An unlocked door will come open with unexpected ease and whap me on the nose. |
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Well, the butterfly took flight, and Digger reached out with his big paw, and gave the butterfly a whap! |
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A good kick can do the trick, so ask that quarterback of yours to have his team's punter give you a good whap in the belly. |
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She managed to insert a fairly loud whap as her fist connected with his face. |
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A child doesn't know she has hands or how to use them and in the meantime she'll whap herself in the nose or pull her own hair and wonder why it hurts. |
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To misquote Gary Lineker, table football is a simple game: four men whap a ball around for a few minutes and, at the end, England win. |
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I shoved the nose down, glided in and hit the water with a good whap. |
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Before the car even moves an inch, though, Linda has to put on her seat belt, because even a semi-sudden stop at low speed will whap her face against the dashboard as if she's a spring-loaded bobblehead. |
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Or a pair of young males, excitedly tottering after an undecided female, would pause to see which of them was the more impressive craner of its neck, or to whap at each other ineffectually with their flippers. |
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Then, when Tendulkar does get on strike, he picks up consecutive boundaries with two stunning strokes, an on-the-up whap through the cover and a sublime straight drive. |
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