I vaguely make out outlines of stalagmites and stalactites connecting floor to ceiling, but little else. |
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From the angle he walked, Tal could make out the symbol of an eight-point star on the cape. |
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I could barely make out the golden hands of the clock in the dim light of the candle. |
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As the sun rose, we could make out the near vertical cliffs rising out of the ocean and the ship steaming right between them. |
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She could just make out large shapes scattered haphazardly within the vault. |
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Through the lens he could just about make out the silhouette of his friend's head, dead centre in the cross hairs. |
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In the grainy black and white photo I can still make out the sheen of A.'s hair oil and the way he slicked his dark locks back on the sides. |
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I looked up, fanning away the smoke with one hand until I could make out the form of my brother Jason. |
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We could distinctly make out the anchor winch, life raft holders and torpedo-loading hatch. |
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Ahead of him, he could barely make out the camp and its wooden stockade around its borders, swaying in the wind as it was pelted with rain. |
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Through the slight early morning haze, I could make out taller buildings to the left. |
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Somewhere between his words, he has managed to move so close to me that I can make out light freckles sprinkled on his nose. |
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Closer and closer the stony peaks came, the distance short enough for me to make out small boulders on the surface. |
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Her vision was blurry, but she could make out a group of people sitting around a table and some animal laying on the hearth. |
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In comparison, current optical microscopes can only make out details down to one-tenth the diameter of a red blood cell, or about 400 nanometers. |
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Mars becomes a lot more orangy, but I can't make out any particular shape, not without a tripod or something, anyway. |
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Though it was night and darkness had fallen, she could still make out one building, blazing like hellfire. |
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He could just make out tropical birds flitting from tree to tree their faint caws echoing up from the valley. |
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Carvings adorn the walls, mostly Celtic crosses, but it's difficult to make out those of antiquity from more modern graffiti. |
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It's because I think he's a total stud and I'm hoping we can make out in the back of his car. |
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After slowly walking up to the doorway, she peered through the keyhole, and could just about make out the high table. |
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But it passed overhead and soon he could make out the helicopter in the sky, a black against a dark blue. |
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He flashed his light over it, and tried to make out what it was, but it was very old and torn. |
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It becomes hard to make out the real men through the billowing superlatives. |
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There was just enough light for me to make out his face, and he wore an expression of concern that nearly chilled my blood in my veins. |
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We left the kite tangled around a chimney pot, as you can just make out in the photo. |
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But in the darkness of the park we make out a dozen hooded figures skulking in a children's play area. |
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His whole body was covered now, and all the priest could make out was a faceless, male humanoid form. |
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In the freestanding mirror, Kenji could make out the monkey's close-set eyes peering unblinkingly at its own small, reddened face. |
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As I turned up the tap even higher, I could still make out Clark trying to say something to me over the dim roar. |
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I couldn't quite make out whether the doc was peeved because I was back again or genuinely surprised to see me again so soon. |
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All I can make out is that she has black hair and eyes, a fair complexion, and a very bad temper. |
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They have no personality, and if you try and study them closely in the dream, you can't make out any detail on their face. |
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Someone captured the moment and you can actually make out someone on the tennis courts photobombing the picture. |
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I could even make out the different indigo and violet stripes, which is rare. |
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Amos was able to identify the photo of a man whose first name was signed Mohamed, but he could not make out the last name, he said. |
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It just looked like an inkblot if I was being honest, but I could make out a few numbers. |
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She lip-reads, and at home little Elliott often helps with his finger spelling when his mum cannot make out a consonant. |
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At first instance the plaintiff did not seek to make out a case of an attempt to pervert the course of justice or of contempt of court. |
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As we came closer we could make out two men in a life raft with dye marker showing and flailing their arms wildly in the air pleading to be seen. |
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Thru a small telescope you may be able to make out the fact that it is actually a disk and not a point of light. |
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They'll take a photo of us looking in different directions and try to make out that we're on the point of breaking up. |
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The woods are renowned for their porcine mushrooms, but they're not that easy to make out against the rest of the undergrowth. |
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Beyond that, he could make out buildings of some sort, but mostly everything was obscured by thick fog rolling through. |
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Surely he's not going to make out that this show is anything less than a crime against humanity? |
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One for her, one for you and, looky, she's so busy learning she forgot she wanted to make out with you. |
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He squinted and brought his face forward, straining his neck, trying to make out the dim form that was only a foot from him. |
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Eric thought he could make out some noise coming from the man, but the air rushing across his ears dampened it. |
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The final straw is when, in a scene that makes even the most innocuous Hindi movie seem lubricious to the extreme, they finally make out. |
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He couldn't make out the name on the pump because of dust, but luckily a drop of water fell on it, and he could make out the name. |
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What came out was in a rough, gravelly voice, but she could make out the words quite clearly. |
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There was a sad, almost tearful glimmer in the older man's eyes I couldn't make out. |
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Then she began to make out dim shapes that in a few moments revealed themselves to be crates, tackle, ropes, barrels, and hooks. |
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You could make out David's outline on your front steps, the huge Mercedes' lights beaming out upon the eternal darkness that was your yard. |
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Her eyes squinted madly, trying to make out the manner of the commotion around them. |
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I know not! It maffles and talks. But all I could make out is that Collop Monday falls on a Tuesday next year. |
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He was relatively tan, and because he was shirtless, I could perfectly make out his lean physique. |
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A man and woman sped through the intersection on a tandem bicycle, singing a song I couldn't make out, in a strong waltzing beat. |
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Downstairs, in the gloom, you can just make out the figures of two large men. |
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I could only make out my name and from her tone of voice I realized that it was used in derogatory terms. |
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The bill is sent to the bank, and a copy to us, and we never have to make out a check or deal with a creditor. |
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Instead, American viewers will have to strain to make out whole words from the constant babble of wild sound and West Indian accents. |
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On the pleadings it is conceivable that he could make out a case for malicious prosecution and conspiracy. |
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In the scant amount of light from the street lights, I was able to make out his face, not exactly clearly, but enough to know who it was. |
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In the field you can just make out a scarecrow on a stand, or is it a scarecrow? |
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For the life of me, I never yet could make out why Scotchmen should go mad and cease to be themselves on New Year's Eve. |
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The walls were papered with graphs, equations, posters of graph, calculator schematics, and some diagrams I couldn't even make out. |
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In the corner of her eye, she could just make out the other Rangers proceeding forward as she had done. |
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The facts simply do not make out a tenable cause of action against this defendant. |
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In the background, one can make out the scarlet of a Cardinal, whose biretta is tuftless and who wears the scarlet mozzetta over his mantelletta. |
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I am safe to declare that I never yet could make out two consecutive words of any of their announcements. |
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The guy on the other end of the line wouldn't raise his voice above a whisper, which I couldn't make out at all. |
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As he proprietorially slaps her buttocks he is saying words she can't make out. |
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Many couples that park their cars near the graveyard to make out find themselves at the mercy of these ghoulish ghosts. |
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Villagers fear that future generations will not be able to make out the details. |
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The young Spellweaver could barely make out his face, which was masked by a full visor. |
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Trey listened with a patient ear, only making distance with the receiver when she whined or couldn't make out her blubbering. |
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In today's Dubrovnik, you can just make out the joins where new stone has been melded with old, like the scars of a past life. |
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Adjusting its controls takes no time at all, though small icons can be difficult to make out. |
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The glittering threads of rivers twisted their way to the sea and Hayes could just make out the lighter wash where they discharged sediment. |
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The wagon driver emerged from the brush and they were able to make out his face. |
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Squinting, barely able to focus, Bill could make out Neva and the vampire called Lamkin. |
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By then, Kentou was watching it too, trying to focus his eyes onto the blurred shape, trying to make out the features of the body. |
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How the movement fits into the piece as such, I cannot make out, but it's such a beaut that I won't ask questions. |
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Though I am an old horse, and have seen and heard a great deal, I never yet could make out why men are so fond of this sport. |
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So far as I can make out, the only people who read blogs are other bloggers. |
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From this distance, about a hundred meters, he could make out beetled brows, and kerchiefs around noses and mouths. |
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It was so far away that I could barely make out the gleam of reflected light. |
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Joshua could make out that while some archers carried one quiver of arrows, many carried up to three. |
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I have to turn the steering wheel fast as we are moving so quickly I cant make out how the road will bend next. |
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On the plus side, there is no background distortion or hiss that I could make out. |
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His hood was tossed up, but the frayed edges provided little shading, so Barridan could make out the majority of his face. |
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Looking along the line separating the bright and dark halves, at you can make out a decently prominent crater near the top of the lower quarter. |
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In the distance, he could make out six people, five of which road common mustangs while the sixth rode on a gallant, black stallion. |
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Believe me it's far more difficult to know what to say to an unconscious loved one than the movies make out. |
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Instead, from what I could make out over the music, her voice sounded shaky and weak. |
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The man moved his head slightly so I could make out a brown doggish snout and a black nose. |
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For instance, if I zoom down to my estate in east London I can clearly make out parked cars, or the trains on the nearby railway. |
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Karen, as far I could make out, was a lovely girl, very kind, but with a cheeky, wicked sense of humour that matched the impish glint in her eye. |
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In the picture she had long hair, and was smiling so widely her features were hard to make out. |
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And even against the increasing daylight we could make out that they were uniformed coppers, and that each of them was holding a push bike! |
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Now I can make out the huge blocks of stone naturally eroded into these surprisingly regular shapes. |
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Claire could just make out the floral print pattern of the skirt under the beige winter coat. |
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Kristen could hear their conversation distantly but couldn't make out what they were saying. |
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He could make out the swell of her left breast, harbouring a half moon crescent of dancing light as she did so. |
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Peering down through its latticed sides I could just make out the sandy, weedy ocean floor, 20 metres below. |
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Inside it's dark, but you can make out a raised platform occupied by a DJ and her turntables. |
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She looked outward, and could just make out a two-legged, tramping shape making little twists and rolls ahead of her. |
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She could make out the pale glow of the moonlight shining through the blinds. |
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The painting becomes a study of a rather bleak room illuminated by indirect light that barely enables us to make out the art on the walls. |
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Flurries of snow drift down gently outside our windows, through which we can just make out the dark silhouettes of the surrounding peaks. |
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As she looked over towards Erik, Maria could only make out his silhouette in the dim light. |
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She listened to whatever Sharon said, but only said an occasional uh-huh, so Livy and I couldn't make out what they were talking about. |
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Connor could make out the distinctive hull markings that showed that this was no ordinary vehicle. |
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Ariana squinted as she tried to make out the figure in the pale red light of the lava lamp. |
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He can make out the attempts at a mustache on his upper lip, but his hair is too fine and matches his pink skin too well to show. |
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The sound is muddy and tinny, and it's hard to make out some of the dialogue. |
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Oh, no, Ember only pretended to make out with Cale, so her lips are still undefiled. |
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Her eyes strained to see through the darkness, but she could only make out shadowy, undefined figures. |
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Both arms rested slackly at her sides, eyes widened, and she could just barely make out the outline of her assailant. |
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When one strained oneself to listen to the speaker one could make out that some important male writers were speaking in generalities. |
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Marcy began explaining to them that we don't have priests, but since he spoke badly, mumblingly, they didn't try to make out what he meant. |
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She could make out a small, unkept lawn to its side, circled by a broken, wiry fence. |
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It bounced right back at me because the return address was incorrectly formed and I can't make out how to get it to its destination. |
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He could make out the glint of staves and unsheathed swords through the swirling dust. |
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He did not need enormous magnification, but he did require considerable resolving power in order to make out the separate stars. |
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As near as he can make out this child must now be thirty-four or thirty-five years of age. |
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From where I was standing I could make out a thick ring of sodden weeds that enclosed a smaller circle of deep water. |
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I stared upwards into the gloom and could make out the outline of a face, with two eyes staring straight at me. |
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Glancing through the window he saw the cloud breaking and above he could make out the faint glimmer of stars. |
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On the opposite shore, I could make out a small railway bridge through a break in the trees. |
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It was dark outside, but Brae could make out more uniformed people, ushering students off of the plane. |
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It was hard to make out the stars because of the gaslights below the building, but she had a better view here then the one she had in London. |
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What looked like a small set of saddlebags was stuffed to the brim with items that Zareni couldn't quite make out. |
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Alan could make out ornate engraving across the surface and for the first time noticed the small feet that protruded from under the rim. |
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A night light was plugged into the wall along the way, offering scant illumination, but he could still make out Robyn's form. |
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Difficulties of no ordinary kind presented themselves to all who had applied to make out even the second, or enchorial inscription. |
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In the compound below you could make out the plan of the palace and all the ancillary buildings. |
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When it hissed and spat at Arvan, Shanae could make out the rows of viciously sharp teeth and foul black tongue. |
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As the lights grew brighter, and his vision adjusted, Mark was able to make out a figure in the distance, running toward him. |
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I can only make out a shadow since everything is dark, and the room is splashed with alternating flickering colors. |
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It's true that every department has some non-native speakers that are rather hard to make out, but that's not a category that we like to add to. |
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When the windows were not curtained, one could just make out the Caspian Sea with its oil rigs and various boats and ships moored there. |
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However, it looks more like a splodge than a fingerprint and you can't make out any of the traditional markings that show it's actually a finger. |
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As she got closer, the music became clearer and she could make out the sound of pipes and drums and voices raised in song. |
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She couldn't make out the lyrics, and the bass seemed annoyingly out of rhythm. |
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She squinted in an attempt to make out her surroundings, to find something familiar that would lead her home, the only place she was safe. |
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The room was dark, but Tessa could make out his defeated expression, his eyes emotionless and hollow. |
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Cassie squints her eyes tightly to try and make out the figure coming towards her. |
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A quick squint in my mirror and I can just make out a Caterham hurtling up behind me. |
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I never yet could make out why Saul threw a javelin at David, but if that was the tune he played on his harp I can understand it, and justify it as well. |
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They peered out into the gloom from battery Park and could not make out her form. |
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Jenny Slate and Rosario Dawson make out at midnight because everything is beautiful and nothing hurts. |
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Both were squinting out into the uneven lighting, trying in vain to make out the shifting shape of the approaching watercraft as it pulled up to one of the side floats. |
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Both sides held firmly to their positions, quoting authoritative sources to make out their cases, and exerting themselves to the utmost to try and argue things out. |
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Lucien is exactly the kind of guy to make out with random girls in bars. |
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It is very difficult to see the canvas in most reproductions, but in the original it is possible to make out the stretcher with two of its diagonal wooden corner-struts. |
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If you can make out a soft purr, or a meow, or maybe the gentle sound of milk being lapped up from a dish, do not assume that your ears are deceiving you. |
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The office was dark so I could only just make out his outline, but he soon obliged me by flicking on the anglepoise lamp on the desk to light the place up again. |
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She could only make out the strong angular shape of his face. |
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We had to drive over rice to get here, laid out on the road to dry or cure or some other food processing I could not make out in the squall of information they gave me. |
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They're also proof that no matter how fancy you are, you can't escape the urge to watch two girls make out. |
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If you zoom in on Google Maps, you can just make out the jumbles of industrial machinery tucked away inside. |
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Usually we can make out no more than a lumpen shape in the gloom. |
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Shields insists things were never as bad as people make out. |
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To cutting my hair off, to going to a house party, to just being completely free ... to make out with myself. |
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It's just possible to make out the Angle of Louis, the ridge in the middle of the sword-shaped breastbone where its immature plates, the manubrium and sternal body fused. |
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It is hard to make out exactly what she is saying, but her words act almost like an incantation. |
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But the images were too dim and indistinct to make out a face or a license plate number. |
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Ahead, I could just make out the maw of the next dreaded tunnel. |
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Again, in the background, one can make out a type of building, and the entire picture is framed by many trees, as opposed to the two trees in the previous picture. |
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In the corner I could make out a bed with glowing vines trailing snakelike up the bedposts and under the window sat a desk with a sea serpents engraved into the dark wood. |
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If I squint I can just make out a bejewelled monk on a throne. |
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In her topsy-turvy upside down world she could clearly make out exactly where her body was supposed to be going but she misinterpreted it somewhere from perception to motion. |
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A third figure is in deep shadow, but we can make out a dark purple suit. |
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If you can't quite see the actors who are in deep shadow, and you can't quite make out what the leading lady is saying, the evening becomes a bit of an uphill climb. |
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Through the dark mist, I could make out the faint shape of a large cat. |
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As far as I can make out, she belongs entirely to her milliners. |
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I peer into a stand of smoking hot woks, thinking I still have room for more, then suddenly I make out the crystallised wings and shells of dragonflies and beetles. |
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Returning to the pectoral limb, we can easily make out two general trends. |
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Although we were unable to make out a signature, there is a possibility this antique painting could be a genuine sleeper and a real investment for a lucky buyer. |
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Through the darkness I could make out a modest, tan coloured house with an overgrown garden and grubby looking shudders drooping from the windows. |
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Peer at the piece very closely and you may just make out the traces of what look like scars on the surface of the cellulose paint which coats these two huge bronze casts. |
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Neither her name nor her nemesis are among the slurred words I can make out. |
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The fact that he could see the sunspots with the naked eye and that he could make out the umbrae and penumbrae of the spots suggest that they must have been extremely large. |
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As it stood only about half a metre proud of the sea's surface, all I could make out was the huge bow wave where common dolphins flanked the whale as they would a ship. |
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All I could make out was the figure of a broad-shouldered man. |
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Then in the gloaming I can just make out a series of variegated camouflage sheets, the size of lonely single beds, strung between the trunks about 2ft off the ground. |
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What I will say though is that the drama queens who try to make out that they are the victims, despite being not even remotely involved, are really getting up my nose. |
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Ivya grew closer and closer, squinting her eyes to make out the figure. |
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When they come up we can make out on the tiny bridges two figures covered in oilskins, but nevertheless drenched through and looking like drowned rats. |
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In the far distance I can just make out the snow-capped mountains that characterise the Bosnian landscape but which look a little out of place from my sun-baked surroundings. |
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He squinted, peering at it and trying to make out the figures. |
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It was all a bit indistinct, but I could make out definite phrases. |
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Deanna could make out the tiny red pinpricks of fighters and missiles swarming toward the two ships as they accelerated madly to attempt an escape. |
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The images in the 15 black-and-white photographs, measuring roughly 24 x 20 inches in the original, are difficult to make out in their reproduction as the book's frontispiece. |
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Drawing the front windows' curtains for a bit, I took notice of three tall dark shadows that I cannot make out due to the frosted glass of our window. |
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At first I couldn't make out the words, just the preternaturally LOUD sound of a boy's voice flatly declaiming some sort of Important Announcement. |
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Without my glasses I can't make out the top letter on an eye chart. |
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Hestor can make out Jody and Morgan, who remain distinct in the throng. |
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As he stood in the middle of the tracks and stared blankly into the headlights, Troy could only make out the sound of fear and his racing rubatosis. |
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As the recluse did not want to learn arithmetic or grammar, and never yet could make out why people persist in writing down meditations, he fell back upon the biography. |
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And when his tissue of lies was finally unwoven by police, he callously tried to make out he had been a victim of years of abuse by her. |
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He can barely make out what the woman in the infirmary is saying. |
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Despite this, the most that Edward could make out of his victory was the capture of Calais. |
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I don't speak Latin well, so in hearing a dissertation in Latin, I would only be able to make out the odd word of it. |
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Learn how to make out a laundry list and to check it when the laundry comes home. |
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Star spotters could also make out world renowned Transformers artists and inkers Andrew Wildman, Jason Cardy and John Paul Bove. |
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Becoming somewhat worried by her intransigence, they insisted she make out a deed surrendering her right to implead them for their misconduct. |
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I couldn't make out the words of the song, it was just a bunch of la la la as far as I could hear. |
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In the dim light I could make out the luminous white heads of flowering Giant Hogweed. |
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They wanted to watch the game on TV, but there was too much interference to even make out the score on the tiny screen. |
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Shellie shouts something I can't quite make out over the racket of a passing police copter. |
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We could make out what she said cheekily in response to his questions. |
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Jude and me can make out to work the boat and get a livin', but we're too underhanded for a big job. |
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When I lurch back toward where I can make out what CNN is saying, CNN has broken for commercial. Shazbot! |
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The fogged window was only semitransparent and I could only dimly make out the figures. |
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Nelson could not immediately make out the French flagship as the French and Spanish were not flying command pennants. |
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Maybe you're more concerned with the catchiness of the tune and can't make out some of the words, or maybe just because it's not something you think about. |
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Sir, The extension of the use of Remedial Action Notices to food businesses other than in the meat sector may not be as bad as some people make out. |
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Can motorcyclists not read the normal signs or are they unable to make out the normal signs as their eyeballs are jiggled about in their heads while speeding about the roads? |
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My eyes had adjusted to the faint starlight and I could make out pale glistenings and white glow of bones which had worked their way free of clinging flesh. |
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It may indeed be said that these days brought on a high quickening of Maisie's direct percptions, of her sense of freedom to make out things for herself. |
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It was a bewildering theophany, since it was impossible to make out anything clearly in the stormy obscurity of thunder, lightning, smoke and wind. |
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I opened my eyes and looked around, trying to make out where I was. It was after sun-up, and I had been sound asleep. Pap was standing over me looking sour and sick, too. |
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Chisum says to the Sheriff I can make out a skedule of what I have. |
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