Even if he does die in bed rather than in a noose, his last day is not far off. |
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They had some black friends who had perfected a trick of making a noose that really had a slip knot to it. |
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The masked executioner slipped the noose around Shadow's neck and slowly adjusted it to fit. |
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When an animal emerged to forage, the noose was pulled tight, preventing the animal from retreating back into its burrow. |
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Its gnarled branches twisted and turned into the air, and a hangman's noose hung from one of its thickest and strongest branches. |
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The inmate is blindfolded and taken to the execution room, where the noose is secured and the inmate's knees are tied. |
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Members of the study population were captured by placing a soft elastic noose around the perimeter of an active burrow entrance. |
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They feel the noose being tightened and they know that we have the military means to crush them. |
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His task completed, the man was taken back to the gallows and again the noose was placed around his neck. |
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Led to the scaffold from a death row cell, he was prepped for the noose by a masked executioner. |
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He can barely pay the recently increased rent from his pension money, but there seems no way out of this noose. |
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He tugged at the neck of his turtleneck sweater feeling like it was a noose tightening with each attack. |
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His lavish past has left its mark financially, and the creditors are now tightening the metaphorical noose. |
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And have you noticed, if you're a male office worker you also get to wear your own personal noose around your neck. |
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But fortunately, Peter gets hold of a rope and uses it as a noose with which to muzzle the wolf and take him into captivity. |
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He climbed the ladder leaving Garry clutching a cat box and catcher noose at the bottom. |
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Now if he could only convince himself to snap out of it before he found himself on the worse side of a hangman's noose. |
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Unbelieving, he watched the girl jump from the top of the branch with the noose around her neck. |
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It's a malevolent money noose that is tightening just as the festive season's bells and lights are beginning to chime and shine. |
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She shaped the words, unable to speak them with the knot of his noose twisting into her voicebox. |
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Then, one day in 1999, according to Elliott, a hangman's noose appeared near his desk. |
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Koras yelled in anger as the noose was taken from Asedrisean's neck and the ropes were cut from his wrists. |
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To achieve near-asphyxiation, masochists might place a noose around their necks. |
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This was the awakening, the realization that I had officially and for all time put my head in a noose and the hangman was taking his sweet time. |
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More macabre was the tailor's dummy strung up from a noose dangling off scaffolding on a building being demolished on Micklegate. |
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In the most disturbing image of all, the young son of a Klansman gazes with casual indifference at a noose where a black-faced doll hangs. |
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Another doctor who killed his three wives, this time with aconite, escaped the hangman's noose by taking cyanide. |
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A country like the United States, they give them enough rope to tie the noose around their neck several times. |
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It's like a noose, it's like a ball and chain around the U.S. economy's foot or neck, or wherever the heck it is. |
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They stood by a gallows holding ropes which were strung over a pulley to become a noose holding up a body. |
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It's painful to say that in front of them, but she was brutally murdered with a garrote, a device used like a noose with a handle. |
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Wait until she feels the noose tighten about her neck and Manx arrows pierce her cold heart upon the walls of Peel! |
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They were all angling for a better view of a simple wooden scaffold bearing a lone noose, which dangled in the breeze. |
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Some men try to tie a noose round the neck of the statue, but nothing happens. |
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In the modern world it is only despotisms which have recourse to the firing squad or the noose. |
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The noose became even tighter when the bishopric of Prague was subordinated to the German archbishopric of Mainz. |
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They capture parrots by lassoing them with a small noose attached to the end of a pole. |
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A CAT was injured after being caught in a deliberately-set noose snare. |
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But when much lifetime had raced by I saw rather trapped in the scrag noose, too, joy and daylight. |
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On 14 August 2005, at 7 a.m., Mr. Agaev made a noose out of a length of electrical wire found on the railings and hanged himself. |
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Beneath the water, the hawser that anchored the buoy ended in a noose, with Michele's neck inside it. |
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The second way to make a noose is to tie a running knot round the standing part of the rope in a way that pulling on the knot-side closes the loop. |
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There is a lamppost and noose waiting for every jihadi that comes back to Britain and their scum enablers and sympathizers. |
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On the scaffold, before the noose is placed about his neck, his chains and the rope that binds his hands are struck off, and he is asked what he has to say. |
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A farmer who puts a noose around an animal's neck to lead it to pasture or to pull it out of danger could potentially be charged. |
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Mr. Speaker, the parliamentary secretary can pretend to be a puritan, but the noose is tightening around Senator Housakos. |
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The wear marks on the beam below the staircase, which carried the noose, can still be seen. |
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Canadians need to understand that the noose is tightening, not loosening, on their ability to own guns and on their gun ownership. |
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The Maastricht indicators are so suffocating, it is as if we were giving a glass of water to a person whose neck we have put in a noose. |
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We clean it and attach it to a long pole, making a noose from the other end of the root. |
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Officers entered the cell and, when the author resisted, forcibly removed the noose. |
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But as you know, in politics a halo is only 12 inches from being a noose and our reputations depend on our ability to meet ever-new challenges. |
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As to who tied the noose around the President's neck on the day of sacrifice and hanged him, those people wore masks. |
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Except for a few dressy occasions, my neckties are now consigned to the closet until that dreaded day in the fall when I have to tighten the noose once again. |
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In an interview yesterday, he agreed the noose was tightening. |
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But it appears from this case that the noose is tightening by stealth. |
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As he feels the noose tightening, Whitlock finds himself in a race against the clock to uncover the mysteries surrounding the deaths and maintain his innocence. |
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I don't think marriage has to be this noose around your neck. |
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I draw back on the shortened rope and begin tying it into another noose. |
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But hanging from a beam in the center of a room typically reserved for celebrations and weddings is a crude, handmade noose fashioned out of three electrical wires. |
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We will be patient and continue to draw the noose tighter and tighter. |
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He had seen it before the noose had been placed on his neck. |
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One might have expected criminals awaiting trial to have been especially defensive, doing their best to avoid the noose by shifting blame elsewhere. |
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When the hangman came to noose her she knocked him clean out of the cart. |
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It was asked, left to right, across the stage, bypassing Gingrich, tightening the noose. |
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It has recently ruled over the country with an iron fist, increasingly solidifying its noose on civil rights and governance. |
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The noose around his neck is attached, aboveground, to a flying white bat. |
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What the United States is asking from Saddam Hussein, however, is not to prove his innocence but to provide evidence of his own guilt, that is, to put his own neck in the noose to be hanged or be bombed to smithereens. |
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He was stripped of his clothing, and wearing only a shirt, climbed the ladder to place his head through the noose. |
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Making the case more complex is the presence at the scene of an effigy, a noose, and a witch ball filled with curses. |
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He showed no anxiety over his imminent demise, but rather tied his own noose and lectured the hangman about the proper way to tie the knot. |
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Provincial government, therefore, has a fiscal noose around its neck. |
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In short, the noose is tightening around Quebec in all areas. |
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There are two possibilities: that the intervention will aim to topple Saddam Hussein's regime and his Republican Guard, or to occupy Iraq and gradually close the noose around the Iraqi capital. |
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According to the Iranian news agency ISNA Laleh Saharkhizan's brother carried out the final stage of the execution of Shahla Jahed by kicking away the stool on which she was standing with the noose around her neck. |
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Well, that is a little bit like looking at the standards of the rope that is a noose around your neck, because Nord Stream and such projects are reducing our energy independence when we have to increase our independence. |
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The family refused to pardon Behnoud Shojaee, and his lawyer said that the victim's mother and father pushed the stool from under his feet after the noose had been placed around his neck. |
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This has been safeguarded in the National Reform Programmes, so that the noose of capitalist barbarity preached in the Lisbon Strategy can throttle the people quickly and with precision. |
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The response to Willis's appeal to them to seek a compromise deal was a hangman's noose that was slowly lowered from the rafters of the meeting hall until it rested close to his head. |
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Dubai The ties that bind can quickly become a noose around your neck if you are in an obsessive relationship. |
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On June 12th his forces again managed to reach those oilfields, impeding efforts to resume production. Oil apart, NATO and the rebels are tightening the noose. |
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The repeated instrumental version of the song The In Crowd cleverly pulls the movie together, like a metaphorical noose around the characters. |
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Tighten this noose and make Khartoum a very small place to live. |
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Even his most avid supporters were unnerved when Mr Bahceli flung a hangman's noose at his audience during a rally in the eastern city of Erzurum. |
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In particular, Darrow had, when defending Leopold and Loeb three years before, proclaimed the lines Oh let not man remember The soul that God forgot, But fetch the county kerchief And noose me in the knot, And I will rot. |
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Efforts to persuade the European Central Bank to tear up its own rulebook and loosen the noose – by easing limits on cash flows to Greek banks – have fallen on stony ground. |
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Stepping on a chair that wobbled under him, he would knot a noose round his scrawny neck, test it, yank it, gyrate his neck like a pigeon and step out into the void. |
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He is yanked heavenward — hoisted up by a hangman's noose. |
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But his left foot was caught in that blame noose in the end of the rope, so only his beardy head went underwater and he was dragged along like that for a few wet yards. |
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In this world a pirate could be nearly certain that if caught he would end up with a short drop and sudden stop with a noose cinched around his neck. |
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