(n.) A strong current of air; a wind between a stiff breeze and a hurricane. The most violent gales are called tempests.
(n.) A moderate current of air; a breeze.
(n.) A state of excitement, passion, or hilarity.
(v. i.) To sale, or sail fast.
(n.) A song or story.
(v. i.) To sing.
(n.) A plant of the genus Myrica, growing in wet places, and strongly resembling the bayberry. The sweet gale (Myrica Gale) is found both in Europe and in America.
(n.) The payment of a rent or annuity.
Example Sentences:
(1) Emergency teams are still working to reconnect 10,000 households in northern England which lost power in blizzards and gales, after all-night repairs on collapsed cables which left 80,000 cut off.
(2) This galE deletion was recombined into the chromosomal gal operons of S. typhimurium and Salmonella typhi Ty2.
(3) Large parts of the UK have been battered with a second wave of 100mph-plus gales inside 48 hours, causing serious road and rail disruption as the wind toppled a large number of trees.
(4) "The party's response has been absolutely extraordinary," Gale said.
(5) • A Perfectly Good Man by Patrick Gale is published this month by Fourth Estate.
(6) Nerdy Gales (@NerdyGales) The size of the crowd seems to be inducing the #USMNT to play like it's a scrimmage #USAvUKR @KidWeil March 5, 2014 It’s an eerie atmosphere for sure, but there are so many US players on the field who must know they are long shots for the World Cup squad and that this may be their best, if not final chance to get to Brazil.
(7) galE mutants were isolated from three mouse-virulent strains of Salmonella choleraesuis (of group C1, O antigen 6,7) by selection for resistance to 2-deoxygalactose.
(8) These mutants had a galE phenotype, as evidenced by galactose sensitivity, altered LPS when grown in the absence of exogenous galactose, and reduced virulence in infant rats.
(9) When the justice secretary took to the airwaves yesterday , his purpose was more serious – to blow a gale through a generation of failed thinking on prisons, a failure that started the moment Clarke last lost control of penal policy.
(10) Sir Roger Gale, Conservative MP for North Thanet in Kent, whose constituents include Hermitage and Middleton, has lobbied successive Foreign Office ministers for Africa over the years and is incensed that the British government is encouraging British companies to invest in Tanzania despite what happened at Silverdale.
(11) GALE runs on a PC-compatible computer with selected Pioneer LaserDisc players.
(12) The vehicle has been trundling around the large Gale crater looking for evidence that Mars was habitable in the ancient past.
(13) Vaccination with viable cells of an avirulent Salmonella typhimurium galE mutant provides mice with solid specific immunity against subsequent infection with a virulent smooth strain.
(14) The Port of Dover said the weather also brought gale force winds on the Channel while Sunderland's clash with Reading in Wearside was called off due to a waterlogged pitch.
(15) In claims fiercely denied by the party, Gale warns Farage: "There is a core faction associated with the party that is being used as a 'Black Ops' dirty tricks team against targets that include party members."
(16) The seed for the story came after Gale saw his father's photo in an old high school yearbook and wondered if they would have been friends had they been contemporaries.
(17) The unsettled weather looks set to continue throughout this week and into the weekend when strong to gale force southwesterly winds will bring spells of heavy rain across the UK at times, according to the Met Office.
(18) Two men were swept out to sea at Brighton beach in gale-force conditions, while two teenagers remained in hospital after the car they were travelling in collided with a gritter truck in South Ayrshire.
(19) States of emergency have been declared in numerous regions in the North Island, after rivers burst their banks following two days of heavy rain and gale-force winds.
(20) Through Connolly, he met George Orwell and Arthur Koestler , who became regular contributors; in later years, he appointed Eric Newby as the travel editor, persuaded Alan Ross to write on cricket and employed Gavin Young and the brilliant but deeply troubled John Gale, whose Clean Young Englishman is one of the finest English autobiographies.
Gyle
Definition:
(n.) Fermented wort used for making vinegar.
Example Sentences:
(1) Analyses of the peptide by the Edman degradation method and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry revealed that purified STII is composed of 48 amino acid residues and that its amino acid sequence was identical to the 48 carboxy-terminal amino acids of STII predicted from the DNA sequence (C. H. Lee, S. L. Mosely, H. W. Moon, S. C. Whipp, C. L. Gyles, and M. So, Infect.
(2) Gyles commission into productivity in the building industry in New South Wales In 1992 Roger Gyles QC described illegal activities in the NSW building industry, ranging from physical violence and a threat of physical violence at one end to petty pilfering of building materials at the other.
(3) The attorney general, George Brandis, said on Tuesday the government would accept the recommendations in Gyles’s report.
(4) The newly appointed independent national security legislation monitor, Roger Gyles QC, is inquiring into section 35P , which makes it an offence for any person to disclose information about special intelligence operations conducted by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation.
(5) About three weeks ago she called me and she said: ‘I’m in a good place you know, I really am.’” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Gyles Brandreth and his wife Michele Brown after the funeral at St Bartholomew’s church.
(6) The Gyles report – extracts of which were reproduced in a 1998 Master Builders paper – summarised the problems: “In between there is a great variety of illegal activities, essentially economic in nature or effect, from collusive arrangements involving giant corporations and industry associations to labour-only subcontractors paying small amounts of graft to project managers.
(7) "It was common gossip that Stuart Hall used the room for assignations," said Gyles Brandreth, the broadcaster and former Conservative MP.
(8) 18 gyle of cheese in three experimental variants were produced: O variant--control product without additive KNO3; 1 variant--with 0.01% of additive KNO3; 2 variant--with 0.02% of additive KNO3.
(9) Gyles argued a secrecy offence was needed to protect special intelligence operations, but he found the laws went too far.
(10) But intelligence officers who spoke out about certain types of intelligence operations, similar to the US National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, would not be afforded the same protections under the changes proposed by Gyles.
(11) She is a private woman, who enjoys her privacy, and enjoys normality, and she likes nothing more than going home and seeing her children and grandchildren.” “I’d say she is very warm and easy, unselfconscious and doesn’t stand on dignity,” said Gyles Brandreth, the author of Charles & Camilla.
(12) In an interview with Gyles Brandreth in 2001, Iain Duncan Smith mused that he had four months to frame his argument as leader.
(13) The acting national security legislation monitor, Roger Gyles QC, was commissioned by the former prime minister Tony Abbott to investigate the impact of a section inserted into the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act that would prohibit disclosure of any information about “special intelligence operations”.
(14) Gyles asked the media representatives about the fact the law allowed Asio insiders to make disclosures about suspected wrongdoing to the watchdog known as the inspector general of intelligence and security.
(15) Gyles recommended the laws be redrafted to create two regimes – one for “external” disclosures by journalists and other parties that had more safeguards and possible defences.
(16) Laws limiting reports on spy operations 'have chilling effect' on journalism Read more Gyles said in his report the laws should be amended to protect journalists more effectively.