morley in English

noun

family name; Christopher Morley (1890-1957), U.S. author, Rhodes scholar, editor; Edward Williams Morley (1838-1923) U.S. chemist who researched the relative motion of the Earth; Robert Morley (1908-1992) English thespia

Use "morley" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "morley" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "morley", or refer to the context using the word "morley" in the English Dictionary.

1. Advowson of the church of Swanton Morley and the chapel of Worthing

2. Two years later, Morley died, and his music patent fell into abeyance.

3. 3 Or even, as Morley evasively said,: A spanner in the works.

4. When looking for Mediterranean Berths for sale, Morley Yachts has you covered

5. The day after I went to fix up an appointment to see Rous again, ' says Morley Myers.

6. Then in 1963, Morley, Vine and Matthews showed that marine magnetic anomalies provided evidence for seafloor spreading.

7. Four days later the organising director, Julia Morley, resigned because of the intense pressure from the newspapers.

8. Four days later, organising director Julia Morley (1941-) resigned because of the intense pressure from the newspapers.

9. 4 Morley weaves its magic only by using a hedge fund to protect the assets of shareholders.

10. 7 hours ago · British Businessman Oliver Morley, reveals the thrilling story behind saving three lions in 2012

11. Beatrice Morley, Global Head of Casualty at Aspen Re, considers the extent of litigation concerning the cost of the U.S

12. Morley served as a radar officer for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Battle of the Atlantic during the Second World War.

13. Examples from the Corpus sitting duck • Being left in front, Morley Street looked a sitting duck approaching the line but scrambled home

14. Einstein extended this principle so that it accounted for the constant speed of light, a phenomenon that had been recently observed in the Michelson–Morley experiment.

15. Morley, T.: Joyne Hands - Akeroyde, S.: Jenny, My Blithest Maid - Nicholson, R.: the Jewes Dance (Tunes From the Attic) Baltimore Consort, Custer Larue & Chris Norman

16. Morley, T.: Joyne Hands / Akeroyde, S.: Jenny, My Blithest Maid / Nicholson, R.: The Jewes Dance (Tunes From The Attic) Album by Custer LaRue 17 songs - 1997 Start Station

17. Borstals Cox, P (2017) 'Borstals.' In: Turner, J and Taylor, P and Corteen, K and Morley, S, (eds.) A Companion to The History of Crime and Criminal Justice

18. Check out Morley, T.: Joyne Hands / Akeroyde, S.: Jenny, My Blithest Maid / Nicholson, R.: the Jewes Dance (Tunes From the Attic) by The Baltimore Consort on Amazon Music

19. Almost but not quite as amazing as their choice of patriotism for a theme was what came next: 24 aged sires (as they were called) led by patriarch Isaac Morley.

20. Some months later, FitzGerald published the conjecture that bodies in motion are being contracted, in order to explain the baffling outcome of the 1887 aether-wind experiment of Michelson and Morley.

21. ‘One of the commonest consorts in the Elizabethan period was the combination of treble viol or violin, flute or recorder, bass viol, lute, cittern, and Bandora, for which Morley wrote his Consort Lessons in …

22. To explain the negative outcome of the Michelson–Morley experiment, George FitzGerald (1889) and Hendrik Lorentz (1892) introduced the contraction hypothesis, according to which a body is contracted during its motion through the stationary aether.

23. Indian Councils Act , 1909 : The relentless campaign launched by the Congress for greater and more effective representation in running the affairs of the country culminated in the Morley - Minto reform proposals of 1908 .

24. From around this time, at Anne's request she and Sarah Churchill, Lady Marlborough, began to call each other the pet names Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman, respectively, to facilitate a relationship of greater equality between the two when they were alone.

25. 1886, David Masson, Sir George Grove, John Morley, Mowbray Morris, Macmillan's Magazine, Volume 54, page 24, And the fields; they must have been a little more trackless and irregular, more Bosky and tumbled, retaining a little more hill and dale, an irregularity which generation after

26. As Mike becomes obsessive – to the point that her partner worries if she is “back on the sauce” – Morley Analeptically deploys colour and light to reveal fragmented flashbacks of objects and shadowy corners of space that visualise repressed memories that Mike admits she cannot access, a cinematic device that makes the audience wonder if