Do not let fear of error or retribution propel you into a medical appointment or a dangerous situation. |
|
In his upper right hand Ganesha holds a goad, which helps him propel mankind forward on the eternal path and remove obstacles from the way. |
|
I had no oars because I thought I could propel the punt with a primitive sail that I had assembled. |
|
Hatch thrusters propel the hatch on the shuttle away from the main shuttle body. |
|
She genuinely, and far less self-interestedly than most, wanted to help propel young talent to the empyrean. |
|
They are weird stubby boats, and you have to do a lot more work to propel and keep them on a straight course through the water. |
|
It is designed to propel itself by using ducted fans, take pictures, analyze temperature and gas levels, and communicate by voice control. |
|
As China grows into a great power, the wealth transferred into the country by expropriating intellectual property will propel it forward. |
|
The US looked down and out until the news came through from the Korean match to propel them into the second round. |
|
Nineteenth century bagatelle floor standing tables required cue sticks to propel ivory balls. |
|
The trap-jaw ant fires its mandibles with such force to propel itself to the front of the pack. |
|
He established himself as the champion of the working people and that helped propel him to the presidency. |
|
When infectious people cough, sneeze, talk or spit, they propel TB germs, known as bacilli, into the air. |
|
This in turn causes surrounding air to rush into the sail and propel the boat further. |
|
The sacred and secular stories of South Asian music propel it along the path of diaspora. |
|
Australia were amassing a huge score when Lyttelton came on to propel his underarm lobs. |
|
Your ardent and enthusiastic manner finds favour and could propel you to success. |
|
Will anger propel you to be a healer, a restorer, a rescuer, and a reconciler? |
|
Some of the dialogue falls flat with some forced jokes, but overall the writing is clever enough to propel the movie. |
|
Instead of using explosives to propel a shell out of a gun barrel, a rail gun uses magnetism to speed a projectile along two rails. |
|
|
Electromagnetic forces propel the dust out of the Jovian system, into interplanetary space. |
|
The propeller or the jet engine of an aircraft pushes air backwards to propel the aircraft forward. |
|
SpaceShipOne uses a hybrid rocket engine that uses both liquid and solid propellant to propel it into space. |
|
To be sufficient to propel the mill wheel the flow of water needs to be 0.3 cubic metres per second. |
|
With it, Sloan hoped to propel the school out of sleepy mediocrity and make it a top-tier institution. |
|
Many factors propel the daily newspaper toward its decline, but the present management of the papers are not helping their situation. |
|
Ice worms propel themselves using setae, extremely small bristles that protrude from the sides of their bodies. |
|
I looked up at the fountain with its carving of heavy-shouldered wind gods straining to propel ships and bearded sea gods looking to spear them. |
|
At such moments nobility and strength of character propel us way beyond our means to be kind and helpful. |
|
The ancient weapon uses a throwing stick to propel spearlike projectiles farther and harder than hunters can with arm power alone. |
|
The child's steely blue eyes, chiselled features and surprisingly strong screen presence will no doubt propel him to many future cinematic roles. |
|
There, electrical impulses propel vesicles into the cell wall to spray the neurotransmitter into the synapse. |
|
I swing my arms to propel myself out of a clump of these strange water plants. |
|
If the show isn't buzzworthy, the e-commercial would have been difficult to propel into the limelight. |
|
Without an internal skeleton, it has to propel itself across the seafloor with bands of minute, hydraulically powered tube feet. |
|
He believed children should be allowed to read codswallop, the idea being the habit will propel them to more fortified pleasures. |
|
Mittal's donation will propel him into the ranks of Britain's most philanthropic citizens. |
|
This ritual apparently provided the necessary steps to propel the spirit into its next incarnation. |
|
The indecipherability and lack of cohesive structure to the lyrics help to propel the surrealism of the music. |
|
It would be Rozema's first feature-length film, however, that would propel her into cinema's international limelight. |
|
|
But I believe the historical conjunction that gave rise to accountability continues to inflect and propel it. |
|
Despite his slowish running, his bike speed was good enough to propel him into fourth place in the 45-49 age group. |
|
The fireman had to keep shoveling coal into the furnace which generated the steam to propel the train. |
|
The Johns Hopkins team also delivered DNA into mice by using a so-called gene gun to propel small doses of the nanorods under the animals' skin. |
|
The team is looking for playmakers who will propel it into the playoffs again and for years to come. |
|
Seen through the door in the background, a team of black oarsmen propel the boat along the Nile. |
|
He is known for his use of objects and objective correlative to propel his story line, instead of strict narrative. |
|
Bend the main joint, flex another smaller joint to propel the body forward, then stop the motion by repeating it again. |
|
Today's equipment, which includes drivers that can propel ultra-aerodynamic balls a country mile, adds some weight to that assumption. |
|
They know exactly when to unleash the bombastic, fuzzy electric guitar to propel a sunny-day strummer to psych rock heaven. |
|
They propel themselves forward without toppling the wine bottles perched precariously on their hats. |
|
Climbing geckos use all four feet similarly to produce positive fore-aft forces parallel to the surface that propel the gecko upwards. |
|
Fear of the equity markets, and the addiction to saving, can propel a country into a vicious downward deflationary spiral. |
|
It gets a boost from electric motors to propel the vehicle at low speeds, when the engine is least efficient. |
|
But he found he could propel himself forward by pushing off against the sides with his feet. |
|
Solar sails will use the sun's energy to propel spacecraft across the cosmos. |
|
A stroke consists of four components that have to be completed perfectly to propel the boat forward as fast as possible. |
|
Now the firm believes the injection of development capital will help propel a new range of its products on to the worldwide stage. |
|
If you were so inspired, you could actually learn to work the big red wheels in the proper manner to propel you forward. |
|
It was a prize, a brass ring, a suburban legend that, if true, would propel the average Stepford housewife to new heights of fame. |
|
|
With a miracle of even greater proportions required to propel his new side to similar glories, he is keen just to focus on the next round. |
|
It is harder for them to dress in and out of equipment, propel themselves through the water and operate stiff power inflators or releases, for example. |
|
However, a gauss rifle uses a series of very large capacitors hooked to several coils that line the barrel of the rifle, to propel the slug forward. |
|
Entrants have to create vehicles that propel themselves, steer, navigate and negotiate potholes, ravines, sand dunes and boulders without any human intervention. |
|
The 21-year-old's nerveless performance in the final, as he ruthlessly crushed Juan Carlos Ferrero, would have been enough to propel him to superstardom in his home country. |
|
Their research provided the groundwork for other modern-day solutions that use microwave energy and light to propel ships, rather than nuclear fission. |
|
Fyffes has been nursing an ambition to propel itself into a new phase of development, moving from being the dominant European player to one of the largest in the world. |
|
If you want a white shirt that will propel you into the fashion stratosphere, then look for something in a luxurious fabric which is fitted, yet floaty. |
|
For all his ruthlessness, Cromwell gave away a hostage to fortune by his efforts to propel Henrician religious policy in a moderately Protestant direction. |
|
The first instance of steam adapted to propel ships dates to the late eighteenth century in France, where small boats with side-mounted paddle wheels were tested on rivers. |
|
While this is not by no means over generous, it is sufficient to propel the car peppily enough for Irish conditions, given its low overall weight. |
|
When her survey group becomes lost inside the cave, the author uses the experience to propel questions of the duplicity of maps and the ambiguities of human perception. |
|
But so long as the whale shark made no discernible attempt to propel itself through the water I could, by finning vigorously, just about keep pace. |
|
In addition, most upper stages that are used to propel systems to high orbits or even into interplanetary trajectories are also solid-fuel systems. |
|
Consequently, the abundant head scalids move forward, plow backward through the water and interstices surrounding the animal, and therefore propel the animal forward. |
|
It was a pod that was streamlined for speed and 4 thrusters to propel it. |
|
The wave can also propel solid projectiles, such as cannonballs. |
|
As such, they don't propel the craft through the water very well! |
|
I use the last amount of my remaining strength to propel myself upward. |
|
Use your arms to help propel you upward and to control the movement. |
|
|
In trees they propel themselves from branch to branch with powerful thrusts of their hind legs, using the soft, disc-like pads on their fingers and toes to grip the branches. |
|
He often recalled the words of his father and dreamed of using technology to engineer a wondrous machine that would propel him into the heavens to meet the Lord. |
|
The amphtrac floated on pontoons and rolled on cleated tank treads, enabling the craft not only to propel itself in water but also to climb across exposed reefs. |
|
A little later he devised a riverboat which could propel itself against a current by using 'legs' that reached the riverbed, as well as the more conventional paddles. |
|
Nine mighty aqua jets propel water at the user, who lies half-sunken into the thing, but conveniently separated from the water by an impermeable surface. |
|
Actin microfilaments are found perpendicular to the cortical microtubules and may be the source of motion to propel the directional motions of the fluid membrane. |
|
His legs, bandy and stubby, propel him sheathed in black overalls. |
|
What they do not do is erase the larger cultural matrix and power relations that propel women to undertake certain kinds of body transformations instead of others. |
|
What is happening to the campaigning steamroller that was going to propel the new prophets of technocratic and meritocracy craving Labor into power? |
|
Since the 1967 war, he thought these tendencies could coexist and propel him. |
|
If he can temper those tendencies, the debate could propel him to the first tier of the race. |
|
Since then, though, the NBA has been struggling to find the stars to propel them to Jordan-like mega heights. |
|
Typically, the power used to propel the water is derived from steam heat, which is turn generated by burning natural gas. |
|
But for a Hyperserial to truly be successful, you need a compelling question to propel the show forward. |
|
And they usually pose a clear question designed to propel the story forward. |
|
These twin forces stand to propel the former Secretary of State and First Lady back into the White House. |
|
Engines were mounted on the bottom to help it propel upwards. |
|
The point of placement of the blade in the water is a relatively fixed point about which the oar serves as a lever to propel the boat. |
|
The success of sugar merchants such as Bartolomeo Marchionni would propel the investment in future travels. |
|
Taking it one step further by writing out the solutions could help propel those individuals who feel out of their comfort zones. |
|
|
Fully aquatic mammals, the cetaceans and sirenians, have lost their legs and have a tail fin to propel themselves through the water. |
|
Blades, otherwise known as oars to amateurs or non rowers, are used to propel the boat. |
|
It is an advantage for the coxswain to be light, as this requires less effort for the crew to propel the boat. |
|
Razorbills dive deep into the sea using their wings and their streamlined bodies to propel themselves toward their prey. |
|
This allowed the engine to drive the electric motor as a generator to recharge the batteries and also propel the submarine. |
|
Otariids use their front limbs primarily to propel themselves through the water, while phocids and walruses use their hind limbs. |
|
Loons are excellent swimmers, using their feet to propel themselves above and under water. |
|
When swimming, whales rely on their tail fin propel them through the water. |
|
A paddle steamer is a steamship or riverboat powered by a steam engine that drives paddle wheels to propel the craft through the water. |
|
It is distinct from an airship, which is a powered aerostat that can propel itself through the air in a controlled manner. |
|
This organism spends part of its life cycle as a motile zoospore, enabling it to propel itself through water and enter its amphibian host. |
|
They can propel themselves over wet grass and dig through wet sand to reach upstream headwaters and ponds, thus colonising the continent. |
|
It was widely copied there and used to propel the Mississippi paddle steamers. |
|
Whilst the line was being built, the directors were trying to decide whether to use standing engines or locomotives to propel the trains. |
|
A handloom weaver could propel the shuttle by throwing it from side to side with the aid of a picking stick. |
|
We're moving across the board from FM synthesis to wavetable synthesis, and looking to propel audio technology as far as it can go. |
|
This type of fiber allows them to propel themselves forward at great speeds and maintain it for an extended distance. |
|
In order to be successful in racing, Quarter Horses need to be able to propel themselves forward at extremely fast sprinter speed. |
|
The actual physical length of each club is longer or shorter, depending on the distance the club is intended to propel the ball. |
|
Players use the sticks to pass, stickhandle and shoot the puck, and to propel their sledges. |
|
|
The seam on a new ball is prominent, and helps the bowler propel it in a less predictable manner. |
|
The video shows two men in a luge, imitating a thrusting movement to propel the luge to move forward. |
|
As the microbes propel themselves along with their whip-like flagella, Earth's magnetic field turns them toward the poles. |
|
Red swamp crayfishes snap their abdomens with fanlike tails forward underneath their bodies to propel themselves backward through the water. |
|
Inserts that propel themselves rapidly away from the shell burst, often looking like fish swimming away. |
|
Complicated connections in the strategic succession of America's global interventions propel this phenomenon of self-fulfilling prophecy. |
|
Although they are microscopic plants, diatoms have hard shells and dinoflagellates have little tails that propel them through the water. |
|
Near the banks, the water is shallow and her palm frond oars propel her. |
|
You remain in the cab, drive it to where you want to go, and propel the extinguishant from inside the cab. |
|
A propeller is said to drag when the sails urge the vessel faster than the revolutions of the screw can propel her. |
|
The new product uses hydrofluoroalkane, instead of chlorofluorocarbon, to propel the medication out of the canister and into the lungs. |
|
Some one-celled organisms are equipped with appendages like cilia and flagella that propel them through solutions. |
|
That combination is so far beyond unhip as to propel the WIN March into its own dimension of occult stodginess. |
|
These issues also helped propel another Illinoisan, Abraham Lincoln, to the national stage. |
|
In early February 2009 this probe ignited a single ion engine to begin pulsing it for up to 8 000 hours to propel it back towards the Earth. |
|
Hendricksz's expedition eventually helped propel a fortification frenzy. |
|
Pteropods, or sea butterflies, have a foot that is modified to form a pair of winglike structures that animals use to propel themselves through the water column. |
|
When it had advanced from the wood, it hopped much after the fashion of a kangaroo, using its hind feet and tail to propel it, and when it stood erect, it sat upon its tail. |
|
A wardrobe malfunction is generally used to propel the woman whose wardrobe has malfunctioned back into the limelight, a la Janet Jackson at the Super Bowl. |
|
Crocodiles have webbed feet which, though not used to propel them through the water, allow them to make fast turns and sudden moves in the water or initiate swimming. |
|
|
Iontophoresis is a technology that delivers pharmaceuticals transdermally using electric current to ionize drug molecules and propel them through the skin. |
|
Gavin Manclark then scored to propel Scotland into the lead. |
|
Single selection Maps is the song that will propel the troubadour to the next level, a self-deprecating and tongue-tied love song that is easily the album's highpoint. |
|
Researchers at Cambridge University recently discovered that a common garden pest, the froghopper, can propel its tiny 6-millimeter body over half meter into the air. |
|
Additional engines provide thrust in order to propel the craft. |
|
A well-executed design can propel vehicle sales to record heights, but one that's widely panned by the public and the automotive press can be the kiss of death. |
|
Griffin referenced the Panthers and in particular Eldridge Cleaver, the Panther whose lionization by the New Left helped propel his prison memoir book. |
|
This device uses a micropump to propel the medication into the GI tract. |
|