Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Now - as I was most appositely saying - our hold space is fully accounted for.
One expert very appositely said that the problem with legal convergence is not so much the rules as the exceptions.
His desire is to keep us inside our barracks (or, more appositely, behind the battlements of our homes).
More appositely, who do I now vote for if I object to the nature and scale of spending cuts?
This is of course bound up with the problem of what we so appositely call 'paper fish' .
'You remind me appositely; I will take the poker.'
The market, as Ted Wragg appositely put it in 2005, is a "useful servant".
Mrs Van Rydock's words came appositely.
Women are the key voices of the chorus in Mekuyo dances as the Okuyi requires the female voice to dance appositely.
"I felt from the first that there was something wrong about him, and I always suspected that it was he who silenced Mrs. Vandemeyer so appositely.
Chiming in very appositely with these thoughts, Elizabeth put her head round the door and informed him that Mr. Hopkinson was here and would like to see him.
Against that background it is totally unacceptable for our continent to continue to be blemished by what has already been described, and very appositely, as a dark stain that is becoming darker still with each passing day.
'We are today standing at a historic crossroads,' Mr Suzuki told a conference in (most appositely) Hawaii, 'a crossroads where the many civilizations encounter each other in this Pacific region.
Harris lost out to Smith, but in 1697, after Smith reneged on a contract for a new organ at Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, Harris appositely installed the instrument which had lost there instead.
This well-meaning "reform" was intended to ensure that the people at large, rather than some junta or clique, represented each country in its deliberations; the models for this were the European Community's Council and, more appositely, the United States Senate.
Sloman referred to a (favourable) review of "The Spider" and "The Snake" in the New York Times by Bonnie Bilyeu Gordon In her review, Gordon appositely remarked: "...Crompton blends great enthusiasm with proper fairness.
It concerns the same line of business that has so far aided the development of the auxiliary economy of the collective, Sheaves of the Future, whose basis is none other than that honorable labor on the subject of which Comrade Mephodiev has just expressed himself so appositely."