Something cold and clammy ran up his leg, into his pants and was racing its way towards his family jewels! |
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There was a light, cool breeze, which was pleasant enough except that it made the skin feel chilled and clammy. |
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My palm was clammy from holding onto the gold pendant hanging from my neck for so long in the summer temperature. |
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Her shirt clung to her petit frame, causing the skin to prickle and become clammy. |
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A wince of pain flashing over her pale, clammy features told me she was slowly remembering. |
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I looked up trying to hear the message, I felt a cold, clammy hand touch my cheek. |
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The skin is pale, cool, clammy and moist with profuse sweating, and the pulse rate is weak. |
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Her skin was cold and clammy to the touch also as Rebecca held her tiny frail limp hand. |
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He felt sweaty and clammy, and his feet were screaming because he still hadn't found a chance to switch his boots. |
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My forehead was all sweaty, my hands clammy, and my body was almost shaking. |
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Sheets from the bed clung to her clammy skin and her forehead was matted in sweat. |
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Her skin became clammy and cold to the touch, and the room began to shift and sway beneath and around her. |
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If you wake up feeling too hot or clammily cold, and your clothing and bedding are soaked or damp and clammy, you have night sweats. |
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He broke out in a cold sweat, feeling the trickles of perspiration run down his clammy face. |
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I felt myself begin to sweat and tried to control it, unwilling to force Andrew to hold a sweaty, clammy hand. |
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Her skin felt clammy and damp, just as her hands had felt back at the school earlier that afternoon. |
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My skin was cold and clammy with sweat, my hands shaking slightly, and blood pounded through my head, leaving it warm and blurry. |
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Acute stress is characterised by increased heart and respiration rates, rising blood pressure, sweaty palms, and clammy skin. |
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She flailed her arms trying to grab hold of something, but her hands were wet and clammy and slid off of everything she touched. |
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My palms started to feel clammy as beads of sweat collected on my forehead. |
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Secondly, my face would frequently drain itself of colour and coat itself with a clammy sweat. |
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It was a dank, clammy night, made gloomy by the intermittent drizzle that had become steadier as the light of day faded with the sunset. |
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The basement was dark and clammy, filled with dreadful silence and the heavy stench of pain and doom. |
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Sweat trickled over my clammy skin as ragged gasps echoed over the still silence of dark. |
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My palms were clammy, I was jumpy, and my parents were standing right behind me. |
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Both fabrics wick perspiration away from your skin while natural fibers like cotton and wool tend to get damp and clammy with sweat. |
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The first was that, though the sea was indeed rough, there was little rain, and the air lacked the clammy humidity of a thunderstorm. |
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My hands were getting clammy and I was feeling a slight degree of nervousness. |
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He could feel the clammy touch of water or mud soaking through his trousers as he held the bowl between his knees and unstoppered the flask. |
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On a nice breezy day in the Canyon, it could feel pretty good to feel clammy, so cotton would be a wise move. |
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Journalists looked up from their buckshee Jacob's Creek and marketing men took their clammy hands from their secretaries' knees. |
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Your spacious three-bedroom dwelling is now a clammy bedsit, vibrating with underlying tension. |
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The power of the heart, already grown virtueless and thin, distills poisonous clammy vapours which emerge from the head. |
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Patients often feel cool, yet clammy or sticky to touch, and sometimes have dilated hand veins. |
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There was a spider on my bed last night, and the atmosphere in London was very clammy. |
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Yes, it stunk of smoke and sick in there, and the air was cold and clammy, but I could ignore these minor flaws. |
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The air was pale and clammy, chilling them so that they all got out their thick cloaks, and huddled in them. |
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She had fortunately chosen one of her heavier outfits as the night fog was still thick and clammy in the chilly, still morning air. |
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An inexplicable, mind-numbing weariness settled over me, dank and clammy as pond-mist. |
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In the cold clammy caves of the Claddagh, the mould of the sea happily coexisted with the mould of the river. |
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Wind-whipped sheets of rain and blasts of cold clammy air penetrated every layer of clothing. |
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The sky bore only a few thin clouds, and the air was warming after the clammy chill of the rain. |
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The way it would warm cold and clammy skin, or make a pearl of sweat roll down my face. |
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My skin was pale and clammy, and was covered in tiny pearls of sweat that slacked my hair into a messy drip. |
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Until the threshold of 270 was crossed, the stillness of the clammy night continued to hang over the city. |
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The thick fish smell wafted through the soupy air, and my skin went clammy. |
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It's ever so close in the lounge, dear, clammy, muggy, stuffy, humid, hot. |
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The edamame was hot and steamy rather than puritanically cold and clammy. |
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Jenny ran fingertips across the indrawn cheeks, so lifeless and clammy. |
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Sweltering heat and clammy weather can at times really put you off. |
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Beads of sweat now covered his forehead, and his arms and legs were clammy. |
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I was running a temperature and had gone a bit green and clammy. |
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Symptoms of shock include pale, cold, and clammy skin, a fast and weak pulse, and fast and shallow breathing. |
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The broken-down, slimy, clammy and cold basement was my refuge from them. |
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The pasta happily absorbed all the liquid, becoming complex, intense and very clammy, a perfect sop without the sopping. |
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With each visitor who descends to their inner chambers exhaling some 20 grams of clammy water vapour, cracks have begun to appear. |
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There is absolutely no airflow under the thing, so in this heat we are perpetually damp and clammy. |
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Overdose symptoms: clammy skin, low blood pressure, bluish skin, unconsciousness, slow breathing and more. |
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In a clammy and dark enclosure, a few sorry rugby players forgotten by history decide to change the course of their own history. |
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It is my heavily researched belief that high pressure has a horrible effect on people, they're sticky, they're clammy, their bile rises and they snap at each other. |
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The threatening, clammy Scottish summer turned the skies grey last week. |
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Utterly alone in the middle of the Dark Continent, I wondered if I really had the fiber and spirit to cope with the rigors of desert travel, as I lay naked, pukish, and clammy. |
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Beads of sweat dotted his forehead and his skin felt clammy. |
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You may suddenly break out into a sweat with cold, clammy skin. |
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Water dripped from a leak in the ceiling, and the air was clammy. |
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Her stomach hurt, her head throbbed, and her hands felt clammy and cold. |
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If I went to a friend's house only to spend one night there, I would have trouble breathing, clammy palms, and wooziness but never to this degree. |
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Soon the lingering sent of burning coal permeated the clammy air. |
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He was climbing out of bed and donning clammy, greasy shearing mocker. |
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The severest form of heart failure is cardiogenic shock. Typical features are severe breathlessness, clouding of consciousness, clammy skin, weak and rapid pulse, and cool hands and feet. |
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Their complexion was lustreless and clammy, although Aunt Evelyn's odd man had given them all the energy of his elbow. |
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But in the meantime the war is raging outside and the excited sweat of the sixties has cooled to form a clammy second skin that envelops their glorious bodies like a straitjacket. |
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Sweat will be absorbed to avoid a clammy feeling. |
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Patients can be lethargic, and might have sunken eyes, dry mouth, cold clammy skin, or wrinkled hands and feet. |
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We do not need to revisit the clammy atelier of science class. |
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Do not touch the equipment when wet or if your hands are clammy. |
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Less clear-cut symptoms-often more commonly reported amongst women-include indigestion, nausea, back or jaw pain, lightheadedness or cold, clammy skin. |
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He's burning hot against her cold, clammy skin. |
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Signs and symptoms may include: shakiness, sweating, dizziness, cold or clammy skin, looking pale, tingling and numbness in hands or around lips, mood changes. |
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She threw the bedcover off, her feet, her underarms clammy with sweat. |
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On examination, the patient was cold and clammy, with an unrecordable blood pressure. |
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Dried dandelion leaves, as well as mayweed, goutweed, Canada mayflower, and clammy everlasting, leave much to be desired. |
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Clinics across Africa witness the same tragedy: a limp child, clammy and cold to the touch, with a fast, weak pulse, is carried in by a distraught parent. |
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Your feet stay drier from the inside out, because your perspiration evaporates out of the footwear it does not stay inside to make your feet feel clammy and uncomfortable. |
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Contains nourishing shea butter, moisturising sesame oil, japanese blackberry to fade age spots and condurango bark to prevent clammy hands. |
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I would shake your hand, but you would find my hand kind of clammy. |
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But these same pores are large enough for moisture vapour to pass through, so your body's perspiration is able to escape and you don't get clammy and uncomfortable. |
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Set in a world of dilapidated stands, rundown stadia and fog-shrouded training grounds, the film expertly captures the clammy grottiness of the period. |
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But a clammy feeling soon dampened his enthusiasm, and he looked down to find his fine white suit streaked with violet where the ianthinas had discharged their ink. |
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