| Cross argues that dismissing music as a useless frill smacks of ethnocentricity. |
|
| And while we like mass transit, door-to-door school bus service is a frill they should cut. |
|
| When a enemy comes up to the frilled lizard, it puts out the frill which scares the enemy away. |
|
| It is possible that the Texas specimens are also instars and have not developed the velar frill of mature specimens. |
|
| The condition is usually seen on the head, extremities, lateral body wall, and, in frilled lizards, at the edge of the frill. |
|
| It's a bit nerve-wracking, because you can really see the frill until after the neck edge is cast off. |
|
| Unflouncy apart from a touch of frill at the back, this winner sported a demure v-neck, sleek, unfussy hair and understated makeup. |
|
| His jerkin was decorated by a flamboyant lace frill around the neck, and like Tudor he carried a sword attached to a belt round his waist. |
|
| Far from being a designer frill, the courtyard is a 'building block' of coherent urbanism for an entire urban district. |
|
| An eclectic mix of feminine flounce and frill, with models in georgettes, net and chiffons was the highlight. |
|
| On some Triceratops fossils, both on the face and on the frill, there are healed puncture wounds. |
|
| To frill the ends, cut off the roots and all but about three inches of the green tops. |
|
| Developing in children a sense of agency is not an educational frill or some mushyheaded liberal idea. |
|
| They resemble in these respects similar grooves on the antlers of moose and elk and the frill and horns of Triceratops. |
|
| To overcome the wax problem one may use a paper frill, or a silver foil mince pie container to create a collar containing the wax. |
|
| Three prominent horns and a large frill at the back of the skull are the distinguishing characteristics of Triceratops. |
|
| At the same time, youth counsellors have been cut out of Toronto's public education system as a frill. |
|
| Culture is not a frill enjoyed by only a few people but a valuable economic activity as well. |
|
| Her frill tore and her shoulder and her tattoo were revealed. |
|
| My partner has warned me that she has seen the return of drop waisted, bubble and frill skirts, bandanas, stirrup bubblegum jeans, and stonewashed denim. |
|
|
|
| My partner has warned me that she has seen the return of drop-waisted, bubble and frill skirts, bandanas, stirrup bubblegum jeans, and stonewashed denim. |
|
| In a striking display of defiance, the frilled lizard opens its mouth, causing its frill, which usually lies flat against its neck, to flare out menacingly. |
|
| When in repose the ears are folded length-wise and thrown back into the frill. |
|
| The turned-back rabato was sometimes used as the support or base for a ruff, the crimped or pleated frill fashionable during the same period. |
|
| A high quality finish for the pillowcases which have a double frill with fine matching embroidery. |
|
| The coat is short on the face, but becomes longer on the cheeks and turns into a full frill on the chest. |
|
| Because of the undercoat the coat is dense, but the frill and the trousers are not very pronounced. |
|
| Investments in the development of individuals, families and communities are not a frill. |
|
| And yet, some schools and most universities continue to treat French as an option, a burden or a frill. |
|
| Checks and pinstripes are bowing out to colours, frill and funk. |
|
| We are seen by many politicians and funders as an outdated, outmoded, useless frill which society can no longer afford. |
|
| Louise opens the front door and a gust of wind teases the frill on her pink Vanessa Bruno dress. |
|
| This is not a frill. This is literally about life and death. |
|
| There are those who might believe that R and D is a kind of exotic frill that you throw aside when times get tough and hope you can pick up again when you are feeling more affluent. |
|
| Their coat is very distinctive, well furnished with straight hair forming ruff, mane, frill and culottes, which produce a genuinely unique outline. |
|
| The full, long frill covers the shoulders and the chest. |
|
| Peplum No wardrobe is complete without the frill of fabulousness on tops, skirts and even trousers. |
|
| The old man heaved himself from the chair, seized Jessamy by her pinafore frill and marched her to the house. |
|
| One common ceratopsian feature is a frill extending from the back of the skull. |
|
| Not long ago culture was still considered an optional extra, a frill. |
|
|
|
| Longer furnishing on the chest is desirable, a full frill is not required. |
|
| This inspired calls for the stone Indigenous faces not to be permanently replaced along with the other 24 that depict, among other creatures, a kangaroo and a koala, a platypus and a frill necked lizard. |
|
| Ruff, in dresswear, crimped or pleated collar or frill, usually wide and full, worn in Europe, especially from the mid-16th century into the 17th century, by both men and women. |
|
| Except the frill, the fur on the head and the shoulders is short and becomes distinctly longer along the back and the flanks, as well as on the belly. |
|
| Slightly larger juvenile specimens have backward-curving horns above the eyes and triangular epoccipitals bordering the large frill at the back of the skull. |
|
| Frounce and frill reached a peak in the 80s with many brides copying the meringuelike voluptuousness characterised by Princess Diana's wedding frock. |
|
| Instead, the team found that the squamosal bone, which forms part of the frill, was injured 10 times more frequently in Triceratops than in Centrosaurus. |
|