More sweat fell down his stubby chin as he tried to avert his eyes away from her steady gaze. |
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The nodal roots present appear stubby, blunt, and are not anchored to the soil. |
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A good 1500 meters stretched from the stubby bow back to the equally stubby stern. |
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She managed to wriggle partially into the fork between the stubby branch and the tree trunk. |
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Jonathan is a shrimpy little guy with surprisingly strong muscles and short stubby legs. |
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A bobcat is another wild cat, about half the size of a cougar, with a stubby tail rather than a long one. |
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I'm sure there are some that will think I'm a stubby short of a six pack by printing this, but I can't help what I believe. |
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The entrance is heraldically framed by the stubby rounded shapes of the vomitoria, clad in dark blue metal over red brick plinths. |
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Short, stubby fingers alone can't account for Galen's broaching the second knuckle. |
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Each beast had two short, stubby forelimbs and two powerful, three toed hind legs. |
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They are fitted with two or three sets of small treble hooks and a short, stubby plastic lip. |
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There was a ton of brush and short stubby sticks in the remote area, but nothing larger. |
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The MechDoc was a big, hulking machine with wheels and three short, stubby legs. |
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The bear toppled out of the window and followed as fast as its stubby legs would allow. |
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You'd have to be a stubby short of a six pack to miss the show this weekend! |
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The stoutly man folded his thick stubby fingers over his round belly and nodded silently then replied. |
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If only she had been born with normal feet instead of these short stubby things with odd toes. |
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There was Coach Murray, a short, stubby woman with a blonde pixie cut and a dimpled smile. |
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I have fairly large hands, but with short stubby fingers just long enough to be able to use a semiauto of this size. |
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I wanted more of that sensation, and made my demand known by punching at the air with clawless fists atop short, stubby arms. |
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Let's face it, spaghetti toes with meatball endings are a little goofy looking to most of us, as are short, stubby piggies. |
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Crested Auklets have short stubby bodies with relatively long slender wings. |
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He stepped in, greeted by a short, stubby man who quickly tried to take him around the store and sell him something. |
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It clawed, pecked and fluttered its short, stubby wings as it thrashed about to get free. |
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His short stubby fingers clutched a brown clipboard as he waited for her reply. |
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She was suddenly interested in her hands, stubby fingers busy plaiting three strands of grass. |
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Dark blue stubby pyramidal azurite crystals and green botryoidal-shaped radial aggregates of malachite. |
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After they have definitely formed they can be recognized by their thick stubby appearance. |
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He was dressed in purple silk robes and had jewels adorning his stubby neck and fingers. |
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The shape of the dorsal fin is variable ranging from low and stubby with a broad base to high and falcate. |
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I'll be the first to admit that there are few Aussies that are a stubby short of a six pack. |
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He, of course, was his usual stubby short of a six-pack, only failing to let a try in through the referee's whistle. |
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Some others may have been produced by sapping or sub-surface flows, giving shape to short stubby channels that join at 90 degree angles. |
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He arched his back, then ran his short, stubby fingers through the brush of short, white crop of hair on his head. |
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All sorts of pasta can be used, from thin sheets of lasagne to stubby penne or rigatoni. |
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Be wary of the 1.25-liter Darwin stubby, though it's really only bought as a novelty souvenir these days. |
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They are weird stubby boats, and you have to do a lot more work to propel and keep them on a straight course through the water. |
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Its bald expanse colonized by a single stubby tree, the narrow courtyard has the bleak and slightly disturbing aura of a de Chirico painting. |
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Finally replete and satiated, the bronze bird cheeped happily, mouth opening to reveal four flat, stubby teeth. |
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We use daubers or stencil brushes to apply printing ink to our plates, but any stubby old brushes will do. |
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There were more leaflets, a pile of uncompleted questionnaires and a small number of stubby light blue pencils stamped with a London Underground logo. |
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But how could they bronze that stubby little body, the melon head, the double chin? |
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In the back of the restaurant, a rather portly man with graying hair sat down before a piano and placed his stubby fingers upon its glossy white keys. |
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Crowds of Darwin stubby swillers kept the ponies racing until the last. |
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The record for downing a Darwin stubby is one minute, two seconds. |
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The gear lever is short and stubby with the changes crisp and tight. |
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Their fleet, grey-brown bodies break the surface subtly, showing only a stubby dorsal fin. |
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Such ships had stout hulls and caught the wind with a huge square sail on a stubby mainmast. |
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You may even find, as I have, that one of these five is a stubby little bit of lippy that dates back to the thirteenth-century, or at any rate, back to your mid-twenties. |
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Their flying machine looks like a small flying saucer with four rotor blades on stubby arms. |
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Over time, as cells reproduce, our telomeres become shorter and shorter, until they become so stubby that the process stops. |
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Walls and floors, desks, tables, chairs, boxes, tinware, window curtains, coverlets, tablecloths, and even clothing accessories were subject to the stenciler's stubby brush. |
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Which is why so few of us actually got our hands on the stubby pencil of destiny. |
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A short, stubby lava flow was the last volcanic event to rock the Mount Meager area. |
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A network with short, stubby, and rectilinear channels may imply spring-fed flows. |
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At this age, it does not have proper flight feathers, just short, stubby wings that are not large enough to enable it to actually take off. |
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Canadians discovered insulin, invented basketball, the paint roller and the stubby beer bottle. |
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Solid and only slightly narrowing at the base of the nose, the muzzle is not pointed or long, but not stubby either. |
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Plovers stab at their food, such as marine worms, with their short stubby bills. |
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The loop is configured around the neck of the user, while the stubby and helical is attached near the shoulder. |
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The right tools are a stubby stencilling brush or an airbrush gun for filigree patterns. |
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Six o'clock in the morning. Manni crawls out of his bunk and strokes his stubby fingers through his hair. |
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For the stubby sections it is recommended to have one gate keeper for every 2 gates. |
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On green terrain set a brush or stubby dual, half turns, and have the skiers straddle each gate. |
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The priest's sermon, recalling his youthful days as a missionary, doesn't garner much attention as the kids use stubby pencils to play hangman on the backs of their programs. |
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Mr. Pool was a short, stubby man who was always dressed with style. |
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There were also two short, stubby antennae on the creatures' heads. |
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She was very small, with short, stubby fingers and almost-chubby hands. |
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At 100 miles an hour the combination of iffy aerodynamics and drivetrain shake caused those stubby little windshield wipers to chatter on the glass like drumsticks. |
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The android stalked over on stubby legs and stopped next to Glenn's chair. |
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His legs, bandy and stubby, propel him sheathed in black overalls. |
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But the key to positive identification was that stubby little finger on his left hand. |
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Banana trees were much more difficult to climb with their huge, graceful leaves, but big bunches of the stubby, honey-sweet, matt-yellow fruit were within our reach. |
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Beyond the asphalt the land was parched brown by the heat, and there were no trees, just stubby greasewood bushes and low grass, with an occasional spiky yucca or flat cactus. |
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The sample yielded abundant zircons, comprising clear, pale brown, stubby to elongate, square prisms with simple terminations. |
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The white bodies developed short stubby leggish appendages, with a single large sucker orifice ringed and ringed with little teeth. |
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They are pardalotes, tiny little feathered jewels with stubby bills and stubby tails, giving an oddly ladybird-like silhouette. |
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Therefore, attention was turned towards the evaluation of several fixed format antennas including a stubby, a loop and a helical, all of which are amenable to wearing on the person. |
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It has extremely small, though sharp claws attached to its stubby legs. |
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A schooner, when you allow for the collar, is not much more beer than a stubby. A stubby of home brew costs me 25 cents. |
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The Colonel ran back as fast as his short stubby legs could carry him towards the tent of the Thâkur, where he found him at supper with Nârâyana and two other Hindus. |
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To my eye the less angular body of the 2008 version, with its dramatic lines and stubby trunk projects a stronger sense of power and symmetry while not going over the top style-wise. |
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A recent morning found Lexington at the 12th-floor studios of WMBD, a conservative talk-radio station, as the rising sun gilded the city's stubby skyscrapers, river and factory roofs. |
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Rather than being lithe and graceful, they were short and stubby. |
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The Australian flag – with its Union Jack – has become central to that celebration, fetishised into patterns on our boardies and bikinis, stubby holders, car mirror covers and surf mats. |
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Inside, the plastics are hard and tough but there are trappings of indulgence: a fake leather gaiter for the stubby gear lever, metal-look rims for the overlapping instruments, and a properly integrated stereo. |
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Annie looked at him a bit surprised and came in, and he realized she carried a bottle of beer with her. Not a stubby, but a long neck. |
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Owing to his sugarcane habit, his stubby front teeth are all pretty much gone to the sweet hereafter. |
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Swollen joints limit movement, and arthritis may lead to limb deformities, ankylosis, malformed bones, flail joints, and stubby fingers. |
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The mouth with its bright, shiny grimace exposes a stubby row of teeth, from left to right growing stubbier and stubbier, with more and more cavities. |
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Near the memorial were some wine casks and an unopened stubby of beer, whose label was yet to fade, which had been left to slake the thirst of the deceased. |
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