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I've never seen men work so hard as these people, and you haven't cither.
You could stay at cither of them.
"Not by cither of us, in any case.
"Lord Rutherford, the cither of the young man who courts Julie.
However, I know my own temperament, and yours, very well--in cither case.
The cither three eyed him glumly.
And Mastiansky with the old cither.
Wasn't damaged much cither.
In a logical universe, that observation would have strongly indicated that Clayton's weapon would not work cither.
He also extracted harmonies from the Norwegian cither, the Langeleik, or the willow pipe.
The cittern or cither (Fr.
And everyone here was cither to Ista or Ruatha!"
But they were more evenly matched than cither had expected, and neither could gain the upper hand Then the Morgawr simply disappeared.
In February 1756, Captain Frederick Smith, with his company of provincials, cither completed the fort already commenced or erected a new one.
There was no animosity- cither overt or covert-toward the Englishmen, Welshmen, Irishmen, and Scots.
I had small hands and if you have small hands you've cither got to be able to hit hard as hell or else be some kind of a boxer.
You can choose there- fore cither to obey the exhortations of a twitching lunatic, or be guided by your ancient trust in the benevolence of mighty King Kragen.
And she didn't untie cither piece at first; instead she looped the rope around the door latch and left Kelder to guard it while she went to make more permanent arrangements.
That the Keroon-bred runners destined for Bcnden, Lemos, Bitra, and Nerat cither died of the plague or were not herded overland."
Grimly, he set about doing these tasks himself, while Kao and A-lu-te stood by, disturbed and worried, but unable by cither request or threats to make the men alter their minds.
Another identical derrick was built to overhang the ocean- Before cither of the derricks were com- pleted a smalt kragen broke through the net to feast upon the yet unripe sponges.
In a skewed distribution, as illustrated by my personal story, variation stretches out farther on one side than the other梒alled cither "right" or "left" skewed depending on the direction of elongation (Figure 6).
Sophie might be six months old and Daniel six years, but she was better company for him than any of his friends at the special school, better perhaps, too, Alex sometimes thought, than cither of his parents.
The "Zhetigen" ("Seven strings") could be seen as a member of the cither family, finding equivalents in China, with the strings being divided each in two parts of different lengths, the bridge being movable and consisting of small bone.
"He exhorted Klamataamorosal to issue a decree elevating to the warrior class any slave that was chosen as mate by cither a man or woman of that class, and further to obligate each and every warrior to select at least one mate from among their slaves.
Harry sat mute, nursing the citole and longing to be away.
Take my citole, or the lute if you prefer it."
There is the playing of the citole and the rebeck.
It is related to but is not a citole, another medieval instrument.
Glad I am to see that you have your citole slung to your back.
One of the young archers had a citole, though he was no great hand on it, and freely confessed as much.
Research on the citole and its development.
There was similar confusion with the citole.
No, she thought, her hands rigid on the citole, it is not that, it is something more.
Exhaustive examination of the citole, compares some places to the gittern.
She rose, drawing all eyes to herself, and slowly, slowly she began to cross the hall, the citole in her hand.
Where is your citole, Nigel?
But for the sad, splintered instruments, and the sword, still stabbing the citole to the heart, no sign of the recent bedlam remained.
It is possibly descended from the gittern and the earlier citole and pandura.
During the 14th century, the gittern's recognition constantly increased, eventually ousting the similarly popular citole.
They conferred in anxious undertones as Harry tuned the citole, reproached each other hotly but very quietly, and were deeply happy.
Guide to Early Instruments - The Gittern and Citole discussed.
"On citole, flute and rebeck."
This instrument certainly directly descended from the Renaissance European cittern and very probably derived in turn from the medieval citole.
He stretched his fingers tremulously along the shoulders of the * citole, and the polished wood was cool and smooth to his hot palms.
John Sothcott - vielle, citole, crumhorn.
A popular instrument with the minstrels and amateur musicians of the 14th century, the gittern eventually out-competed its rival, the citole.
Modern scholars debate its exact history, but it is generally accepted that it is descended from the Medieval citole, or cytole.
He turned, startled, to shake his head at the praise of his playing, and back out of the circle hastily, thrusting the citole back upon its owner.
The citole is frequently mentioned by poets of the 13th to the 15th centuries, and is found in Wycliffe's Bible (1360) in 2 Samuel vi.