Hydrostatic elongation of the tongue involves narrowing of the tongue vertically and consequent lengthening and protraction from the mouth. |
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For the hand-made eyelets, punch the hole with a stiletto or a nut pick, making the hole the size of the tongue of the buckle. |
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Most of the raiders were Danes, but the common tongue of the Scandinavians enabled them all to work together. |
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Some 100,000 consider Kashubian their mother tongue and speak it to varying degrees. |
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While her mother tongue is Afrikaans, she speaks some Spanish and some Sesotho, learned while in Maseru. |
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Stimulating tongue acupoints could augment the neural pathways connected to the motor cortex and result in improvements in motor function. |
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The only thing in front of her was this dog, who was grinning at her with his tongue lolling out. |
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All he needed was a few tots of spirits to loosen his tongue and tell one of his adventures, some pleasant, others tragic. |
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My own favourite notice from the same era was one written by my Oxford College authorities, doubtless with tongue in cheek. |
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The drive has to come from the students who choose to speak their native tongue instead of a language that everyone understands. |
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When she reached the fence, she stuck her tongue out at the little kids and blew a raspberry. |
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And you'll keep a civil tongue in your head until we're all through with each other. |
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The development of the tongue and reduced dentition are reminiscent of the nectar feeding bats in the family Phyllostomidae. |
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Francofolies, he is called, this special time when minstrels and jongleurs assemble to share their dreams and secrets in the tongue of Moliere. |
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The sickening sound of a saliva dripping tongue licking dry lips met my ears. |
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The puppy that had so taken a liking to Cael bounded in the room, its tongue lolling out the side of his mouth and his eyes dancing playfully. |
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If this fails to intimidate the attacker the snake turns belly up, opens its mouth and lolls its tongue out, playing dead. |
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He was slightly drunk and perhaps realised that the alcohol had loosened his tongue a little too much. |
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Chewing is a cyclic motion of the mandible and tongue apparatus, whereby food is reduced between the maxillary and mandibular teeth. |
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There is variety in texture, too, from the fragile laciness of maidenhair fern to the solidity of harts tongue fern. |
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The hand movements were a result of nervous system feedback, the tongue of the creature was some how triggering involuntary muscle spasms. |
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I remembered him sitting and watching me, nursing his drink for hours, every now and then dipping his tongue to sip. |
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As I had only been learning Spanish for 2 years at University in Scotland, I hadn't quite got my tongue round the lingo. |
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If no one was available, children who spoke the same mother tongue could still discuss the new topic in their own language. |
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It might be impossible to move an entire case of tongue or oxtail or side of lamb unless the person requesting it buys at least half. |
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I hardly know what to say, given this new and unfamiliar policy of keeping a civil tongue in my head. |
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Cele's throat and blotched tongue are swollen with thrush, a fungal infection of the mouth. |
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Like pangolins, aardvarks have a long, protrusile tongue and a gizzard-like stomach. |
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But is it not speaking with forked tongue to call this piece of legislation racist? |
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I bit my tongue until I regained a little bit of calm, then managed to force a smile. |
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I was almost afraid to leave the elevator, but the elevator man was clicking his tongue annoyedly. |
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He slowly guided her lips to his and he kissed her, his tongue licking her lips slightly. |
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The industry jargon that rolls off his tongue is that of a consummate marketer. |
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A black collie ran back towards her, her fur ruffled in the wind, tongue lolling out. |
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I let my head roll to the side and lolled my tongue out the corner of my mouth. |
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He dramatically flops backwards, lolling out his tongue and pretending to be dead. |
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The dog proceeded to stand on his hind legs, waving his front paws at the man and lolling his tongue out in an expression of doggy glee. |
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The wine loosens his tongue and he begins to boast of his conquests of women at shady resorts. |
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Nor were Mori's nationalist leanings and loose tongue the sole causes of concern. |
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The tongue is suspended from the inside of the mandible above the hyoid bone and has muscles with a range of different orientations. |
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The mastery of at least two languages as well as the mother tongue is essential to secure the future of British society. |
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I'm not really a fan, I don't find him that funny, so I was a little dubious about it, but it was great, very camp, cheesy and tongue in cheek! |
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Contemporary railing features a combination of redwood tongue and groove siding and sleek brushed stainless steel piping. |
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The tongue directs the bolus of chewed food to the pharynx as an initial step in the involuntary reflex swallowing mechanism. |
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Fit-wise, they have a nice, roomy toe box and a padded tongue and heel collar that make for a nice fit, even with my skinny feet. |
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So when you get back to work, you're not only drunk but your tongue feels like someone scraped it with the dull end of a razor blade. |
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The forked tongue darted from his lips, and the tip of his tail began the familiar sound of a rattle. |
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As a rule, interpreters are supposed to translate between their mother tongue and another language. |
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Spines at the base of the tongue grind against spiny ridges on the palate to masticate food. |
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Tyler stood out even from this group with five earrings on each ear, two eyebrow rings on each eyebrow, four lip rings, and two tongue pierces. |
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All of our Maithili translators are mother tongue speakers who live in-country. |
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Adam scrunched up his face, his tongue wiggling a loose tooth on the side of his mouth. |
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I know you're eager to prove John's worth but do try to keep a civil tongue in your head. |
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The common tongue was by then very different from Old English or Anglo-Saxon. |
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As the many Shias on his list gave tongue in response, and answered his Koranic invocations, we could see the difficulties ahead. |
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Wind stuck his tongue out and blew a particularly loud raspberry in Dragons direction. |
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Guess how many old growth trees are cut down every year to make these tasteless tongue depressors? |
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Dissection of chameleon tongues revealed an elastic collagen tissue sandwiched between the tongue bone and the accelerator muscle. |
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They sit on the rim of the back of the truck, laughing and joking in their native tongue of Tzotzil while holding on for dear life. |
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He was able to find his tongue again and struggle out a simple thank you to the elderly woman. |
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She ran her tongue across her perfect front teeth, a smile spreading to her face. |
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It is as if the gift of English as a mother tongue should preclude the learning of any other language. |
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Jaw prehension is common in aquatic frogs, often in combination with abortive tongue protraction, but suction feeding is present only in pipids. |
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As a substitute for sticking her tongue out at me, she took a long drag on the cigarette and blew a plume of smoke toward my face. |
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Get the tongue depressors into the bending jig before they cool down completely. |
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The screen went dark as a monstrous tongue licked the lens, then a hand swiped it several times. |
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Kevin tried to intercede at one point but got his head covered with big wet sloppy tongue licks for his trouble. |
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Some linguists have expressed concern that learning a foreign language too early may impact unfavourably on learners' native tongue acquisition. |
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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. |
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He looked up at her, tongue lolling out, ice cream covering his muzzle, sweat dripping from his fur in several places. |
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The Clown had tiny eyes, a loose tongue and a small enough role to be very dangerous. |
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A man with the face of a dog smiled at her from the painting, his tongue lolling out happily over his business suit. |
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The trick with tongue piercings is not to hit a vein, but I double check the tongue before I unclamp it. |
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The tongue of the whale was regarded as a delicacy, while salted whale blubber could be bought in any French town. |
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In all squamates, including iguanians, the tongue is also used for vomeronasal chemoreception. |
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After seeing some of the sets, my tongue is hanging out and I am drooling on the keyboard. |
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We have returned as often as possible and my tongue is hanging out right now. |
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I had to relearn how to position my mouth and tongue to form the sounds of each letter of the alphabet. |
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The most common instrument for this examination is a tongue depressor which is used in conjunction with a light or other viewing device. |
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The long, narrow entrance hall is decorated in a rich orange colour and features tongue and groove wooden flooring. |
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This sound is then modulated into speech by the precise movements of the tongue and lips. |
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Alya was about to flip him the bird, but changed her mind and stuck out her tongue instead. |
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If plywood is impractical, 1x6 tongue and groove boards may prove to be an easier solution. |
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But the fact remains that you like your liquor and you have a loose tongue when you drink. |
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The seal has a big, fat, fleshy tongue and nostrils and a larynx very much like ours. |
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The discovery of a specific taste receptor on the human tongue for glutamates in 2000 legitimized its existence as a basic flavor. |
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For ordinary sensible people, genuineness trumps a slick tongue every time. |
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The upper cloth of Seetha's sari is goldenly silky and thus it will have a tinge of reddish brown hue, like the outer edge of the tongue of fire. |
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She was slurring her words and unable to use to her tongue properly to help her make the sounds. |
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In agamids, the homologous muscle also functions to move the tongue forward, assisting the major tongue protractors. |
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Michael rolled his tongue backwards in his mouth, savoring the bittersweet beer he clutched in his pale soft hands. |
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Similarly, control of the anuran tongue is achieved largely through its mechanical relationship with the lower jaw. |
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Speaking of lobster, a whole one showered with tabbouleh and arugula will cure you if that tongue cake leaves you mute. |
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I run my tongue over it gently, shredding it before grinding it between my well-developed teeth. |
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Jaw and tongue motions during suckling have been investigated in the macaque, opossum and pig. |
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The face was filthy, and tired, and worn, but the eyes and mouth spoke the tongue of sheer torment. |
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I felt the urge to stick my tongue out behind their backs but I stopped myself. |
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There are tongue and groove stained wooden floors throughout and the master bedroom includes an en suite bathroom. |
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Prestigious translation organisation is seeking experienced audio typists with French or German mother tongue and fluent English. |
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She nudged him with her nose, and gave him a brief lick of her long tongue before turning and trotting away. |
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The taste of it on my tongue strikes a chord deep within me, the way that the smell of woodsmoke or Grandma's perfume does for some. |
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Remove the meat, skin, and tongue from the head, shoulders, and fore shanks. |
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Different models of the shoe had different pump systems, which were integrated into the tongue of the shoe. |
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Like walking into the fun house at your local fair it's zany, madcap and often tongue in cheek. |
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Sydney's eyes narrowed in response and she willed her sharp tongue to spit back a scathing retort. |
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True, it rolls mellifluously off the tongue and hangs in the air like an echo from a bell or the sonorous tones of a self-righteous preacher. |
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When he's ready to keep a civil tongue in his head and email me an apology, he's welcome back. |
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This pair of shoes features contrast stitching and textures, a removable padded tongue and comfortable rubber sole. |
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She bit her tongue in a large effort not to say what had floated across her mind. |
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Second, you are to keep a civil tongue in your head especially when addressing your peers. |
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Flying foxes have a long bristly tongue that's great for lapping up juicy fruit, and for licking and grooming themselves and their friends! |
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Cool water dribbled on his lips, and he opened his mouth, moistening his tongue and swallowing. |
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The statement also said the latest cases were likely caused by the consumption of tainted pork tongue in jelly. |
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Like York, the commercial focus developed on a tongue of land between two rivers. |
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The last piece, next to the intersecting wall, should be cut to size and its tongue slipped into the groove of the adjacent board. |
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A stethoscope whipped past, followed by tongue depressors and a DNA sampler. |
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She was fired for speaking in her mother tongue to customers and co-workers. |
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The magic of Sichuan cuisine is that you can taste the flavours even after your tongue has gone numb. |
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It's a great read that will have your tongue hanging out to join in the odyssey by the last page. |
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He kept the drink at his lips for an extra pull, feeling the alcohol burn a path from his tongue to his stomach. |
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Arabic, the language of the majority and the official language of the country, is a Semitic tongue related to Hebrew, Aramaic, and Amharic. |
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You'll keep a civil tongue in your head if you know what's good for you, boy. |
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In a Pentecost scene an apostle at the rear of the group was raising his arm to fend off the tongue of flame, like a man attacked by a bee. |
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The allegation stunned us all but Hayley managed to find her tongue before Terry and me. |
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While salamanders with ballistic tongue projection rarely miss their target, frogs that use ballistic projection can be highly inaccurate. |
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I was vaguely aware of Deo and a name, a word on the tip of my tongue that I couldn't quite say. |
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This bilingual program provides the opportunity for immersion in the lost mother tongue at an early age. |
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The tongue contacts the food item forcefully, pushing it down into the papillae, maximizing the area of contact. |
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Geese, of course, do not rely on this tongue for getting food into the mouth, so the hyoid apparatus tends to be simple, but powerful. |
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For a learner to acquire skills in a foreign language, correctness of speech in his mother tongue should be taught. |
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Cixi clicked her tongue and finished lighting the last candle, and then sat down on the bed next to her brother. |
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Maori names can be difficult to get your tongue round and my mind blends similar names into one. |
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Certainly his comments about correct spelling and grammer must be tongue in cheek. |
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My mouth and tongue are severely inflamed and a biopsy has diagnosed lichen planus. |
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He now always licks the lenses clean with his tongue before wiping them on a cloth. |
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Rhea blew a raspberry with her tongue and fiddled with the fabric she was lying on. |
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If that last comment was intended to be tongue in cheek, the others certainly were not. |
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Variations can be made by changing the shape of the tongue behind the apical closure. |
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It is said that a child can already use all the grammatical patterns of its mother tongue by the time he or she is five years old. |
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In all actuality, this film is a light-hearted action romp that has its tongue firmly planted in its cheek. |
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The closest thing to a national tongue is Lowland Scots, which is what Burns wrote his poetry in. |
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Her burial shroud was tattered and ripped, her feet were stripped to the bone and a disgusting, black tongue wriggled around in her mouth. |
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As soon as he had uttered the question, he could have bitten his tongue off. |
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Jasmine flushed with guilt and couldn't seem to get her feet or her tongue in motion. |
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I'm waiting on a cheque, my tongue is hanging out for this cheque and the list of things to spend it on is getting longer. |
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His backstreet bistro is beamed, roughcast, tongue and groove, decorated with bibulous 19th-century prints by Gilbert-Martin, barrels, etc. |
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He cried, and the next instant could have bitten his tongue off for the childish vanity of the speech. |
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The question was rather tongue in cheek, but it certainly provoked conversation. |
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There was one of those horrible silences when I could have bitten my tongue off. |
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The trouble with me is most of the things I say are tongue in cheek, very flippant. |
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Emma, angry at the insult to Miss Taylor's husband, holds her tongue for the sake of family civility. |
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I was going to ask whether she was joking but decided to hold my tongue as class ended. |
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But he is not a man to hold his tongue when he feels strongly about an issue. |
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I've held my tongue for weeks now, but seeing this commercial four times in the past hour has finally pushed me over the edge. |
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Many times my students make me upset, but I have to control myself and hold my tongue so as not to hurt others. |
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Here's where I attempt to hold my tongue for the day and try to stay away from politics and war. |
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The houses will also have tongue and groove timber flooring upstairs and walled back gardens. |
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I haven't got very far into the book but my tongue is hanging out to learn more about the political scene on Jersey. |
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Laminate flooring is a tongue and groove interlocking flooring system that rests on top of the existing substrate. |
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A stream of lukewarm liquid trickled onto Ben's tongue and down his throat. |
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For supper we'd have things that people would never dream of eating now, like cold tongue or herrings' roe on toast. |
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The wicked mix of an acerbic tongue and a winning smile means holding grudges is nigh impossible. |
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Make a buttonholer from a tongue depressor or craft stick with a loop of string through a hole in one end of it. |
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If you're not in the sandwich mood, they do have other items on the menu, including pork tongue with a red pepper sauce which was quite tasty. |
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These commarginal lirae broadly tongue dorsally across plicae and ventrally across interspaces. |
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Those left unscathed by his loose tongue will hardly be inclined to trust him. |
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The flooring is tongue and groove flooring and there is a nicely fitted kitchen and fully tiled bathroom. |
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Since they sprout from perennial caudices, the adder's tongue ferns were presumably established in the chamise understory. |
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The general conclusion was that the impact of the first year's cattle grazing had helped the adder's tongue fern to thrive. |
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Hidden nailing is where nails are driven into the groove of the plank and covered by the tongue of the next plank and so on. |
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Partitioning was constructed and lined, mostly with tongue and groove timber boarding. |
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A loose tongue may cause only mild irritation, but it can also destroy reputations and wreck lives. |
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And while the sweet sensation takes a hike, the tongue remains as sensitive as always to salty and sour tastes. |
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This deficiency is associated with anemia, a sore mouth and tongue and poor growth and spinal cord problems in newborn children. |
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He's the kind of guy who always has the mot juste on the tip of his tongue and the wit to know when to say it, and when not to. |
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Hold a carpenter's square with the long tongue against the back wall and slide it into the corner. |
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The current quickens and the kayak begins to hurtle towards the tongue of smooth water. |
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She suggested he should see a dentist, of course, as well as remembering to brush his tongue when he brushes his teeth. |
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The entrance hallway with tongue and groove flooring is complemented by high ceiling with original coving and cornicing. |
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As his muzzle touched the water, his tongue lapped at it, his ears pricked up, and his eyes opened weakly. |
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The ceiling has a light washed tongue and groove cladding and exposed oak beams, while the flooring is recently laid birch. |
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I had braised beef tongue with ragout of porcini mushroom and white beans, with a soft poached egg laid on top. |
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Finally, insulate the cavities and then install sheets of tongue and groove plywood subfloor, using adhesive along with your fasteners. |
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The worker was performing trophallaxis with the queen who had her tongue extended through a slit or small hole in the queen cell. |
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Eyes are gumdrops and jelly beans, antennae are licorice lace, and the tongue is a shaped gumdrop. |
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I thought once that you wrote the column tongue in cheek, as provocative as possible, an Aussie stirrer. |
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Biting his tongue to prevent an acidic remark from coming off it, he glanced again at Meg. |
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My tongue stops midway to going back into my mouth, with the ice cream still on the tip, I must look like a dog begging for a bone or something. |
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It tasted sweet and bitter on his tongue at the same time and made him shiver slightly, unable to decide if he enjoyed the taste or not. |
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I know I've been talking about the collapse of Japanese society recently, but it was tongue in cheek. |
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To this the young devotees made their way, and after fastening cords to the bell's tongue they tossed ropes to their aiders and abettors below. |
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They started gabbling in some foreign eastern European tongue and shot me intermittent daggers from their steely blue eyes. |
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But quick-thinking Sgt Lynne pulled Mr Johnson's tongue from his throat and put the biker in the recovery position until paramedics arrived. |
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She had a distaste for the world and she showed it with a general lack of emotion and sharp tongue laced with venomous words. |
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In India, for instance, Maithili was claimed as a mother tongue by over 6 million people in the 1971 census. |
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The small closet swayed and packages of tongue depressors, bandages, pill bottles and other items showered from the upper shelves. |
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Davidson's tongue is hanging out which is like a red rag to a bull to Simon Cowell as he grabs hold of it with both hands. |
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The taste buds are small lumps on the surface of the tongue which are packed with chemical receptors. |
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I take it off my tongue where it seems to have glued itself, put it back in, take another drink of water. |
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This problem was solved when I glued a wooden tongue depressor to the pieces. |
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I was still at school when it came out, we all knew the lyrics then, but I can't get my tongue round them now. |
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Diced tuna is too soft and bland to leave any impression on your tongue or your mind unless served with wasabi cream. |
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Sitting outside the bar there is a light babble of a foreign tongue trilling off the tongues of groups of people enjoying leisurely drinks. |
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She's from Texas, and the words roll off her tongue with a distinctive elastic twang, softened by the years in New York. |
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Seconds later, his face is thoroughly cleansed by a rough tongue accompanied by a myriad of woofs and laughter. |
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In Wales they all speak behind your back in their mother tongue and you don't know what they're saying. |
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Because the tongue of a young woodpecker has a smooth tip, the sticky, glue-like saliva is used to pull grubs out of their galleries. |
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Jasper, the eight-year-old macaw, was on top form, singing, talking and clicking his tongue at all and sundry. |
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Along with Czech and Polish, it is classified as a western Slavic tongue in the Indo-European language family. |
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Another very useful tool is a laminate flooring clamp, which tightens together tongue and groove boards. |
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The material comes in individual boards with tongue and groove edges, roughly eight inches wide by four feet long. |
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A caustic wit, a penetrating eye, a stiletto tongue that enjoyed drawing blood, she wasn't everyone's cup of tea. |
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You put them in your mouth at bedtime to keep your tongue and jaw forward during sleep. |
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I struggled to take long deep breaths and bit hard on the sides of my tongue to bring saliva into my mouth. |
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The buckle has a cast pewter frame with a hinge element between the buckle sides, and both the tongue and strap were attached to the center bar. |
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Tracy was busy sketching a diagram of Sed's room, while I was clicking my tongue every time the clock's second hand ticked to amuse myself. |
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She took a tankard of each and downed them all in turn, burning her tongue on the wine. |
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My mum's mother tongue is Bikol although she's completely forgotten it now since she's lived here in the UK for over 20 years. |
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If after tying the shoe, less than an inch of the tongue shows, the shoes are probably too wide. |
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All the houses will feature gas-fired central heating, tongue and groove flooring upstairs and recessed lighting throughout the ground level. |
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We lose the thread at the Proto-Indo-European tongue spoken beginning in 4,000 b.c. and since vanished. |
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This site suggests baby powder, between the tongue and the upper or, if you can peel it back, beneath the inner sole. |
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No, they used the local equivalent to Cockney slang and it took me quite a while to get my tongue round it. |
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Starting with the tongue of the board, place the fabric top over the batting and layers and continue to the end of the board. |
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Although they both carry the taste of the ornage bitterness of the Bergamot, the tea from the whole leaf brew holds on to the tongue far longer. |
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Oral malodour predominantly originates from the tongue coating, gingival crevice, and periodontal pockets. |
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This is unapologetic good-time rock 'n' roll done with tongue planted firmly in cheek. |
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Taste is the sensation of a dissolved object penetrating the taste buds on the tongue and surfaces of the mouth. |
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Poor devil had his tongue cut out, so he trained the parrot to talk for him. |
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The Times's John Diamond, who died last year, sweetened his personal account of carcinoma of the tongue with gentle humour. |
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He was pressing his lips against hers harder and she felt him gently nudge his tongue against her lips. |
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The sensation of chilled vodka on your tongue is the perfect way to start a meal of traditional Polish food. |
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However, Josie's forked tongue flickers into persuasive mode and eventually convinces Tasha to keep schtum. |
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Swallowing, which is accomplished by muscle movements in the tongue and mouth, moves the food into the throat, or pharynx. |
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There is enough filtered moonlight to reveal the tip of a glacier hanging like a tongue out of the mantle of clouds. |
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Kero got up, tongue hanging from the side of his mouth as he pranced over to her, his small tail wagging back and forth rapidly. |
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Engage the tongue and grooves of the tiles as you lay them next to each other, but don't slide them into place. |
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We demonstrated that, during the palatally induced jaw-closing reflex, the tongue extended at jaw closure. |
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The tongue trills of the Irish singer Roger Whittaker continue to delight audiences the world over. |
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From time to time, the wind changed direction so that you had to leap back to avoid a sudden tongue of flame curling back towards you. |
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I think it's time I proved to myself and to those around me that I haven't lost my tongue just yet. |
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Caleb woke up with a great big yawn, his carmine tongue flicking over the roof of his mouth. |
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The tongue and mucous membranes lose their glistening appearance and the buccal mucosa becomes sticky. |
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When this disc is turned it activates a metal tongue which alternately closes and opens the electric circuit. |
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He deserves someone who is ladylike and can hold her tongue and knows how to behave around people of high standing. |
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Emily searched her mind for something eloquent and meaningful to say in response, but the plain and simple truth rolled off the tip of her tongue instead. |
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Thanks to an elastic band that connects the shoe's tongue to the sidewalls and a heel cup with a notch for your Achilles tendon, the fit is superb. |
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She looked as though there was something she wanted to say, but either she couldn't find the words or the proverbial cat had her tongue because she didn't say anything. |
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So, cleansing and treating the tongue can help to bring other parts of the body into balance. |
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The skull was almost a handspan wide, the pike's six rows of curving, pointed teeth distinct, as were the teeth that cover the upper surface of its tongue like barbs. |
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A good ear, a lithe tongue and a sound sense of humour are the only qualifications for these daily collectives which serve as a great social equaliser. |
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Also chisel off the tongue of the board protruding into the space. |
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A partner helps secure the board while the nailer bends backward pushing the groove hard onto the tongue with one hand and driving the nail in with the other. |
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The Wakhan, a tongue of land in Afghanistan's north-east, touches China. |
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When you put a laminate floor in the bathroom, use a little bit of glue on the tongue and on the groove just to make sure we have a really tight, moisture-proof seal. |
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Ally put her cell phone to her ear, sticking her tongue out at her father. |
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It took three swallows for her tongue and throat to start working again. |
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It is painted in warm yellow tones and fitted with varnished tongue and groove floorboards, a picture rail and a fireplace with cast-iron inset and black granite hearth. |
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So, with a bottle of scotch as old as I was in hand, I went over to Grandpa's house for a conversation and a probable tongue lashing from the sarge. |
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Teresa, tempted to stick her tongue out at her men for making disparaging remarks about women and their penchant for silly names, opted to turn her nose up at them. |
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The blade is immediately behind the tip, lies opposite the alveolar ridge of the upper mouth when the tongue is in a state of rest, and sounds made with the blade are laminal. |
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Doug stuck his tongue in her ear and Diana shuddered in revulsion. |
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Unforgiveably, he fell for the whole thing hook, line and sinker, and at no point deployed his sarky tongue to dismantle the publicity-fixated cybercharlatan's prognosis. |
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She poked my stomach and I stuck my tongue out at her and sighed. |
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Robert Rauschenberg is photographed like a schoolboy prankster with his tongue poking out. |
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Though a relatively recent convert to card playing, Vincent has mastered all the tokens required, winking, nodding, tongue twists and body gyrations. |
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In the U.K., an undesired tongue kiss was disassociated with rape under the 2003 Sexual Offences Act. |
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The hooves are sawn off, followed by the head, from which the tongue is removed. |
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It actually functions as a tongue and sends food down the fish's throat. |
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The chest, back, arms, legs, and tongue are common places for tattoos. |
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When something about the magic act goes wrong, a glib tongue and a humorous manner can do much to gloss over the slip so that people do not notice that anything is amiss. |
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Next came important work associating HPV with most of these new tongue and tonsil tumors. |
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In severe cases, oral herpes causes sores that spread from the lips to the inside of the mouth, along the tongue and cheeks to the back of the throat. |
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I cannot let Aoife's caustic tongue spoil this experience for me. |
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The recovery position ensures that an unconscious person maintains an open airway, that the tongue cannot be swallowed, and any vomit or fluid will not cause choking. |
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Julian gaped at him for a moment before abruptly leaving the office, biting his tongue to avoid saying things he wanted to but which would surely cost him his job. |
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Don't know if you can tell or not but I've got the blogging urge tonight, but as most of the stuff I want to say involves other people I am biting my tongue somewhat. |
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The lingual frenum can be located under the tongue and is a vertical band of tissue that attaches the blade of the tongue to the floor of the mouth. |
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He licked them up with a slick bronzy tongue and spat a thick wad of honey-brown juice into the empty teacup. |
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He had on the tip of his tongue great swaths of European, U.S., and Latin American literature, world cinema, and art history. |
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He spun it around with his tongue as she threw the saddle high up on his withers, pulling it back so none of his hairs were in the wrong direction. |
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To the right the living room retains its original tongue and groove floorboards and features a cast iron fireplace with carved wooden mantelpiece. |
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There is one, however, which shows none of these characteristics and indeed suggests that, sharp tongue or no, he might have been a lovable old buffer. |
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The patient may also experience lassitude, have a pale complexion, a sore low back, pale tongue body with thin white coating, and deep slow-weak pulse. |
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Since her lower jaw is underdeveloped and her teeth never grew in, her little tongue is permanently sticking out. |
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Features will include oil fired central heating, contemporary fitted kitchens, tongue and groove flooring upstairs and French doors leading to the back gardens. |
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Unlike most dogs, she doesn't use her tongue to lap up the liquid. |
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With most brands of laminate flooring, the joints are glued with specially formulated, water-resistant, glue placed between the tongue and grooves of every plank. |
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With a quick bob of her tongue she span back around and marched down the corridor, opening the classroom door by magic without even realising she had done it. |
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The brother's got the boastful swagger of your favorite rapper, the entrepreneurial instincts of a street hustler and a pen as swift as his tongue is sharp. |
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They ate cold Venison with red-currant jelly, potted meats, tongue and fowl accompanied by pumpernickel, toast and rye-bread, and they drank port wine. |
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My mother, always keen to take action, scrubbed his tongue with a washrag. |
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The words were on the tip of my tongue before I bit them back. |
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My mother often plucked me from unexpected places all over the palace and escorted me back to my room with a sharp tongue and a good whack on the ear. |
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Her voice was accented, but she spoke the common tongue well enough. |
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Adder's tongue is a perennial plant that grows to 1 foot high. |
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In it grow such ferns as adder's tongue fern, bog fern, Christmas fern, crested fern, Goldie's fern, maidenhair fern, New York fern, ostrich fern, and spinulose woodfern. |
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A high ceiling and original coving are found in the entrance hall, off which the dining room has tongue and groove wooden floors and an open fireplace. |
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Chinese was the mother tongue of just under 25 percent, while Arabic, Punjabi, Tagalog, Tamil, and Persian together accounted for about 20 percent. |
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If these symptoms are accompanied with a lusterless complexion, dizziness, pale tongue and lips, and a thready pulse, then these are heart blood deficiency syndromes. |
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