Sentences with phrase «water brook»

From your backyard deck in Summer, enjoy the relaxing sounds from the tranquil man - made babbling water brook and the fragrance from your flower beds or flowering trees.
Take Psalm 42, whose opening verse I will always hear in the unbeatable King James Version, «As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.»
As the hart panteth after the water brooks, So panteth my soul after thee, O God.

Not exact matches

I once had a dream that I was by a beautiful brook on a nice day and I could feel a lovely breeze and hear the water trickling down the brook.
; (Jeremiah 14:8 - 9) he complained at God's seeming desertion, saying, «Wilt thou indeed be unto me as a deceitful brook, as waters that fail?»
He was repeating the old story: the first birth of all peoples in God's image, stamped with reason and able to see each other as a neighbor, to be awakened in the second birth» in water and fire» of Christian charity that brooks no injustice.
For the Lord thy God bringeth thee into a good land, a land of brooks of water, of fountains and springs flowing forth in valleys and hills; a land of wheat and barley and vines and figs and pomegranates; a land of olives, of oil and honey; a land in which thou shalt eat bread without want, thou shalt lack nothing in it; a land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills thou canst dig copper (Deut.
The Bible is full of the language of respiratory oppression: «Hide not thine ear at my breathing; my groaning is not hid from thee; my heart panteth, my strength faileth me; my bones are hot with my roaring all the night long; as the hart panteth after the water - brooks, so my soul panteth after thee, O my God.»
Drops hissing in the brook, and all the suns Burst outward in their joy, and the shot child, Like the great and flaming tree, runs With fire and water, and alive and wild.
I knew that now the brook would be rushing, filled with clear, icy water from melting snow.
For the lord your God is bringing you in to a good land, a land of brooks of water, of fountains and springs, flowing forth in valleys and hills, a land of wheat and barley, of vines, and fig trees and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and honey, a land in which you will eat bread without scarcity in which you will lack nothing, a land whose stones are iron and out of whose hills you can dig copper.
Jeremiah asks God, «Wilt thou be to me like a deceitful brook, like waters that fail?»
Wilt thou be unto me as a deceitful brook as waters that fail?
The same brook was surveyed again this year but this time he found 12 latrines, four burrows and numerous piles of feeding remains, all positive field signs of water voles active in the area.
32 Northwest mollusks 404 Southeast aquatic, riparian, and wetland species Acuna cactus Amargosa toad American pika (federal) American, Taylor, Yosemite, Gray - headed, White Mountains and Mt. Whitney pika (California) Andrew's dune scarab beetle Ashy storm - petrel Atlantic bluefin tuna Bearded seal Black abalone Blumer's dock Bocaccio (central / southern population) Cactus ferruginous pygmy owl California spotted owl California tiger salamander (federal) California tiger salamander (California) Canelo Hills ladies» tresses Casey's June beetle Cherry Point Pacific herring Chiricahua leopard frog Colorado River cutthroat trout Cook Inlet beluga whale (1999) Cook Inlet beluga whale (2006) Delta smelt Desert nesting bald eagle Dusky tree vole Elkhorn coral Gentry's indigobush Giant palouse earthworm Gila chub Great Basin spring snails Headwater chub Holmgren's milk - vetch Huachuca water umbel Iliamna lake seals Island fox Island marble butterfly Kern brook lamprey Kittlitz's murrelet (Alaska) Kittlitz's murrelet (federal) Klamath River chinook salmon Las Vegas buckwheat Least chub Loggerhead sea turtle (northern and Florida population) Loggerhead sea turtle (northern Pacific population) Loggerhead sea turtle (western North Atlantic population) Longfin smelt Mexican garter snake Mexican spotted owl Mojave finge - toed lizard North American green sturgeon Northern Rockies fisher Northern sea otter Pacific fisher (federal) Pacific fisher (California) Pacific lamprey Pacific Northwest mollusks Pacific walrus Page springsnail Palm Springs pocket mouse Parish's alkali grass Polar bear Puget Sound killer whale Queen Charlotte goshawk Relict leopard frog Ribbon seal Ringed seal River lamprey Rio Grande cutthroat trout Roundtail chub Sacramento Mountains checkerspot butterfy Sand dune lizard Sand Mountain blue butterfly Shivwitz milk - vetch Sierra Nevada mountain yellow - legged frog Sierra Nevada red fox Siskiyou Mountains salamander Sonora tiger salamander Southwestern willow flycatcher Spotted seal Spring pygmy sunfish Staghorn coral Tahoe yellow cress Tricolored blackbird Tucson shovel - nosed snake Virgin river spinedace Western brook lamprey Western burrowing owl (California) Western gull - billed tern Yellow - billed cuckoo Yellow - billed loon Yosemite toad
See the place, hear its natural sounds, feel the breeze on your skin, smell the nearby plants or flowers, taste the water in that nearby brook.
I am offered a glass (not plastic, he's very anti-plastic, which he says contains synthetic hormones) of alkaline water made in a machine that «acts on the water like a mountain brook» by making the molecules more absorbable.
Schaerbeek is an Old Dutch spelling for Schaarbeek, which probably derived from «schorrenbeek», meaning a «brook with shores», i.e. elevated parts not always covered by water.
I have 96 Chevy Blazer (automatic) that's been making a slight gurgling noise (sounds like water - think «babbling brook»).
Still water in a dish can seem stagnant to your cat, making them more attracted to running water in a brook or a water fountain.
Two brooks merge together, turning clear water into a divine hue of turquoise.
It sounds a bit like a brook, but it's an electric coffeemaker, siphoning hot water from a glass pot into an old bathtub.
«Most authors have dismissed this theory with a remark similar to the following quotation from C. E. P. BROOKS (1951): the carbon dioxide theory was «abandoned when it was found that all the long - wave radiation absorbed by CO, is also absorbed by water vapour.»
• Native brook trout and Atlantic salmon will decline, but bass will flourish in warmer waters.
Nunavik villagers, meanwhile, frequently get their drinking water straight from local lakes, rivers, and brooks, which the researchers found were cleaner than the chlorinated water people had delivered daily and kept in tanks near their houses.
Our rivers, brooks, ponds, lakes, wetlands, and marshes provide us with inspiration, adventure, and solace, not to mention drinking water and electricity!
Town Brook was a fresh water source for the Pilgrims and a marsh at the outlet of the brook provided protection for their boats.
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