Often it doesn't come to blows, they enjoy the buzz of organising confrontations. |
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He was struck in the face with a tomahawk, the force so great it broke the weapon's handle, before receiving several blows from the taiaha. |
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His own punches at times found a target, only to be rocked with an avalanche of blows in retaliation. |
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Several blows and parries were executed as images of imaginary foes continued to appear all around him. |
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Making turns, parries and blows against an imaginary opponent Alaina got lost in a constant rhythm. |
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They paused for a moment and began to trade a flurry of blows, parries and dodges in a blur of movement. |
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Still, after a certain number of blows, I managed to gather myself to the degree that I knew what to do, which was to run. |
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Do not be conceited, he who blows his own horn will find people are quick to get out of his way. |
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The result is a generic actioner, in which a gravel voiced man-mountain grabs some guns, smokes cigarettes and blows up stuff. |
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A great noise of clanging metal filled the air, and filled Ivya with a type of battle rage as she rained down blows on her brother. |
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A report by a top level think-tank blows a hole in Government claims that the gap between rich and poor has narrowed. |
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The SPA, he says, blows a hole in government plans for more than 200,000 new homes by 2016 in the Thames Basin and Thames Gateway areas. |
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As the fighting factions are physically restrained, the verbal blows rain down harder than ever. |
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Fearing the worst, the victim curled into a ball to try to protect himself from the blows raining on him. |
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A west wind blows biting flies out of the dunes and they build up at the water's edge. |
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Because of the westerly winds it just blows back in again, just like all the muck and dust from the building site next door. |
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I like to go where the breeze blows free and the windows of the heart are not shut. |
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Car accidents, excessive head contact in sports, severe whiplash, falls, and blows to the head may all cause concussions. |
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And usually when one tire blows out, the tire adjacent to the flat can blowout easily from the increased pressure. |
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He can be unpredictable, able to move swiftly round the ring and be elusive, but has the height and reach to stand and trade blows. |
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The defendant then allegedly leapt on his bench and aimed a flurry of blows at his head. |
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She said she described her husband standing over her, aiming blows to her head from above. |
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The officer then aimed three blows towards his face and another one to his leg as he handcuffed him and bundled him into a car. |
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The man with the knife then aimed two or three blows to Sylvester who backed on to the railings but did not seem in trouble. |
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The wind blows in different directions within the cloud and forms a funnel. |
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She dodged his extremely slow blows and sank her fist into his stomach, winding him. |
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Maybe we'll just wait for the catastrophe and anyway, it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good. |
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But it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good, as they say, and I've discovered an excellent replacement taxi service. |
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Mr Sharp's view of matters, that summer, must have been that it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good! |
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A more probable explanation for some injuries was that they were caused by blows and kicks. |
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A post-mortem examination conducted by a Home Office pathologist has revealed he received a number of blows and possibly a number of kicks. |
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He said the blows, kicks and punches continued even when he cowered on the floor with his hands protecting his head. |
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But when the paramedics tried to leave, two youths attacked them, raining kicks and blows down on their heads and ribs. |
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Zhao said she fell to her knees, and then felt repeated kicks or blows to both sides of her head. |
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A four-minute video of the brawl was played which showed the Leeds players trading kicks and blows with Owen. |
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Examples of abuse include punches, kicks, blows and partial suffocation by placing a rubber gas mask over the person's face. |
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A musician-dancer blows the reed-pipe wind instrument, while going through various dance movements. |
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The wind blows huge squalls of fine grey sand everywhere, so kikois are wrapped around our heads, Lawrence of Arabia style. |
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Dalbir made a valiant attempt and pushing Diwakar onto the ropes executed a couple of solid blows, which had Diwakar taking the count. |
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She shuts her eyes and makes a wish in her head then blows out the candles. |
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But each knock-down was ruled out as Moore was adjudged to have caught his opponent with low blows. |
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When the wind blows, the fly fisherman keeps on casting and reeling them in! |
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These are serious blows to our sense of who we are, what we expect of the world and of our interactions with others. |
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She looked up and saw many people in deep concentration, sparring with their partners, trading blows with great speed and accuracy. |
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Hence a wind is said to box the compass when it blows from every quarter in rapid succession. |
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He parried all of the soldier's blows and then landed one of his own, on the soldier's armored stomach. |
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Magee, who entered the contest unbeaten in 22 fights, began confidently, landing the more telling blows. |
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The two fighters from the boxing crazy Eastern Cape began dishing heavy leather from the onset but Marali landed the most telling blows. |
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Rocky was the aggressor throughout the fight and landed all the punishing blows, but the judges announced Wallace as the winner. |
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He landed a few successful blows before he was roughly pulled back by two sets of strong arms. |
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I mean, I only have to look at an amplifier or an effects pedal and it blows up. |
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A katabatic wind is a wind that is blowing down a slope, and an anabatic wind blows up a slope. |
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They were not a united minority mainly due to the fact that they suffered from such blows as being leaderless and economically dependent. |
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I saw Wyatt pummeling Adrian under a storm of blows and I began to understand why I had not found a calling card from Ace. |
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The referee halted the fight in the final round after a storm of blows followed a standing eight count early in the early seconds of the round. |
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The steam blows out of the top annealer cap indicating a positive pressure in the annealer tube. |
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A sail blows off the foredeck and a spinnaker drum jams so they can't jibe on the downwind leg. |
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Jay-jay Okocha supplied the attacking inspiration as Wanderers rode the early blows to pose some serious first half problems of their own. |
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The veteran backstop has learned to take the fierce body blows of his position philosophically. |
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The stronger and longer the wind blows onshore, the more likely men-of-war will be around. |
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Tenderness, a sign of vulnerability, is so feared that it is showered on women with verbal abuse and blows. |
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The warm sirocco that blows off the Sahara often makes the sea rough along southern shores, and all diving is then done on the north shore. |
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There is no need for a nameless Persian Baha'i family to come to blows over the fact that Jesus was a great prophet. |
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Tuesday Scotland's farmers march on Holyrood to protest against the blows which have beset their profession. |
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Both were self-proclaimed rulers of their territories, and had come to blows in the past. |
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When the plane's engine blows, they crash and are marooned in the middle of the tundra with only a handful of supplies. |
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For this treatment, you will wear a mask over your nose during sleep that blows air into your throat at a pressure level that is right for you. |
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A steady breeze blows against their faces as they flip through a catalog of apartment listings. |
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Before the floaters realize it, a sudden storm blows in and it's so dark for so long that when the storm dissipates, it really is night time. |
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Despite the sun, the island is luxuriantly green and the hot wind blows the balmy scents of lavender, rosemary and heather. |
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Takemoto, in the middle rounds, attacked him with straight rights, while Saohin responded with roundhouse blows. |
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He blows a whistle, and the defensive players box the offensive players out, trying to keep them from the loose ball. |
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The measurement was taken as the best of three blows from total lung capacity with no breath hold. |
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I saw him perform that same routine once against a fighter who'd landed probably two dozen low blows in the course of the match. |
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You know, he delivered some low blows, but they weren't questioning his patriotism. |
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Officials from both parties say the typical Dayton resident has grown weary of glitzy ad campaigns and superficial low blows. |
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This was not the time to fight, not the time to exchange cheap shots and low blows for sure. |
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You struck Mr Ryan three vicious blows to his stomach, causing him to collapse like a sack of potatoes into the gutter. |
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He still has big-timers Green and Walker, but the losses of guards Rivera and Wahle are blows. |
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Unconnected wires hang from the roof, and a chilly sea breeze blows through the unfinished walls. |
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Today's announcement is the latest in a series of job blows for the Bradford manufacturing sector over recent years. |
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Other European nations came to blows with the Church over secularist legislation. |
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Because the base of the stone barely touches the base upon which it rests, it appears that it could easily fall over when the sea wind blows. |
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The Blue Archer quickly recovered and threw a few more punches, a few hitting their mark, parrying the retaliating blows well. |
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For example, the close range shield features quick, multiple hits, while the long-range weapon focuses in on powerful blows. |
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I know a bank whereon the wild thyme blows, where oxlips and the nodding cowslip grow. |
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With a smirk, she stretches out her arm and with the flick of a finger, blows the creature back 4 feet. |
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If this were to be implemented, it would strike fundamental blows to British science. |
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People panicked and stampeded, blows rained down, people fell and hurt themselves in the melee. |
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In recent memory, in the lifetime of our previous dog, an unlikable Sealyham, we had nearly come to blows. |
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Rollovers typically happen when a vehicle blows a tire, hits a bump, or runs off the road onto uneven ground and one side tips up. |
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It's tipping down with rain, Poland are kicking from right to left and Portugal get proceedings underway after Hugh blows his big blue whistle. |
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Your blows, and those of the army, will knock them senseless, destabilise them, and send them to their death. |
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Boxers need to move quickly in the ring, block or avoid their opponent's blows, get past his guard and then hit with power. |
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Every single one of his intended blows was blocked and parried, even when the man tripped and fell backwards. |
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As the round ended, both fighters got toe-to-toe and exchanged savage blows until and after the bell. |
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The opening of the second season moves at full speed, delivering a series of heavy emotional blows both touching and tragic. |
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The riot police moved in and struck quick, hard blows with their batons, mainly at people's calf areas. |
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If wind blows the netting around, anchor it into the ground with bent wire. |
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They are open to body blows in the midriff and lack the ability to throw straight punches. |
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He has given our people stout hearts and strong arms with which to strike mighty blows for freedom and truth. |
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Both players traded blows in the middle of the field behind the back of the referee but in full view of both linesmen. |
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They would charge at each other, trade a few useless blows, and then back out of range of the other's strike. |
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I watched in amazement as the two combatants traded blows and then there was a flash of lightening that dazzled my eyes. |
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The crack of willow on leather was replaced by the thud of fists on jaws as drunken spectators traded blows when players came off the pitch. |
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Thus the tramontana blows most frequent in winter, but may occur from mid-September through April. |
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His old shield had taken many blows and was dented, so he replaced it with a buckler with red trim, a gold emblem at its center. |
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This collapse triggers a shock wave that blows off the star's outer mantle of gases, which we see as a supernova. |
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When the shofar blows at the end of Yom Kippur, we are, for that moment, our full potential self. |
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He was beaten to the floor, where he cowered and tried to protect himself from the shower of blows. |
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During the tung blossom season, when the wind blows, onlookers are often showered with tung blossoms falling from the trees. |
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And when the two women finally trade physical blows, it descends into succession of slaps and upper cuts. |
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The governing and opposition parties are growing more confrontational, trading trumped-up accusations and even blows on the legislative floor. |
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The whole mountain is shrouded by clouds and mist, which the wind blows into various strange shapes. |
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On this blindingly bright summer day, the wind whips at her long skirt and blows tumbleweeds down the streets. |
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When strong wind blows to create waves and ripples, when it rains hard or when sheets of snow land on the lake-surface. |
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Jake is adamant and placing his hands around the machine, he blows as hard as possible down the tube. |
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He blows harder and harder, everybody laughs in anticipation, and the balloon busts with a big bang right in his face. |
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Hence, the weird mood swings where Jenny blows up at Brandon and he shrugs it off. |
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It was quiet from midnight to 6 a.m., but then it was like in the cartoons when the factory whistle blows, they just started crashing. |
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Watch in amazement as the final free is taken in the All Ireland Hurling Final and the final whistle blows immediately afterwards. |
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It blows my mind that they can put their children into that kind of situation. |
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He blows another great scoring opportunity, with his touch and nerve deserting him as soon as the Milan goal hoves into view. |
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He then coats the eggs with mucus, swims up to his nest, and blows them into the mass of bubbles. |
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The lead track is a pretty good tune for an introduction, but the blows don't connect. |
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This definition does not include any additional, or secondary, oxygen blows made after the primary blow. |
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He wasn't the first nor will he be the last male who blows his brains out to go in utero. |
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While its performance blows the doors off the competition over any terrain, a cramped interior and clunky cabin tech bring it down. |
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It blows the doors off of the machines at the low end, just blows the doors off of them. |
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Joe's book blows the doors off conventional thinking and offers a brilliant new yet accessible approach to community. |
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He blows hot and cold, more cold than hot it must be said, and he let his side down on Sunday. |
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He has got his own problems, blows hot and cold, steals her ideas, dumps her, sleeps with his employer. |
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This is also the reason why his puppet Prime Minister blows hot and cold in the same breath. |
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A man in a chair that holds his head in a brace, turns to me, lifts a hand and blows me a kiss. |
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I shrugged, then just as Mothers car is pulling out into traffic, little girl waves and blows me a kiss, which made me smile. |
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But she just blows them a kiss and licks the froth from the mouth of the bottle. |
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It's an amazing part of the culture that just blows my mind, on a regular basis. |
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Just thinking about it completely blows my mind, and many other people I know feel the same way. |
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It blows my mind just to think he's seen something I wrote, never mind loved it. |
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You know, even looking at that clip now, it really blows my mind, because I had no words to say. |
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But if the secret itself is a massive publicity stunt, well then the whole thing just blows up in your face. |
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Or do I throw whatever my initial reaction is and risk looking like an idiot when it all blows up in my face? |
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Maybe it only blows up in your face if you mock your opponents deformities. |
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Smear your critics, and when that blows up in your face, throw rationality overboard and smear them some more. |
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Those who still argue that the politician blows with the wind, are deeply, profoundly wrong. |
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Would you put up with a pal who doesn't call when she says she will or constantly blows you off? |
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What if one of them is her soulmate and she just blows him off and loses him forever? |
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I highly recommend not trying it, but if your ex boyfriend blows you off, it's a good replacement. |
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And when a married woman blows off her commitments to her husband and her children in favor of an affair with a married man, who is to blame? |
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On the way home my left rear tyre blows out, while I'm on the phone to another customer. |
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Aziz takes off quickly on his bicycle, which has no brakes or lights, and blows out one of his tires. |
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Yes that is a promise, we'll go away after all of this blows over, and have serious quality time. |
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I hope this stuff blows over soon and all but other than support, there's not much i can say. |
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Flames shot out of my test tube and spread over the bench in a way you only ever see when a car blows up in an action movie. |
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If your pal insists you partake in whatever negativity she is up to, blows up at you or quits calling you, you haven't lost much. |
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He blows up at little old ladies, but his only response to his wife leaving him is to squeak. |
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After she leaves, Harding asks McMurphy what he thought of her, and McMurphy blows up at him. |
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Let me first say that the main reason she blows up at Justin has little and I repeat, little to do with trust and talking about her life. |
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Wonder of wonders, your mom blows up at him the next day in front of the whole school. |
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So yes, whatever's out here when the wind blows up, I start, I start wheezing. |
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The inflation theory says that a baby universe blows up very quickly, like a balloon, in the tiniest fraction of a second. |
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She regularly blows up cars, her captures always include some element of mayhem, and she has some serious man issues in her life. |
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Sitting anonymously in the crowd, he gets up, takes out a red balloon, blows it up, then lets the air out in sporadic farting sounds. |
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He looks at me, takes a latex glove and blows it up into a balloon so it looks like a crazy beige rooster. |
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It was no irony that even as the pamphlets were being distributed, Congressmen were on the verge of coming to blows. |
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The fact that neither of us had read these great luminaries didn't stop us nearly coming to blows. |
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This was the woman with whom he had fought so many bitter disputes, almost come to blows so many times. |
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Already, party members are coming to blows, picking candidates not just for the presidency, but for parliament. |
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And there were unconfirmed reports of a passenger and a rail company employee coming to blows on a platform. |
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Dolphins, however, are known to kill sharks by attacking their soft bellies with hard blows from their beaks. |
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It blows up out of nowhere, rages like crazy, then blows itself out before another version of the same hurricane comes along to fire up the whole thing once more. |
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The card you buy now will almost certainly be replaced as soon as you pull it off the shelves, and unless you have deep pockets, this really blows. |
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Some of the families here stay inside the mosque, but the rest are camped out in tents that provide little shelter from the winter wind that blows across the university. |
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Why they continue to get quoted as independent observers blows my mind. |
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She has a nice exterior personality, but her true self really blows. |
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When two men become involved in a brawl and start trading blows and punches and kicks and so forth, how does the law of provocation relate to that circumstance? |
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The smouldering passion that ignites the central love triangle, with it's heated arguments and graphic lovemaking, burns brightly for a brief moment and then blows itself out. |
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Though many poly people obviously have interests outside of their sexual lifestyle, I have yet to see them manifest in the kind of variety that blows my mind. |
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When a tire on his truck blows out, someone finds him a new one. |
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A hunter comes across a sickly gorilla, too weak to defend itself from the blows of his cleaver. |
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The wind blows from the south or southeast off the hot Saharan desert. |
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Within seconds of the opening salvo, the first of the wrecked cars blows up, flying 30 feet into the air and sending a fireball some 200 feet into the sky. |
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In the harmonium the action of the bellows blows air past the reeds. |
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In brief instances when they collided, one could see them attacking with outrageously fast kicks and punches, either trading blows are blocking blows. |
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It has a great charm, the poetry world, because people are not particularly making money, although admittedly they are coming to blows over grants and so on. |
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The complainant suffered several blows which left his fist mildly scarred. |
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He watched his father's neat, even blows, chops, cuts, and parries. |
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He blows up balloons all day, sits on the porch swing watching them fly. |
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Ever seen two inebriated off-duty firemen at a local pub about to come to blows? |
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The evidence, carefully marshalled, blows the official case to shreds. |
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The ensuing night gave me the grand migraine of my life, with throbs like the blows of an ax and continuous pinwheels. |
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In fact, Clark fell back first from her blows, losing his cap, tie, and badge in the melee. |
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When the men with ripping muscles and lean frames slapped their arms and thighs in gusto and let out a Viking war cry, the entire place reverberated with the loud sharp blows. |
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Puck produces a horn, and raising it to his lips gives three blows. |
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For this treatment, a patient will wear a mask over their nose during sleep that blows air into their throat at a pressure level that is right for them. |
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The two pugilists traded blows early on, and seemed fairly evenly matched. |
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The maestro himself blows a mean horn with unbelievable energy and mind-blowing skill and has the kind of stage presence so-called pop idols cannot be taught. |
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There is nothing worse than being in a cosy little restaurant, enjoying wonderful food, and then somebody lights up and blows that acrid smoke in your direction. |
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In the simplest case, the metal is compressed between a hammer and an anvil and the final shape is obtained by turning and moving the work piece between blows. |
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I grew up on the streets of Pittsburgh and I learned to treat everybody with respect because if not, one day that might be the guy who draws a gun on you and blows you away. |
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As he tries to explain this theory, Gonzales blows a hole in it himself. |
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To even think that I was perceived in that genre blows my mind. |
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This enraged his domestics, who retorted the insult by blows. |
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But the next assault is just around the corner, and the band's talent for stringing out the quiet moments makes the next shower of blows rain down even harder. |
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Usually he's a placid child, but when that valve blows, it blows big time. |
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Viking forces marched through the city on Saturday before coming to blows in the Eye of York in the re-enactment of a 10th century clash between Viking and Anglo Saxon armies. |
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The real issue is, why are you so heavily interested in someone who isn't reciprocating interest in an active way and repeatedly delivers fresh blows of rejection? |
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The other blower blows a fresh airstream in through the heat exchangers. |
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We've gotta keep our heads until this peace craze blows over. |
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The gleam of hope in this darkness is the number of men who came out to protest and who shielded women from baton blows. |
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If one paints dots onto the surface of the balloon and then blows it up, each dot sees all the other dots moving away as if it were the centre of expansion. |
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If forced to fight, aim blows towards the neck and the groin. |
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As I turn around, the cheering cries of the people are almost as deafening as the explosion blows the homemade rocket into the clouds amidst billows of white smoke. |
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The referee blows for full time and it's time for a penalty shoot-out. |
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Wind blows up from the southeast as if there's a storm behind it. |
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Like the Rube Goldbergian contraptions that start by pushing over a domino that turns on a fan that blows up a balloon, there's a satisfaction in getting it right. |
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It had a hard red shell that protected it from powerful blows. |
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Then she smiles, blows me a kiss, turns and walks off the stage. |
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Otherwise I'm going to have to conclude that this is a sort of disguised overnegation, a rhetorical thunderbolt that blows back semantically the wrong way. |
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Not surprisingly many of the subjects of these experiments ended up mad as hatters but they did provide useful samples for us, so it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good. |
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Over the past week, Sony Pictures Entertainment has received more body blows than Muhammad Ali during the Rumble in the jungle. |
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So it seems to be true that it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good. |
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This week they got Mike Tyson and Razor Ruddock over at the mirage, where the fake volcano blows up every twenty minutes. |
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Unsurprisingly, he blows off his friend's demand for payment. |
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They traded blows, insults, and annoyed mutters for several long minutes. |
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Suddenly, his opponent block one of his blows and punched out hard. |
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One musician will then occupy the pivotal No 7 position with the other set for debut after some lusty blows last night and a mean spell of seamers. |
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Bury yourself in some textbooks until the whole blasted thing blows over. |
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It just blows my mind that people have suggested that he is gay. |
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The couple, who had been together for 28 years and had come to blows in the past, argued at a local Conservative club and continued to row at home. |
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She'd landed another few blows when he caught her wrist and twisted. |
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In the examples provided by the inventors, ore, having a particle size distribution as indicated in the tables of the patent, is supplied during the blows as a coolant. |
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Jimmy's making the fight but Foster's landing the more effective blows. |
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Like those two characters, who are friends off-duty but become antagonists when the workday whistle blows, until they punch out at the end of the day. |
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After several hard blows from Luken, Xarne's arms began to tire. |
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Yea, the guitar solo is ok, kinda cool, but the rest of the song blows. |
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First words, then shoves, were exchanged, and finally, testosterone thick in the air, a few blows were thrown. |
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Over time, he lost a split-second, just enough to make him less capable of pulling away from blows or landing one of his tremendous counterpunches that come out of nowhere. |
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Sometimes two separate branches of the same family have even come to blows, or worse, over some dispute. |
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This region is also particularly known for its wind, which blows intermittently almost all year. |
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They on the hill, which were not yet come to blows, perceiving the fewness of their enemies, came down amain. |
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Here, student, some man or woman kills living beings and is murderous, bloody-handed, given to blows and violence, merciless to living beings. |
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He has never officially said that we are in a relationship, but he blows up my phone night and day, always wanting to know where I am. |
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A fan blows air through the chaffer to remove lightweight material known as chaff. |
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The argument grew heated and teammates grabbed the pair to prevent them from coming to blows. |
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At the end, the orchestra played a somber dead march that was punctuated by harsh, chilling blows on the timpani. |
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Hadst thou foxship to banish him that struck more blows for Rome than thou hast spoken words. |
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O'er blows the filthy and contagious clouds Of headly murther, spoil, and villainy. |
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As well as its influence on Wales' coastal areas, air warmed by the Gulf Stream blows further inland with the prevailing winds. |
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It was obvious that it consisted of several blows to the head from the hoe. |
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If it came to blows, the younger man could not hope to hold his own with the huge policeman. |
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They will not sustain even the din and the shout of so many thousands, much less our charge and our blows. |
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It was said that the blows were so violent that the king's helmet was driven into his skull. |
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Twice Nelson was nearly cut down and both times his life was saved by a seaman named John Sykes who took the blows and was badly wounded. |
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The kirner was made to give repeated blows in the hole, turning it partly at each blow to keep the hole cylindrical. |
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Obstinacy and willful neglects must be mastered, even though it cost blows. |
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A referee monitors the fight to ensure that competitors use only legal blows. |
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When the umpire blows the whistle to restart play, four players from each team can move into the centre third to receive the pass. |
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The three scoring judges had scored Groves ahead of Froch before Groves was shaken by some powerful Froch blows in the 9th. |
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I have served him from the hour of my nativity to this instant, and have nothing at his hands for my service but blows. |
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One reporter counted 200 successful blows to Summers head during the match, and he was bleeding as early as the third round. |
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Wells took the first four rounds, but in the sixth round, Welsh landed a combination of punishing blows which slowed the champion down. |
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Ripples appear on smooth water when the wind blows, but will die quickly if the wind stops. |
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The length of each spoke around the circle is related to the frequency that the wind blows from a particular direction per unit time. |
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Armored in highbrow credibility, he lashes out with low blows. |
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If Paul Hartley blows a snotter out of his nose this tells you how far it went. |
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The wind blows faster at higher altitudes because of the reduced influence of drag. |
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The Khamaseen is a hot, dry wind that originates from the vast deserts in the south and blows in the spring or in the early summer. |
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As further Allied blows fell, von Thoma was captured and reports came in from the Ariete and Trento that they were encircled. |
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Aside from anchoring the jaw muscles, the thickness of the crests protect their skulls from hard blows. |
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They can also become icebound, and sometimes the wind blows so strongly no sailing vessel can make headway against it. |
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A kite is an aircraft tethered to a fixed point so that the wind blows over its wings. |
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The surface area of the core which received the blows necessary for detaching the flakes is referred to as the striking platform. |
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The contestants will try to dodge each other's blows and then get ready to counter. |
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The depression was hard on both the fishermen and merchants in Battle Harbour, Labrador, and they almost came to blows. |
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When the black purga blows it can pile the snow higher than a ship's mast overnight. |
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The Mughals suffered several blows due to invasions from Marathas and Afghans. |
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He who first acts as striker asks the other how many blows of the rattan he will bear on his forearm without crying out. |
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Below the straw walkers, a fan blows a stream of air across the grain, removing dust and fines and blowing them away. |
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I went into my own version of Ali's rope-a-dope, ducking as many of the heavy blows as I could, and waiting for some kind of idea to come to me. |
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The harmattan, which is also called sharqi in Morocco, is a hot wind that blows out of the interior of the Sahara. |
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The sharqi is a wind from the south and southeast that blows in early summer and early winter. |
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After which Buttons landed four blows, one on each peeper, one on the smeller, and one on the mug. |
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She would unarm her noble heart of that steely resistance against the sweet blows of love. |
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Then a storm blows Aeneas, the celebrated Trojan hero, onto her shores. |
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The strength and number of blows depends on how far out of true the shafts are. |
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From Edgar Linton, as we have seen, Heathcliff's blows fell aside unharming, as the executioner's strokes from a legendary martyr. |
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Not with the rage with which this whirlwind blows, Joust warring winds, north, south, and east, unpent. |
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This program works correctly on all well-formed formulas but it blows up on illegal input. |
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You can get 10-1 that Lopez blows a kiss at Mummy Murray today, and 20-1 that she wolf-whistles him. |
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After a succession of low blows, rabbit punches and butts, the referee had seen enough and disqualified Cordoba. |
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He trims your tresses and his assistant Dora blows you out to perfection. |
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So I wish you luck, but don't come crying to me when it blows up in your face. |
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The hot and dry Khamsin wind blows in early summer and causes sizeable sandstorms. |
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Later, the white dwarf blows off a faster wind of particles moving mostly outward along the poles of the orbital plane. |
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The doctor had a green fight in his favor, and some chowderhead blows the red fight, hits him in a side impact, and kills him. |
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Chapter 27 is a summary of the sharp, merciless blows he delivered to the disinformation he debunked. |
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Parker blows soprano and tenor, usually in an extremely abstract manner, but sometimes he can growl like a bluesy bebopper. |
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Such a large within-sort MC variation results in both overdried and underdried veneer, and further leads to glue dryout, blows, and delamination during gluing and pressing. |
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Earlier, West Indies needed another late cameo of lusty blows to unshackle a stranglehold placed on them by Pakistan's bowlers, of whom Junaid Khan was the best. |
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