For a long time your body lies there while the pigeons mill about, cooing to one another. |
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As she walked pass the table, the dove flew up to her shoulder, cooing in her ear. |
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You're never sure if the phone's ringing in the distance, someone is moving about in the flat upstairs or a pigeon is cooing outside the window. |
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I could hear the pigeons cooing overhead, a constant cacophony of noise that filtered down from the eighth floor. |
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I say pigeon cooing because Joseph also likes the pigeons and his pigeon won a race last weekend. |
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Though there was still a haze of darkness, he could hear the starting of the pigeons cooing. |
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Being petless, I find it hard enough when people start cooing about their cats. |
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While Colleen was cooing over his attempts at flowery language, I saw Madison lean over to him. |
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I mean you should have seen all of those people cooing over me at the bridal shop. |
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Minutes later, I was cradling my little baby boy, cooing to him as his mother had left in a huff soon after dropping by. |
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I have chattering and squealing, screeching and cooing, crabbing and carping. |
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It was quite comical watching these gruff geezers peering under the van trying to coax the kitten out, making cooing noises at it, etc. |
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We all want to be able to communicate with our babies, grandbabies or siblings as soon as we can beyond the babbling and cooing. |
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The other daughter is only a few months old and hasn't yet made it past cooing and gurgling. |
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There was also a mass of black swans, making little cooing sounds that reminded me of learning to play the recorder in primary school. |
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The heavy air vibrates with cooing of doves and the creaking-gate single note of the tropical boubou. |
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Not content with cooing and pooing from the rafters, a few of them decided to take up permanent residence in the foyer. |
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A wood-pigeon is cooing lazily in the distance, and the gardens are ablaze with laburnums and rhododendrons. |
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In my day we never dreamed of billing and cooing in public, or in private for that matter. |
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The first time he trips and falls, his mother responds with sympathetic cooing noises. |
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And to photograph the dovecote full of multicolored pigeons, all billing, cooing, and scuffling. |
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Two birds, perfectly white, pink-beaked, dark-eyed, pigeons, settled on the ledge outside my window, billing and cooing as birds will in spring. |
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At first light, not long after the mourning doves begin their day-long cooing, the crows decide on their day's agenda. |
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I don't believe there is anyone who has not heard the cooing of a mourning dove. |
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I simply can't! Anything to oblige and all that sort of thing, but when it comes to cooing, distinctly Napoo! |
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It's what every mother dreams of, next to hearing that first utterance of ma-ma and the later cooing of I love you at early ages. |
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Infants begin by babbling and cooing, progress to holophrasis and by age three to four children are working on semantics and pragmatics. |
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Willow, cooing softly, managed to get the bridle over her head and the chinstrap secure before the horse reared again. |
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The simple lyric and Bass's cooing and humming give the song an almost hymnal quality. |
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He was a very happy child who was always cooing and I used to make him laugh by playing peek-a-boo with him on the corner of the sofa. |
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They are cooing about their success in recruiting Charlie Crist, Florida's middle-of-the-road governor, to run for the Senate, for example. |
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By the end of the day, Ayden was chirping and cooing and murmuring to her hearts content. |
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The bird idea reappears in the allemande, where sixty-fourth note runs sound like billing and cooing. |
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Meanwhile, interrupting the shadow play performance was the bellowing sound of a camel, the soft cooing of a turtle dove and the neighing of a horse. |
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Basil, cucumber, mangoes, the cooing of turtledoves on torrid afternoons, the screech of buses coming to a sudden halt. |
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With every breath, Wren made a cooing noise, but Jones looked online and saw that lots of newborns make funny sounds. |
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There is Britney Spears in a neon-pink ball gown on a lily pad cooing for the camera. |
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Ladies were cooing over them but he didn't acknowledge them. |
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He follows me around, cooing and clawing at me, begging for attention. |
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Do you really want to overhear his cooing conversations with another girl? |
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In her tiny showing, her rose paintings seem as wispy as the aquarelles of some cooing Edwardian maiden lady celebrating the beauties of copse and dell. |
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Instead of making love, they engage in compensatory snuggling and lovey-dovey cooing, followed by crossword puzzles, then beddy-bye. |
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Now that my three-month-old is in his six-to-nine-month-old outfits, cooing strangers boggle at his size. |
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Only flittering and cooing pigeons up in the cupola, light falling through marble ornaments and intensifying the solemnity. |
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So of course the group starts cooing and making goo-goo eyes, pumping the guy for details. |
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Three month old David lies in his cot placidly cooing at his foster mother Elvire. |
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They were drooling at Charlie and his Taylor Lautner-esque looks while cooing over his muscly arms. |
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After feeding small birds for over 20 years, suddenly the pigeon fraternity found me, dozens of them took up residence, cooing loudly at daybreak and ruining my beauty sleep. |
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By an adjusted age of 7 months, your premature baby should begin cooing and babbling-her first attempts at speech. |
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She learned that cooing and babbling to her child in response to his sounds, commonly called 'motherese', would help the baby boy learn to talk. |
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Their chief activity, though, is oohing and cooing at the obscene luxury that's laid on for them. |
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Still, people offer advice about how to quiet her or try to do so themselves by cooing at her or putting her binky in her mouth. |
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Suddenly, I find myself holding up one of the tiny outfits with the same cooing glee as my wife had just held up the pinafores and gingham sun dresses. |
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We spent the night on a big wooden yacht cruising backwards and forwards along the river, eating good food and cooing over the illuminated sights. |
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Throughout the recitation of the Consecration, Mary was smiling, laughing, cooing, and responding to the picture. |
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They begin by cooing as infants and over time they learn to use words, phrases and sentences. |
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Imagine the rustle of 800 doves which populated this place and the cooing of birds in love! |
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You are quite able to spend your life cooing into the pillow, in a state of amorous trance. |
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Gradually, children progress from cooing and babbling to using the words they have heard and speaking in simple sentences. |
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If the parents ask their baby how she feels, she will not answer in words, but with a satisfied expression or with cooing sounds. |
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As I sat there, wistfully watching the kids run round me, I scattered some cheesy puffs and cashew nuts for pigeons which descended cooing and flapping to peck among the grit. |
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Even as I tell people about our new garden, an image flashes up of friendly old men bending down over enormous cabbages, their pigeons softly cooing in the loft behind. |
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She was a cooing and cherubic mini-avatar called anima, which players earned after reaching a certain level in the game Prius. |
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Then, incredibly, he cocked his head and started making cooing sounds at the baby. |
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Listen for the herons' cooing calls and the snapping of their bills. |
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From a big msasa tree that shaded the veranda a pigeon was cooing regularly. |
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They were too busy cooing over the baby and his parents were too busy cooing over each other. |
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Sinn Fein still used aggressive rhetoric for the benefit if its own supporters, while cooing with the British, Irish and US governments about the joys of non-violence. |
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In place of the Fairy Godmother, there's a protective chorus of birds – a booted, bespectacled, and bobble-hatted bunch who hop about the stage, cooing and cawing and flapping beautiful hand-held wings. |
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But aside from all of the baby talk and cooing from many of your friends and relatives, a reality of many sleepless nights, tension and fatigue are ahead. |
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In general, ducks make a wide range of calls, ranging from whistles, cooing, yodels and grunts. |
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The New Yorker has just run 24 cooing pages on his post-presidency. |
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With its remarkable graphics and 3D animation worthy of the Baby Life animation films, Baby Life, the game, and its adorable, unique virtual and totally realistic babies will have you cooing and crooning with delight. |
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In the language of the men and women, the characteristic vowels without colour or clear boundaries, which is why the children's speech sounds like careless cooing. |
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From out of Brighton, they're going to conquer the world with their never-ceasing wall of guitar-sound, hail of drum beats and Carter's lascivious cooing. |
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If there's one thing those in higher education are good at – bar sleeping, ordering Dominoes and guzzling red beer like the brewery's about to close – it's cooing and oohing and ahhing. |
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While controlled studies can prove the positive effects of gentle cooing and 'motherese' on early childhood, one can only surmise what happens to a young child during the uncontrolled reality of war. |
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A 2016 study suggests that dinosaurs produced closed mouth vocalizations like cooing, which occur in both crocodilians and birds as well as other reptiles. |
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His is an isolated, masturbatory existence, but Maso wraps it in a cocoon of enchanting fantasies and sing-song poetry, like a mother cooing nonsense over her sleeping baby. |
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She tucked it back and went away and he heard her cooing to old Breaux on the sofa. With the heel of his hand he forced his erection thighward and left the room. |
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