Sentences with phrase «embalmed in»

Based on past tweets, Bad Legal was named for its founding partner Arthur P. Bad, who according to firm lore, died on the job, and remains forever on the minds of his former workmates: «He's embalmed in the lobby.»
The medium gave Johns's work a particular timbre and voice, full of immediacy and also reserve, a feeling of deliberateness and of ideas embalmed in the surface.
Critic James Panero writes that «There is nothing embalmed in James Little's use of wax.
His national tradition of landscape painting, young as it was, seemed stronger, and when it was on the point of being embalmed in an Australian Academy of Art (luckily short lived) the reaction was urgent and noisy.
These famous folk, embalmed in their iconic images, are scrutinized with a mix of reserve and intimacy, humor and slight befuddlement.
It takes a while to enter into the obsessive concentration that suffuses these works, with their shifting textures, newsprint scraps and other small objects, all embalmed in cast metal.
All of this is embalmed in the ultimate Dead Island replica suitcase — the most iconic item from the original Dead Island.
As with many other portrayals of this ugly period, the movie's central figures and their experiences have been cleansed of complexity, embalmed in a sort of hagiographic glaze that makes even the pain look pretty.
Any animal or plant that sank into the lagoon was embalmed in a briny grave.
It's amazing how good just plain old catchup tastes on the end product accompanied by butter embalmed in hot soft rolls (how sad that you are allergic to garlic, as garlic toast is another perfect add - on).
According to Wiigh - Mäsak, her method is much more sustainable than our current embalming in caskets, or cremation.

Not exact matches

So we lived in an embalming station next to this church.
That summer, Johnson opened the company's first East Coast store in a small, rented house behind a funeral parlor in Wellesley, Mass., and started shippling shoes in cartons that once contained embalming fluid.
Recent queries include: «Do you use embalming fluid in your patties to keep them from rotting?»
Some are still wrapped in the plastic they came in, hanging from metal hangers, as if embalmed and exempt from the passing of time.
When you die, I promise you: I will not make the decision to not embalm you I will not make the decision to not show you off to a room full of people surrounded by flowers for 2 days I will not make the decision to not parade you through town with traffic stopping pomp I won't bury you within 24 hours I WILL allow YOUR family to make those decisions for you in respect to what you wish for in your passing.
Once you are embalmed, meaning your blood has been drained, rigor mortis has set in, and your brain and other organs have been deprived of oxygen for 48 hours you ain't getting back up off that table!
In death, the only part that a funeral director plays is the embalming.
The customary practice in our society of embalming and publicly viewing the body is one way of doing this, but it is by no means the only way.
His corpse was mutilated by a spear and left to rot in a cave because there wasn't time to properly wrap the embalming spices into the grave clothes.
Like David Fisher in the award - winning HBO series Six Feet Under, when my father died, I embalmed him.
An autopsy is scheduled for later this week to find out just what put Lonesome George under, the park is considering embalming him, and concern has poured in from all over the globe.
In just the same way, the dull materialist looks at a corpse, notes that it neither acts nor senses anything, and concludes that after you die nothing further happens to you — unless you count your body rotting away, or being burned, embalmed, frozen or whatever.
The embalming only serves to protect the body for a viewing, which is not a Christian rite in any way.
Theological orthodoxy is one thing; it is quite another to embalm Christianity in the form of nineteenth «century American Protestantism.
The other obstacle is that department of health, in the name of maximizing damage to the local ecology, frequently mandates embalming, and other things that prevent the normal decay, and return of the body to eartth.
Since professional embalming gained respectability only after the Civil War, the family most often prepared the body, subsequently placing it in the parlor or living room for viewing.
The picture is of the famous artist Damien Hirst's «Golden Calf», an embalmed calf in a plexiglass case.
Joseph died at the age of a hundred and ten; they embalmed him and laid him in his coffin in Egypt.»
But Nate, her legal next of kin, wants her buried, sans box, sans embalming, in keeping with her stated eco-friendly, return - to - nature preferences.
David gets his reality in the embalming room, conversing with his dead father, and argues for tradition, ceremony, decorum and calm.
I get a mouthful of frigid sour cream in one bite and then slack white - meat chicken embalmed with cumin.
Before then, the tricky part will be finding time to do the required hands - on work embalming on campus in New York.
Formaldehyde is a toxic gas added to many personal care products, as well as being mixed in to embalming fluid formulas.
Previous nominees Al Gore or John Kerry could jump in, validating Mo Udall's theory that presidential ambition can only be cured by embalming fluid.
The Chief Medical Examiner said: «To avoid any decomposition, we have to embalm the bodies in the various mortuaries and were equally given identification numbers.
The resins and embalming materials used to prepare the artificially mummified bodies were not found in the hair samples, suggesting that the hair was protected during embalming and then styled separately.
The platform holding the body and the other organs was put into an embalming preparation room in the basement of Wade's department and left at 90 to 107 degrees Fahrenheit.
7 So much for recycling: Burials in America deposit 827,060 gallons of embalming fluid — formaldehyde, methanol, and ethanol — into the soil each year.
Funeral workers who had performed the most embalming and those with the highest estimated formaldehyde exposure had the greatest risk of myeloid leukemia, according to a National Institutes of Health study published in 2009.
In addition to his wax «sculpture,» Ruysch also preserved specimens in his secret embalming fluid: liquor balsamicuIn addition to his wax «sculpture,» Ruysch also preserved specimens in his secret embalming fluid: liquor balsamicuin his secret embalming fluid: liquor balsamicum.
The brain is missing — apparently removed through the nose in what was a common embalming procedure.
There was a problem, though: Embalming centers need a death certificate, which in turn requires a doctor's report.
But what about the majority of bodies, which get refrigerated soon after death, then embalmed and put in a coffin?
But the embalming process used to preserve these royal remains worked in Pusch's favor.
People have been preserving bodies of the dead for millennia, from the bog bodies found in the peat wetlands of northern Europe to the embalmed and wrapped mummies recovered from Egypt's desert sands.
Dr Buckley's chemical analysis also established that the materials used to embalm the legs are consistent with 13th Century BC mummification traditions, which when taken in conjunction with the findings of the other specialists involved, led to the identification.
One cemetery in Saqqara contained 7 million embalmed dogs.
An analysis of Richard I's heart shows that Christians in the Middle Ages embalmed, which the Church has tried to downplay due to the practice's pagan origins
Egyptian records show a great many references to it including its use in cosmetics, perfumes and as an embalming agent.
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