It was far away, almost out of sight, and the undertow threatened to pull her down at any moment. |
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Unhappily for your daughter, she is in the undertow of abuse, loss, and possibly guilt. |
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He swam across the river easily, even though the undertow beneath could be fatal to someone who was not a strong swimmer. |
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The water then withdraws either as undertow or in localized currents known as rip currents. |
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As a wave lifts him he grips onto a rocky ledge and is pulled back by the undertow. |
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The undertow here's strong, and it'll sweep you out to sea before you know it. |
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Like undertow at a beach, you find yourself being drawn out to places you don't want to be without realizing it. |
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But like the undertow of a giant tidal wave, the massive media exposure couldn't exist without a backlash. |
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Yorkshire's most famous soul singer has matured into a handsome, outwardly respectable middle-aged man with a raffish undertow. |
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Some people mistakenly call this an undertow, but there's no undercurrent, just an offshore current. |
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The overall effect, therefore, will be to generate a stronger deflationary undertow. |
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Amid the laughter, the melodrama and hysteria, this is a play with a terrible, almost frightening undertow of sadness and helplessness. |
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There will be no big themes, no gripping emotional undertow, no feeling of the pain. |
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There are some rapids downstream, and one of the kayakers seems to get caught in the undertow for a few minutes. |
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Sometimes he tells himself he's not going to follow them, but the current is too strong, the undertow too fierce. |
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Struggling against the current, he was overcome by the undertow several times before he managed to swim with the child to where the boys waited. |
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This undertow, of violence and duplicitousness and frustration, paradoxically propels the book forward. |
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At each level of governance below the Senate, the conservative undertow grows stronger. |
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But it doesn't stop me objecting to the undertow of corruption in the whole business of giving in public. |
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There is a strong undertow there, which makes it difficult to even leave boats there overnight during the summer. |
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Its sail area of 130 m² is efficient in performance generates no pitching in the undertow. |
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Nationalist politics is ever-present, constantly exerting an undertow away from the positive dynamic of European integration. |
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He jumped in and swam out to them despite the force of the undertow, which made it very difficult to stay afloat. |
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As they approached the man, they discovered that there was a powerful undertow and that they would need help bringing the victim to safety. |
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Others struggled valiantly against undertow and icy water to the last limits of your strength. |
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When you Know opens the album with flashes of psychedelic rock, jazz and classical, and a strong piano and trumpet undertow. |
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She tried unsuccessfully to reach out to him, all the while fighting the undertow pulling her down. |
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The title track begins with a slow fade-in of sparse acoustic guitar above an undertow of bubbling feedback, as if it is the guitar itself which is summoning those sounds. |
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Seven days after Flight 370 disappeared, the families of those on board are stuck in an undertow of uncertainty. |
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Raise your arm for help, and float with the current or the undertow. |
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She hit the sandy ground, and got pulled out with the undertow. |
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It was like a flood, like being trapped in the undertow of a tsunami. |
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The undertow of hopelessness threatens to lead many to despair. |
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He handed the man the floatation device and, struggling against the powerful undertow, pushed him back towards the shore until they could touch bottom. |
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The assembly of materials, whacked-out scejarios, and sly political undertow mocks the seeming coherence and uselessness of the work. |
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But it is the racial undertow that energizes the tides of anger and focuses the force of the ressentiment. |
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The surf was not heavy, and there was no undertow, so we made shore easily, effecting an equally easy landing. |
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Travellers to Ecuador's beach areas should seek advice from local authorities before swimming, as strong currents, undertow, and underwater hazards may exist and are not always posted. |
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Linehan evokes a forceful emotional undertow with a rare economy of means. |
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We must know in our hearts that change is incremental, that progress sometimes means a surge forward, which is then pushed back by the undertow of entrenched interests. |
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After The Edge off the World, Couta Rocks held my attention, the rocks beaten by the undertow of the sea were sublimes in scanty light of a covered morning. |
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Despite the strong undertow, he reached the panicked victim and pulled him up to a small platform area, where others cared for him until the paramedics arrived. |
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The entrance to the harbour basin is exposed to the prevailing winds which can lead to undertow conditions at the wharf, making it unsafe for fishing vessels to unload or tie-up. |
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There is not really a wall, but rather a flat area covered with soft corals, which give the impression of dancing under the effect of a significant undertow. |
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Without hesitation, she jumped in the icy waters to search for him, but was suddenly caught up by the strong undertow and pulled towards the middle of the river. |
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It's an astonishing piece of work that lurks in the strange otherworld between score and sound effects – a brooding, scraping, pulsing aural undertow that perfectly accompanies the on-screen weirdness. |
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A recent underwater inspection of the wharf found damage to 30 bearing piles, largely due to ice and vessel movement caused by an undertow in this section of the harbour. |
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Or is it forever subject to the undertow of social and historical forces? |
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A strong undertow may sweep a returning swimmer off their feet but it does not carry them far from the shore. |
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Episode two's sneery undertow was less obvious than the opening programme. |
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This is, illuminatingly, to make a start on incorporating an inevitable undertow of natural presences into criticism of even 'high' modernist poets. |
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During the opening scene of Undertow, his character is being pursued by an angry, shotgun-wielding neighbour who doesn't take kindly to the boy fraternising with his daughter. |
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