Bebe puffed up her little body, her short fur trying to ridge along her back into hackles, her bared fangs at Daisy's throat. |
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Their thick hackles rose and their lips curled back into snarls as they spotted the two. |
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Another distinct bird is the Nicobar pigeon with its metallic green hackles and sheen on its plumage. |
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I clip off all the bottom and top hackles leaving the side hackles to ensure the fly sits in the surface film. |
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Different coloured hackle fibres for tail and throat hackles can work well. |
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Faced with the famous red hackles of the the organization, they dropped their bags and applauded. |
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My teeth grind together, and my hackles rise, and I want to find the radio or whatever it is and rip it to bits. |
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The sudden picture of Bruce sitting so close to her, hands clasped, made his hackles rise. |
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As nondescript and unassuming as he seemed, his mere presence made my hackles rise. |
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Ms Beeny is so very annoying that I can usually feel my hackles rising before the programme has even reached the halfway point. |
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With countless hackles raised, justifiably, on a daily basis with regard to the current fiasco, it's time for the verbals to cease. |
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A pack of wolves, fifty at least, were coming toward her, hackles raised, teeth bared, snarling. |
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These flies may have brightly coloured bodies or long hackles and we can only guess at what the trout think they are. |
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He was silent for some moments, and felt his hackles stir at the dread her words roused. |
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It is at this point, where rosy promises of performance are linked to stark dollar amounts, that hackles rise. |
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The smell conjured up terrible, dog-like images of danger and violence, and the hackles on the tomcat's neck stood at attention. |
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They snorted and snuffled, hackles raised, dancing sideways, eyeing each other. |
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Politically incorrect from the title on, this guide to old-fashioned coquetry has raised the hackles of every feminist writer worth her salt. |
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The dog was a reddish-grey color, with what seemed to be permanently upraised hackles along her neck and back. |
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The dog stared, ears flattening, and she saw his hackles rise along his spine. |
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Even before they hit the ground both birds fan their hackles out, resembling nothing so much as a suddenly opened umbrella. |
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Her eyes practically exploded with flames and her hair rose a little, like a dog rising its hackles. |
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Lee's hackles rose, his ears flattened, and a low growl began deep in his chest. |
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With malevolent eye highlighted in red and throat feathers raised like the hackles of a dog, he was distinctly intimidating. |
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His peculiar skills, which combine faith healing, gentle manipulation and massage, may raise the hackles of conventional animal doctors, but they seem to work. |
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His record might well raise the hackles of a thorough-going free-marketeer. |
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I feel that this is an over-cautious report, and yet it is already raising some people's hackles. |
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It is when identities are under threat, when they feel under attack that hackles rise and they become dangerous and aggressive. |
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The proposed changes have not only raised hackles in Timiskaming-Cochrane, but all across northern Ontario. |
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And we all like to get our hackles up because nobody likes to be told what to do, even if it is in our best interest. |
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When will the Minister of Public Safety lower his hackles, drop the attitude, pick up the phone and talk to the Mohawks of Akwesasne? |
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Mr. Speaker, honestly, at first blush, this piece in Bill C-4 raises my hackles and makes me very worried. |
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The blanket of media negativity, he says, still raises the hackles. |
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Finally, just as animals' hackles rise when they feel they are in danger, so humans clench their fascias. |
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The tale that finally raised my hackles crept up as unexpectedly as any ghoulie or ghostie. |
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Bowering's hackles rise and then just as quickly fall again. |
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I knew it was a grin, but the bared teeth still made my hackles rise. |
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But it raises hackles among those who are mostly unwitting combatants in the war. |
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Media have been barred from attending, a move that has already raised the hackles of some shareholders. |
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As many consumers wrongly consider sediment as a flaw, the resulting wine is unlikely to raise hackles. |
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In 1993, Vlady was invited to the Ministry of the Interior, a place bound to raise the hackles of an artist-dissident. |
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He sometimes seemed to take great pleasure in raising hackles in Washington. |
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It is the connection of triclosan to dioxin that has appropriately raised the hackles of so many. |
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The fat fee is raising some hackles, but the head of the nonprofit she helped tells Shushannah Walshe she was worth the money. |
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The minister's refusal to back-pedal on his smoking ban earlier this year raised the hackles of publicans nationwide who claimed it damaged their business enormously. |
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British journalist Liz Jones has an unqualified knack for raising media hackles on both sides of the Atlantic. |
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I cannot help but suggest that there is some degree of an attempt to raise ire and hackles and to divide individuals, not only in the House amongst party affiliations but around the country, for crass political gain. |
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That, of course, raised everyone's hackles. |
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Fire burst from its open mouth, its eyes glowed with a smouldering glare, its muzzle and hackles and dewlap were outlined in flickering flame. |
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Mr Smyth emerged as a challenger when hardliners' hackles were raised by the apparent flexibility towards republicans shown in remarks by Mr Trimble on a recent visit to Washington. |
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The government's pursuit of tax competitiveness, where countries vie with each other to offer lower corporate tax rates, puts Christensen's hackles right up. |
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Vestiges such as the stumpy wings of flightless birds, and the hairs that prickle on human skin just like the rising hackles on furry mammals, are further testimony to our shared origins. |
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Senator Banks: Watch out for rising hackles. |
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Although new rules on the management of illegal migrants and their return to their countries of origin are desperately needed, this new Directive has raised the hackles of many migrants and migrant associations. |
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But Madrid raised hackles in Paris in January 2007 by jointly holding, with Jean-Claude Juncker of Luxembourg, the 'Friends of the Constitution' conference, a gathering of countries having ratified the text. |
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But the conditions on the cash raised some hackles in Pakistan. |
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