularly kept up, till a great battle took place, in which the venerable Pírán was killed, and nearly the whole of his army destroyed.

The Shipping Board recently called for two hundred and fifty thousand men to be gradually recruited as a skilled army for work in shipyards.

The Incogs, with a team recruited exclusively from the rabbit hutchnot a well-known man on the side except Stacey, a veteran who had been playing for the club for nearly half a centuryhad got home by two wickets.

Soon at the king's command, like hasty streams 500 Dammed up a while, they foam, and pour along With fresh-recruited might.

Hence in the case of war, the navy could be recruited indefinitely with competent men.

The army collected by him, and mainly recruited by Catholics, was regarded with strong disfavour both by Irish Protestants and by the English Parliament, and Charles, much against his will, had been forced to disband it, and the arms had been stored in Dublin Castle.

Nominally a raw recruit, I was handed over to Sergeant John Wilson, who put me singly through the exercises without arms for about four hours on my first day's duty, which was the third day of my enlistment, or perhaps I should say re-enlistment.

Not indeed, that fleeting and superficial pleasure which needs to be perpetually recruited, but a solid and substantial one.

But Philippe le Bel and his successors, while incessantly quarrelling either with the aristocracy or with the clergy, wanted the great judicial bodies which issued the edicts, and the urban or municipal magistrateswhich, being subject to re-election, were principally recruited from among the bourgeoisto be a common centre of opposition to any attempt at usurpation of power, whether on the part of the Church, the nobility, or the crown.

The classes already mentioned have, until the present year (1913), been recruited solely for the Post Office, but the class of Women Typists, numbering about 600, are a Treasury Class, and are common to the whole Civil Service, the conditions of entry varying according to the Department.

Thirdly, the Senate, thinned by the Social War and the Varian law, was recruited by 300 optimates.

The warning that he must cease enlisting men even for this branch of the republican service proved sufficient in this case, but undoubtedly such recruiting on a small scale continued to evade detection.

Unhappily they had frequently been recruited from amongst men of no character, importing the contagion of their vices into the little colony which Coligny had intended to found the Reformed church in the new world.

METHODS AND TEACHINGS It will not be surprising to the reader to learn that a religious body having such a past and being so variously recruited to-day is far from stereotyped in method.

In both States men were actively recruited and enrolled to assist in attacking the capital.

New Hampshire and Vermont contribute a good share of the tall and well-developed men who yearly recruit the population of our Eastern cities.

The nutritive organs will not create vigorous muscles and effective limbs, unless the blood is constantly and appropriately recruited.

He was just a young, boyish fellow, with light flaxen hair and blue eyesevidently a new recruit from some country village.

18 adverbs to describe how to  recruiting  - Adverbs for  recruiting