(a.) The common yellow-flowered avens of Europe (Geum urbanum); herb bennet. The name is sometimes given to other plants, as the hemlock, valerian, etc.
Example Sentences:
(1) However, her relationship with Mr Bennet, so often seen as establishing and ratifying her status as the smartest and most interesting of the daughters, certainly complicates – if not pollutes – her standing as our narrator's ego ideal.
(2) But that was less than the 81% of Latino votes secured than Colorado’s other Democratic senator, Michael Bennet, in 2010.
(3) Hello, my darling ducks As Jane Austen's Mr Bennet might put it, I have delighted you long enough.
(4) However, clever Miss Bennet was not an automatic crowd-pleaser on her first outings.
(5) The long discussion between Elizabeth Bennet and her aunt is remarkably open: "But can you think that Lydia is so lost to everything but love of him, as to consent to live with him on any other terms than marriage?"
(6) Bates was born in Allestree, Derbyshire; and, although Jane Austen's Elizabeth Bennet had "a very poor opinion of young men who live in Derbyshire", Bates made the most of its artistic possibilities.
(7) Bharat Tandon on Mrs Bennet 'A woman of mean understanding, little information, and uncertain temper' … Alison Steadman as Mrs Bennet in the 1995 BBC adaptation.
(8) The economics minister, Naftali Bennet, leader of the pro-settlement Jewish Home party, urged Netanyahu to respond to the soldier's killing by allowing the settlers back into the house.
(9) It was Chatsworth House, I remind Cooper, that served as Pemberley in that scene in Pride and Prejudice where Firth emerges from the lake, wet shirt clinging to his chest, and turns the knees of Jennifer Ehle's Elizabeth Bennet to jelly.
(10) Bennet, who chairs the Democratic senatorial campaign committee, reportedly urged Obama behind the scenes to postpone further executive action to defer deportations, fearing the impact on tight election races.
(11) From Elizabeth Bennet and Mr Darcy to Emma Woodhouse and Mr Knightley, Jane Austen created some of the most enduring romances in literary history.
(12) You might not always want Mrs Bennet in your space, but there are worse people to have on your side.
(13) Having elicited such a speedy proposal from Henry Tilney, Austen reassures us by telling us that he and Catherine in fact marry "within a twelvemonth" of their first meeting – not much less than the year allowed Elizabeth Bennet and Mr Darcy between their first encounter and their nuptials.
(14) He was the proudest, most disagreeable man in the world, and every body hoped that he would never come there again" (prominent among this "every body" being Mrs Bennet, of course).
(15) The molecular weights of two light chains were 26K and 19.5K which confirmed the earlier reports [Fowler, V. M., Davis, J. Q., & Bennet, V. (1985) J.
(16) His old age was blessed with numerous grandchildren and he was buried in his own cathedral, where an impressive marble tomb bears witness to a long life lived always in the service of others …" PD James is the author of Death Comes to Pemberley (Faber & Faber) Paula Byrne on Lydia Bennet 'Good humour and good spirits' … Ann Rutherford as Lydia Bennet in the 1940s Pride and Prejudice film Is Lydia Bennet Jane Austen's most misunderstood character?
(17) : Twenty Crucial Puzzles Solved (Bloomsbury) Zoe Williams on Elizabeth Bennet Feminist heroine … Keira Knightley as Lizzie Bennet in the 2005 film.
(18) Naftali Bennet, the economics minister and leader of the religious-nationalist Bayit Yehudi (Jewish Home) party, led a walkout in response to what he condemned as Martin Schulz's "lies".
(19) Their mother, Mrs Bennet, was always obsessed with the idea of marriage for the girls; she tried hard to find the suitable man for each of them, but unfortunately her methods hadn't worked so well.
(20) Furthermore this device enables to designate the axis of rotation of mandibular condyles as well as to designate Bennet's angle and pterygoid angle precisely for individual setting of the SAM-2 articulator.
Jennet
Definition:
(n.) A small Spanish horse; a genet.
Example Sentences:
(1) The usually accepted risk factors for late post-traumatic seizures (LPTS) are those identified years ago by Jennet: early post-traumatic seizure (EPTS), depressed fracture, intracranial haematoma.