My body had begun to stiffen up after many years of sedentary work as a therapist. |
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He couldn't afford to take it, not as it currently stood, but a flat refusal would stiffen the old man's position. |
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In Elizabethan times the roots were dried and crushed and the powder was mixed with water and used to stiffen the ruffs worn by the gentry. |
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Japanese banks, besieged by requests to waive corporate debts, can stiffen their resolve to resist. |
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Politicians stiffen penalties, and the police increase man-hours and arrests. |
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The cat-o-nine-tails with its knitted thongs of whipcord was pickled in brine to stiffen it when there was an imminent flogging. |
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Lee promptly stiffen at the turn of the conversation and the change in my tone of voice. |
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In addition to osteophytic overgrowth, the ligamentum flavum may stiffen and buckle into the spinal cord dorsally. |
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The ultimate winner was an echt conservative who wants to rein in abortions and stiffen drug laws. |
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Legislation that will stiffen the penalties for the offences of kidnapping and false imprisonment ought to be passed. |
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Pondering this commentary will stiffen the spine of the faithful for preaching, teaching, interpretation, and life in the world. |
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After the German Army was chased across France, resistance began to stiffen. |
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Thicker foam also will stiffen the base fabric more than thin foam and requires the stability of heavy fabric, such as denim. |
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A person becomes empowered only when he successfully combats environmental factors that stiffen the path to success. |
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On the other hand, this intimate contact with war can stiffen your resolve. |
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The Queen heard it as well, for Margaret saw her shoulders stiffen almost imperceptibly. |
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I felt my body stiffen painfully as I relived the memory of my best friend being thrown onto the concrete footpath. |
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He looked at me, and even though he smiled, I could see his posture visibly stiffen. |
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Nicole followed my gaze, and I saw her visibly stiffen at the sight of her sister. |
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The bigger muscles in the arms and legs stiffen between four and six hours after death. |
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Bridge Plank can restore strength to an old structure, stiffen bridges laterally and will eliminate rattles. |
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To further stiffen the chassis, three cross members beneath the floor tunnel reduce flex due to steering input and provide a strong linear steering feel. |
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If a man loses this sense of enjoyment he is already beginning to stiffen up. |
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There can also be a tendency for joints to stiffen up and sometimes to fuse together. |
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The newborn's body may stiffen or arch and he or she may convulse when stimulated by light, sound or being touched. |
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My game plan went out of the window within a few minutes as it was so cold that my arms started to stiffen up and I had to change stroke every 50 to 100 yards. |
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During a convulsion, the child's arms and legs stiffen because the muscles are contracting. |
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In adopting resolutions, our aim should be to stiffen the sinews of these very people who are fighting for freedom, democracy and development. |
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Although Wilson is credited with not having sent troops to Vietnam, Healey hints that he had to stiffen Wilson's resolve. |
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In Iraq, special forces might be allowed out of their bases to help spot targets for air attack, and to stiffen Iraqi units. |
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We must call upon the Member States to stiffen penalties and to implement complete legislation to respond to this reality. |
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After smoking them, let them first stiffen in the fridge and then cut them into thin slices. |
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As the wings dry, they stiffen until the butterfly is ready for its first flight. |
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Close to 2,000 men and two nursing sisters were sent in November 1941 to Hong Kong to stiffen the defences of that distant British colony. |
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This seizure begins with the tonic phase, in which the body's muscles stiffen. |
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Their body becomes stiffen from fear, and even some of them die with their eyes open. |
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In the automotive industry there is widespread use of beading to stiffen floor and dash panels. |
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The weight is a few grains more which may stiffen the shaft a little. |
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Healey and Allen, two Englishmen who used it at the time to stiffen top hats. |
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The reforms are far from complete, but the present crisis should stiffen our political resolve to see them through. |
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In biology, nastic refers to the natural movement of plants in response to changes in their environment, such as plants that track sunlight or that stiffen when watered. |
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To borrow the corset metaphor, it's clear that we need to loosen our stays rather than stiffen them further, if we are to achieve optimum comfort and good function. |
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What he did in his speech last week was take the bad apple approach and say OK, what we're going to do is we're going to stiffen the penalties on the bad apples. |
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To stiffen the shallow vault, curved steel girders brace the two sides. |
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Did his face stiffen for a moment there or was it just my imagination? |
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Mazda also added a strut tower bar to help stiffen up the chassis. |
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The second key objective of my group was to stiffen the resolve of the Commission, to be more liberal and more 'market opening' in its approach to the abolition of quantitative rules. |
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One that came up time after time was to stiffen the penalty. |
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Let it stiffen up in the fridge, wrapped in aluminium foil. |
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But when I came in here, things started to stiffen up a little bit. |
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They grow cold, their skin droops, their hands stiffen. |
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Under these circumstances, the public is calling for more effective control mechanisms, leading many countries to stiffen their youth legislation. |
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Allow to stiffen up and cut into chunks, which you serve with the sashimi. |
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A pickup in private sector spending and a change in government in 2005 have helped to stiffen German resolve to address the nation's budgetary problems. |
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There are still some sailors who refuse to concede that grease, vaseline and silicone spray have no business getting into a sliding bearing, and are then surprised when their gear starts to stiffen up. |
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Using manioc starch diluted in water and spraying it over fabrics before ironing helps stiffen collars. |
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To swell, tumefy, stiffen, not the diction only, but the tenor of the thought. |
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It can still stiffen up a bit, but both knees now bend the same. |
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Were Major John Howard alive today, he would no doubt stiffen his ageing back, drop his walking stick and stand to attention in front of a glass museum case containing his commanding officer's uniform, to give a brisk salute. |
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Communing with history is another way to stiffen the laxity of a vacation: famous buildings, battlefields and landmarks are popular and lucrative draws. |
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She would break down to some degree, and then stiffen back up. |
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Bowed legs can be common in young toddlers before bones straighten out and stiffen naturally, but Maurel's condition was so bad that he was facing the rest of his life crippled. |
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Holding the breath in this context indicates a conscious or unconscious expectation of pain or danger, and that alone can cause muscles to stiffen. |
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I hope that today's discussion will stiffen the common resolve of the organs of the United Nations, the Secretariat and troopcontributing countries to rid United Nations peacekeeping missions of this scourge. |
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We usually stiffen up when we are faced with adversity. |
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The joint can begin to stiffen, and movement is impaired. |
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What Bergson deplores is encrustation — the way in which we dry and stiffen up, taking ourselves, our poses, and our beliefs so seriously that they sap us of pliability, poise, and goodwill. |
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Are the insulation accessories that secure, fasten, stiffen, seal or caulk the insulation and its protective cover or finish compatible with each other and with the environment? |
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Frozen shoulder when the tendons, ligaments and muscles stiffen up after overuse or injury. |
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Not just a sight base, the Amega system acts as a strut to stiffen the light barrel. |
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By levigation the fine clay is separated from the quartz and run off to stiffen before being formed into brick and dried prior to transportation. |
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Hurrell tried to spiritualize her in the same way that other photographers had spiritualized Garbo, and Crawford, as the thirties wore on, tended to stiffen, as if she were trying to live up to the images of her in magazines. |
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In ego-mindedness you can become hijacked by feelings of fight or flight in the guts, which stiffen your body against the negative reactions you anticipate. |
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Should England be fated to play France in the latter stages of the current Rugby World Cup, what better galvaniser to stiffen the sinews than the Bard's most patriotic play? |
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The proclamation helped stiffen resistance to the American attacks. |
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There's also an old-style tarriness plus oak to stiffen it up. |
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