quakers造句1. Melville uses this chapter to satirize the Quakers.
2. The Quakers failed to adapt and almost died.
3. Quakers didn't lose their composure after the break.
4. Suddenly, goals were easy to score against Quakers.
5. Quakers were caught napping again two minutes later.
6. Quakers were easy meat at home.
7. This time the Quakers were not going to wear it.
8. They, or at least the Quakers who lived in our town, had become paragons of propriety.
9. Quakers were not disgraced in the first derby match of Third Division standing played at the Victoria Ground.
10. While they wanted to speak out elsewhere, Quakers also desired a place of their own.
11. The Quakers relied too heavily on the mighty hit rather than short passes.
12. Last term, he took the Quakers into Division Three by storming to the fourth division championship.
13. Andy Payton, later to move to Middlesbrough, destroyed Quakers by setting up three goals and scoring another.
14. But, unlike the wind, Quakers blew themselves out and Torquay took command in the late stages.
15. Quakers broke out of defence, Cork laying the ball off to give Gaughan a clear run on goal.
16. Some Quakers began to denounce slavery beyond their circle in society at large, and they drew negative response for doing so.
17. But Quakers regained full control and could have added more.
18. Quakers strongly oppose violence and war.
19. The movements they founded ( the Pietists, Quakers and Zen ) became exemplary, but they were the exceptions.
20. Yet novelty kept appearing relentlessly from the lips of stray Lyfordites, Baptists, and Quakers who later visited the wilderness community.
21. From 1655 to 1656 he was especially fearful about the Quakers and records their progress in the neighbourhood.
22. John Bond's side never got a look in as Quakers took command in the first half hour.
23. While visiting York, he became a victim of a smallpox outbreak, and Quakers there risked their lives to treat him.
24. Jamie, 18, is Boro's young player of the year while Sean, also 18, plays for the Quakers.
25. Massachusetts laws forbade people to induce others to follow false gods, and this they accused Quakers of doing.
26. During the first half of the eighteenth century no other sect was as widely spread as the Quakers.
27. Midway through that period she sailed for Philadelphia to be with Quakers and gradually came to desire the ministry.
28. Many others had reason to be grateful to the Quakers for refusing to give up their mission to help refugees.
29. The Society of Friends (in full, Religious Society of Friends), is the designation of a body of Christians more commonly known as Quakers.
30. The process began in colonial times, before the United States declared its independence from Britain, among members of the Society of Friends, known as Quakers.