Learning to breathe more fully can help you let go of pain and loosen tense muscles. |
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He could only stare at her there, watching her breathe and watching her eyes twitch beneath her lids. |
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She'd sit in front of this tabletop device and breathe slowly for 20 minutes. |
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The stench coming from them almost made me puke and I had to force my body to not breathe whilst I did my widdle. |
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Although I found his interpretation of the sonata a shade tame, the variations and ballades breathe a truly Olympian spirit of resigned grief. |
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Exhale as you swing the kettlebell out in front of you and breathe in as it swings back between your legs. |
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As the heat of the coals seared Ian's shoulder, Nick's hands tightened around Ian's throat and he couldn't breathe. |
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Sea turtles are marine reptile living in salt water but have lungs and they come to the surface to breathe air. |
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After being locked down for so long it will be exhilarating to exit my cell and to breathe the fresh desert air. |
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Children from far away cities came here for summer camps to breathe the sea air and eat fresh fish. |
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I do believe that being able to breathe fresh mountain air, see the sea or green hills all the time does a lot for one's spirit. |
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My spirit feels reborn, and I breathe in the sweet air of the pardoned prisoner. |
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When you breathe in through your windpipe, the air moves through your bronchial tubes into your air sacs. |
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This involves making a cut into the windpipe below the swollen part of your airway, providing a new opening through which you can breathe. |
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He can breathe fire and climb trees and he always poos in the same part of the garden. |
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Yes, this includes your favorite music, the records you cannot live or breathe without. |
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My heart was knocking against my ribs so hard I could hardly breathe, much less speak. |
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Panic sufferers usually tense their bodies and breathe in a way that increases symptoms. |
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The road goes through a number of impoverished regions, and it is hoped that construction works will breathe life into them. |
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Finally I had worked myself into a state of hysterics so much so that I could not breathe. |
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Mae-Lynn crossed to the wrought torches to breathe softly on them and put them out. |
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I focused on my labored breath and thought back to my struggle to breathe in Laos, which reminded me of why I was doing this. |
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Larry's voice came in short, labored gasps as it slowly became more difficult to breathe. |
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At the same time, I breathe a regretful sigh at the anguish, the desperation and the rage reflected in the letters I hold in my hand. |
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Although labyrinth fish have gills, they also have a special organ which allows them to also breathe directly from the air. |
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Prevented from surfacing to breathe, the sea mammals drown while their skin is lacerated by the spines of writhing fish. |
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As your muscles begin to feel the burn, the body goes into buffer mode, and you release the excess lactate as carbon dioxide as you breathe. |
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You get to watch benevolently, breathe in crisp Alpine air, sip Swiss wine and wolf down chocolates by the handful. |
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Try to avoid polyester and other man-made fabrics, as they do not allow your skin to breathe. |
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And I now have the breathe control to lance two fish on the same spear with one breathe of air. |
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At high altitudes, the thin air makes it hard to breathe unless the cabin is pressurized. |
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The mauve-coloured external stone was repointed with lime mortar to allow the walls to breathe. |
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The movie never has much space to breathe, and there are only one or two real laugh lines in the entire film. |
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In her latter years, she could not breathe without oxygen or even totter round her beloved garden on her Zimmer frame. |
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Despite being unable to breathe properly or see clearly, Arthur then absolutely leathered his Polish quarter-final opponent. |
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In between the sounds of his gagging and retching, he sobbed wildly, gasping for breath, barely able to breathe. |
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There was a chance that he might not be able to breathe for himself or swallow, let alone walk or talk again. |
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Most colds are caused by rhinoviruses that are in invisible droplets in the air we breathe or on things we touch. |
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The singer should breathe silently and deeply, experiencing expansion around the lower ribs. |
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You may see the soft tissues of the neck and the area below the ribcage pull inwards during attempts to breathe in. |
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A ringing sound was all she could hear and she began to breathe very quickly. |
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If you can breathe through a snorkel, then you are well on the way towards one of the most enriching wildlife experiences of your life. |
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He needed an oxygen machine to help him breathe and a team of nurses to roll him over in bed. |
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Since the old adage of a little of what you fancy doing you good is now applicable to chocolate, we can all breathe a sigh of relief. |
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If you want to work in the music industry, you have to live and breathe music. |
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When you live and breathe your product, it's hard to realize that customers aren't as passionate about it as you are. |
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High ceilings give the already roomy back room more roominess and let the wisely-selected art on the walls breathe. |
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He had grown used to it, at least when he had his mask and filters that allowed him to breathe. |
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If opening the airway does not cause the person to begin to breathe spontaneously, artificial respiration must be started. |
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The external plaster was replaced with a lime-based plaster to allow the stone rubble walls to breathe. |
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They prefer procedure masks because the masks fit loosely and are easier to breathe through than surgical masks. |
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I feel unable to breathe in this paradise, crushed by the mountains that aren't here, scared I won't be able to survive in my asphalt jungle. |
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When in actuality, children need all of their breath in order to simply breathe. |
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She had to breathe a couple of deep breaths before she could allow herself to talk about her mom. |
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Performers may hold their breath or breathe rapidly and shallowly from the upper chest. |
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Most often, when we are overly frightened, we either breathe much too quickly or we hold our breath. |
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It has been noted that guide dogs working in towns breathe the same pollutants as humans yet do not have asthma. |
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People who breathe in the fine pollen may have an asthma or hay fever attack as a result. |
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The air was stale and the dusty atmosphere was enough to make all of them hesitant to breathe. |
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The sentinel still stood at attention directly under the lantern, not moving but to breathe. |
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A third group of fishes, the lungfishes or fishes that can breathe on land, survive today as freshwater fishes in Queensland. |
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As the tadpoles become frogs, the gills initially used to breathe are replaced with lungs. |
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I breathe in the salt cedars, the bushes pearled with skin petals that seem to sweat. |
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The reason we need to breathe is to provide the oxygen needed to carry out cellular respiration in our cells. |
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I have come in to breathe in the still, dark air, the scent of prosciutto waiting on the slicer, the tang of lemon leaves. |
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Even though she didn't need to breathe, Akasha took a deep one to calm the awakening feelings that had lain dormant for so long. |
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If water is made up of hydrogen and oxygen, why can't we breathe underwater? |
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Haggling over the prices of groceries can be a taxing job, but Delhi's home-makers may finally breathe easy. |
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In that moment he could scarcely breathe, and yet the air was filling his lungs like an inflated balloon, stretching them painfully. |
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It was rather tight and it was slightly hard to gather enough air to breathe, but I managed. |
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Lizards, therefore, progress in short rushes with frequent stops to breathe. |
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I was about to breathe a sigh of relief when they ballooned out and started to parachute down in the middle of the courtyard. |
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And society has a duty to them, their families and those who breathe in their second-hand smoke, to help them quit. |
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Recent research around volcanic vents has found tiny organisms that breathe iron. |
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The war clouds began moving away the past week, so we can breathe a little easily. |
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I tell you, there were enough waterworks that day to breathe life into Death Valley. |
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He was too weak to move very much, expending any energy he had trying to breathe. |
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However, the air was sometimes so thick with dust that it was almost impossible to breathe. |
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The bodice was constricting like a corset that gave lift to my bosom, but thankfully I could still breathe. |
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The child was also mouth-breathing, a sign that her adenoids were so enlarged that she was unable to breathe through her nose. |
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She lets each song breathe, adding in conga solos, DJ scratching and trumpets from her tightly synched seven-member band. |
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Krystal and Katie laced up the boned corset and pulled until Kirby complained that she couldn't breathe to sing. |
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He was so unworthy, a lowly thief, a rat, unfit to breathe Her Majesty's air. |
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If I hold the end just the right way and breathe out briskly, I can make a sound just like a kazoo. |
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Even with the doctor's notes, I was given bare minimum to live on, and was forced to pay for most of the medications I needed to take around the clock in order to breathe. |
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My face was red, I couldn't breathe and my eyes were tearing. |
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In this scene, Edgardo and Enrico, both hell-bent on revenge, breathe fire at each other, and Donizetti responds with an appropriately militant duet for tenor and baritone. |
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Yet the tired, poor, huddled masses yearning to breathe free did not always find what they expected in America. |
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Mr. Ziegler's is an elegant, sympathetic, and extremely readable biography, which really does breathe the breath of roistering life back into the vanished knight of letters. |
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No intelligent words from the President or anyone else, can breathe life into the dead, or erase the burn scars on the bodies of people who were injured in the blasts. |
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As the piece unfolds through these different layers, images of billowy clouds juxtaposed with bodies that breathe amphibiously transform the park into an airy lagoon. |
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Why do we have to leave our cities and towns to breathe fresh air? |
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Breathe naturally, lout slowly, silently repeating your focus word or phrase every time you exhale. |
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Some people find it hard to breathe while wearing thick respirators, so they just cover the mouth and leave the nose exposed in the air, which is wrong and risky. |
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Breathe normally in this position until returning to upright position on inhalation. |
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Like all barbiturates, it can overwhelm alertness to the point of stopping the urge to breathe. |
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Breathe fresh air, walk and drink room temperature water adding a twist of lemon. |
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Breathe continuously, with no pauses between the exhalation and the inhalation. |
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The room is gradually invaded by well-wishers, liggers and distant relatives, the support bands and their friends, until there is barely room to breathe. |
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I could not breathe.... When I would pass out, they would shake me and begin again. |
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It's amazing to think that someone in another country might provide you with 140 characters that allow you to breathe. |
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In the car going over there I tried to breathe and couldn't get my breath. |
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After all, he smiled, it's imperative to let mature wine breathe. |
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We expect clean air to breathe, pure food to eat and safe water to drink. |
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Don't inhale deeply or hold your breath, just breathe normally. |
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Rugs on marble floors, dark wood wainscoting, patterned green silk wall coverings and the building's original cavernous ceiling breathe life into the installation. |
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Normally this would be good news, since the steel tariffs were bad policy, but I think I'll wait for the other shoe to drop before I breathe a sigh of relief. |
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Rosshall Academy rose from the ashes of two crumbling secondary schools, one of the first examples of how private finance could breathe new life into state education. |
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Worried sick about their youngest beloved, mum and dad breathe a sigh of relief when long term schoolboy chum and well respected local policeman, Nino, moves in with him. |
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The Trust now holds regular readings of Wordsworth's works, using actors, and employs writers and artists in residence to breathe life into the poet's legacy. |
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Not awesome if you're claustrophobic, because it covers your mouth, and you really can't breathe at all. |
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They breathe a refreshing complexity of black currant, blueberry, black cherry and kirsch, intermingled with violet, cocoa, coffee, pepper, licorice, and warm spices. |
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The first stage is for the clinician to decide whether or not a ventilator-supported patient has a reasonable likelihood of being able to breathe on his or her own. |
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Spotting the glimmering, jewel studded weapons, Shanza forgot to breathe. |
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When in the water, they breathe with their gills as most fish do. |
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On the ferry, I spent most of the time trying to punch holes in the shoebox lid so that they could breathe, but my only weapon for this was a kirby grip. |
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She would have to let herself breathe, after three weeks of wearing a restrictively tight undershirt, giving her the appearance of a scrawny, underfed little boy. |
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Open the door and breathe in the mossy, earthy smell of saturated soil. |
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I slouch back in my office chair, breathe deeply, and stare up at the ceiling trying to regain my composure. |
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It wrapped around her like a sausage casing, barely leaving room to breathe. |
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If your child snores during sleep, he may have enlarged tonsils or adenoids that are making it hard for him to breathe while asleep, waking him up often. |
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She's a manically cheery person who thinks that because I live and breathe in the world of news, I've become laden with the gloom of it all. |
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High in the mountains the air is thin and it can be hard to breathe. |
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The mouths and noses of the rats were covered with an aerophore to allow them to breathe in the water. |
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Continue to breathe awarely, listening to your body, visualizing the part that is lacking energy. |
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While life as we know it depends on oxygen, scientists have speculated that alien life forms might breathe chlorine or methane. |
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Garments made of certain new materials breathe well and keep the skin relatively dry during exercise. |
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You can breathe easy knowing that your savings account is insured against loss. |
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There I began to breathe a little freer, and to give a loose to those warm emotions which the sight of such an encounter had raised in me. |
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Gowan snored, each respiration chocking to a huddle fall, as though he would never breathe again. |
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Juan Antonio Samaranch endeavoured to breathe new life into the Olympic Movement. |
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A further wave of fluorescent balloons gently deflated, exhaling into miniature harmonicas to breathe an eerie music of the spheres. |
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Unlike a newling, I have to have air to breathe, and this idiot is squeezing so hard I can barely draw in a breath. |
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The perforated patch helps a nosebagged animal to breathe easier, but its main function is to let out water should the need arise. |
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Sea turtles spend almost all their lives submerged, but must breathe air for the oxygen needed to meet the demands of vigorous activity. |
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During routine activity, green and loggerhead turtles dive for about four to five minutes, and surface to breathe for one to three seconds. |
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Most of the length of the back, including dorsal fin and blowholes, appears at once when the whale surfaces to breathe. |
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They do not generally sleep at the surface, but they must continue to breathe. |
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Some sharks suffocate within about 15 minutes while the whale holds them still, because these sharks need to move to breathe. |
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Eventually, they separate the pair and surround the calf, preventing it from surfacing to breathe, drowning it. |
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Dolphins are much easier to spot from a distance than tuna, since they regularly breathe. |
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Loaches, trahiras, and many catfish breathe by passing air through the gut. |
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Obligate air breathers, such as the African lungfish, must breathe air periodically or they suffocate. |
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As such whales must breathe air regularly, although they can remain submerged under water for long periods of time. |
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Marine mammals, such as dolphins, whales, otters, and seals need to surface periodically to breathe air. |
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These nets restrict movement, causing starvation, laceration and infection, and, in animals that breathe air, suffocation. |
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Compared to terrestrial mammals, sea lions have a higher tolerance to storing CO2 which is what normally tells mammals that they need to breathe. |
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Like other amniotes, turtles breathe air and do not lay eggs underwater, although many species live in or around water. |
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Amniotic eggs, however, have internal membranes that allow the developing embryo to breathe but keep water in. |
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But it would not be usual for southern to be pronounced identically with sudden or breathe with breed. |
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Gowan snored, each respiration choking to a huddle fall, as though he would never breathe again. |
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I rode down the mountain to get the powder he needed to soften his cough. He said he couldn't breathe. |
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When an allergic reaction caused Jack's throat to swell, the paramedics inserted a tracheal tube so that he could breathe. |
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In Adam Lanza, with his classic adenoidal face structure, have we overlooked a possible root cause as simple as the very air we breathe. |
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Aero aerates wine by infusing a stream of air directly into the wine bottle, allowing the wine to breathe. |
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Now, 20 years on, The Great Grog Wine Bar is trying to breathe new life into wine bars. |
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The time for remorse was when my husband was yelling to breathe! |
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Tropical rainforests are the single greatest earthly source of the air that we breathe. |
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Given their potential to breathe life into a stale property, reboots will only continue. |
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Remember Scott Reed, the Oregon redeveloper who was going to breathe life into 30 residential properties in Little Rock? |
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This technology may minimize the risk of asynchrony between ventilator pressures and the patient's efforts to breathe. |
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But Funny Car driver Jack Beckman can breathe a little easier heading into the last race before the Countdown to One begins. |
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That might not sound all that blokey, but when you consider that it involves a lot of dangerous chemistry, you can breathe a sigh of relief. |
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Akshay takes to hamfisted fits to try and breathe life into this braindead fare. |
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To relax and calm down, I sing a song in my head, breathe deeply, and think of happy things. |
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It might take another 10,000 to 100,000 years for the terraformed Martian atmosphere to contain enough oxygen for people to breathe unassisted. |
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The Walking Snakehead Fish can breathe air, survive on land for four days and can slither 400m on wet ground. |
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Somebody up there finally had an epiphany and hockey might now come out of the choke hold it has been suffering and breathe again. |
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For months he was fed via a tube into his stomach and surgeons had to carry out a tracheoscopy to enable him to breathe. |
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If her condition worsened a tracheostomy, a surgical procedure, could create an opening in her windpipe helping her breathe 24 hours a day. |
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Finally, stand tall again, with your hands at your sides, and let yourself breathe normally. |
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Breathe wisteria, lavender, lobelia as you wander willowy riverbanks. |
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For a final test in the smackdown, I choose the far less threatening Breathe Owl Breathe. |
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His collabo, Breathe with Blu Cantrell, is a dance floor hit. |
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Breathe deeply, inhaling and exhaling through the nose, bringing breath to the deepest part of your belly and expanding and contracting rib cage with each breath. |
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Not until Pujals hit Kalif Raymond for a 14-yard touchdown to make it a 44-27 game late in the third quarter could the Crusaders begin to breathe easier. |
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Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain. |
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Even in the areas with relatively low levels of air pollution, public health effects can be significant and costly, since a large number of people breathe in such pollutants. |
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Reflexively he opened his mouth to breathe, forgetting he was underwater. |
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The Arctic is home to millions of seals, which become prey when they surface in holes in the ice in order to breathe, or when they haul out on the ice to rest. |
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Although many turtles spend large amounts of their lives underwater, all turtles and tortoises breathe air and must surface at regular intervals to refill their lungs. |
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The rigid shell means that turtles cannot breathe as other reptiles do, by changing the volume of their chest cavities via expansion and contraction of the ribs. |
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Patients with suspected conditions such as asthma or Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease breathe into the spirometer to assess how well their lungs work. |
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Facultative air breathers, such as the catfish Hypostomus plecostomus, only breathe air if they need to and will otherwise rely on their gills for oxygen. |
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The bottlenose dolphin typically rises to the surface to breathe through its blowhole two to three times per minute, although it can remain submerged for up to 20 minutes. |
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The polecat feeds on eels mostly during lengthy frosts when eels, unable to breathe air at regular intervals because of the ice, congregate at breathing holes. |
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Southern Pacific selected this design to provide air free of smoke for the engine driver to breathe as they went through the SP's numerous mountain tunnels and snow sheds. |
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She takes a long look at her injured and ashen-faced former hubby before calmly walking away leaving him struggling to breathe and fighting for his life. |
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Amphibians breathe in, in part, through positive pressure gular pumping. |
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The Aerophore was attached as soon as respiration ceased and was continued for three minutes at which time the animal began to breathe spontaneously. |
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Serkis has served as the second unit director for The Hobbit films and will direct the upcoming Breathe and Jungle Book. |
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Breathe Normally was jump-started by a series of discussions with actress Olympia Dukakis. |
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At higher altitudes you need to breathe your horse more often. |
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Now in a glittery, flesh-coloured body stocking he churned out a string of hits, Brother and Sister, The Circus and Breathe. |
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The Air We Breathe brings back descendants of some of the characters introduced in Andrea Barrett's National Book Award-winning Ship Fever. |
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I had a nightmare that I tried to run but could neither move nor breathe. |
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I warn you not to breathe a word of this to anyone, or else! |
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Own-label baker Honeytop has launched what it says is the first chocolate-flavoured Scotch pancake in a bid to breathe new life into prepared pancakes. |
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For hours I had tried to hold her this close on the bathmat beside the steaming shower, but she struggled against me, confused, as if I was the reason she couldn't breathe. |
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Going against the tendency that maximizes density and landlocks sites, the new route gives its neighbouring buildings space to breathe and true permeability. |
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This will substantially reduce the wayward drift from dirty old coal-fired power plants that have been one of the thorniest problems in cleaning the air we breathe. |
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Indeed, to Mr Cameron and his ilk, we've probably come across as refuseniks as efforts are made to breathe life into economic prosperity of England's northern areas. |
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During an asthma attack, airways become narrow making it hard to breathe. |
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And, if thy time is sorrows, let all breath Breathe dirgeful music for is welcome such, Nor shall the stricken curse that thou dost hold Ingratitude a minion. |
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