The woman was incredibly limber and evasive, weaving through everything like she was made out of rubber and not flesh. |
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I know dancers are very limber and flexible, what happens if I can never do a split? |
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Fire up the old grill, do a few twelve-ounce elbow bends to stay limber and just kick back. |
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There is also a foot-well under each table, so those less limber than SE Asians can sit easily. |
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It will not only help you develop a more lithe and limber body, it will improve your strength training as well. |
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With limber agility, she propelled herself into the air, in a graceful back flip. |
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But strong, limber forearms allow you to lift greater amounts of weight as well as hit a softball or golf ball farther. |
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With flexibility training, however, we can keep our bodies more limber and youthful. |
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You don't need to be a stuntman, you just have to have a limber body and some muscle. |
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His approach reflects a nostalgia for the gloriously learned mind and limber memory of a retrospectively constructed Renaissance reader. |
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He's very limber and agile and would have a few good moves to pull out on Superman. |
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Stretching is a good way to keep muscles limber and to increase blood circulation during travel. |
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Though their sleek torsos and short, limber legs may seem catlike, civet cats aren't really felines. |
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Although overall it was linear and limber, in places it congealed into colorful clots. |
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She reached for some of the more limber pine needles by her feet, but stopped when she noticed they were dripping with red. |
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We also did a lot of stretching, and for the first time in years, I started to feel limber. |
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Since pregnant women may feel more limber, they often over-stretch and injure themselves. |
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Luchey is quicker and more limber than Henderson, and he could be a more complete player if he gets his act together. |
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Her body was limber, lithe with the grace of a cat or that of a ballet dancer, hinting at carefully controlled strength. |
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You want to wind up with a sidearm sweep and lob the assemblage far across the open water, and this is best done with the long, limber stick. |
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Stretch enough to get limber before squatting, but don't over-stretch as this actually weakens your muscles. |
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On all three Sundays they will limber up for the skijoring race on the flattest track in Europe. |
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Very shortly we had orders to cease firing and limber up as we were to move up. |
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Then, a long and limber girl with wide eyes and an uncanny resemblance to Rihanna grabs my hand and startles me by speaking. |
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A few reps of dynamic moves like toy soldiers and step-ups will get you warm and limber. |
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Watch the brave and limber artist go Cirque-du-Soleil style and dance with some provocative figures. |
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Then he does an obstacle course to limber up, or some endurance work on the treadmill. |
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Pulled in a field and slept under the gun limber during the night and it was very chilly. |
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Three men and three women in track suits dash out, and the women limber up, raising a leg high. |
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We have a big physical warm-up together to limber up, then start getting ready. |
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My legs, stiffened by the cold and wet, drag badly at first, but bit by bit they limber up. |
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A zero calibration can be performed after sufficient running of the conveyor allows the belt to limber up and take its natural formation. |
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This contouring treatment blends together generous, fluid and harmonious movements to deeply relax and limber up the body. |
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But as this special report will show, Asian firms are discarding some of their traditions as they limber up for a new era of growth. |
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The Elf Boat floats along as a limber leaf gently pushed by the breeze in the canvas sail. |
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For the same size arrow, the shorter is stiffer and the longer is more limber. |
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Women dealing with menopause are also encouraged to practice stretching and strengthening exercises to keep muscles limber and toned. |
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Run the conveyor for several minutes to limber the belt and ensure that it is empty. |
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With the right kind of exercise, you can alleviate joint pain or even prevent it, stay limber and healthy. |
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Stretching and keeping your body flexible and limber is so important especially as we age so when we reach for something we don't pull our back out or pull a muscle. |
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We shuffled back and forth in the tracks for a few minutes, trying to stay limber, until the Norwegian ambassador to Canada sounded the ceremonial horn and we took off. |
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Putting them last ensures that I'm thoroughly warmed up and stretched out and will be limber enough to work my abs through a full range of motion with intensity and good form. |
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I've never been the real limber type, nor much of a stretcher. |
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The council squad has teamed up with staff at the Barbican, Courtney's Gym and Fitness First to limber up for Sunday's big event, and have been training since March. |
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The ammunition limber was the worst for wear and required the most work. |
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The Beauty Pill are a surgically precise band whose compositions perform limber arabesques without losing a step, and Clark's homespun production accentuates every contortion. |
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The bank's approach to hitting its target, already limber, is now as flexible as a yogi. The chancellor has also given the bank leeway to use new tools. |
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Recorded in New York with LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy, it opens with a limber strut, all undulating bass and Win Butler's breathy vocals, before briefly rising to boiling point and then simmering back down again. |
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There aren't enough numbers of lodgepole, limber or ponderosa pines left for them to infest. |
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The director, Edward Torres, shaves the gory fable of drama's most murderous overachiever down to a breathless hundred minutes, during which the limber eight-member ensemble plays some thirty characters. |
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Loose, lithe, and limber, Hemingway gets into the comedy groove and has a great time spoofing her overearnest screen persona. |
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If you're not that limber yet, just cross one leg in front of the other. |
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Everywhere, limber palms, broad-armed shrubs, firs that dropped resiny cones, blue wildflowers that looked like they'd come from the mountains. |
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The athletes may wish to receive treatment before their events to limber up their muscles or following their event to cool down and prevent lactic acid build up in their limbs. |
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How to limber up muscles and points of junction. |
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Now, as these two best of enemies limber up for their latest showdown, FIFA.com looks back to October 1989 and the first-ever preliminary meeting between North and South. |
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As USA and Brazil limber up for a final that, if history is anything to go by, should be a thriller, FIFA.com looks at the statistical stories adding intrigue to this South African showpiece. |
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It took half an hour in the morning for him to limber up his joints. |
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But, I stretch every morning to keep my muscles in shape and limber. |
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The opportunity lies in the fact that a reorg makes an organization very limber. |
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To limber up, Stella stares off into space. |
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To do so, it will need to be yet more lean and limber. |
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On 18 September 1917, Flanagan, a Gallipoli veteran known as 'Moe', was in his wagon on the Menin Road, near Hellfire Corner, carrying ammunition when a shell exploded right under the limber killing him and his horses. |
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A Trail Rated suspension is limber like a gymnast. |
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As they limber up for what promises to be a sensational showdown with Mexico however, Argentina can count on one lucky charm on their bench, coach Hugo Tocalli. |
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The skinny, preternaturally limber Edivaldo Ernesto moves like he's battling one hurricane while gestating another in his belly. |
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The role eventually went to the limber Brit Andrew Garfield. |
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He's so limber that he can kiss his knee without bending it. |
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People think that somebody this small shouldn't be able to move that big, for my stockiness I shouldn't be as limber, for my youth, I shouldn't be bald. |
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