A sprightly woman wrings her hands as if flirtatiously sizing up a fellow resident at the nursing home. |
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Or you apply those aids and the horse wrings its tail and moves off at a brisk trot instead of the intended canter. |
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These two shows, a few months apart, displayed the tactile and abstract effects she wrings from such small-scale marks. |
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Yet Strauss manages to create an opera which wrings every dramatic drop from the text. |
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The boy's grandmother stands in the doorway holding a tea towel, twisting it in the way she wrings out the wet laundry before she carries it outside to the line. |
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Now, writing these lines, the sorrow wrings my heart again. |
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It is exactly this antisocial behaviour that the bike wrings out of you. |
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Shakes his head, wrings his hands then says. |
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The next time Britain wrings its hands over how others see it, it should consider how it portrays them. STEPHEN HASELTINELondonSIR We Indians are amused by your wailing about depictions of the British on film by Americans. |
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Instead, he wrings his hands, and declares how complicated everything is. |
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In Livonia, Father George wrings his hands over his people's fate. |
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Of course he finds the fabric, but even then he wrings a profit which any honest man would be ashamed to extort from the labour of the needle girl. |
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