At 10,600 feet, they spot her, a lynx, alive and well and lying against a knotted Engelmann spruce. |
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Some of our co-passengers would head for the spa where the expert masseuse would knead their knotted muscles. |
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He nodded and knotted his scarf tighter and stuffed his hands in his pockets. |
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He stood in front of the tall mirror in his room and knotted the tie on his dress blue uniform. |
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Breathing in sharply, she held her breath as she wrapped the fabric around her chest and knotted it. |
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Two young men sit down close by, bright scarves knotted around their scrawny necks, eyeing me speculatively. |
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She twisted her hands, trying to figure out how they had knotted the ropes. |
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He had been strangled with a piece of a T-shirt which had been knotted at the back of his neck. |
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The last time I saw him a little gray had come into his sideburns but he still looked handsome in his dark suits and expertly knotted ties. |
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For example, the necklace is composed of nine different strands of woodchip coco beads, knotted by hand. |
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He stood in front of me smiling broadly, skin oiled and supple, his hair tangled in a mass of knotted dreadlocks. |
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She grabbed the hairbrush out of his hand and began raking it through her knotted red hair. |
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The man was about thirty and unshaven, his unkempt, blonde hair knotted like some Rastafarian. |
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Her normally sleek auburn hair was frizzy and knotted and her clothes were wrinkled from a night of restless sleep. |
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She took deep breaths, quickly running her fingers through her knotted hair. |
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Yawning, she walked over to the oak dressing table and ran her brush through her knotted red hair. |
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He could smell her hair, dirty and knotted, but still with a hint of the strawberry shampoo she had used the morning before. |
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Her fingers dug expertly into the knotted muscles of my shoulders, pummelled my back, massaged the tension out of my neck. |
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He felt her hands close gently on his shoulders, kneading his tired, knotted muscles. |
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After about 10 minutes, I felt muscles knotted from a 12-week training schedule start to loosen up. |
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She went to the bathroom to run a hot bath to help release what she thought was knotted muscles. |
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He seemingly did not notice, so she put her hands on his shoulders and began kneading his knotted muscles. |
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I quit talking as his hands began to knead my tired, knotted muscles and one by one, I felt them all begin to slacken. |
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In trigger-point injections, you may feel a sharp pain or muscle twitching when the needle hits the knotted muscle. |
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Soothe your knotted muscles by applying a heating pad to the back of your neck or shoulders for from ten minutes to an hour. |
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Stretching out her sore and knotted muscles, she slowly rose from her blanket. |
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I thought about calling Matt to see if he'd heard anything about this, then changed my mind when my stomach knotted up at the thought. |
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Her stomach knotted into a hard ball of fear, but she knew enough not to let them see it. |
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With Debbie back at our house, I made an executive decision and told them to get knotted. |
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Its eggs are laid in May and June, primarily on rock surfaces that, at low tide, are covered with the knotted wrack Ascophyllum nodosum. |
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The result was a matted, knotted hairstyle that honored the Rastafarian religious beliefs. |
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Her blond curls were knotted in an elegant bun at the base of her neck and her cheeks flushed a rosy pink. |
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He had on a navy blue suit that really suited him, with a plain red tie knotted round his neck. |
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They were men who did public penance and scourged themselves with whips of hard knotted leather with little iron spikes. |
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The lad bowed his thanks and knotted the sash around his body in the usual fashion. |
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All the men still have their shirts buttoned up tight to the collar, their ties knotted, their hair slicked back. |
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He clutched the knotted mass that was his stomach and reached inside his desk drawer for a bottle of the pink stuff. |
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During the actual weaving, tufts of fleece were sometimes knotted into the weave to anchor them, creating a fabric with a hairy or shaggy finish. |
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She knotted her jacket's sleeves around her waist and from a pocket she unfurled a roll of balloons. |
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Remove and burn plants with knotted roots or unthrifty plants with extensive root decay. |
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As he glanced from picture to picture his eyebrow knotted in brooding thought, his head shaking gently from side to side. |
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Now he was a greying elder, spectacled in thick bifocals, wrinkled in his once handsome features, and knotted and veined in limbs. |
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He twisted the two sides and knotted them in a normal knot at the back, and twisted them back again upfront and locked them in square knot. |
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He stood staring into the night, hand on his sword hilt, stomach knotted and mind racing. |
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The corners are gathered together in a rosette and knotted along the ceinture so as to overlap slightly, while the lower end floats free. |
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I had an immensely complicated pattern to imitate them, carved out of spun marabou with knotted black eyeballs of ostrich herl. |
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Despite their portrayal as Hooray Henrys in knotted hankies, the Lions supporters have been wonderfully good-tempered. |
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This work, marked by palmettes and knotted vines forming a cross, was paired with a sculpture of the Virgin and Child from the Banjska Monastery. |
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His high cylindrical crown, triple-wound knotted girdle and long, thin nose lend colour to the suggestion that they were of Iranian origin. |
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He picked his way carefully through the ferns and knotted roots, focused eyes always straight ahead. |
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I wish I could get rid of this horrible knotted feeling in the pit of my stomach. |
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The pandan, a local aromatic plant, is usually knotted around chicken or fish paste and then deep-fried. |
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Her black hair was knotted up tight, her cheekbones stuck out very high, and her nostrils were flared. |
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The path plunged downhill at a near-sheer angle, with few hand or footholds, but a free-swinging knotted rope to hang on to. |
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This needs crimping to the swivel and hook, though some commercial grades can be knotted if you soften the line in warm water before tying. |
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Elsewhere, we witness fluid arabesques that suggest currents of wind or water and a grove of green trees, their leaves knotted into high relief. |
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He leaned against the muddy wall of the trench furiously whittling a knotted tree branch. |
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Others were as coarse as sandpaper, and while they stayed knotted you usually drew blood when you tied one on. |
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The tree is grand and huge, its girth perhaps five metres, and the knotted protuberances of the base cover a huge area. |
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Mid-length to long hair is twisted and knotted into a mass of lively little ringlets, then twisted and fixed with grips. |
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I have a piece of purple webbing knotted in a loop that I untie and wrap around my forearm. |
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There are frescoed walls and ceilings, weighty beams inscribed with German proverbs, and a preponderance of carved and knotted pine. |
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We were also greeted by a large man in rumpled chef's whites and a rakish black beret, a handkerchief knotted jauntily around his neck. |
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The lips are slightly parted and a cord made of knotted strips of raveled red cloth hangs to the floor, where the crow grasps it in its beak. |
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The drawing of a woman with big eyes, dark lashes and tightly knotted hair, dressed in a ruffled frock and sporting a fan, gave it away. |
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Her white sneakers were annoyingly neat and the laces were knotted tightly and securely. |
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She gently kneaded his knotted muscles as she spoke to their son. |
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Now my stomach knotted as I wondered what I'd gotten myself into. |
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He washed his face, brushed his teeth, gurgled a mouthful of Listerine, combed out his knotted hair, and changed into another pair of boxers and a shirt. |
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Among these on the newer dunes are sea-holly and sea bindweed, and at the edges of older dunes are slender centaury, knotted pearlwort and sea-heath. |
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A dog, white and black hair tangled in a knotted mess, slept at the girl's feet, paws twitching every once in a while, signs that he was dreaming. |
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Every muscle was defined, from his corded neck to his knotted calves. |
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Some came wrapped in what looked like puffed up fabric worms, with hair just as knotted and twisted. |
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Her glistening black hair was encircled by a crown of animal figures carved from lapis lazuli intertwined and connected by vines and leaves of knotted beaten copper. |
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As the pitcher wound up to throw the third pitch, my stomach knotted up. |
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Dozens of patients escaped by climbing down knotted bed sheets. |
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Splintered Reality was exhibited earlier at Marlborough Gallery, where several other knotted rubber sculptures were porched on pedestals or hung from the gallery walls. |
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Electricity is also used to stimulate tense and knotted muscles. |
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While you recline, this amazing chair does wonderful things to your body and you start feeling all that stiffness disappearing as knotted muscles begin relaxing. |
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The film's weakness lies in its storyline, which is knotted with subplots. |
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His shoulders and chest were huge and knotted, uncorrupted by tattoos. |
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Take care around the traditional bonfires as even a stray spark shooting from damp or knotted wood can ignite materials in multicoloured costumes. |
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Here is the place to try a hot stone massage, where warm basalt stones from the desert's dry river beds are used in a deep massage to ease any knotted muscles. |
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It seems logical that the incredible headdresses, the folded, puffed and knotted clothes, are all designed to make the wearer look bigger, taller and more impressive. |
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Her stomach knotted together, her heart jammed in her throat. |
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My stomach's all knotted up and I feel like I'm going to get sick. |
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No matter how successful you are or how fulfilled you feel, there are nights where you toss and turn because your stomach is knotted with thoughts of failure. |
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She yanked out the brush and began combing through that lock of knotted hair vigorously, her eyes watering slightly every time the brush hit a stubborn tangle. |
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Doctors treated her hypertension with magnesium sulfate, while a medicine woman said prayers for her using a traditional sash that's knotted and unknotted during labor. |
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My hair was knotted in a tangled mess, giving me a wild look. |
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The Guild of British Tie Makers is this week celebrating the knotted history of this particular piece of neckwear by urging men to buy more of them. |
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Instead of wasting his breath answering her specific points, he listed all his Government's glorious achievements and told her, basically, to get knotted. |
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Traditional crafts include knotted and woven carpets made from wool or goat hair, basket-weaving, pottery, silver jewelry, intricate embroidery, and brassware. |
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Investigators also found some ties that had been knotted together and believe Yu had intended to use them as a rope before deciding to use electrical cord instead. |
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It would make a big difference if people would just followed simple steps such as putting all rubbish in a black bin bag, which should be knotted to prevent any overspill. |
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The reason for not using knotted tapered leaders when fishing with very small flies is you will often get fish hitting the knots in mistake for a tiny insect. |
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This is clear from her works on tapestry, knotted carpet and on litho. |
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The plane rolled to a stop and the crew dropped a knotted rope ladder. |
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Today it's possible to buy wire which can be knotted, or crimped. |
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Jeff Koons takes knotted balloon dogs and enlarges them in stainless steel. |
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She shook her head, her black knotted hair flying around her face. |
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A knotweed is so called because its roots are knotted or twisted. |
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Newborn asphyxia may also result when the umbilical cord is compressed between the baby's body and the uterine wall, or when the umbilical cord becomes knotted. |
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Her long blond hair, knotted with traces of blood, trailed behind her. |
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The masseuse said she'd never known anyone with such knotted shoulders. |
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In your marketplace they traded with you beautiful garments, blue fabric, embroidered work and multicolored rugs with cords twisted and tightly knotted. |
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Its most prominent feature, 30-odd handblown, green speckled glass lamps, is hung via knotted chords from a wooden latticework. |
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What was it about Charlie Resnick that made him so special? With his shirt still crumpled from the wash and his tie knotted arse-about-face. |
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Plant species in the North Sea include species of wrack, among them bladder wrack, knotted wrack, and serrated wrack. |
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The Inca recorded information on assemblages of knotted strings, known as Quipu, although they can no longer be decoded. |
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The image of Britons abroad has changed with men no longer wearing knotted hankies or string vests. |
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Try creating your own collages, pencil holders, posters, throw pillows, knotted blankets, and more. |
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It was only 340 years ago that Dutch physicist Christiaan Huygens pioneered the use of pendulums in clocks, and knotted our duodena forever. |
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Usually that knotted region prevents most of the ribosomes from starting the process, so cancer-promoting mRNAs aren't translated effectively. |
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He knotted his tie so that both ends would be the same length. |
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She knotted her brow in concentration while attempting to unravel the tangled strands. |
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Years later, he approaches Arthur disguised as a peasant wearing leather boots, a wool coat, a hood, and a belt of knotted sheepskin. |
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He was also fond of hand knotted Persian carpets and advised the South Kensington Museum in the acquisition of fine Kerman carpets. |
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The rocky and boulder shores toward the south of the lough are dominated by the seaweed knotted wrack Ascophyllum nodosum. |
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We knotted the ends of the rope to keep it from unravelling. |
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The work in this museum series ''depicts tangled and knotted lobster traps, rope and debris, mauled by collisions along the boundaries of water and land. |
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He arrives at school every day with his shoestrings all knotted. |
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Banners and cards and dresses and hands folded just so and shoes and pants pressed primly and flowers knitted into hairbands and ties knotted by fathers and will it rain? |
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Dapperly dressed in a dark blue suit and carefully knotted purple tie, he was placed in the back of an unmarked car and driven to Runcorn police station. |
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Which is plainly daft because the first good day of summer sunshine won't send us all scurrying out for a 300 quid bathing costume and a new packet of knotted hankies. |
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