Another memorable experience about that time was an accidental meeting with some Gypsies.
2013, Mark Q. Sutton, E. N. Anderson, Introduction to Cultural Ecology, p. 36:
Human ecology profits considerably from such meetings of the minds.
2012, Robert Aziz, The Syndetic Paradigm: The Untrodden Path Beyond Freud and Jung, p. 227:
Ego control is about exclusivity in that it is about the meeting of the narrow objectives and needs of one individual.
2012, Joe Occhipinti, Strangers in the Gale - Book 1, p. 14:
She dove deep to be free of the turbulence caused by the meeting of rocks and waves.
2006, Frances Lomas Feldman, Frances H. Scherz, Family Social Welfare: Helping Troubled Families, p. 271:
In this connection case finding is becoming increasingly important and new programs and services have been emerging with a focus on the meeting of needs before serious problems develop.
2004, Eliezer Berkovits, David Hazony, God, Man and History, p. 87:
All encounters in this world are meetings of needs set in a context of value.
1990, Flying Magazine, Dec 1990., Vol. 117, No. 12, p. 114:
These meetings of fate happen often at OSH.
1986, Marguerite Duras, The sailor from Gibraltar, p. 49:
I'd always loved that sort of landscape — geographical, you might call it, with its capes and deltas and tributaries, and above all the mouths of rivers, the meetings of rivers with the sea.
1968, Robert S. Summers, Essays in Legal Philosophy, p. 215:
It is in the meeting of the requirements for principled decision that the qualities of neutrality and generality are achieved.
1904, Goerge Manville Fenn, To Win Or To Die: A Tale of the Klondike Gold Craze, p. 40:
He forgot that but a short time back he was advocating a brave meeting of their fate.