The 0-52 was not a bad looking aircraft its rotund fuselage being offset by a narrow chord wing with a single strut. |
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He opened his eyes, looked up, and before him stood a large rotund figure smiling down at him. |
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The nascent temperance movement, too, is suggested by the rotund whiskey jug placed prominently in the foreground. |
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Despite his rotund appearance, the professor was physically fit to the point of being rather scary and unnatural in his movements. |
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Up on the East Gate, under tinkling bells and rotund lanterns, men had come to sip tea, puff cigarettes and play draughts. |
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The average weight of these unenergetic participants hovered between rotund and obese. |
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Most of the species studied have a pollinarium composed by four superimposed, obovate to rotund, unequal pollinia. |
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A woman holds a rotund globefish behind the spherical head of an old man in his Fish Vendors. |
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Not waiting for the guard to finish, Mel ran towards the sickroom, with the stuttering guard and rotund matron trailing behind. |
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The population there is much different, filled with gloriously rotund men and women, fat beyond belief. |
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Just as she reached the stairs to enter the house, an ugly gelding cantered to a stop and the rotund rider ungracefully dismounted. |
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And just for good measure, he is given distinct abilities from his shorter, rotund brother. |
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Two beady eyes set too far apart regarded them lifelessly, head cocked to the side to expose what little neck the rotund man had. |
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The rotund man left the railing to rush down a set of stairs leading to the main deck until he stood toe to toe with the much smaller Bard. |
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He has often been called the king of the slow burn, the incremental building up of rage until his entire rotund body explodes in anger. |
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For many centuries, he has been a comfortably rotund elephant-headed god hymned at the beginning of enterprises. |
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Armstrong whirled around and saw a rotund man with a large cigar and a beard come storming across the bridge. |
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He was fairly short, a trifle rotund, with dark penetrating eyes that had a way of roving mercurially over objects under surveillance. |
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After about an hour, I think I hear one of the receptionists, a rotund lady with bushy red hair, call out my name. |
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A zap through of news channels will reveal this rotund surgeon, laying claim to be the sole representative of Hindu sentiment in this country. |
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He was a rotund, florid, bad-tempered, red-haired man who would shout orders. |
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In appearance, he was a rotund, rather owl-like figure, usually casually dressed. |
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From rotund one-pot stews and bangers, mash and onion gravy to fork-bending risottos, the diverse menu will soon have you kicking off your heels. |
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The daffs are out, the sun is shining and rotund men are hanging around Lendal Bridge. |
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Her rotund frame was crowded onto a porch swing, her naturally white hair colored, poorly, I might add, red. |
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This phraseology is grandiose, rotund and sonorous, but signifies a fatal weakness in Walcott's approach to both Brand and Philip. |
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To create that rotund profile, he wears a fat suit under his clothes. |
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A rotund shape that becomes further distended as more rubbish is shoved into it. |
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All the big men shop here, from reverends to rappers, the Eagles and their rotund coach, a few extra-large Sixers, visiting players and others from the super-wealthy set. |
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Bilbo is supposed to be rotund, and Bilbo is said to be more than 50 years old. |
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A rotund English bourgeois, industrialist or capitalist, often shown holding bags full of money or other goods. |
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If Mike Huckabee runs for president in 2016, he could deliver the Republican nomination to a telegenic, rotund governor. |
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Perched next to the officers was a rotund thirty-nine-year-old writer with thick wire-rim glasses named Abbott Joseph Liebling. |
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Already, America's most rotund citizens benefit from bypass surgery and cholesterol-lowering statins. |
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As I said, I am rather rotund and the handcuffs actually dug into my skin and pushed right against the bone. |
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This cylindrical, slightly stocky, rotund lidded box was made out of three joined pieces of elephant tusk. |
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The organisation has made an extraordinary effort to make this parallel Forum possible and merits rotund congratulations. |
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I have one of the earrings of the querent, who is now in her fifties and rather rotund. |
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Instead a rotund a rotunda of roses has been installed with the pergola guiding the view to the great fountain. |
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Rufus This rotund American fighter loves motorcycles and travels everywhere on his favorite bike. |
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His rotund nudes scandalized the public, and the police threatened to close the gallery down. |
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The orange tree is an 8m high, evergreen tree with a rotund crown and edged, rotated twigs. |
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The rotund and lawyerlike Taft did not enjoy a happy presidency. |
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They entered, and a small, rotund man stood up and greeted them. |
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They didn't even look like they would support her rotund body. |
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A bit rotund, she seemed very centered on her relatively small pillow. |
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Serving pots for coffee retained the tall tapered look of their Arab counterparts, while tea pots retained the squat, rotund shape initially seen in China. |
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So the style becomes more rotund, more rococo, more elaborate. |
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The state is nearing a health crisis with tens of thousands of people suffering in one way or another from their fat and sugary diet. Mr Barbour, a bit rotund himself, won't deny his penchant for fried chicken and ice cream. |
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The rotund man had difficulty belting his pants, and generally wore suspenders to avoid the issue. |
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Yet German multiracialists evidently fear rotund ladies wearing winged helmets performing in traditional Wagnerian operas before placid audiences, because they fear anything that challenges their dogmas. |
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I asked, trying really hard not to sound even the teensiest bit sarcastic, as the gentleman was of rotund proportions. |
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Corporate fashion for everyone: tall or short, stick thin or rotund. |
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George IV, when a rotund prince, liked to gallivant with mistresses there. |
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In spring, he was moved out into the garden and onto the lawn in front of the rotund building which had been erected in 1802 in the style of the legion of honour. |
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In this process, the Verdejo develops a large potential for a fruity and delicate nature, which contrasts with the rotund character of the white Rueda Verdejo. |
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He is a little less rotund but is very healthy. |
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With wonderful dexterity he then throws a handful of wet clay onto it and, before the stone slows and falls to the ground, shapes it into a rotund pot. |
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The site shows a number of the characteristics of Olmec culture, including depictions of jaguars, colossal heads and images of figures of rotund children. |
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The puppy, a wee thing, rotund as a butter ball, wandered into the police station several days ago. His puppyship made himself at home immediately. |
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In these periods, the more rotund figurines are predominant. |
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