360 collocations for deciding

"Dalton," cried Lethal, "you are in time to decide a question of deep interest;your friend, De Vere, will assist you.

The crisis of her disease was approaching, and the next twenty-four hours would decide her fate, and in consequence, my own, if not her brother Arthur's.

" "I'll tell you what I should do," answered Diggory, who seemed to have a great idea of letting the fates decide these matters: "I should write 'em all three on slips of paper and then draw one.

"Even if I did, men of" "Yes, Doctor Maryof sensitive honor!" "Decide doubtful cases against themselves in money matters.

Mary had to decide the point for herself, and quickly; the old man might be seriously ill.

"Any time a club has three games on its own grounds in a series where four victories decide the issue either it or its followers have not much chance to raise an objection.

As Napoleon from Mount Coeur de Lion pointed to St. Jean d'Acre, and told his staff that the capture of that town would decide his destiny and would change the face of the world, so the Athenian officers, from the heights of Epipolae, must have looked on Syracuse, and felt that with its fall all the known powers of the earth would fall beneath them.

He is a non (or num) peer, a not equal man, an odd manone therefore who can decide disputes.

But it is plainly a preposterous method of instructing, of deciding controversies, of begetting peace, to vex and anger those concerned by ill language.

It was originally the duty of these judges to decide all legal differences between Mohammedans, or men of other creeds under Mohammedan protection, who called for their decision.

He was a reformer of abuses, publishing the most severe acts against venality, and deciding quarrels on principles of justice.

But that fight was not trivial upon which hung the possession of Paris and the fate of France; and between these two great soldiers it was our Mademoiselle who was again to hold the balance, and to decide the day.

"The man to decide a cause with half a word," exclaimed the Master, "is Tsz-lu!" Tsz-lu never let a night pass between promise and performance.

The great inequality of numbers was sufficient alone to decide the victory; but the Queen, by sending a detachment, who fell on the back of the Duke's army, rendered her advantage still more certain and undisputed.

We had a big special meeting to decide about two things, and believe me, those two things had momentous consequences.

One of the King's retinue insulted one of the Earl of Warwick's; their companions on both sides took part in the quarrel; a fierce combat ensued; the Earl apprehended his life to be aimed at; he fled to his government of Calais; and both parties, in every county of England, openly made preparations for deciding the contest by war and arms.

He did not relish leaving her withAt that instant Mr. Dale decided Racey's course for him.

" After morning school was the time agreed upon for the dux to cast the die which was to decide his future; and as soon as the classes were dismissed, Jack Vance and Diggory met him by appointment in one corner of the garden.

And dare you vauntingly decide The fortune we must meet? "A brighter day we soon shall see, Tho' now the prospect lowers, And conquest, peace, and liberty Shall gild our future hours." The foe advanc'd:in firm array We rush'd

At school, he meets with a boy of the name of Balty Mahu, between whom and himself a degree of rivalry, and subsequently the most decided enmity, existeda circumstance that decided the character of Gurameer's subsequent life.

In a minute or two he had reached Main Street, and stood looking up and down it, trying to decide which way to go.

Let us each choose a champion and let those two champions decide the rights of this case by a combat at arms.

To speak truly, it has but one declaration to make: to proclaim anew the constitutional law, by virtue of which each State sovereignly decides its own affairs, and consequently excludes all interference of Congress in the matter of slavery.

The ancients also made use of dice, drawing tickets, etc., in casting or deciding results.

Four great countries decided the War: Great Britain, France, Italy, and the United States of America.

360 collocations for  deciding