302 Verbs to Use for the Word triumphed

The philosopher, not waiting to enjoy the triumph of victory, abruptly took his leave, and we, refreshed and delighted with our walk, returned home.

Being victorious, therefore, at Liparæ, by sinking and scattering the enemy's fleet, they celebrated their first naval triumph.

He recognized his unpopularity, thereby achieving a triumph in a difficult little branch of wisdom.

That one city should have produced three such men as the great triumvirate of the fourteenth centuryDante, Petrarch, Boccaccioand that one half-century should have witnessed their successive triumphs, is the greatest glory of Florence, and is one of the most notable facts in the history of genius.

All the same, the men had won a triumph.

He secured the triumph of Realism for a time and the apparent extinction of heresy.

A Spanish priest was the first to whom it was administered, in the year 1639, and even then its use was extremely limited; and it would undoubtedly have sunk into oblivion, but for the supreme power of the church of Rome, under whose protecting auspices it gained a temporary triumph over the passions and prejudices which opposed its introduction.

Among other features a representation of Cleopatra upon the bed of death was carried by, so that in a way she too was seen with the other captives, and with Alexander, otherwise Helios, and Cleopatra, otherwise Selene, her children, and helped to grace the triumph.

Had Wordsworth and Coleridge written only this one little book, they would still be among the representative writers of an age that proclaimed the final triumph of Romanticism.

to devote one's powers of painting, not to mimicking obsolete legends, Pagan or Popish, but to representing to the working men of England the triumphs of the Past and the yet greater triumphs of the Future!' Luke began at once questioning him about his father.

The idea which chiefly governed his actions was that the country should be first strengthened internally, and that afterward it would be easy for the nation to bring about the triumph of her national and political aspirations.

'Many women I know think the ideal of happiness is to be in love with a great man, or to be the wife of a great public success; to share his triumph!

The new campaign of Antony (B.C. 34) was apparently more prosperous, but it was only carried far enough to warrant his holding a Roman triumph at Alexandriaperhaps the only novelty in pomp which the triumvir could exhibit to the Alexandrian populace, while it gave the most poignant offence at Rome.

Yet it was a disgusting thing to doit certainly was; and the Sergeant would think that he had scored a triumph.

And when she saw the better feeling triumph, a tear of exquisite pleasure dimmed her eye, for in that trifling circumstance she saw the many trials and temptations of after life prefigured, and hoped they would end as that did, in the victory of the noble and generous impulses of the heart.

He obtained a triumph in spite of the fact that Spain was assigned to Caesar; for the rulers could at will grant the honors to those who served as their lieutenants.

We shall triumph because the right is on our side, and the moral idealism; peacefully if we can, and I think it pretty sure that we can, since no public force can stop a nation on the march.

The consuls at Rome are granted a triumph and the surname of "Privernas," for the conquest of Privernum.

Girolamo questioned, in his grave, deep voice, concealing his triumph.

No combat with a Ligurian or Corsican horde was too insignificant to be made a pretext for demanding a triumph.

Having thus awhile enjoyed themselves in the rustic solitude, the Queen of Cathay (for in the course of her adventures in Christendom she had succeeded to her father's crown) thought it time to return to her beautiful empire, and complete the triumph of love by crowning Medoro king of it.

The dust clouds rise; my mantle floats upon the breeze, which in my ears sings "Triumph! triumph!"

The meeting marked a great triumph for Alexander; the union of the Teutonic nations against the policy of Rome was to be delayed for three centuries and a half.

That thought was the inexplicable feeling within her that there was something in connection with that hideous crime which she ought to recollect, something whichif she could only remember what it waswould give her the clue to the tragic mystery, and for once ensure her triumph over this self-conceited and sarcastic scarecrow in the corner.

The terms merely express the nature of the schism which naturally followed the triumph of machinery.

302 Verbs to Use for the Word  triumphed