The gravelly whir of wheels on pavement is subtle, while motorcycle engines throb and roar. |
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Providing the electrifying bass throb was Luke, all long tousled curls and dangling cigarette. |
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I was basking in the warm glow of appreciation when I realised my thumb was starting to throb. |
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When the energy runs through the pineal gland, it will throb and pulsate as mentioned by HunterWolf. |
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On the bright side, her head was just a minor throb and the pain in her chest had calmed. |
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Her heart had pounded every second of the dinner, beating a rhythm that seemed to throb his name. |
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His head began to throb painfully and he felt the eyelid under the laceration lower in reaction. |
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He could feel its palpitations and hear the insistent throb of blood in his veins. |
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Check out the Kraftwerk-like throb and distanced lyricism of March, the second movement of Phil Kline's The Blue Room and Other Stories. |
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Rob sat up, his fever was mostly broken, but it still raged at a dull throb. |
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Slowly, a rhythm grew inside my bosom, resulting in a pulsating throb of emotion from the bow to the instrument. |
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One, the projection of the film onto the bathtowel-sized screen was so painfully out of focus it made my eyes throb. |
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Sometimes the tape threatens to break up under the accumulated weight of Masuko's bass drum and the low throb of Fujii's synth. |
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She let out a sigh of relief as she felt the comforting throb of Sasaki's pulse in her fingers combined with her shallow breathing. |
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My eyes glued shut when I coughed and as I did so, a huge throb of pain went to my head again. |
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In the distance, you hear the throb of drums from a workshop or a spontaneous drum-jam. |
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How many Pagans are solitary because they can't handle the constant throb and beat and intrusion? |
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Surrounded by dozens, she danced alone, eyes closed, her body feeling the pounding throb of the relentless bass beat. |
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Then a pulsing throb like the beginnings of a migraine started deep in my temples. |
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Perhaps it was the dull throb of pain or the tyre mark on my shoe that put me in a particularly vicious mood. |
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It doesn't hurt as much as throb and that sensitive pain when I eat something hot or cold. |
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The pain in my arm had subsided to a dull throb and we both fell asleep straight away, completely exhausted. |
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Raven was about to respond scathingly but her wrist give an extra painful throb. |
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Ignore the steady throb in your rapidly-swelling ankle, and the tearing pain in your knee. |
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But the house standing behind me and a throb of pain in my hand wouldn't let me move. |
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The dull throb of joint pain and her increasing inability to make sense of the goings-on around her, kept her in one spot more and more. |
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Occasionally the drumline rides on a steady electronic throb, but that's it. |
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The hum of high-powered machinery enveloped him instantly, the throb of massive generators pulsing through the room. |
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Almost to a one, his commentaries throb with the dark fury of an aneurysm in Joe Sixpack's brainpan. |
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I was being wheeled off the basketball court and the fans were applauding loudly, a sound that could only make my head throb even more. |
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The pain makes his head throb and divests his brain of any sort of thinking power. |
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Ease on in to the cool interior and the steady throb of the reggae beat tells you that you are in Marley Country. |
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I contemplated sitting up, but a throb of pain from my shoulder threw that idea out the window. |
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Pulling the blade back out of the small eyehole, Nainnam dropped the dagger to the floor as a throb of pain passed through his nerveless fingers. |
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The town is really just three main streets, South Street and Market Street and North Street, and about them bubbles a decorous throb of industriousness. |
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The minutes of the diaconate throb with painful materials during these years as the church searched for denominational identity along with so many other moderates. |
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Move around while listening and the hum changes to a low, soothing throb or at particularly resonant points in the room, vibrates your skull rather unpleasantly. |
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Mary saw John's face redden and noticed a prominent vein starting to throb on his forehead. |
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From high on the roof came the throb and boom of the conches and the blare of the great trumpets. |
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It was not a blind, stabbing pain, but just a throb and a twinge. |
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Perhaps they just really like the idea of not sleeping at night because they can feel their ruined hands throb with their every heartbeat. |
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On weekends music spills out on to the hot, crowded streets and pools into an indistinguishable throb. |
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Marc Lavoine was labelled a heart throb right from the start of his career. |
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Throb, throb, went the heart sounds in such volume that the glassware behind me rattled in sympathy. |
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Sirens blared loudly in my ears, deepening the throb in my temples. |
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Then Doctor Gregori was finished and the pain subsided to a dull throb. |
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My head began to throb violently, making me want to whimper in pain. |
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Those who work in the steel, glass and concrete towers of these business giants live in antiseptically clean towns in which no heart seems to throb. |
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As they drove along in silence, the sound of the wipers and the throb of the engine the only real sounds on this Sunday night, Karen waited for something from Roger. |
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The only sound that filled the room was a high-pitched throb. |
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She listened to her heartbeat as it thudded in her chest, and she felt the throb of Jason's heart beating through his chest as he lay against her. |
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So it was that the faint throb of a boat engine and then the definite sound of contact between craft and rock resounded from the cliffs, reaching those on shore. |
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There is a throb of constant excitement, an irrepressible energy as palpable as the tangled screech of a bird chorus in the wash, glow and lightness before sunrise. |
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A throb came to their ears, emanating from the ship's engines. |
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I reached out and poked it only to be rewarded with a throb of pain. |
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I still had all my indistinctive cuts, and the pulsating throb on my arm, beautiful quivering under the pressure of the gauze, wasn't helping much. |
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The dull pain, not even a throb, just a constant, nagging ache, seems to be inside your body, deep inside, rattling your bones, if that were possible. |
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A white-hot throb of pain lanced through his leg, from ankle to knee. |
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The company's acoustic boffins tuned the engine to introduce a throatier sounding note, so the all enveloping deep bass throb rising to spine tingling wail exists. |
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The aesthetic is a throb of negation that is better suited to the toils of life, the impression is a masked void so as not to show the civilisation of precariousness. |
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Such is beauty: a magnetic power to make us throb with emotion, expressed in every language by countless words, yet as hard to define as it is easy to feel. |
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It made my heart throb with wonder and amazement as I stood for a few moments and looked upon this beautiful sheet of water as it dashes and tumbles down over the rocks with a thundering and roaring noise. |
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Their special lyrics have been passed down virtually unchanged for at least 50,000 years, and are often accompanied by clapsticks or the deep throb of the didgeridoo. |
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Far in the distance, a heavy engine's throb breaks the silence. |
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The climax itself brings back the lonely, delicate sweet theme of the Andante, now to throb luminously over the jubilant repeated chords whose fiery momentum drives the work to its frenetic conclusion. |
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Its markets throb, its traders haggle passionately, and ten-year-old boys stand by flooded craters in the roads, hiring out gumboots to pedestrians. |
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No, it is not Ebola, though the throb of coverage would have it seem so. |
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Ms. Gambatese's Constance, in cheerful, cleanly cut 1950s dresses, exudes a wholesome pertness that suggests Donna Reed, and her bell-bright soprano hasn't got a throb of anxiety in it. |
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I wanted her volume, and I wanted to hear her throb. |
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This area, one of Calgary's oldest, teems with the urban throb that comes with a mixture of wonderful old buildings, great shopping, a variety of entertainment and plenty of restaurants, bistros and coffee specialty shops. |
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Tonight the kids will go out and party down in a more righteous mode. Alcohol and not a few tabs of X will be ingested. Club music will throb through big speakers. |
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