June workouts will be so much better for the people who champed it out through the frigid January mornings with the tribe. |
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Walker gripped the railing of the quarterdeck as another frigid wave swept over his ship. |
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Michi's eyes reflected the uncontrolled rage of the sea, and the frigid savagery of ice. |
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His hands and feet, victims of Raynaud's disease, grow cold easily and are sometimes numb in the frigid northern winters. |
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There was a hole in the floor through which poured a festive mixture of frigid air and diesel fumes. |
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Now, the frigid water was leaking through that hole and causing not a little irritation. |
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Fighting for air, Allie found her legs and began kicking upward in the frigid water. |
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Like most other seals, leopard seals are insulated from frigid waters by a thick layer of fat known as blubber. |
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As the frigid water saturates his jacket and pants, his first instinct is to let out a loud gasp. |
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In general, cool summer days beat real scorchers, and exceptionally frigid winters make for exceptionally high returns. |
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Marmoreally frigid at a first glance, it grows in warmth as we approach the main altar and the 17c painting found at Vinello. |
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Out of the water an open seacock still admits moisture, frigid air, and perhaps vermin, so close them. |
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The frigid old crone who taught us made copulation seem like the most boring thing possible. |
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Rosetta will leave the benign environment of near-Earth space to the dark, frigid regions beyond the asteroid belt. |
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I went about picking up mounds of dirt to drop into the pit, and my hands, already dirty with muck, became benumbed under the frigid air. |
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Actually, I was just looking for shelter from the frigid weather outside, and they miked me and put me on your bench here. |
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I began to reflect on the bitterly frigid winter days of my youth, when I would sit outside in the backyard of the old house. |
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Ninety years ago this week, the world's most famous ocean liner sank to a frigid grave in the icy waters of the North Atlantic. |
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On this December afternoon, the wind was downright blustery and the temperature was frigid. |
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The precipitation was on that borderline between sleet and just frigid rain. |
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In preparation for this operation, hundreds of pipes filled with circulating, frigid brine are driven into the ground. |
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The icicles began to melt, and a few drops of frigid water splashed onto her head. |
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They represent communities early in plant succession, which can take many centuries in frigid ecosystems. |
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A chorus of high-pitched wolf howls pierces the stillness of a frigid January morning. |
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It was mid-February, a frigid cold day where ice had frozen on the bus windows, and by the end of the ride you couldn't feel your toes. |
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Not just the internal temperature, crisp as the weather had changed overnight from Indian summer to autumn, but the silence was frigid. |
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The frigid water soaks your innermost layer of clothing, which is practically a guarantee of hypothermia. |
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I watched as two police divers plunged into the frigid East River and quickly collected the corpse. |
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I was half asleep, standing out in the freezing cold with nothing but a flimsy coat to defend my racking bones from the frigid cold. |
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Waterproof hair and insulating fat, called blubber, help crabeater seals stay warm in the frigid waters. |
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Forecasters are warning of more snow and frigid temperatures across Europe the next two days. |
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In the prison where a woman is sentenced to spend the rest of her life, many of the windows have no glass to stop the frigid mountain winds. |
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Bigelow residents awoke to frigid temperatures last Sunday morning, and not just outside. |
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Logically the frigid temperatures and winds could have accounted for a good deal of this decrease. |
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They didn't adapt fast enough to survive the frigid temperature and lack of pressure. |
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As their bodies moved on auto-pilot, they pushed on through the 30-mile trekking loop to face the frigid Alaskan glacial waters yet again. |
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Rain, snow and frigid temperatures are delaying efforts to reach many of the survivors. |
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All-natural aphrodisiacs can get even the most flaccid of men and frigid of women in the mood and raring to go. |
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With her usual perfection, Keaton plays an uptight frigid woman who is quietly appalled by her daughter's romantic liaison. |
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Others become frigid and have problems in experiencing a healthy sexual life. |
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She'd seen her in action just last night, so she knew that the woman was far from frigid. |
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She didn't want her new friend to think she was frigid or strange in any way. |
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Before long, however, she's back on baby-sitting duty, as assigned to her by her frigid stepmother. |
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Wouldn't it be pleasant to have milder temperatures, especially in the temperate and frigid zones? |
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The sight of winter cyclamen's hot pink flowers on a frigid January day will warm your heart. |
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A little crowd of good old boys, coaches and kids send puffs of steam into the frigid air. |
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They are the ideal digestive for warming up in the frigid months of winter. |
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Maybe she is frigid due to a bad experience with another man. |
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The lure of the three frigid Galilean moons is that beneath their thick crust of ice may lie vast reservoirs of liquid water that harbor, or once harbored, life. |
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The sea here is as cold as Cornwall in winter and you have to wear a full wetsuit, boots, gloves and a hood to insulate you from the frigid waters and equally cold winds. |
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The wind swings around to the northwest, ushering in frigid temperatures. |
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The photos from these fly-bys have revealed amazing detail in the structures of craters, grooves, and chasms crossing the frigid surfaces of these little worlds. |
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Famine and frigid temperatures ensued, and roughly 10 percent of the population died. |
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In the frigid temperatures, demonstrators constructed barricades, built a massive tent city and occupied government buildings. |
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This canine workaholic was originally conceived to toil the livelong day in blazing heat or frigid cold in Australia's back of beyond, also known as the outback. |
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You know I'm frigid and completely ill-at-ease with my sexuality! |
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All of this happened while he endured endless taunting and baiting by racist opponents and hostile crowds and frigid responses from some of his own teammates. |
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Rarely moving, never eating, standing in frigid cold, the fathers-to-be will lose half their body weight incubating their egg over the next two months. |
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Nevertheless the climatic regime of the palaeosols was fundamentally frigid and these palaeosols formed on glacial terraces beside large permanent glaciers. |
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On the frigid night of December 15, 1835, as children counted down to Christmas, coal gas leaked from a stove and ignited a five-story warehouse near the south waterfront. |
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The author, an intelligent woman and self-described formerly frigid wife, provides a long laundry list of explanations for this unhappy state of affairs. |
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It is now so cold we want to die and the bleak, frigid pilgrimage to campus, wrought with icy peril and sub-zero gusts of wind, is a source of daily sorrow. |
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Far from me and from my friends, be such frigid philosophy as may conduct us indifferent and unmoved over any ground which has been dignified by wisdom, bravery, or virtue. |
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Similar temperatures are clocked in Antarctica's frigid interior. |
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At the last second a geyser of frigid water rushed up under him, swirling around and under him just strong enough to keep him from hitting the ground. |
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Steiner noticed that because of frigid temperatures, inadequate heating, and poor insulation, one could see the children's breath inside the buildings. |
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The ramp extended and a frigid wind blasted through the opening. |
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While the balmy lowlands along the southwest border seldom experienced any snow, the frigid peaks and plateaus to the northeast bore a forbidding climate all year round. |
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The muggers attacked me in a frigid, windswept, remote parking lot. |
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In experiments over the past 2 years, physicists have been slowing laser light to a crawl, sometimes even stopping it cold within certain frigid gasses and solids. |
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In the winter of '58 however, John came home one evening, his cheeks brilliantly pink from the frigid cold, and his hands shoved deep into his pockets. |
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I was wrenched back into the frigid brine, unconscious, and helpless. |
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But I kept running faster and faster until I got to the courtyard where I jumped into the cold, frigid fountain and let the water wash over my body. |
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Forecasts for the US north-east, the world's largest heating oil market, showed frigid temperatures this week that could add pressure to already thin stockpiles. |
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The figure stands inside the room known in the northlands as an Arctic entry, a buffer zone between the frigid outdoors and a house, similar to a farm's mud-room. |
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After a half-century of frigid relations, the U.S. and Cuba have agreed to a thaw as the result of 18 months of secret talks. |
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Russia is rapidly building up its military forces in the arctic in an effort to secure its claims in the frigid region. |
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The cold, frigid air from the open windows chilled his body. |
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In the frigid dark silence he sat, the familiar rumble of the transport flooded his ears as they traversed the wastelands, almost lulling him to sleep. |
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They both reside in the frigid arctic and both have large amounts of blubber. |
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Lawrence, to weaken ocean thermohaline circulation and have a frigid effect on global climate. |
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As a result of the warm air and currents moving northward, Antarctica cooled down so much that it became frigid. |
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Air circulation tubes carry frigid winter air into the core of the dam where frozen earth stabilizes the structure. |
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These also account for AGL LCD panel being favorable among countries in temperate and frigid zones. |
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Such effortless motion is usually reserved for superfluids like liquid helium that are kept at frigid temperatures. |
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In his frigid antihumanism, Sorokin parts company with Russian satirists like Gogol, Bulgakov, Yuri Olesha and, more recently, Viktor Pelevin. |
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When a groundhog can't see its shadow, it indicates the absence of high-pressure air masses that bring clear but frigid weather from the north. |
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But now her frigid stoicism quickly devolves into a kind of nymphomania. |
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Salt is concentrated in pockets between crystals of pure water and then squeezed out of the freezing mass to form a frigid brine. |
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This, in itself, is no easy task in a frigid zone and at an altitude of 3,000-4,000 meters. |
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Legume Family trees are widely distributed around the world, growing from the tropics to the frigid zones. |
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Particularly in areas of the country that experience decidedly frigid winters, a set of jumper cables, also called booster cables, is a necessity. |
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These include burning smudge pots to produce warm smoke, running wind machines to move the frigid air, and spraying water on the plants to form an insulating coat of ice. |
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Discover the Ice Age Travel back in time to discover a frigid world, covered in ice and occupied by mammoths, saber-toothed cats, cave people and more. |
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The shock of the frigid sea made my nerves wild as a Tuckernuck steer. |
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This hunting strategy often places turtles in very frigid waters. |
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The lowest counts of less than 32 parts per thousand are found in the far north as less evaporation of seawater takes place in these frigid areas. |
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Wegener studied plant fossils from the frigid Arctic of Svalbard, Norway. |
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In the coziness of their suites, neither the sweltering season opener nor the frigid playoffs affect these fans with their ultimate view of the field. |
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In the early fall of 1779, the daring sea rover was again sailing the frigid waters off England's coast, looking for British supply ships to seize. |
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