The second Safar="Emptiness," because during the heats citizens left the towns and retired to Táif and other cool sites.
An excellent race; the heats with difficulty decided.
The severe running on the first day prevented several of the horses starting on the second, but the four well-contested heats for the Town and Country Gentlemen’s Plate more than compensated for the deficiency in the number of horses.
A stove in a room heats both by direct radiation and by heating the air that comes in immediate contact with it.
As on Richmond's Island so here, along the bank of the river they found grapes in luxurious growth, from which the sailors busied themselves in making verjuice, a delicious beverage in the meridian heats of a July sun.
The author's power was especially shown in investing his maidens with glamour and piquancy: Coquette and Sheila led their captives away from the suffocating dusts and the burning heats of life.
High heats and short charges in the retorts of the manufactory give a purer gas and a larger production.
Latent heats are utilised in every case when available.
In common parlance, the thermal field is the agency whereby the primary mass heats the planetary system.
The heats set in in the middle of June; the days became excessively hot.
It rouses me--it heats my eyeballs with salty honeyed warmth as I read: but it is not John Keats: who writes his own immediate magic sickness in perfect sudden obvious blood-warm golden Now!
The younger brother had, after the first juvenileheats of radicalism, become a moderate republican, holding his convictions resolutely.
But he would take care to get it before the Saturday heats were run, because once they were over the thing was done, and the principal conspirator might have refused to pay up, and Steggles couldn't have helped himself.
Ran the first round of heats last Saturday and Monday, didn't they?
In such a Tract of Time it is possible that the Heats of the present Age may be extinguished, and our several Classes of great Men represented under their proper Characters.
The slave toiling in the Southern heats is a nobler aspect of thought than the freed black upon the shore of England.
The great heats of summer were past, the cooler season had set in; besides, our path now lay through the elevated table-land of Central Arabia, whose northern rim we had already surmounted at our entrance on the Djebel Shomer.
The heats of life have passed with me, and my vision is truer, surer.
The wormheats the water, and the eagle screams; the pale of beak tears carcases; the ship Naglfar is loosed.
Or would it droop limp and lifeless, withered by the heats of the world other than the little simple, natural Dyea world?
Colonel Trethaway forgot that the heats of life had passed, and swinging a three-legged stool, danced nimbly into the fray.
She had wandered away amid the complexities and smirch and withering heats of the great world, and she had returned, simple, and clean, and wholesome.
His ministers and their agents bestirred themselves so successfully, that the heats in parliament were entirely cooled, and the outcry of the people subsided into unavailing murmurs.
Party heats began to abate; the factions in the city of London were in a great measure moderated by the union of the two companies trading to the East Indies, which found their mutual interest required a coalition.
This proposal was seconded by the court party, and violent heats ensued.
King William finds means to allay the heats in Scotland .
Such an interposition of the crown in parliamentary transactions was irregular, unnecessary, and at another juncture might have been productive of violent heats and declamation.
Heats and Animosities about the Bill of Indemnity recommended by the King.
Before the heats occasioned by this unpopular expedient were allayed, the discontent of the nation was further inflamed by complaints from Ireland, where lord Sidney was said to rule with despotic authority.
She recommended despatch and union, and earnestly exhorted them to avoid any heats or divisions that might give encouragement to the common enemies of the church and state.
The humidity of the atmosphere, and the damp heats which are nourished amidst its intricate thickets, produce violent fevers, which often prove extremely destructive, especially to European constitutions.
We forgot that five hours before we were burning and baking in the torrid heats a mile below.
When the heatsof summer arrive, its ravages will be frightful.
When a form exists perfectly and naturally in something, it can be the principle of action on something else: for instance a hot thing heats through heat.
Further, a man can better transmit to another, that which he has of himself, than that which he has received from another: thus fire heats better than hot water does.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "heats" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.