They take me, insensible, up the ladder to their prison and have me tied down in boxes where the winter wind comes in the gaps and freezes them. |
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Rieff now contends that such an insensible change has become not a danger but an appalling fact. |
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Nilsen made sure the men he killed were insensible from drink before he strangled them, and wrote tenderly about them after the killing was over. |
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However, there are conditions that may increase so-called insensible losses through sites such as the skin. |
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Few lads could have been more insensible to the impressions of a life thus passed among the ensigns of mortality. |
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I took it, but my relief was mingled with insensible annoyance at the trifling penalty. |
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Some are in jail, some are medicated insensible, some are living lives of dangerous poverty. |
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Also, if there is a means of rendering an animal insensible before cutting, then surely this is what is required in a compassionate society. |
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Thus the body of the witch might be subjected to penetration by bodkins or needles as the insensible spot was sought. |
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And I thought the whole point of going to the pub was to become insensible. |
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He was taken to see the doctors but fell into a coma and was insensible for three months. |
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Meanwhile, go read some of the fine blogs at the side there, and I'll just nip off and quietly drink myself insensible in the hiatus. |
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The sudden sensory deprivation is not going to render a grown man or even small child insensible and throw them into fits of panic. |
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Apparently, he is a rather high-level alcoholic, insensible between takes, though perfectly clear when required on cam. |
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Peter Bell is a potter, a lawless, roving man, insensible to the beauty of nature. |
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They were thrown out of a pony carriage and Sir Watkins Wynn was picked up insensible. |
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She is utterly insensible to the fact that Henry's scandal might affect her in any way. |
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They are insensible to their own external effects, those they produce in other domains. |
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Her outstanding flaw is the ability to be totally insensible to the feelings of others. |
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This normally took the form of an excrescence or area of skin that was insensible to pain. |
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Another brother slumped on the floor, insensible to the fact that he was sitting in his mother's blood. |
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Although best watched when insensible with drink, The Adventures Of Grey Boab is as shamefully hypnotic as a car crash. |
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She had also said many other things, but to Mary it had seemed like insensible babble. |
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I sometimes catch myself wondering what the world will be like after I am dead and trying to tell myself that it will not matter because I will be insensible to it. |
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Once having imbibed too much liquor he became sleepy and insensible. |
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I go out and become insensible with drink and end up in hospital. |
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This would make me woozy and two glasses would render me insensible. |
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It doesn't render them unconscious or make them insensible to pain. |
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In eroticism the poles of life and death, being and nothingness, fullness and emptiness are one, dissolved like subject and object in the insensible totality of things. |
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The poor indeed are insensible of many little vexations which sometimes embitter the possessions and pollute the enjoyments of the rich. |
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The microphone is resistant against vandalism and other physical and chemical influences and insensible to moistness, heat and cold. |
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She decided that remaining emotionless and insensible makes life much easier. |
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Myanmar's neighbours are too morally insensible even to rebuke it in the councils of the Association of South-East Asian Nations. |
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Consequently, incubator care is associated with less insensible water loss, and lower fluid requirements, than nursing infants in open cots under radiant heaters. |
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Although she was odd, silently I knew I enjoyed her insensible babble. |
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This is a trial in the court of public opinion, to which the elected Manhattan district attorney is not insensible. |
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I hope I have helped people both inside and outside of UNESCO understand that size is not an irredeemable impediment and that small does not mean incapable or insensible. |
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It seems like most, translators included, are insensible to the crudeness of Tolstoy's style, but Tolstoy liked to be crude, he was crude provocatively. |
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The religionist is not unsympathetic with social suffering, not unmindful of civil injustice, not insulated from economic thinking, neither insensible to political tyranny. |
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All of them have drunk of the bitterness of seeing the incomprehension of a world that is blind to the truth, of humanity insensible of beauty and good. |
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The medieval alehouse, in which Langland's peasants drank themselves insensible, was often built in the lee of an abbey or a church from which the customers, including clergy, came direct. |
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Accept an obligation without being a slave to the giver, or insensible to his kindness. |
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It is of an occult kind, and is so insensible in its advances as to escape observation. |
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The church, that before by insensible degrees welked and impaired, now with large steps went down hill decaying. |
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Manners are what vex or soothe, corrupt or purify, exalt or debase, barbarize or refine us, by a constant, steady, uniform, insensible operation, like that of the air we breathe in. |
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While thus engaged he was struck by the skysail yard and knocked down on deck insensible. |
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According to Hesiod's Theogony, if a god perjured himself, he was rendered insensible for a year and then banished from the divine society for nine years. |
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Dehydration secondary to both poor intake and insensible losses through either infection or surgery may also cause an increased coagulable state. |
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If it make the indictment be insensible or uncertain, it shall be quashed. |
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