| His face became disfigured, all blotchy and lumpy, truly monstrous, and he began to develop ulcers all over inside. |
|
| I am dressed in the hated green skirt, black pullover, lumpy shoes, and ankle socks. |
|
| The surfaces are lumpy and clotted, linty with escaping threads, amusingly slapdash. |
|
| His trees and waves were always a little solid, a little lumpy, and now the buildings are, too. |
|
| You could use cottage cheese at a push, but sieve it really well, or the mix will end up lumpy. |
|
| Jenna shot a doubtful glance at the lumpy, brown couch in the corner of the room. |
|
| She grasped at the ground under her right hand, taking a huge lump of wet, lumpy dirt up with it. |
|
| But, as I hinted above, I'd also peek under that slightly lumpy corner of the rug. |
|
| She seriously doubted a lumpy mattress would make for a good night's sleep. |
|
| The porridge was too sweet and too lumpy but I was so hungry I didn't care. |
|
| There were pods like small lumpy rugby balls sprouting straight from the trunk. |
|
| Half-hidden under the lumpy covers was a creature of indeterminate size, his head turned away from the door. |
|
| Some sites can have quite a current rushing across them and the seas can be lumpy. |
|
| The wind had dropped but the sea was lumpy and Cuban boats aren't designed for it. |
|
| I can only assume that for my buddies in Tortola, this will only mean a bit of rain and some lumpy seas. |
|
| She leaned back into the taxi's lumpy seat and gave him a reassuring smile. |
|
| The use of knobby, marled wool yarn gives each tulip-shaped hat loads of lumpy, one-of-a-kind character. |
|
| By comparison, their playing was straight, sometimes lumpy, with no attempts to arch the phrases in a melodious fashion. |
|
| The ground seemed lumpy and careful observations revealed the outline of a massive shape. |
|
| Quince, a lumpy, pale-yellow fruit related to the apple, has a tart, sharply astringent taste straight off the tree. |
|
|
|
| Swaggering along in their check suits, gold chains, lumpy rings and billycocks, they were pointed out by name or exploit. |
|
| So, as today is Shrove Tuesday, or Pancake Day, I shall try to assist you in not making lumpy batter or burning down your kitchens. |
|
| The tsetse fly transmits sleeping sickness, midges transmits lumpy skin disease and three-day stiff sickness. |
|
| As it was, she had a thin, lumpy wool cloak, riddled with holes despite its distinct, musty smell of mothballs, to prop up her head upon. |
|
| The tsetse fly transmits sleeping sickness, midges transmit lumpy skin disease and three-day stiff sickness. |
|
| Various classic rock licks are unimaginatively re-hashed and served up cold, like yesterday's lumpy porridge. |
|
| It looks wide and lumpy bumpy in the picture, but it actually drapes nicely when worn. |
|
| Ugly, unshaggable ones mostly, holding their German boyfriends' Ferrari flags, lumpy bumbags bobbing on lumpy bums. |
|
| The dress she's wearing only just covers her thin and bony frame, and her spindly legs poke out above long white lumpy kneesocks. |
|
| The cam made the engine too lumpy for slow moving London driving and the radiator barely coped with the extra heat. |
|
| In the California hand roll, however, the crab, cucumber, and avocado were food-processed into a lumpy, green mixture lopped over the rice. |
|
| A rail passenger travelling from Montreal to New York City complained to the guard that his seat was lumpy. |
|
| When the air condenses into small, lumpy, low pockets of cloud, this is cumulus. |
|
| But congrats on a decent hall of residence, just cross your fingers and hope the bed isn't lumpy! |
|
| Older John Deere 7000 planters sometimes put seeds almost on top in lumpy spots while dropping them in just right where the soil is softer. |
|
| And on the right side of the entrance, in a lumpy bed, surrounded by blankets of brown, grey and cornflower blue, Allie was sleeping. |
|
| My parents had a proper bed while I slept on a lumpy foldaway, which, to a child of nine seemed pretty cool. |
|
| Even in a ski resort, it doesn't snow every day, and when it does, addicts like me will quickly turn the powder into lumpy, unrewarding crud. |
|
| In bread baking, you add a little bit of salt so that, instead of a lumpy, haphazard crust, you get gorgeous, round, smooth loaves. |
|
| The base of the plate is usually slightly expanded and may have a lumpy, pustulate appearance. |
|
|
|
| Below me is a sea of clouds, as far as I can see, nothing but a gray lumpy mattress of thick vapor, moving ever so slowly. |
|
| A single very small spherical shell is characterized by a lumpy to ragged surface and numerous short spines. |
|
| Her fingers looked as if someone had beat on them and they were welted and lumpy and bent at uncomfortable angles. |
|
| As we were driving down these terrible, lumpy, unlit streets we were constantly catching whiffs of different smells. |
|
| The work's neon-bright surfaces range from the impeccably airbrushed to lumpy aquarium rocks drenched in paint and glued on. |
|
| Their own little place was what the locals would call a kipsie, which had a door to keep the draughts out and a large, lumpy straw mattress. |
|
| Should your stencil sheet be too thin, lumpy or uneven it is a good idea to kiss it off as soon as you notice. |
|
| My grandma told me that Sean's head was wonky and I should rub his lumpy skull while it was still soft. |
|
| The city's skyscrapers give the landscape a lumpy appearance, but the instrument's resolving power fails to distinguish individual buildings. |
|
| So PLEASE do not overstuff these bags making them lumpy and shapeless. |
|
| There was a small desk made of metal opposite his squeaky, lumpy bed. |
|
| If they get it right, the present school generation could be set on the road to a lifetime's love of good food, without a plate of pink custard or lumpy mash in sight. |
|
| The fine powder has to be slightly moistened and formed into granules to make a product which will dissolve without bedding down into a lumpy mass. |
|
| The mattress, he discovered, was too thin to be sprung and slightly lumpy. |
|
| I don't just mean sour, I mean lumpy and curdled and almost cheese. |
|
| Finally, I folded the sheet and set it on the bare lumpy mattress. |
|
| Even the basics are not up to scratch as the court, laid at the last minute, slopes alarmingly and is uneven in some places and positively lumpy in others. |
|
| Nettle rash is characterised by a lumpy, itchy rash with red spots. |
|
| Today, for example, she was dressed in a thinly ribbed, cream-colored turtleneck beneath a rather lumpy violet sweater knitted by her grandmother. |
|
| Objects more massive than a certain amount are more spherical than not, while punier specimens are lumpy and irregular. |
|
|
|
| And then I thwacked my left knee on the washing machine this afternoon while I was cleaning out the rat cage, and it is all red and lumpy and it, too, hurts when I walk on it. |
|
| No-neck goons in black turtlenecks and lumpy suit jackets are fine if you want to hit a dance club with a posse, but they are not effective for executives. |
|
| Built beneath a grandstand of lumpy bluestone, it features honour boards the length of the room and memorabilia cabinets filled with old footy boots and yellowing programs. |
|
| So I tried to salvage it by dumping in more icing sugar, but the icing sugar was lumpy and old so I ended up with slightly thicker chocolate watery slop with white chunks. |
|
| We don't have lumpy pudding, soggy semolina or horrible cabbage any more. |
|
| His face was scabrous and lumpy, his flesh a sickly shade toward green. |
|
| Calmer patches on the way to Claife and Adelaide drew the fleet together before Five pulled away from Kiffs and Zephyr in the lumpy waters of Millerground Bay. |
|
| Right in front of my nose a canvass blanket covered a lumpy pile. |
|
| If my memory serves me well, they had a yellowish, lumpy inside. |
|
| Zuckerberg, slumped on a couch in his usual lumpy shirt and ill-fitting jeans, says it never will. |
|
| The heavy spout represents the lumpy branch of a crab apple tree. |
|
| I awoke on a lumpy old couch that smelled more than faintly of alcohol. |
|
| Just an hour out of Port Taranaki, the sea was a bit lumpy, but bearable. |
|
| As the ground under foot grew unusually lumpy, I worried I was stepping on tombs. |
|
| In a famous passage, he squeezes the hands of his fellow labourers in a tub of lumpy sperm oil, which they are kneading back to its proper, fluid consistency. |
|
| But of course, states are lumpy, with pockets of wealth and poverty. |
|
| A tablespoon of glycerine makes it glossy, or half a cup of soapflakes makes it lumpy. |
|
| These speed bumps are lumpy and haphazard, some of them only reach halfway across the road. |
|
| The reflectance spectra of the lumpy or cloddy soil and of coarse sandy soil are shown in Fig. |
|
| Gone is the hokey croak which saw him verging on self-parody and in comes a delicious lugubriousness that's akin to lumpy honey. |
|
|
|
| He said that in severe cases the conjunctiva under the upper eyelids swell and look lumpy. |
|
| The lungs were in a bad condition, hard in places, and lumpy and badly graped. |
|
| As Lehman, Breuler is sluggish, coarse, and lumpy, huffing and puffing his way arthritically about the stage like some 1930s crime-movie heavy. |
|
| It doesn''t matter if the mixture looks a bit lumpy, it''s more important not to overmix or the muffins will turn out tough. |
|
| I don't know which was worse, the lumpy soup or the lumpy bed. |
|
| Saturday's lumpy, 161km eighth stage from Tomblaine to Gerardmer La Mauselaine provides a further test for the peloton, with the possibility a breakaway will prosper. |
|
| Linham was fixing a broken topping lift on the spinnaker pole when a sheet wrapped around his ankle and, when the spinnaker filled, he was flicked into the lumpy sea. |
|
| The large, lumpy variety of tomato, a mutation from a smoother, smaller fruit, originated in Mesoamerica, and may be the direct ancestor of some modern cultivated tomatoes. |
|
| The typical presentation of NFD consists of acute, lumpy, plaquelike indurations involving the lower limbs and occasionally the upper limbs and torso, he said. |
|