With a spring, he jumped out of the alleyway and hoofed it back to his apartment. |
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By the ancient berserker instinct, his hand went to his belt where his rune-covered axe normally hung. |
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Ahern has delivered several sharp rebukes to his parliamentary party recently. |
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He walked a little ahead of her to his car, and conversation stopped for a moment. |
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His legs may be a bit weary these days, but his presence is everything to his young charges. |
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However, his deeper loyalties to his best friend, her sister, could separate them. |
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The receptionist said that she would ask the porter to take the visitor's bags up to his room in the lift. |
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He had more expected a sharp rebuke for sleeping late, maybe even a none-too-gentle reminder in the form of a hand to his backside. |
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Makala leaned on him and let him hold most of her weight as he led her upstairs to his apartment. |
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During the Civil War, he was an indispensable aid to his father during the latter's tenure as Minister to England. |
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You saw for the first time this evening that the Prince of Wales referred to his mother in a very affectionate way. |
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He remembers how as a 12-year-old boy, he would run to the bunkers every time the siren went off and bombs exploded next to his house. |
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And he even opened his arms wide in such a moving gesture, as though he were ready to abandon himself to his fate. |
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He only gave new cars to his cronies and people showing unwavering loyalty. |
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By paying attention to his lyrical skill, you notice that he is not only a phenomenal rapper, but also a fine poet. |
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She stood perfectly still, listening to his footsteps recede down the hall. |
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But as he looked up a stream of liquid came to his eyes and made them feel as if they were burning. |
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Abruptly the old man wheezed and slumped back in his chair, one stiff, gnarled hand to his chest. |
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He had a unique-shaped nose that was neither large nor small and laugh lines around his interesting eyes that added to his playful mien. |
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He ended up half-carrying, half-dragging me to his car, where he dumped me unceremoniously like a sack of potatoes. |
|
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Tobias sighed heavily as he lugged his equally heavy books to his first class, Word Processing. |
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Her husband, who was sitting beside her, sustained a whiplash injury and an injury to his shoulder. |
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He let out an angry bellow before once again leaping to his feet and lurching forward. |
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Part One covered Mike's opinions on topics ranging from his beloved Phillies to sabermetrics to his favorite players and baseball heroes. |
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And not even the infamous wiggle of his Cleopatra can compare to his passion for golf. |
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He will be missed dearly, and our thoughts, prayers and deepest condolences go out to his wonderful family. |
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Suddenly aglow under the light bulb of an idea dancing above his head, Paul Reinhard turned to his typing machine. |
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He was educated at Harrow, spent his childhood in England, travelled widely yet returned to his estate to retire. |
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While more jokes and wisecracks were coming from the campfire, Alan retreated to his cabin. |
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To add salt to his wounds, he's besieged by 'journalists' interrogating him about his golden handshake and gambling habit. |
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He is an independent film-maker with over 60 films to his name, including four low-budget features. |
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These are days when there is more rhythm and flow to his bowling, his run-up and action blending better. |
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Clarke has responded to his critics with a dollop of wistful regret, followed by an adamant refusal to back down. |
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When so out of touch with public and media attacks, that is when a First Minister should turn to his special advisers. |
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The man squawked as Roman grabbed him by his collar and hauled him to his feet. |
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Imagine an astrophysicist who must explain the solar system to his students. |
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His Afro adds an entire foot to his height, and his thick, long eyelashes look like they're stuck together with tears. |
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If something creepy appeared on the television he would get to his feet and politely leave, taking to his heels like a scalded cat. |
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With major injuries to his chest and legs, Michael was rushed to a waiting medical helicopter. |
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I should have been sat in front of the television making mental notes and issuing sharp rebukes to his paper thin justifications for war. |
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He fled to his cistern to bring back water, but though the fledgling grasped the cup and strove to drink, he could not force it down. |
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You struck Mr Ryan three vicious blows to his stomach, causing him to collapse like a sack of potatoes into the gutter. |
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He was devoted to his family and his concern, care and affection for them was of the highest calibre. |
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Because they need the airbase and military base that he allows them to have there in return for turning a blind eye to his atrocities. |
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Bucky walked next to his master, then shook the water and snow out of his hair. |
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Away to his left Roger Palmer was scribbling a note on the smooth surface of his sabretache. |
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He fell to his knees and the arms around him loosened the grip and he fell completely. |
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He was heading towards the casket once again but Rachel lunged at him and grabbed on to his back. |
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The long greasy blond locks in his face, the raspiness to his voice and his stage presence all scream Cobain in a surreal, time-travel way. |
|
It was much earlier than Jake usually got to his office, but he was keyed up, and hadn't been able to sleep. |
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Being a gifted writer, with eight books already to his credit, he does so with lucidity and in eminently readable prose. |
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At one house it seemed obvious that someone was at home, but no answer came to his repeated knocks at the door. |
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On Christmas Eve, Ralph invited all of the wifeless sailors who hadn't any place better to go over to his house for a good time. |
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Tal saw the light from the fire go out, and decided that it would be wise to return to his own hut. |
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Unfortunately, from day one in the job, Mitchell has paid no heed to his or the team's public image. |
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Sympathy is also extended to his grandchildren, in-laws and all his extended family land many friends. |
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I looked to Cory, who was seated in the front of the boat, holding his fingers to his nose and taking a deep whiff. |
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McMahon had two good opportunities to add to his tally and claim a hat-trick but fired wide on both occasions. |
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Pompey sniffed at the low-born Julius, who ignored the deliberate affront to his parentage. |
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It was a source of delighted surprise to his friends to discover his expert knowledge of food and wines. |
|
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Henri reluctantly agreed, wanting to return to his home ere it was evening, and urged his sister to hurry. |
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Flattered by the attentions of the young lord, Antonello admits him to his studio. |
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He put up his shoulders to his cars, and spread out the palms of his hands, as who should say, There is nothing further to be said. |
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Colonel Solent was a snobbish, proud man, dressed similarly to his soldiers, but with a blue tunic and red belt. |
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The Carrutherstown handler is churning out winners at an extraordinary rate and looks likely to add to his score tomorrow. |
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She saw the toilet to his right and, figuring it as good a place as any, walked to it, taking a seat on the lowered cover. |
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As he aged, Kantanos had grown more accustomed to his way of life, had accepted it. |
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There is a dignity and rage to his character, a proud father wanting to do best for his family. |
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He gave the youth a yellow package of letters and keepsakes to deliver to his family. |
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After the victory at Smolensk, Hitler reverted to his old concept of concentrating the main effort on the wings. |
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Cheska's fathers' eyes widened as he dropped to his knees, falling onto the ground face first. |
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According to his mother, his liver, kidneys and muscles then began to break down. |
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He was obliged to hint delicately at the dire news to his invalid and still absent wife. |
|
Even opponents from his days in the Indiana Senate attest to his character and ability. |
|
He still had his signature haircut, the Afro, and he dropped his hands to his sides, walking toward me. |
|
In addition to his mathematical work, Talbot also published on astronomy and physics. |
|
Admittedly, Paul, 53, of Niton, has followed a career path that has gradually led him to his current calling. |
|
Dmitri was thankful that she had not attached any importance to his absence. |
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Like most propagandists, he measures individuals according to his own rigid standard of how they should have thought and acted. |
|
The studios had rather employ a screenwriter with eight disasters to his credit than a William Faulkner with none. |
|
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He yawned, stretching his arms and reaching down to his pocket when he felt his phone vibrating. |
|
He tackles ferociously, wins ball with his first touch and delivers perfect ball to his attack. |
|
Until he can find a way to affix them more securely to his house, he says, they will remain stored in his garage. |
|
The egoist's basic normative judgment is directed not to behaviours, but to his particular end. |
|
And George went on about losing his family member and losing this precious addition to his life. |
|
I affix a leather saddle to his hairy back and ride him into many righteous battles. |
|
This is not to say that he was not agonized by risky decisions he needed to make with regard to his career as a sage. |
|
The Athenian youth flocked to his side as he walked the paths of the agora. |
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I didn't resist as he put his arms around my shoulders and held me close to his body. |
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He has decided that attaining power is more important than holding to his principles. |
|
He gave out an involuntary sigh as the wind rushed from his lungs and he dropped to his knees. |
|
Since all the peoples of the world are his heirs, and since presumably he willed the land to his heirs, then all the people of the earth own it. |
|
Mr Robinson then felt convinced that something serious was about to take place, and he took to his heels and ran for it. |
|
The officer then aimed three blows towards his face and another one to his leg as he handcuffed him and bundled him into a car. |
|
Exhausted, he climbed into bed, pulling the thin covers up to his chin, then over his head. |
|
In that case it will be up to the more idealistic among us to hold the president to his commitment. |
|
His wispy brown hair is flecked with gray, a striking contrast to his crimson face. |
|
St Kieran's Jim O'Donovan who played superbly in the second half, holds on to his place at midfield with Niall Moran the player to lose out. |
|
He has good reason to hold Rab dear to his heart, however much he insists he was just a two-dimensional character in a script. |
|
About an hour later I was on my way to his house warming up with ollies over sewer covers and the odd kickflip. |
|
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The lead singer has developed a slight raspiness to his usually clean vocals. |
|
Reportedly he's taken a new approach to his training this offseason, involving kick-boxing. |
|
I placed my hand in his, expecting a shake, but he surprised me by bringing my hand to his lips and placing a butterfly kiss on my knuckles. |
|
He thought that using it for transit or for poverty-reduction would probably be agreeable to his government. |
|
He is far from being the first British Prime Minister to attach great importance to his relationship with the American president. |
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Smiling a toothy grin, he put his hands to his temples, his index fingers extended, and reared his head. |
|
The medals of a war hero have been returned to his family after a four-month police search to track them down. |
|
That member should have been stopped in his tracks from the very moment he got to his feet. |
|
Earlier, on the telephone, I asked his receptionist for directions to his Dublin office. |
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I thought he was very truthful and very funny, and I was drawn to his rebelliousness and irreverence. |
|
They stopped and searched the youth, finding nothing, but he was so frightened by the confrontation he took to his heels. |
|
He whimpered, as the pain spread from his toes to his ankles and his arms to his barrel chest. |
|
He went back to his car, switched on his phone and almost immediately it rang. |
|
He is the league's all-time winningest starting quarterback with a record of 148-82-1, which speaks to his durability as well as his excellence. |
|
Ellis showed tremendous heart once again he beat the count and stumbled to his corner. |
|
This sexagenarian does not have even a basic tool such as a good harmonium to aid him in singing to his heart's content. |
|
Referring to his attire, Mbeki said he was dressed that way because he was going to work at some of the schools. |
|
He participated in the students' social life, going to their parties and inviting them to his home for square dancing. |
|
Two hours later, Colin returned to his car, to find a note under the wiper of his windscreen. |
|
Rocketing to his feet, then swaying as his head lurched, Kaerin staggered over to the long full size mirror. |
|
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He also inflicted deep cuts to his face, on one occasion scoring the bridge of his nose so severely that he cut it down to the bone. |
|
He moved a little in his sleep, a delightfully wicked smile coming on to his lips. |
|
Is that the only passage in which the trial judge drew attention to his interest in the outcome of the proceedings? |
|
One of them planted a punch into his stomach, causing the Doctor to sink to his knees, whimpering in pain. |
|
A horse standing there took to his heels in fear and galloped 200 yards at full speed round the fenced area. |
|
Both aspects of the rapper's persona contribute to his or her commercial success. |
|
He went out to his horse's stall where his horse stood whinnying to get out and stretch his legs. |
|
He felt his stomach drop to his feet and his heart sped up, this could not be happening! |
|
He returns briefly to Ireland to put his affairs in order, and Kate's enraged mother pushes him over the cliffs to his death. |
|
Though not much stressed in the catalogue's writings, Dickinson's pronounced estheticism is key to his sensibility. |
|
He has been married for 15 years to his childhood sweetheart, has a delightful family, and attends church regularly. |
|
With no damage to his mind or his hands, he knew practicing pediatric medicine was still within reach. |
|
Playing down to his sexist expectations worked, but the idea that because she was a woman she must not be a threat still rankled. |
|
The sheepherder went over to his storage hut and brought out one bale of wool. |
|
Thanks to his albatross and some solid golf thereafter he finished three under. |
|
Both the players were rushed to a private hospital here where Jarnail Singh succumbed to his injuries. |
|
As Chad speeded to his work on the opposite side of town, he went over the last few minutes again in his head. |
|
A cynic may say it's the feeling of acceptance that comes over a condemned man who's resigned to his fate. |
|
I wanted to say that, thanks to his prediction, I was ready and prepared for the long cold winter that we just went through. |
|
He dropped to his knees and keeled over sideways as blood spouted from the side of his head like a drinking fountain. |
|
|
She marched right over to his bed, whipped the blanket off him and shook him. |
|
Stanley Morgan was sitting behind his desk with a telephone receiver to his ear when Emily walked through the open door. |
|
So many of our prisoners have lost members of their family to his ruthless practices. |
|
At Phoenix, he became the first driver in IRL history to lap the field as he led wire-to-wire en route to his first victory of the season. |
|
The doctors decided to keep him in overnight because they were worried about the injury to his eye. |
|
He told her to return to his bedroom, that she was a bad girl, and that she could not return again. |
|
Numerous young professional players can attest to his tireless encouragement and invaluable expertise. |
|
Suds from the soapy sponge he used to clean the floor clung to his sleeves and nestled in his wiry black hair. |
|
Was it Matisse or Cezanne who, aged and infirm, incapable of clutching a brush, demanded that one be tied to his hand so as to continue his work? |
|
We finished our meal with a bottle of wine and went back to his place to watch anime dvds. |
|
I am growing sadly accustomed to his disregard for the views of the people of the town. |
|
Due diligence was also required to get the capital needed, so Wright assigned the job to his A-team. |
|
When he sat down, the barber held a straight razor to his throat and spun the chair. |
|
If he is able to explore his options, don't be surprised if at least 10 teams make an initial call to his agent on Spikes' behalf. |
|
Instead of devoting his time to his celebrity status, he spends hour after hour, week after week, working for the little guys... and loving it. |
|
I was finding it difficult to respond in kind to his teasing. |
|
In addition to his temperamental aversion to populism, Roosevelt also had a practical reason to be cautious. |
|
In 1941, he was placed in Dartmoor prison, where he took information from German inmates and fed it back to his bosses. |
|
He climbed to his feet, wiping off the dirt that was on his face. |
|
Upset and shouting, Buck took to his heels and dashed out of the room, the wooden door banging on its hinges behind him as his cowboy boots clattered on the timber porch. |
|
|
He reckons to have selected his first squad for Saturday's opening day clash at Brunton Park but was giving little away as to his starting line-up. |
|
Much of his success as a politician can be attributed to his personal magnetism. |
|
Having promised to join in the celebrations and wave to his mum if his team won, the Rangers boss was doubtless wishing this ever-improving campaign would never end. |
|
The former ranking member on the House International Relations Committee met with Foreign Minister Chen Chien-jen in a closed-door meeting prior to his departure yesterday. |
|
Johnson dashed into the base and called to his partner, 23-year-old Tantania Alexander. |
|
His half-hearted attempt at a palace coup in 1600 led to his execution. |
|
He would bring him to his office after the Senate recessed and ply him with drinks until the inebriated Kentuckian would agree to anything Johnson wanted. |
|
Havel was allowed by czechoslovakian prison authorities to write one heavily censored letter a week to his wife, Olga. |
|
I went with him to his clinic and there found on the operating table a lady whom they had tried, unsuccessfully, to deliver with forceps without anaesthesia. |
|
Sgt. Crowley raised his beer to his lips and gulped, as Professor Gates lectured and gestured. |
|
And If Tygart was the crusading general, Hamilton, the cyclist to his left, was one of the casualties. |
|
It's now known that Hussein maintained a top-shelf selection of liquor and a six-figure wine cellar, even while denying so much as a sip to his soldiers. |
|
The skipper, to his credit, doesn't just pull rank and yell at him. |
|
When he took to his heels, some petrol splashed on his clothing. |
|
The 28-year-old Burnett, whose across-the-body delivery has concerned scouts for years, tinkered with a new windup this spring before going back to his old motion. |
|
Chase sprung out of his air mattress and ran to his brother's room. |
|
Last December, Hu went to his friend's home to wine and dine. |
|
Eventually Rebecca and Greg got the kit boxed and sent by airfreight to Addis, the capital of Ethiopia, to coincide with a trip to his home town by Samuel. |
|
Caught off guard, Olive stared open mouthed at the newcomer as he kept singing his sea shanty in a rich baritone voice, oblivious to his audience. |
|
He closed his eyes, pressing the heels of his palms to his forehead. |
|
|
Macmillan is a martyr to his gallstones and lumbago, and whenever possible he prefers to spend the morning in bed, devouring classic works of 18 th-century political history. |
|
James' sojourn in Gooding lasted less than a year before he was returned to his family who were apparently instructed to keep paper, pens, and inks away from the recalcitrant. |
|
In fact, Kimble admits that racing led him to his biggest crossroad in life, deciding whether to pursue a career behind the wheel or behind an airbrush. |
|
Nashe's attitude to his fate is fatalistic, he accepts that his freedom is taken from him and the building of the wall becomes a kind of atonement. |
|
When she was out of sight, the man also took to his heels in case the woman quickly found out what was contained in the plastic bag and followed him. |
|
Two passers-by came to his aid and helped to find the cause of his injury. |
|
He sat down and an aide attached a microphone to his jacket. |
|
A low-profile and entourage-less John McCain, iPhone to his ear, wandered alone down the sidewalk. |
|
He moved over to his console again and keyed in a few commands. |
|
Then with a will, he forced himself to his feet and ran off. |
|
With three years left to his presidency, we are reduced to the lowly ambition of executive orders. |
|
Linus worked 40 hours a week in the classroom and in the lab, and spent time preparing lessons and grading students papers in addition to his regular studies. |
|
He's surprisingly lucid in comparison to his usual interviews and manages to avoid the trademark doommongering and baseless claims of scientific advance. |
|
After almost a minute of this strange outburst, he came to his senses and slowly pulled himself into a sitting position, wincing in pain with every agonizing inch. |
|
Reports from the prison say the officer was attacked by a prisoner with boiling water from a kettle and received severe scalding to his face and hands. |
|
Our thoughts and deepest sympathies go out to his family and fiends. |
|
The king was a widower, his wife having died giving birth to his daughter. |
|
Enron's Ken Lay conducting television interviews, dappled with references to his being the humble son-of-a-pastor. |
|
But it also suggests a capacity to distance himself from the world and its sham enthusiasms, and lends an unconscious edge to his portrayal of it. |
|
While I was in the lake, little fishes would nibble softly on my toes, beside me slid a beautiful California king snake and a bird swooped down to his prey. |
|
|
The local favourite aggravated an injury to his troublesome right arm after catching his hand in a latch while taking a toilet break on the 16th fairway. |
|
The strange young man pulled himself unsteadily to his wobbly feet. |
|
The entrance the modern-day budoka makes to his ryu or dojo may be simpler than it was in the old days, but it has just as much meaning and commitment. |
|
Harry has been playing his cards very close to his chest over the summer as far the status of his relationship with Cressida went. |
|
His black hair was smooth, styled, kempt, and it hung only to his ears. |
|
Indeed Colm, who has suffered from cystic fibrosis since birth, was considered more than once to be at death's door, with the family being called to his bedside. |
|
He was the sort of person who was very loyal to his friends. |
|
Who would bet against him adding Olympic gold to his Tour de France crown. |
|
And it may be only a matter of time before Button is recalled to his first team, especially if Michael Schumacher decides enough is enough and a grand reshuffle ensues. |
|
There was, of course, no honeymoon, and to crown it all a telegram arrived at the end of the week recalling my new husband to his unit because the posting had been cancelled. |
|
He writes long letters to his estranged wife and keeps a diary. |
|
His owners chain him to his kennel when they leave in the morning, and the poor little fella sits there barking for an hour or so until he settles down. |
|
At the highway, Lucius picked up a rhythm of hoofs and fell to his knees behind a shallow berm, thinly screened from the road by a stand of brush. |
|
Resigned to his status as a lowly hospital attendant at the Whitestone Sanitarium, Jerome dreams of the day he can once again ply the Hippocratic oath. |
|
This stand-alone thriller features Miles Flint, an unambitious low-level spy, whose job is to watch and listen, and report backs to his superiors. |
|
As with his 50, Vaughan went to his century in the grand manner, sweeping Brown over square leg, but the next ball had him lbw as he pushed forward. |
|
But his many piercing performances provide a counterpoint to his embarrassing legal troubles. |
|
Towdah fell to his knees, faking a little flailing motion as he fell. |
|
Suddenly Fenton's face recoiled and his hand flew up to his nose. |
|
His reaction to his classmate's affirmative answer is telling. |
|
|
After a few glasses of wine, we retired to his huge, king-size bed. |
|
A belayer holds the end of the rope, hooked to his or her karabiner and through the belay device, to take up rope slack as the climber ascends the wall. |
|
Adding to his already battered pride, he tottered back into the bedroom on unsteady matchstick legs, attempting to regain maybe a little of his lost composure. |
|
He put his fingers to his mouth and gave a loud whistle to signal his men. |
|
The husband cut his own rations, feeding his share to his son. |
|
He listens with a beatific half smile to his visitors in English and responds in rapid fire Nepali, which the secretary in his ministry does not bother to translate. |
|
Our central problem is that the combination of his grandiloquence and the September 2008 financial crisis led to his election. |
|
His decision to stick to his convictions on Thursday is no doubt positive news for them. |
|
In his awed provincialism Grimshaw failed to realise that as a painter he could outdo all three so long as he kept to his own landscapes and townscapes. |
|
He straps his sword to his waist while Annabelle buttons his coat. |
|
He shook his fist at her, which, to his surprise, earned a real smile. |
|
But Corey Stoll was so fantastic, I moved that storyline to his character, and that required a great deal of rewriting. |
|
The former Dublin star has been a loyal Na Fianna man for 20 years and has done more than most to contribute to his club's transformation from whipping boys to kingpins. |
|
Eventually, it is reported, he ceased working and turned to his wife, who was in tears by his bedside. |
|
The luxuriant mop is also gone in Sugar-house as Hoodwink is a skinhead, which only adds to his visual ferocity. |
|
These same scientific methods led Locke to his Two Treatises of Government, which later inspired the thinkers in the American Revolution. |
|
His complete infatuation with Eve, while pure in and of itself, eventually contributes to his joining her in disobedience to God. |
|
Satan is very devoted to his cause, although that cause is evil but he strives to spin his sinister aspirations to appear as good ones. |
|
It rested the Dodgers' bullpen and enabled Tracy to turn to his relief pitchers as soon as Jackson began faltering. |
|
Innocent probably saw in them a possible answer to his desire for an orthodox preaching force to counter heresy. |
|
|
And I am immensely grateful for his graciousness to his defeated opponent. |
|
Widespread knowledge of Chaucer's works is attested by the many poets who imitated or responded to his writing. |
|
His proposal that a wing of the latter should be devoted to his sculptures aroused hostility among some artists. |
|
Throughout his life he sought to be of service to his fellow citizens, and believed in making music as available as possible to everybody. |
|
Moore's sense of England emerging undefeated from siege led to his focus on pieces characterised by endurance and continuity. |
|
The account of the loss of the blessing of his father Isaac appears immediately after Esau's marriage to his Hittite wives. |
|
It was a gracious touch, a rhetorical olive branch to his vanquished foes. |
|
Before me, the turnover rate on his assistant's desk was about three months due to his daily mantrums. |
|
He claimed the explosive was strapped to his leg, Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court heard. |
|
Notwithstanding Facebook turning him down, he along with Koum, his Yahoo colleague went on to create WhatsApp that was sold to his rejecter. |
|
Joseph Paxton was first and foremost a gardener, and his layout of gardens, fountains, terraces and cascades left no doubt as to his ability. |
|
The Edge's distinctive mandolinlike upper-position chord fills took on a more sparkling quality, and Bono added some depth to his singing. |
|
In fact, several details of this passage belong exclusively to his auctorial persona. |
|
Haradinaj, a former leader of the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army, appealed to his Cabinet to remain calm, the officials said. |
|
Immediately prior to his appointment to Canterbury, Williams was the Bishop of Monmouth and Archbishop of Wales. |
|
Gundulph moved to his wife's town, where she held a palace, likely near the cathedral, along with a villa in the valley. |
|
At issue was the right of Charles's daughter, Maria Theresa, to succeed to his Austrian dominions. |
|
He referred mainly to his tidology when he applied for the Lowndean professorship of astronomy, which had become vacant that fall. |
|
They chose a course that extended the lovefest, bonded Barbaro to his fans and cemented his appeal as a documentary subject. |
|
Jack is considered a loose cannon due to his volatile personality and his track record of being unable to maintain his composure. |
|
|
But they were overshadowed by Matt, who whooped and shouted, and Andy, who clipped his security pass to his short and curlies. |
|
But he did not lose heart and remained true to his perspective, swimming against the current, as it were, lion-heartedly. |
|
His lack of discernment led to his disastrous choice of business partners. |
|
The following year he moved on to his prep school, South Lodge, Lowestoft, as a day boy. |
|
He proposed that Olav Audunsson should move down to his house and submit himself to his leechcraft. |
|
Mountain lines and distant horizons lend space and largeness to his compositions. |
|
In fact, the child will lexicalize one, two, or three elements of the semantic representation according to his lexicalization span. |
|
In 1928, RAF College Cranwell cadet Frank Whittle formally submitted his ideas for a turbojet to his superiors. |
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He was the first major figure to argue that mankind had evolved language skills in response to his changing environment and social structures. |
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The Right Honourable gentleman is indebted to his memory for his jests, and to his imagination for his facts. |
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Charles believed in the divine right of kings and thought he could govern according to his own conscience. |
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Now if the irreversibility of God's gifts to his people, be considered, what joy for those who feel within a wicked heart. |
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Drake's father apprenticed Francis to his neighbour, the master of a barque used for coastal trade transporting merchandise to France. |
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The officer, who is from the Glenrothes area, was taken to Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy with injuries to his arm and stomach. |
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Holder Michael McDonald took the snap, leapt to his feet and threw to Smith, who made a shoestring catch and easily reached the end zone. |
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Accept an obligation without being a slave to the giver, or insensible to his kindness. |
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His ineligibility as a contestant was due to his former employment by the sponsor. |
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This was partly due to his health still being poor, but also due to a lack of urgency. |
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She recalls trailing him around his greenhouse as he tended to his babies. |
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Wilfrid left large sums of money to his monastic foundations, enabling them to purchase royal favour. |
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After various adventures, he returned home to his family, now in his early twenties. |
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Now that Agnes is seventeen and her education, or ignorization, has been concluded to his satisfaction, Arnolphe intends to wed her. |
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The waves seemed to have closed over the Umbar episode, perhaps owing to his own ignoscible treatment of the subject and the absconding rogues. |
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The king instead tried to leave control of the region, at least in part, to his children. |
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It was these skalds who first referred to his greatness with emphasis on his generosity to the church and military achievements. |
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An honest physician leaves his patient when he can contribute no farther to his health. |
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In addition to his works on ethics, which address the individual, Aristotle addressed the city in his work titled Politics. |
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He refused the request of Alexandrian Greeks to dedicate a temple to his divinity, saying that only gods may choose new gods. |
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A heads-up posture meant the pilot couldn't pay attention to his instruments. |
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Beneficence is godlike, and he who does most good to his fellow-man is the Master of Masters, and has learned the Art of Arts. |
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A similar request was not issued to his Russian counterpart. |
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Hockin was emerging as a principal target-villain in the case, a traitor to his union yet a key figure in the dynamitings. |
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He would as soon have thought of wearing a white linen shirt or having the lairdship of a barony, as of getting ham to his breakfast. |
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He spotted a pair of shoes belonging to a woman house guest, found himself irresistibly attracted to them and began taking them to his bedroom. |
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It was when the stranger came up to his house and looked into his sunroom that Ferguson went for his gun. |
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But unto Cain and to his offering he had not respect. And Cain was very wroth, and his countenance fell. |
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He went to his office and logged online to have cybersex for more than six hours. |
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Lou Brent rolled from his cot, got to his feet on the floor of the tiny coop. |
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Saumarez was silent for good or bad, and as business-likely attentive as he could be, having due regard to his work and his polo. |
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He wore black three-quarter cargo pants with that same strange belt, except his had a chain running from that to his cargos. |
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