Not being able to stand it a moment longer, she sprang out of the reeds and dashed toward her sibling, enveloping him in a very wet embrace. |
|
The international reputation that he acquired in the field of myalgic encephalitis research sprang from the records that he kept for 40 years. |
|
He sprang up quickly and spryly, adjusting a bow-tie that was fixed firmly to a frilly white dress shirt underneath his tuxedo's jacket. |
|
Six long, spindly, purplish-black legs, thick like the boles of sapling trees, sprang forth and hauled up the rest of the foul thing. |
|
It was thought that mandrakes sprang up beneath gallows, with the root taking on the shape of the person who'd been hanged. |
|
The wounded creature snarled and sprang away, leaving me to lie and pule in my ruined body. |
|
He did not know it, but when he sprang away, he was racing for the yellow jersey. |
|
The solo Canvey fire crew on duty yesterday first sprang into action at 4pm, dousing a rubbish fire at the side of the road in Fifth Avenue. |
|
When the lights came on, a figure sprang up in front of the screen it was none other than Mallika. |
|
Gemini finished off her drink in one large gulp and then sprang from her stool. |
|
I sprang into action and started to run for the hole but remembered too late the girl behind me. |
|
All of the overhead lockers flew open and the red cover on the handle of the emergency exit sprang across the cabin. |
|
Angharad gasped and gripped the horse's copper mane as Shadow sprang into a bouncy and jarring trot. |
|
At the place where it sprang from the toe of the valley wall I crouched down to dip my fingers in the fresh water. |
|
His popularity sprang from his simple, evocative verse, augmented by the appeal of a noble birth, romantic youth, and tragic end. |
|
Consternation spread through the armed men, and a subdued elation sprang into the hearts of the captives. |
|
By 1986, around three quarters of the population supported the nuclear ship ban and anti-nuclear towns and cities sprang up all over. |
|
As they rounded a corner another squad of heavily armed commandos sprang from around the next building. |
|
Gideon hit the ground with bone-breaking force but still he sprang up in a second. |
|
Evolution crawls out of the primordial ooze from whence it sprang onto your DVD player. |
|
|
The Crows sprang to the attack, swarming over the embattled Sioux who had no time to reload their weapons. |
|
Just when it looked like the fourth and no doubt final meeting was going to end without any plans in place, Barrett sprang to his feet. |
|
Tears sprang reflexively, unbidden, and cautious he opened his eyes again, to the excruciating light. |
|
He gave it a quarter twist and it sprang open into a bow a half meter long. |
|
Fortunately, our car sprang back into action and we followed him at close quarters, weaving in and out of the other traffic at high speed. |
|
Presently the man whistled and another ruffianly person sprang out from near the gate at the corner of the Grotto-field and joined his companion. |
|
Central to all this choral music were the philharmonic societies that sprang up in most major cities around Europe. |
|
Tears sprang to her eyes, as the horrible immensity of his disease was made plain to her. |
|
My poor father picked up the call literally falling off the bed, and I sprang up in perfect state of lucidness. |
|
A whole lot of channels sprang up during these years, keen to milk the cash cow that TV became. |
|
The school band sprang into action while the waving tricolours led the President triumphantly into the school premises. |
|
Suddenly, the cat sprang from the bed and pushed its way through a small hole in the door. |
|
Of course that first thing that sprang to mind was lockjaw, but I've not been hammering any rusty nails recently, so it's unlikely. |
|
The two men behind her suddenly sprang into action, rushing forward, each one grabbing him under an arm. |
|
Her interest in the highly specialized field sprang from an early love of history and archeology. |
|
From under the granular crust of a subalpine snowfield sprang forth life as tender and fresh as a butterfly's newly unfolded wings. |
|
Courageous motorists sprang to the aid of two elderly women trapped in their car after an accident in North Yorkshire. |
|
The poem outlined his experience of being gender-fluid and sprang from being confronted with old photos at his grandparents' house. |
|
Out he sprang like a stag before the boat could be blown back into the sea and tied his vessel to the footbridge with a perfect bowline. |
|
Aida, who had been gurgling apoplectically, sprang snarling from the basket, and made for the intruder open-mouthed. |
|
|
The doors to Titan's office sprang open as the last echoes of a gunshot reverberated throughout the room. |
|
A few days later, so the story goes, a large growth resembling the stump of an animal's horn sprang from the guilty man's forehead. |
|
Then, almost unnoticed, a playful breeze sprang up, which turned rather suddenly into something stiffer. |
|
The biggest complaint is that the city officials went outside the approval process and sprang this on us as a done deal. |
|
Air brakes sprang from the hull and the plasma retros fired a controlled burst. |
|
But recently while shopping at BestBuy, I purchased a washer and dryer and actually sprang for their extra warranty. |
|
Apparently, these items are inspired by the classic drive-ins that sprang up during the Rock 'n' Roll era in the West. |
|
The tanker sprang a leak when it hit a floating cargo container, in either Spanish or Portuguese waters. |
|
The holding tank sprang a leak and there was water pumping in all over the basement. |
|
All subsequent crimes against the Party, all treacheries, acts of sabotage, heresies, deviations, sprang directly out of his teaching. |
|
I think of the Khoisan, and I wonder if Saartje Bartman, who sprang from that blood, ever walked here. |
|
The conception of cornhusking as a sport rather than a chore sprang from the fertile brain of Henry Agard Wallace. |
|
After three minutes, Riordan sprang the offside trap but his dangerous cross was acrobatically clutched by Stillie. |
|
She sprang on the deer the moment that Temer pulled back and started feasting on some of the choice meat. |
|
The idea sprang from the cost to convert the simulators to friendly lighting for night vision goggles. |
|
The cab jolted to a violent stop and Rock sprang excitedly into the street. |
|
A gurgling well sprang from the foot of the altar, saving the townspeople from dying of thirst. |
|
He located a tire iron amid the stinging rubble and sprang forth to attack the invaders. |
|
Donovan and Darius sprang to life, scooping food onto their plates before passing the platters and dishes to their father. |
|
He says the black market in organophosphates sprang up following the ban on such chemicals being used in sheep dip. |
|
|
One time on a geology field trip, a student's acid bottle, carded in a rear pocket, sprang a leak. |
|
One of the 12 small jet engines sprang a leak, and others aren't providing the thrust they should be. |
|
Mike, who literally sprang up on stage, had to first answer why the co-host of the show, Tania, was not present. |
|
The idea of a fundraising walk sprang to mind readily and the friends set about canvassing family and friends for sponsorship. |
|
There was a sudden hiss of water, and the sprinklers lining the path sprang into life. |
|
A Bradford dad-of-two was blinded when a bungee cord he was using to tie up a deckchair sprang open and hit him in the eye. |
|
In line with this belief, devotional cults sprang up in which reverence and homage were offered and intercessions sought. |
|
Legends, however, sprang up and abounded about Asclepias' magic powers making the other gods jealous with envy. |
|
This created jobs both in agriculture and in the major ports that sprang up along the coast. |
|
My arm sprang out like a Hitler salute as I pointed across the water to the Isle of Iona. |
|
Rogers' film success sprang from allowing the actors on screen to improvise many of their lines. |
|
The night commences and everyone sprang into a social butterfly, while I sat at my seat and slowly drank my iced water. |
|
More tears sprang to her eyes, but she headed towards the door to be led off by the guards. |
|
From it, blown green glass dolphins supported a smaller basin from which sprang bizarre blown-glass hippogriffs. |
|
The game really sprang into life in the last quarter as skipper Scott Hutton charged forward for Hawks. |
|
Certain service firms also sprang up within the area, but these aimed to satisfy a strictly local demand. |
|
Restaurants serving conch and goat meat and record shops blaring Haitian meringue music sprang up on 54th Street and Northeast Second Avenue. |
|
Surprisingly, once the shock disappeared and reality sunk in, tears sprang to my eyes. |
|
As always in such cases, all manner of conspiracy theories immediately sprang up. |
|
Bingham sprang from the car, hauling an old blue and gold canvas duffle bag. |
|
|
So, the soldiers sprang into action and enlisted stateside help from doctors, politicians and churches. |
|
Tonight while driving down Sydney Rd, I took off my glasses at a red light to polish them, and the world suddenly sprang into a vivid kaleidoscope of coloured spangles. |
|
With the initial breach of the enemy defense now gained for his unit, he sprang from the vehicle and began assaulting the berm and ambush line with two Marines. |
|
Then the leader sprang forward toward me, pointing his gun at me. |
|
In a instant, the door was open and he sprang into the room. |
|
Before Whitney had a chance to really answer, Jay sprang from her bed. |
|
He stopped in front of it and touched the cabinet's cold metal exterior with a hand, running it along until he found the three locks, all of which sprang open quickly. |
|
The doors sprang open and Stella was thankful that she had stepped back. |
|
His eyes sprang open as he remembered what had happened the night before. |
|
He's the guy who sprang you from prison four years ago. Remember? |
|
The first time I ever sprang for the hardcover price of a book because I couldn't wait until it came out in paper, it was for a book by Germaine Greer. |
|
The Prestige, laden with 77,000 tons of oil, sprang a leak in November off the northwest Spanish coast and sank six days later after snapping in half. |
|
The brunette's head sprang up and she beamed a truly cheerful smile. |
|
Then suddenly I comprehended, and sprang through the hallway to the marble room. |
|
It has been suggested by some authorities that the original witches sprang from a race of Mongol origin of which the Lapps are the sole surviving remnants. |
|
The breeds from which the sheepdog sprang are not identified, though some people maintain that Scotch bearded collies played a significant role in the sheepdog's development. |
|
Indoor pools combining washing and laundry facilities sprang up in cities. |
|
A small-town and rural press persisted and neighborhood and suburban newspapers sprang up, generally serving more as community cheerleaders than as community tribunes. |
|
Based on the way they sprang into action on Friday, his family had more than an inkling of what might be ahead. |
|
Before I could move she flattened her belly to the ground, crouched, trembled, and sprang into his face. |
|
|
Her sad face flushed sensitively as tears sprang to her eyes. |
|
The grey-trunked trees sprang up straight to a great height and then interwove their pale-grey branches in a long tunnel through which the autumn light fell faintly. |
|
Cirque du Soleil obviously sprang to startling success with a variety of shows since its 1987 founding. |
|
A slew of white citizens' groups sprang up to oppose desegregation. |
|
Suppose the shuttle sprang a leak and began losing its air supply. |
|
Among Puerto Ricans in New York City, home-built casitas in abandoned urban lots sprang up to recreate the garden life of a community amid decaying apartment projects. |
|
If the disease lay dormant for just over twelve months and only sprang into action at the hint of uncharismatic but otherwise cool presidential candidates. |
|
The latter similarly sprang from a private association that dates to 1975, when the Cold War often shaped cultural strategies in Germany's once and future capital. |
|
The vehicle was stopped by a young African guard, but he was overwhelmed when dozens of armed policemen and several police dogs sprang from the vehicle. |
|
A chill of fear swept over her and goosebumps sprang over her arms. |
|
The lid sprang open, revealing a small object wrapped in blue silk. |
|
The freighter's engines sprang to life, deafening its only two occupants. |
|
The blade was set into a rounded cone-shaped hilt piece, from which sprang a finely-crafted crosspiece carved into the shape of silver angel wings. |
|
He says that in the initial postwar decades, these oases of comfort and architectural swank that sprang up throughout Europe and the Middle East embodied American Utopia. |
|
Memories of my first day as an altar boy at the Cathedral sprang to mind as did my couple of years at the Ursuline school and later, St John's National School. |
|
The Sunday Schools sprang from the same era of earnest endeavour, as did the widespread drive to establish Friendly Societies supervised by the clergy. |
|
Plus I woke up at 5am again, and since sleep skittered evasively through the window and out into the gloomy morning, I surrendered to the inevitable, and sprang out of bed. |
|
The marines now began a deadly discharge of musketry, while the seamen, sword in hand, sprang up the vessels' sides in spite of all opposition, and sabring every man that stood in the way. |
|
He sprang up again and asked if, before new offices are occupied, they should have combs and hair brushes installed for members no longer able to find them in the gents. |
|
What had seemed an anonymous mob suddenly sprang into variety and colour. |
|
|
Part of my botheration sprang from guilt, over not getting to my mail in a timely fashion, or getting to letters before they sank in the spam pits. |
|
At his cue, Jeremy sprang onto the stage, ready to recite his lines. |
|
Porter unstrapped himself from his ejector chair, and sprang to his feet. |
|
At one time the BBC was renowned for its standards and sobriety, indeed, much of its worldwide eminence sprang from its coverage of great royal events. |
|
Personal courage and an indomitable self-confidence were the chief, indeed the only, qualities which sprang to light in General Feversham. |
|
However, with the dainty volume my quondam friend sprang into fame. At the same time he cast off the chrysalis of a commonplace existence. |
|
The differences between England and the Germanies sprang from the absence or presence of ministerial interventions. |
|
The building of the railway from Shrewsbury in the 1860s encouraged visitors and hotels sprang up in the town to accommodate them. |
|
His eyes sprang open. Umegat stared straight at him for the fraction of a second, and Cazaril felt flensed. |
|
Insurrections against Communist rule sprang up, particularly in the northern regions of Eritrea and Tigray. |
|
However, the capital market turmoil is creating some havoc for lenders who sprang to prominence in the last two years. |
|
In Glasgow, Stewart boarded in the same house as Archibald Alison, author of the Essay on Taste, and a lasting friendship sprang up between them. |
|
Upon completion of this potion, three drops sprang out and landed upon Gwion Bach's thumb. |
|
A number of other Baptist churches sprang up, and they became known as the General Baptists. |
|
In England, Quaker schools sprang up, with Friends School Saffron Walden being the most prominent. |
|
He sprang into the saddle easily as a bird, got the quirt from the horn, and gave his pony a slash with it. |
|
Unfortunately, the uproar awoke Mr. Jones, who sprang out of bed, making sure that there was a fox in the yard. |
|
Preston boss Simon Grayson admitted it was the worst feeling in his 30 years in the game as Colchester sprang the escape hatch. |
|
Studios sprang up in cities around the world, some cranking out more than 500 plates a day. |
|
She sprang into the air and jack-knifed into a clumsy pike before following her hands into the water. |
|
|
All of which sprang from the fertile skull of yed, no doubt it is something in my Radius. |
|
Almost immediately after the disinvitation was publicized, the University of Michigan sprang into action. |
|
Throughout the 18th century, a counter movement opposing the Rococo sprang up in different parts of Europe, commonly known as Neoclassicism. |
|
Several other smaller cities and towns also sprang up surrounding the various Spanish missions and pueblos, which remain to this day. |
|
When I experienced a grilling session like this in Frias, today's Johannine Gospel about Jesus, the true vine, sprang immediately to my mind. |
|
For Watson, much of the humour of the film sprang from the tension among the three lead characters as they matured. |
|
Few middle-class homes of the era were without a stereograph set, and stereoview companies sprang up to meet the demand. |
|
Houses of correction sprang up all across the country during the 18th century to deal with petty criminals. |
|
Far-right groups and clubs sprang up all over the country in 1936 and 1937, amid the New Deal and a wave of labor unrest. |
|
I saw a recipe using a rosti topping online earlier in the year, and it sprang to mind immediately. |
|
Hostile messages, many from women, sprang up on blogs and social networking sites, criticizing her braininess and her appearance. |
|
Hamilton's intemperateness and haughtiness sprang from political frustrations and impatience. |
|
Meanwhile, La Matanza sprang a 50-1 shock in the Transmore Van Hire Median Auction Maiden Stakes for in-form trainer David Barron. |
|
She sprang out from their midst like the Virgin in a busy Annunciation, calm as Mary and nimbed with that unmistakable aura of the chosen. |
|
Indeed, Pinafore was so successful that over a hundred unauthorised productions sprang up in America alone. |
|
Conrad's distrust of democracy sprang from his doubts whether the propagation of democracy as an aim in itself could solve any problems. |
|
Revolts against the Delhi Sultanate sprang in many parts of South Asia during the 16th century. |
|
Out of all these dissensions in the 14th century sprang a number of separate congregations, almost of sects. |
|
Miracle stories connected to his remains sprang up soon after his death, and the cathedral became a popular pilgrimage destination. |
|
In later legends, Alban's head rolled downhill after his execution, and a well sprang up where it stopped. |
|
|
When Alban reached the summit of the hill he began to thirst, and prayed God would give him water, whereupon a spring immediately sprang up at his feet. |
|
A desperate effort of Spanish and Imperialist forces to relieve the city failed and on 20 August 1632, Frederick Henry sprang his mines, breaching the walls of the city. |
|
An intimate friendship sprang up between Wilde and Douglas and by 1893 Wilde was infatuated with Douglas and they consorted together regularly in a tempestuous affair. |
|
The government became increasingly authoritarian, and resistance movements, encouraged by Ethiopia, sprang up across the country, eventually leading to the Somali Civil War. |
|
Tom sprang to the position which had been occupied by the spokesman of the party, and grasping the foresheet and the tiller of the boat, he soon brought her up to the wind. |
|
After that case, groups sprang up to fight corporate personhood. |
|
One of the clergy sprang involuntarily to his assistance, but retreated with haste, so withering was the fire which flashed from those failing eyes. |
|
Leading his own troops, dispensing justice, an after-type of those great Arabs who sprang from the sands of Arabia and Africa, shook Europe, and flourished in Spain, a basha. |
|
Noh sprang to prominence here as a teenager, but he's now a more accomplished player and will look to carry the Asian flag in the company of so many high-profile tourists. |
|
The organization of each folk, as such, sprang mainly from war. |
|
I sprang back, giving utterance to a cry, which brought Watkins to me, and the two of us stared at the grewsome object and then about into the wavering shadows. |
|
Denmark's architecture became firmly established in the Middle Ages when first Romanesque, then Gothic churches and cathedrals sprang up throughout the country. |
|
It is frequently linked to the myth of Narcissus who became so obsessed with his own reflection in water that he drowned and the narcissus plant sprang from where he died. |
|
Matthew Fisher then fired home from a Williams cross, while Joey Leahy sprang the Porth offside trap in the last minute and chipped the keeper with the deftest of lobs. |
|
As we approached the bar another police van pulled up and a policeman sprang out of the paddy wagon and you could see his intention was to sort it all out. |
|
A hidden ringneck held perfectly for a double point of German Shorthairs like some old magazine cover, something wild birds rarely do, and sprang out going hard to the right. |
|
Following the publication of Ronald Russell's influential book entitled Lost Canals of England and Wales in 1972, a number of canal restoration schemes sprang up. |
|
Anime has strong links to manga, the thriving Japanese comic book industry from which it sprang. |
|
Obsession with grain-growing sprang, of course, from an age-old but well-justified fear of famine. |
|
Fires sprang up everywhere, spreading from house to house, until the whole town was ablaze. |
|
|
When the building sprang back and forth like a car antenna, door frames twisted and jammed shut, trapping a number of them in a conference room. |
|
One of the little dogs looked up at her, and then sprang to his feet, bounding over to her, his tongue lolling out the side of his mouth. |
|
James sprang, uncoiling, leaping from his perch toward his best friend. |
|
Factories sprang up like fungi while the countryside was laid waste. |
|
Louis sprang to his feet and I arose also, and flung the paper marked with the Yellow Sign to the ground. |
|
Surprised, the dragons sprang backwards, snorting and tossing their heads. |
|
There was also a boom in the tourism industry, and new hotels sprang up throughout the island. |
|
This mythical flower, which was almost certainly not the modern hyacinth, sprang up from the blood of the dying prince Hyacinthus. |
|
With a wrench, which threw his victim back upon the bed as though hurled from a height, he turned and sprang at us. |
|
The Jim Bolger-trained Flight Risk sprang a 50-1 surprise to lead home 33-1 shot Piri Wango and defy a high of 100 in running on Betfair. |
|
Numerous small industrial centres sprang up, focused on ironworks, using local coal. |
|
Some archaeologists believed it sprang from central Europe while others saw an influence from nomadic pastoral societies of the steppes. |
|
Deep mines were not required at first, so a large number of small operations sprang up. |
|
Thousands of church buildings sprang up throughout the country during this time. |
|
Other settlements sprang up as colony grew, mostly populated by Swedes, Finns, Germans, and Dutch. |
|
We sprang aloft and double reefed the topsails, and furled all the other sails, and made all snug. |
|
A lively trade sprang up between Bruges and London, mostly in textiles. |
|
The new saw mills which sprang up in the fjords changed this. |
|
They were the roots out of which sprang two distinct people. |
|
Fireproofing took the form of cast iron columns and beams from which sprang jack arches that were infilled with ash or sand and covered with stone flags or floorboards. |
|
|
This step had no success, but on the contrary there sprang up from that day forth an estrangement between the Emperor and myself which steadily increased. |
|