Come on, this whodunit tale is quite engrossing with its frequent tosses, turns and twists. |
|
Come see these beautiful, 3 tiered, water fountain which are shaped after the eight-side mandala known in Feng Shui as the Ba-Gua. |
|
Come winter, drive the 12 miles west of Pontiac to get above it all at Alpine Valley, a ski resort with 25 runs and a snowboard terrain park. |
|
The Chemical Brother's new platter, Come With Us, isn't going to help the situation any. |
|
Come up with a great series of concerts and the world will beat a path to your door. |
|
Come recess, country boys would rush outside to reap stalks of wild beargrass which they would fashion into spears. |
|
Come on tell me. What's your pleasure? Vodka and cherry. Shaken, not stirred. |
|
Come to think of it, it would be interesting to see whether such theses are remotely true or not. |
|
Come July and August, with crops drinking thirstily from the canal, the riverbed below the diversion often dried up completely. |
|
The 21-year-old, whose hits included Come on Everybody and Summertime Blues, was the darling of British teenagers. |
|
This Day of Judgment is the day of the resurrection of the dead, when all will be judged as to their position in the World to Come. |
|
I thought Knight was doing an Anastacia as this album opened to the rock-tinged tune of her latest single Come As You Are. |
|
The first motivating force was the critical drubbing that 2002's Come With Us album received. |
|
Come back at a later stage and maybe you will be in a better frame of mind. |
|
Come back and read the next paragraph to discover more about how TV channels repeatedly trail their top programmes to try to make us watch them. |
|
Come visit our store for diamonds, colour stones, maple leaf coins, pearls, engagement rings, wedding rings, repairs, toreutics and many others! |
|
A shadowy figure has appeared on the horizon to put these democratically unaccountable Johnny Come Latelys in their place. |
|
Come to our Thanksgiving Party on Thanksgiving Day starting around 1 or 2pm. |
|
Come into work feeling like an idiot, go straight up to the person in charge of you and explain that your alarm clock was banjaxed or something. |
|
Would anyone genuinely expect serious electoral matters to be raised at a works meeting!? Come on, give me a break. |
|
|
Come to think of it, I have the Antidote to Rage lying in my DVD player awaiting for the beck of a remote control. |
|
Come September, she says she will do her best to set up groups such as scouts and guides for the area. |
|
Come fall, the rich and the powerful abase themselves for a seat in the owner's box. |
|
Come face to face with polar bears, walruses, harbour seals and beluga whales. |
|
Come on Walter, now we've had to stump up the ackers, lets get our moneys worth out of Thomas and let him prove he is one of Europes finest. |
|
Come rain or shine, Ballinakill outdoor heated swimming pool continues to attract swimming enthusiasts. |
|
The car was a rattletrap, and when we slowed down, dust would Come boiling in, even with the windows shut. |
|
Come on, try and imagine me, Mike Da Hat, rock star, wearing white kid gloves and a pinny. |
|
Come here at sunset, when the colours flame in red and orange, bold and beautiful. |
|
Come on guys I think it goes without saying that in barehanded combat Haikon would have ripped either of you apart if you had been alone. |
|
Final track Come and Go completely wrong-foots you with its bossa-nova beat. |
|
Come ten o'clock in the evening we've generally begun to stretch and yawn, and by ten thirty the house is quiet except for gentle snoring. |
|
Come 1986 when I was sober and I was out of the business and I was 18-years-old, you bet I worried about it. |
|
Come and enjoy a summer day and meet new people or renew old acquaintances. |
|
Come and enjoy a mixture of sublime acoustic and pop music, punk, electronic wizardy, hard-rock and funk. |
|
Come on, we chide, they can't have all the wealth, status and talent to boot. |
|
Come this time of year the mating call of the inebriated student can be heard from 11pm till late. |
|
Come hear what his Reverence rises to say, in his painted pulpit, this calm Sabbath day. |
|
Come to that, try putting yourself in the place of the letter carriers who have to deliver such unruly epistles. |
|
After the ceremony attached to lighting the candle, Come O Come Emmanuel was sung by a member of the Club. |
|
|
The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come wears a long black robe with a hood that conceals its head. |
|
Come on woman, you've already had a romp in a supply cupboard, how insatiable can your sexual appetite be? |
|
Come and see all the marine life that's attracted by the oysters and mussels we cultivate in a Scottish sea loch, they said. |
|
Come Monday he would have his hair cut and take a post-weekend shave at the in-house barbers. |
|
Come on let's run through the scene one more time and then we'll call it a night. |
|
Come on, we are students, we're the lower class of the future, you might as well start demoralizing us now. |
|
Had he been alive, I might have tried to get him a bit part in the remake of Lassie Come Home, which is to be filmed in Ireland. |
|
Come to think of it, the man with the beard and the man with the hood might be one and the same. |
|
Come autumn, the leaf colour warms up, becoming singed with red, a real treat to witness. |
|
Come back to where you belong, awaken your senses with the magical touch of nature. |
|
Come here for casual meals such as grilled sandwiches on homemade focaccia. |
|
Come and learn all the different options women have besides tampons and how to make your own reusable pads. |
|
Come the end of the tax year, it will make filing your tax return less of a chore. |
|
Come on FNW, Blackburn is not a titchy little backwater and deserves something better. |
|
Come on Tennesseeans we can't let those Coloradans and Washingtonians upstage us again. |
|
The six songs and six instrumentals of Angels Come on Time are well paced and carefully produced by the band themselves. |
|
Come September, attractive ferny foliage is a backdrop to yellow, lemon-peel flowers, which mix with fascinating tousled seed heads as the flowers drop. |
|
Come winter though, wombats are not averse to a little basking in the sun. |
|
But on the Strictly Come Dancing special on Christmas Day she showed clear signs of a small baby bump as she hosted the ballroom entertainment show with Bruce Forsyth. |
|
Come all ye people, offer thy assistance and ye may be greatly rewarded. |
|
|
I reckon that at least 30 new modern bins, strategically placed, are needed to avoid future complaints. Come on council, don't spoil the ship for a ha'p'orth of tar! |
|
Every aria she sang was a highlight, not least the formidable Act 1 scena which can hold up its musical head in the exalted territory of Come scoglio. |
|
Come celebrate with the young artists in attendance as they inject fresh colour, life, scent, spirit, humour and unselfconscious whimsy into our art scene. |
|
Sir Tom is expected to sing Delilah and Mama Told Me Not To Come and Robbie Williams will perform Mack The Knife. |
|
Come on, let's get a move on before this storm gets really bad. |
|
Come on, surely it's not beyond the wit of Wapping to rise to this challenge and ogle some young totty honestly, while still admiring her intelligence? |
|
Come up to us and say hello, you will find one of us by the merch stall. |
|
Come November, MacArthur will challenge Democrat Aimee Belgard, a Burlington County Freeholder in the general election. |
|
Come retirement, their Social Security may turn out to be a lot less than they counted on. |
|
Paul Bowles put it that way in Let It Come Down, a title taken from a Shakespearean assassin just before he strikes. |
|
Come on, this incident was broadcast well after the watershed and I cannot believe that anyone who watched the show wasn't either expecting or hoping for some confrontation. |
|
Come inside the star-studded globes after-parties, where inebriated A-listers mingle. |
|
Come Sundayby Isla Morley Isla Morley's first novel should not be attempted without a Kleenex box at hand. |
|
Come on Tobey, find yourself an older woman to run around with. |
|
Come on, do you really expect us to fall for such a childish ploy? |
|
Come with me as I give you the low-down on all the latest movie releases. |
|
Come bleary Friday morning, everyone will be itching to see what paid off for whom. |
|
Come on BBC, put the A-team behind the mikes for the men's final. |
|
Come on then, I think I have some medicated wipes back in my dormitory. |
|
Come on let me get my stuff then we will be on our way back to the house. |
|
|
Morley is a stunning storyteller, although Come Sunday should not be attempted without a Kleenex box at hand. |
|
Come the final readings of these bills, the Government flip-flops. |
|
Come to think of it, I would also avoid acrylic for a bedspread, after all, all that work means heirloom and it should had been done in a much better yarn. |
|
Come back a month or two later, get the logs, and wipe out the keylogger. |
|
On Friday the Museum of Richmond hosts Come Forth and Play, a look at engravings of merrymaking, playing Tudor games and making a Nine Men's Morris. |
|
Come daybreak, the atoll was about three miles away and had rough water. |
|
Dubai Come Friday and you can have a slice of the longest Stollen cake yet in Dubai. |
|
We are also being treated to a celebrity version of Strictly Come Dancing and Lord Sugar attempts to sweet talk the dragon's from Dragon's Den. |
|
But swapping cricket whites for sequins on Strictly Come Dancing seemed to offer a cure for his creaky knee. |
|
Perhaps instead of elections, we should just put our politicians into a national Strictly Come Dancing show and see how they cut the rug. |
|
Dance for fitness s HEALTH spa Ragdale Hall in Leicestershire is holding a Strictly Come Dancercise break. |
|
Carrey, who once played another Christmas humbugger, the Grinch, is also the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come. |
|
Highlights of the show include the emotional, In My Daughter's Eyes, Come What May and Hushaby Mountain. |
|
EastEnders star Halfpenny foxtrotted up in the final of Strictly Come Dancing, as the market had indicated she would. |
|
I mean, it's a bit of a waste of money paying me eighteen grand to run errands, isn't it? Come on. I'm supposed to be the brains of this outfit. |
|
Come the final whistle, Mikel Arteta lay flabbergasted on the turf. |
|
He could stay a little longer. Come to that, why couldn't he stay forever? He had nothing to get back to. |
|
Come to think of it, I certainly don't envy you all the work involved. Gad, you must be superhuman, or at least superdevoted to crifanac! |
|
Come to Him, the ever-living Stone, rejected indeed by men as worthless, but in God's esteem chosen and held in honour. |
|
Wells' novel The Shape of Things to Come and its 1936 film adaptation, and others such as The Air War of 1936 and The Poison War. |
|
|
He spent whole days and nights on his knees praying, yet he could have won Strictly Come Dancing with his virtuoso Brazilian tango, the maxixe. |
|
After the Communion service is interrupted, the anthem Come, Holy Ghost is recited, as a prelude to the act of anointing. |
|
In March 1935 the LSO recorded Arthur Bliss's incidental music for Alexander Korda's film Things to Come. |
|
As of May 2012, Leat handed over the editorial reins and the name of ERE, the new site being Come on my Lovers. |
|
In 2010, he composed the music for Come Fly With Me, a British television series from the producers of Little Britain. |
|
The supporters' unofficial anthem is Come On The County, written by Ken Buck and Eric Thomas. |
|
The 2010 release included reworkings of Come On The County by The Tenants Supermen, who are ardent County fans. |
|
Participants included Luol Deng, Jenson Button, Davina McCall, and stars from Strictly Come Dancing, to name but a few. |
|
In 2006 Jackson became the first competitor who had not won the main series to win the Strictly Come Dancing Christmas Special. |
|
On 16 November 2008 Jones was invited to perform on BBC's Strictly Come Dancing. |
|
Much of this footage was recorded around the time that the You Gotta Go There to Come Back album was being recorded. |
|
Come in, you false witness, you perjurer, you suborner of evidence, come in! |
|
Come morning, Frankish scouts discovered that the Umayyad force had withdrawn during the night. |
|
They will live ordinary, corporeal life but will not die and pass as such into the supernatural World to Come. |
|
Then all the apologists come and try defend this tai-tai. Come on la. They are all sama-sama elitist. |
|
William. No palaver! tell it to the marines. What, tacking and double tacking! Come to what you want to say at once. |
|
Come on Daisy, don't hold out on me. If you won't tickle my pickle, someone has to. |
|
Come to think of it, it was more Great White than barracuda. |
|
Her attack came after the BBC were branded ageist for replacing Strictly Come Dancing judge Arlene Phillips, 66, with 30-year-old Alesha Dixon. |
|
Come see for yourself why Winnebago is the best selling brand and most recognized name in RV'ing with a free factory tour. |
|
|
Come harvest time, it was run over by a winnower or combine, and hundreds of tiny body parts were spread across the field. |
|
As The X Factor has gone witlessly downmarket so Strictly Come Dancing, by recruiting their new judge from the Royal Ballet, has gone upmarket. |
|
They eat a vast amount of odd-looking sausages or wursts, as in their own carol, the Wurst Noel, whence the old saying Wurst Come, Wurst Served. |
|
Actualites Eecrit par Mohamed Nait Youssef Come Alive de RedOne et Chawki Le football rime avec la musique. |
|
Jamie Theakston's favourite, Come On England by the Karaoke Crusaders, is far ballsier. |
|
Other than that, turn the volume up and enjoy classic like Basketcase, When I Come Around and American Idiot. |
|
The rough collie made her big screen debut in 1943, starring in Lassie Come Home alongside Roddy McDowall and Elizabeth Taylor. |
|
Come on, Little Rhody,' he said, stepping forward towards the nest 'She's going to hatch them out here. |
|
Come savor our smoked paprika pizza, piled with aged pork salumi with hints of smoked paprika and cayenne pepper. |
|
Come January for the globes, expect to be enjoying yourself, too. |
|
The show might not attract the same amount of tabloid interest as X Factor or Strictly Come Dancing, but Showboaters is still good family fare. |
|
Come on, don't they get enough free perks as it is for wasting public money on painting bus shelters etc? |
|
X FACTOR bosses are planning huge changes to the judging panel in a dramatic bid to keep in touch with soaraway rivals Strictly Come Dancing. |
|
Doing the old soft shoe shuffle was what he later took to with enthusiasm on the Lithuanian equivalent of Strictly Come Dancing. |
|
Come with me, we'll sit outside the cafe and I'll paint you a moon you've never seen, constellate your eyes with a shower of stars. |
|
Come back here with your cut glass, posh English accent and waitrons everywhere will melt at your feet. |
|
Come dusk, the system is over-run with low-life charvas and their girlfriends, drinking, swearing and being totally anti-social. |
|
The service ended with her band, joined by singer Holly Johnson, playing one of her tracks Don't Come The Cowboy With Me Sonny Jim. |
|
And Isaac said unto Jacob, Come near, I pray thee, that I may feel thee, my son, whether thou be my very son Esau or not. |
|
Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain. |
|
|
For the first time, Come Write In, a program that offers free resources and support to literacy-related spaces, will expand beyond libraries and bookstores. |
|
Right, I'd better go and find an emery board. Come to think of it, this nail varnish generally is looking a bit scrotty. I really need to take it all off and start again. |
|
He has appeared in Strictly Come Dancing in 2005, as well as a number of other entertainment and factual TV shows, and is a well known face on British television. |
|
Winehouse is the backing singer on several tracks on the album and she performed backing vocals for Bromfield on the television programme Strictly Come Dancing on 10 October. |
|
Come see a live alligator, panther, chameleon, gray fox, coatimundi. |
|
Essex glamour model CHENILLE STEELE releases Come On You Lions on iTunes this week and reckons it can boost our boys enough for them to pick up the cup in South Africa. |
|
On 30 August 2013, Jacklin was revealed to be taking part in the eleventh series of the BBC1 Saturday night entertainment competition, Strictly Come Dancing. |
|
You yellow bastards! Come back here and take what's coming to you! |
|
Shows such as Strictly Come Dancing and Pointless are recorded there. |
|
Come make my dreams, honey hard as it seems, loving me is as easy as pie. |
|
But A Change Is Gonna Come is for all its data a very readable book. |
|
We're right near the lifeguard station. Come by before you leave. |
|
This study is a complete revision of her Where Do Indo-Aryans Come From? |
|
He has previously appeared in Stratford East's The Harder They Come and The Big Life and in Indhu Rubasingham's production of Fabulation at the Tricycle. |
|
Strictly Come Dancing judge Darcey Bussell outshone the heavilysequinned hoofers on the show in this stunning full-length gown from the AW14 atelier collection. |
|
The award was handed to the chatshow host by Strictly Come Dancing presenter Bruce Forsyth, after a video outlining Ross' career was played to the audience. |
|
The raucous likes of Because We're Dead will inspire hoedowns while slower numbers such as Come On Youth recall Bright Eyes at their most stripped down. |
|
The rest of the set comprises singles such as Dirrty, Lady Marmalade, Come On Over and Nobody Wants To Be Lonely, the latter a duet with swivel-hipped Ricky Martin. |
|
Come dressed to impress in your favorite Hawaiian shirt or traditional muumuu and enjoy a live music and dancing show from Tuika's Polynesian Island Magic. |
|
Ken Loach rose to fame in 1966 as the young director of the television play, Cathy Come Home, which featured homelessness and was watched by 12 million people. |
|
|
Come and meet the giant lancehead viper in deepest Costa Rica. |
|
Come to think of it, people in Dublin 4 don't fight, they just altercate. |
|
Nissan may also come in later in the network season with a prelaunch campaign for the long-awaited revival of the Z sports car. |
|
Don't take these as just an expensive replacement for the cheap earbuds that come with most portable audio players today. |
|
The use of a common language is extremely helpful in the cities, where Gabonese from all of the different ethnic groups come together to live. |
|
With both valves closed following combustion, the pistons in those cylinders come up and compress the exhaust gases instead of pumping them out. |
|
I come from a good family, my father was an honorable man, and I was the lord of one of the richest earldoms in the kingdom. |
|
Mum was booked on the 12.55 back to Edinburgh, so it had to be an early lunch, come hail or shine. |
|
We need to make sure we get into games early doors so we are not having to come from behind. |
|
In my experience, real kitchens come complete with gack on the floor of the oven and curd in the crevices of the hob. |
|
To gaff a trap, you need to come at it against the tide so you can create some slack on the line. |
|
It's a mistake for journalists to come into this business because they see pound signs. |
|
It may be cruel, but there will come a time when the youthful athleticism that earns him so much money now will disappear. |
|
Even the kitchen staff had come in from their duties, and were standing in a gaggle near the back of the room. |
|
This is the biggest break to come along for The Hooks so far in their career, but they fully deserved and earned it. |
|
The electorate will come to its own judgement as to whether or not we all earn our corn. |
|
She earns her keep though by competently catching all the bugs and critters that come into our Texas home. |
|
It's going to come down to how your behind looks when you pour yourself into them. |
|
Atmosphere, dread and horror are things that come naturally to him and here he pours it on liberally. |
|
They earnestly hope to come back in the summer and they are most grateful for the kindness shown in Rathdowney and other areas. |
|
|
Our harvest gaieties have come to a close, and the ghost stories are about to begin. |
|
He did not come to save his people from aimlessness, poverty or political adversity. |
|
Well, unfortunately, is that this drug does not come in pill form, or as a powder or liquid. |
|
Every year, some 3,000 of these exorbitant powder-blue stacks come cracking and groaning down the Labrador Sea. |
|
We come to a bridge under construction, the solid grey concrete piles in stark contrast to the compacted red earth comprising the river banks. |
|
Being an earth sign, he is willing to focus on the long term and whatever he began nine years ago should now come to fruition. |
|
The only trouble with this form of mental escape is that sooner or later you must come back to earth, the jolt of this being pretty terrific. |
|
I've got such a buzz at the moment I don't know when I'll come back down to earth. |
|
They've just come back after winning an Olympic gold medal so they are going to be on a high, but they have also got to come back down to earth. |
|
It's been a really hectic few days, and I'm only now beginning to come back down to earth. |
|
This is by far the best prize we have ever won and I think it will take quite a while to come back down to earth. |
|
I get really lost in a piece of work and come back to earth with a bump when I have to stop. |
|
We are sitting on a powder keg and decisions about what is needed must come from the people, who must take ownership of the issue. |
|
The squall line was rapidly moving east and I had to come up with another plan quickly. |
|
The air was darkened with a whirling, seething mass of powder-like snow which appeared to come up from the ground as well as down from the sky. |
|
As I paid out I watched him come in, walking with the rolling gait of a sailor on a pitching deck. |
|
The pressure was on a year in advance to come up with stellar costuming worthy of the star-studded gala performance at Wortham Theater Center. |
|
Unless military power is used with a clear moral clarity we set a precedent that may come back to haunt us and the world. |
|
This combined force on Iberia's eastern coast created a new power base in Spain that would help to shape the Peninsula in the centuries to come. |
|
It didn't look to me as if she needed a bunch of Sir Galahads to come riding to her rescue. |
|
|
It's a path well-trodden, and not a place where one is going to come up with many new, earth-shattering insights. |
|
When the wind suddenly drops, these kites come tumbling earthwards with a fierce velocity. |
|
Does Brancusi come closer to the spiritualism of the Shaker society or to the witticism of Duchamp and Dada? |
|
Explosive growth has even come to Egyptology, thanks to the ease with which source materials can now be distributed by CD and online. |
|
The team has eased Wuertz into the picture, making sure he hasn't had to come into games with runners on base. |
|
So it was that the young Roman and the old Galilean had come to frequent each other, at Lugdunum Converanum. |
|
It is unrealistic to expect all our answers to come from a long dead Englishman, let alone a pale Galilean. |
|
You really have a lot of gall, Mackenzie, to come right up and say all these things. |
|
Meanwhile at home, the first daffs were reluctantly unfurling, and half my scillas haven't come out yet. |
|
To many poor regions in the east and south of the continent, they did not come at all until the nineteenth or even the twentieth century. |
|
The last carriage of an eastbound train was believed to have come off the tracks between Hammersmith and Barons Court stations. |
|
She hurled the words at him in the desire that somebody would overhear them and come gallantly running to her rescue. |
|
A friend had given us a beautiful Easter lily, two stems with four or five lilies on each, and more to come. |
|
It will be Easter Monday, a public holiday and I'm not going to work, so I have to come up with something. |
|
He says the power station prides itself on being a good neighbour and intends to be a vital part of the local community for years to come. |
|
These power-ups are collected when you kill an enemy or come across a new area in order to discover a coloured can. |
|
I need somewhere easy-peasy to get to, because I know from experience that if people have to actually look in an A-Z they won't come. |
|
People, who managed to come out of the area, have reported that there is an acute shortage of potable water and eatables. |
|
At every point we would come across a boat vendor selling some eatables, they would purchase something for me to eat. |
|
When people with eating disorders come for their first appointments they have a lot to say. |
|
|
This means, come summer on the Stubai Glacier, the slopes are practically empty. |
|
In the years to come we may well see far more nightmarish things in our military arsenal than bunker-busters and daisy-cutters. |
|
There are at least two different families of gall wasps which come in lay their eggs and that eats the maggot. |
|
I guess there is one thing in being a critic, and a whole new ballgame when it come to practicing what you preach. |
|
The entry fee is 20 for a table of four and there will be raffles galore on the night so why not come along and support a good cause? |
|
She explains that the animals instinctively know when the tide is ebbing, and thus when to come down to the shore to graze. |
|
The best known Gamays come from Beaujolais, but it also grows well in the Loire valley as Gamay de Tourraine and as Vin de Pays du Jardin. |
|
This leaves us with the realists, who come across as sensible, pragmatic moderates. |
|
He was highly practical and would come up with pragmatic solutions on various issues. |
|
My friend and I have just come upon a picturesque farmhouse on a rolling prairie. |
|
The guy also is the best blocking receiver in the game and is as competitive as they come. |
|
Either way, it has left Downes in ebullient mood and ready to come out fighting. |
|
Of course, senility will come soon, and I praise the Goddess it has held off until now. |
|
However, like most business correspondence, praise comes rarely and complaints come often. |
|
If you want to play this game until you come across some hard evidence, that's up to you. |
|
It is an extremely serious matter and the time has come for those who produced those photographs to acknowledge the game is up. |
|
For the first time in the match it was game on, the hurling was frantic and well contested with scores hard to come by. |
|
Politically, especially as there are risks to humans from Avian Influenza, the game bird industry will come under closer scrutiny. |
|
The game fish of British Columbia, Canada, are sought after by anglers from around the world who come to BC for it's incredible sportfishing. |
|
There are readymade cards on several websites, but the greatest satisfaction seems to come from sending a personally designed e-card. |
|
|
And when he finally does come pranging in from behind, I don't want my kids to be one of the first things he hits. |
|
But I'm sorry, if you carry on the way he has over the last three weeks, you can only expect the English pranksters to come out. |
|
I get to pick up Debbie from her last day at school, which is one of those milestones that come and go so damnably fast. |
|
Despite its denials and stonewalling, damning evidence has come to light implicating it in the deaths. |
|
With your graciousness come to honor her loving memory during the funeral services and prayers. |
|
For example, who would come out on top if fifth dans in judo and karate were to match skills? |
|
If you could have someone come in and take a gander at your living room, would you let them in the house and what would you like to change? |
|
You literally need to battle your way through the crowd and when you come across someone who is just dandering you just want to push them. |
|
She tries not to come in like a whirlwind or gangbusters and turn things upside down. |
|
They all went down to the quay to greet the boat and the first person to come down the gangplank was a Corkman. |
|
He peered over onto the docks, and then beckoned for his men to come up the gangplank onto the ship again. |
|
The point of attaching the parachute bridle to the carabineer is that then you can dangle from the hang glider as you come down under chute. |
|
As a journalist, when you pull at a dangling thread and see three more threads come free it's hard to resist pulling on those too. |
|
Lego for example come from Denmark and in Danish is pronounced leg godt and means play well. |
|
Regional assemblies' funds would come both from central government and through a precept on the council tax. |
|
I'm a long time WoW player and I'll come keep pesky high levels from ganking you. |
|
After his call had come in, another precinct, closer to his position, had dispatched officers to help him. |
|
Did any of the background dirt about the doctor come before the jury, or was it ruled prejudicial? |
|
He then throws down the gauntlet by challenging educational reformers to come up with suitable new methods of teaching morality. |
|
Perhaps more than a handful of those members have come to understand the potential calamity of a precipitate withdrawal. |
|
|
This will then leave a major gap in the trained, professional sector in years to come. |
|
So although the Chair may be saying to come back to the bill, it is precisely why that issue is directly relevant. |
|
The trash cans were set out waiting for the garbage man to come by and collect them tomorrow morning. |
|
I have come to the creek, she said, to shine my flashlight on the animals in the water when it gets dark. |
|
At the beginning of this campaign I said that this is a dark period for the union, but we would come through it and the union would be stronger. |
|
The white light is a spell that will over come the dark forces of evil and destroy it. |
|
Some of the handiest garden tools don't actually come from the garden center. |
|
Bulbs bought in bulk from a garden center usually come with information slips. |
|
The pre-meal selection of chutneys is a precursor of the sharp flavours to come. |
|
Fraser, for her part, has certainly come through the darknesses of three years ago. |
|
If rosy predictions are to come true, a change in business culture will have to occur. |
|
Then the envelope will be opened to reveal if Paul's prediction has come true. |
|
The example of Germany shows that reunification can come at a time and in a way that defies prediction. |
|
Margulis and Sagan say that Darwinism never really addresses where new species come from. |
|
Before becoming pregnant, she was advised to slowly come off some of her drugs, but to continue to take prednisolone, a steroid. |
|
Five of his title defences have come against last weeks opponent or against Joichiro Tatsuyoshi from whom he won the title. |
|
If these substances come into contact with bird feathers they are impossible for the bird to preen or wash out. |
|
Jesus offers a preface in these verses, which come near the conclusion of the section in John commonly referred to as Jesus' farewell discourse. |
|
The data used for this study come from the same data set used for the soybean example just reported. |
|
The snag is that running a music festival miles from anywhere doesn't come cheap, even with generous subsidies from the prefectural coffers. |
|
|
If the Court is against us on preferences, then those credits come back into our loan account. |
|
The shy dater can open up and get to know a person without having to deal with first-date jitters that often come from fear of the unknown. |
|
To Pamela's astonishment, there was helplessness in those eyes she had come to think of as dauntless. |
|
Her view is that judges should not prejudge the issues that will come before them. |
|
It was the group's misfortune to come into prominence during the dawning of the video music era. |
|
About a mile down the road, on the right, you'll come to an imposing brick gateway with wrought-iron gates. |
|
Ideas come to him while he's studying tape, driving to work, eating dinner or watching a player drink from a Gatorade bucket after practice. |
|
In the ritualistic piece that preludes actual narration, the Chakyar depicts how he has come a long way down to earth from heaven. |
|
Each of us observes the world and the people with whom we come in contact through a lens refracted by our own upbringing, experiences and prejudices. |
|
Are the machines going to come with Corel Linux pre-installed? |
|
The time has come for Jack Sparrow to be rescued from Davy Jones's Locker. |
|
Family sagas come no more epic than the story of Noah, his wife, three sons and three daughters-in-law, who survive serious global flooding to repopulate the earth. |
|
We stopped for gas on the way home and were parking in front of her house when she turned to relate what I've come to think of as the quintessential Lisa story. |
|
The other is that he had come to make a virtue of the fact that the basic data of knowledge are never certain, but at best merely credible to some degree. |
|
Between Loch Pattack and the peat hag-ridden moor, you will normally come across some white horses, garrons, that add to the dream-like quality of the place. |
|
They come from the poorest families and the most distressed communities. |
|
Too, a tract devoid of any winged life other than dragonflies and mosquitoes this week might just be covered with the feathered gray darters come the first of September. |
|
If you dart a giraffe and he falls over, the sort of force that would come from being 6 or 7 metres high and your head hitting the ground would crack the skull open. |
|
Williams and Fitton have been good pals for years, have thrown the odd dart in friendly combat, but this was the first time they had come face to face in matchplay. |
|
We microwave our dinners, movies come out on DVD mere weeks after they're released, and instead of darning a sock with a hole in it, folks simply buy a new pair. |
|