But she blew the whistle on what she believed was misconduct in the military, and in 2000, she was dismissed on medical grounds. |
|
And we all know what happens to people who blow the whistle on conspiracy theories, don't we? |
|
My music will never sound as well-produced as some techno record that sounds clean as a whistle. |
|
More importantly for our purposes, the all-digital source material transfers to DVD clean as a whistle. |
|
Well no, but its excellent rollaway hood, complete with dinky peak, keeps you dry and clean as a whistle. |
|
All recordings have come up as clean as a whistle and the album is a fine memorial to another conductor who was so tragically short lived. |
|
Assorted whistle sellers, hot-dog vendors and T-shirt floggers stalked the crowd. |
|
Have your musket clean as a whistle, hatchet scoured, sixty rounds powder and ball, and be ready to march at a minute's warning. |
|
Kevin played a tune on the tin whistle for me before I left for fourth class. |
|
I think some actors probably find it frustrating, because he likes things clean as a whistle, unadorned, and unemotional, generally speaking. |
|
I insisted Jon have a CT scan, a calcium scan, and he came up clean as a whistle. |
|
Technically, Owen Moriarty's playing is as clean as a whistle with tonally strong projection. |
|
The production is clean as a whistle and as smooth as a newly varnished coffee table. |
|
The game's 7.30 am kick off, with the final whistle at 9.15 am, meant the game overlapped with the start of the school day. |
|
So i arrive at the call and get to work, and what do you know there's a 40 gig hard drive, clean as a whistle. |
|
She's as clean as a whistle, but you, you obviously had something to do with this mess. |
|
As the lion and I depart the chamber I hear a tuneless toot of the whistle and the magical whoosh of the cloud of numbers. |
|
Thereafter Abbey should have a business as clean as a whistle, enabling it to focus on its personal financial services side. |
|
Similarly, those seeking to control crime, and raise consequential consumer confidence, must appear to be clean as a whistle. |
|
Are the other political parties immune to this disease and therefore as clean as a whistle in this regard? |
|
|
Don't let the little ones near it unless you can afford to whistle it down the wind. |
|
That means that taxes will be upped when the Government decides to up them, and Parliament can whistle in the wind. |
|
Umbrellas, which glow red and green, and those that whistle are also in the market. |
|
Once far enough she let out a low-pitched whistle, one she spent a whole summer perfecting. |
|
By the time you hear the raver's whistle, you have to ask yourself if the Brothers are for real. |
|
All eighteen players played their hearts out and were ecstatic when the final whistle came. |
|
Because beer drinking is popular, to say the least, there are hundreds of bier halles and biergartens where you can wet your whistle. |
|
Only too happy to wet his whistle, he had two cases dispatched to his London offices yesterday. |
|
Scotland's fate was made official with the events in Oslo but, really, they were done as soon as the final whistle went at Hampden hours earlier. |
|
The referee should also whistle immediately if any player in the scrummage is lifted off his feet or is forced upwards out of the scrummage. |
|
She describes these rages as often provoked by strangers on the street who whistle at her or make some sexually suggestive remark. |
|
Only four points were scored in total in that period and it was a relief to all when the final whistle was blown. |
|
Rotherham were understandably delighted as the final whistle sealed their position on top of the table. |
|
He tried to whistle to her, but his clothes were beginning to weigh him down, and his mouth filled with water. |
|
You turn around to see eight guys coming toward you, armed with cowbells, drums, horns, and a whistle. |
|
The final whistle was greeted with cheers of jubilation and sighs of relief. |
|
At the same moment, the truck swayed as the tailgate opened, and the thin officer let out a long impressed whistle. |
|
The shrill whistle of the hoary marmot is a familiar sound to Alaskans, especially to hikers with dogs. |
|
The only offer he got was from a fellow-lodger, a young man who earned an honest penny by playing a tin whistle on the streets. |
|
To rub salt into the wound the referee blew the final whistle as Ilkley kicked-off. |
|
|
Indeed, even the pitch invasion at the final whistle seemed more like a wake than a party and soon evaporated into memory. |
|
The joyful scenes at the final whistle were what one would expect on such an historic occasion. |
|
He's more East End than a Limehouse jellied eel in a pearly king's whistle. |
|
When the final whistle was blown the excitement of the boys and the spectators was amazing. |
|
Audio cues such as engine noise, traffic ship whistle and sea sound add to the ambience. |
|
It was as if they just wanted to mark time until the final whistle and take the win. |
|
That one point margin again separated the sides at the final whistle as two evenly matched teams shared 10 second-half points. |
|
Near us there is a man who has been enthusiastically blowing a whistle and waving a glow stick throughout. |
|
There was the sound of thunder and of game shooting and the hoot and whistle of steam trains. |
|
Vocalizations are variable with species, and range from the sharp piercing whistle of the tropicbirds to the guttural grunting of cormorants. |
|
There is also an album from Dublin-born uillean piper and tin whistle player, Ronan Browne. |
|
With shining eyes he let out a wolf whistle playfully, grinning, as Jake looked over his shoulder and smiled mischievously. |
|
I suspect there will be a few raised eyebrows from the traditionalists and perhaps the odd wolf whistle from the Longhurst Stand. |
|
All walkers are reminded that they must have a whistle and a survival bag on all walks in the interest of safety. |
|
Spanish men favour the noise ch-ch-ch-ch-ch over the wolf whistle for street harassment. |
|
Except for the occasional wolf whistle, Superchav passes unnoticed among them. |
|
A man dressed in black leapt from an alleyway in front of her, releasing a wolf whistle from his lips. |
|
I offered to get them and as I got out of the car, Andy let out a wolf whistle. |
|
But I think sometimes getting a wolf whistle can be fun, but sometimes it's sleazy. |
|
Legge plays him with such smiley, boyish charm that, at the final curtain, he earned a loud wolf whistle from the gentleman sitting next to me. |
|
|
I let the towel drop to the floor, and quickly walked over to the pool, ignoring Dom's excessive wolf whistle, I dived straight into the pool. |
|
The story is told of how a trooper once let out a wolf whistle and muttered something under his breath as Sarah walked by him. |
|
He then put it back into his pocket, and walked to the sidelines and handed in his whistle and yellow and red cards and said the game was over. |
|
Neil Lennon vents his fury at the final whistle, pushing the point so far that he was also red-carded by the referee. |
|
I stood in a deep trench with members of various companies waiting for the whistle to jump out and low crawl to the barbed wire. |
|
At the final whistle the Brazilian team gave each other self-satisfied high fives, which hardly seemed justified considering their performance. |
|
I was sure anyone within five miles would have heard it the way they hear a church bell's knell or a train's whistle. |
|
Unfortunately for Malton the final whistle sounded to prevent a miraculous comeback. |
|
But someone blew the whistle and Michael was arrested for bigamy and hauled before the courts. |
|
Inside the pub at Cambridge Circus, the final whistle blew as Arsenal knocked United out of the FA Cup. |
|
This is because every driver has to ensure they act in line with a whistle which is blown three times. |
|
Oh, the percussionist also played a whistle and in the final movement the pianist and flautist played plastic wood blocks. |
|
The children of Brendan and Theresa Walsh of Rhue, Lisa and Alan danced jigs and reels to the music from the tin whistle of Nicola Walpole. |
|
I shall stick to routine, mindless tasks, and whistle my way through it happily enough. |
|
Boaters get to know the lakers by name and recognize their silhouettes, even their whistle sounds. |
|
Watch Joan and Melissa Rivers blow the whistle on the evening's best and, yes, worst dressed. |
|
The referee's whistle came not a moment too soon and the celebrations began. |
|
When the teakettle let out a whistle, Quinn went to go turn the burner off. |
|
When the rustlers spin round and glare at you, levelling their pistols in your direction, whistle nonchalantly. |
|
On Wednesday the final whistle sounded and he was there, perched on the ledge of the executive box, fists punching. |
|
|
From the opening whistle the pace was frenetic and the fans simply loved it. |
|
Once they and the others have paid a tiny tribute to a few families that keep the market area clean, a whistle shrills and the bartering begins. |
|
The kazoo always sounds daft, and the Swanee whistle is almost impossible to play a recognisable tune on. |
|
He is sitting, fashioning a silent whistle out of wood, he blows it and the dog comes running back. |
|
Incidentally not once during the five days did the shrill sound of a whistle disturb concentration. |
|
But for the endless shrill of crickets and the loud whistle of a bird, the silence of the forest was enchanting and complete. |
|
She brushed aside branches, following the chug of an unseen train that got louder and louder until finally, another whistle sounded into the air. |
|
After a moment, he let out a high, piercing whistle that somehow seemed strange coming from the hulk of a man. |
|
The man lifted a whistle that hung around his neck and blew into it, causing a sharp, shrill sound to be emitted. |
|
Interspersed between dance items were the tin whistle groups who played both singly and in groups turning out a lively medley of tunes. |
|
It had been 40 years since the company closed the railway, but now there was again an echo in the wilderness, as the whistle blew once more. |
|
An agitating game that left the hearts of many fans racing from the blow of the whistle was indeed the game of the day. |
|
From the first blow of the whistle we were unsure as to who would take control of ball when McDonald put the first score on the board. |
|
He announces his arrival with a long, low, almost obscene whistle that sounds as though someone had just uncaged a large, evil bird. |
|
A caged canary at a craft shop in rural England had the whole whistle down pat. |
|
A thundering, prehistoric steam engine cleaves the crowd, whistle screaming, a velvet column billowing into the dark. |
|
He would whistle whenever he wanted its presence and obediently it would flutter its wings to its owner's shoulders. |
|
He is still under investigation by ICAC and NSW Police for the way in which he dealt with the whistle blowing nurses. |
|
The other rule will whistle shorthanded teams for icing the puck but will not prevent them from changing lines. |
|
There's not too many people playing the penny whistle in Thailand and it sounds good with Rick's guitar. |
|
|
Buskers who stand in subways with a cap and a penny whistle can intimidate people, and it doesn't create a pleasant atmosphere. |
|
There isn't one poor song and a bonus is the use of unexpected instruments, such as a recorder and penny whistle on a couple of the tracks. |
|
The term is also used for instruments with full melodic capability such as the swanee whistle and penny whistle. |
|
When the whistle blew for half time the antagonists bowed to each other and went off to drink in the same pub. |
|
And if you can't whistle, then get a flute or a recorder or a penny whistle or a harmonica and bring your music into the world. |
|
There was one moment where I gave a low whistle of admiration, hit pause, scanned back and did a slo-mo examination. |
|
As he blew the final whistle Collina walked over to the distraught Kahn to offer his commiserations but Kahn was unmoved. |
|
Sadly it was soon followed by a whistle as the sword cut through the air, which prompted a loud smack as it hit its target and a groan. |
|
It was not the usual indistinct crackle of a far-off transmission, but a crystal-clear whistle as if someone was on her boat. |
|
The final whistle sounded before the game could be restarted and Reds had secured another fabulous win. |
|
It was quiet from midnight to 6 a.m., but then it was like in the cartoons when the factory whistle blows, they just started crashing. |
|
A sonic whistle is very old technology, to the point of almost being forgotten. |
|
The audience began to clap and whistle, standing up in their seats while Will kissed Lauren sweetly and they went off-air. |
|
The story has entranced audiences for decades, teaching them never to be vain and always whistle while they work. |
|
Philip's mother, Carol, said that instead of a dummy he was given a sheepdog whistle as a baby, and he's never looked back. |
|
But a mixture of wayward finishing and last-gasp defending ensured the game remained goalless at the final whistle. |
|
Watch in amazement as the final free is taken in the All Ireland Hurling Final and the final whistle blows immediately afterwards. |
|
Long before the end the atmosphere had gone from the place, the final whistle greeted by dutiful cheers rather than raw passion. |
|
Tom, almost as if he were responding to a dog whistle, jumped off the sofa, dragging his feet as he walked to the Kitchen. |
|
As I hung up he'd started to whistle, that wobbly tuneless whistle that's unmistakeably elderly. |
|
|
Fearing that the criminal would return and rough me up, I blew on my crime whistle to wake my neighbors for help. |
|
But no one was in any doubt about the real dog whistle at the core of the strategy. |
|
But the hint that migrant workers are to blame looks like a dog whistle that risks playing into the hands of the far right. |
|
In Howard's case it's a dog whistle message to blue collar Labor supporters. |
|
If dog whistle campaigning works, how many people are considering changing their vote as a result? |
|
For immigration is a dog whistle of a different kind for a certain type of Labour supporter. |
|
This dog whistle may have been missed by his audience, and was certainly neglected by the press, but it resonated in Conservative headquarters. |
|
The team managed to steady themselves and managed a brief rally before the final whistle signalled their exit from the competition. |
|
The occasional muffled whistle indicated that the train was catching up with me. |
|
She heard the tin whistle begin, and without even realising she was doing it, began tapping her feet to the ever-present drum. |
|
At nightfall, the ceremony ended with a recorded train whistle sounding over loudspeakers. |
|
The starter has a loud squawker, whistle or some article, which when dropped to the floor, will make a sufficient noise for all to hear. |
|
The half-time whistle sounded and traditional sliced oranges were brought round on trays for fans wilting from the sticky heat. |
|
If he is out of tune why is he favourite, and if Leona sings with a strengthless whistle why is she second favourite. |
|
As the ball was kicked out referee Pet Moran blew the full time whistle with Portlaoise holding out by the skin of their teeth. |
|
Audiences in Bombay's derelict Art-Deco cinema halls often hoot and whistle when their hero vanquishes a villain. |
|
Bullets whistle by from right to left and even bullets impacting the dirt sound real. |
|
He inhaled the freezing air around, hearing the whistle of the wind through the infantry. |
|
The final whistle sparked a pitch invasion of ecstatic fans and the Burnley players got off as quickly as they could. |
|
Indeed, a low whistle began to sound from the top of the kettle and within a minute it became a high-pitched, ear-splitting shriek. |
|
|
To their credit, they struggled on to the final whistle but the result was inevitable. |
|
But it was in vain, as Bury kicked deep from the restart and the final whistle blew. |
|
Soon with a whistle and a puff a steam train chugged through the snaky valley below. |
|
Three puffs of steam from the ship's whistle verified it received and understood the message. |
|
This was to be the last action of the game as the referee blew the final whistle and the pitch invasion and celebrations got underway. |
|
Staff rooms and canteens were filled with fans allowed to delay their work until the final whistle. |
|
It's tipping down with rain, Poland are kicking from right to left and Portugal get proceedings underway after Hugh blows his big blue whistle. |
|
Soon enough, the boat's whistle began to blow an eerie piercing sound as the water vehicle began moving. |
|
Tuition is provided on instruments which include tin whistle, fiddle and flute. |
|
Adam gave a soft whistle as he entered the barn and was pleased to hear an answering snort from Sport. |
|
All too soon, Johnny's cutting zigzags across trapping lines and frozen inlets, listening to snowbirds whistle and the dogs pant. |
|
Sean had learned some tunes at school and he provided the music on the tin whistle. |
|
The talented multi instrumentalist can play anything from a piano to a didgeridoo to a tin whistle. |
|
He is a man who seems determined to make a trumpet sound like a tin whistle. |
|
He was also talented musically, singing and playing the tin whistle being some of his favourite pastimes. |
|
Larry played the two row accordion, the tin whistle, the silver flute, and the clarinet. |
|
The stunned looks on the faces of the audience caused her to lose her pucker, proving that you can't whistle and laugh at the same time. |
|
The national school children gave a recital on thin whistle and the pre-school tinies paraded with the flags of the nations. |
|
It's harder still when there's no moral cop walking the beat to blow the whistle when things get out of control. |
|
High on the dusty, sun-baked sierras Pedro's whistle barrelled and echoed off the forest-covered hillside. |
|
|
Long after the final whistle had blown at their semi-final, the sound of drums beating and fans chanting could be heard outside the stadium. |
|
The innkeeper who sat across from the hunter however gave a small whistle before drinking his own brew. |
|
Maybe before we didn't get the rub of the green, we didn't play to the final whistle or we didn't plug away enough. |
|
Expressionless except for his puffed cheeks, he blew his whistle twice, signaling us to fall in line behind the school's back door. |
|
Paul Allaerts peeps on his silver whistle and signals my good self over to the kettle. |
|
Guiseley wrung one final effort out of Henry before the final whistle and all in all a draw was a fair result. |
|
If you are acting like a whistle blower know the consequences and don't leave a breadcrumb trail to your door. |
|
I thought we were staring at another defeat when the whistle blew for a free kick to City deep into injury time. |
|
Blowing the whistle on any illegal or unethical activities is the right thing to do. |
|
It was hard to determine if these young refs were too quick with the whistle or if the poor play resulted in a lot of silly fouls. |
|
I heard the taunting whistle of the koel and I knew I was in a mango orchard. |
|
Plumes of white vapor fill the air, and the blast of a steam whistle announces the train's departure. |
|
A recorder is a wind instrument characterized by a tube-like shape, a whistle mouthpiece, and eight finger holes. |
|
It was the insurance score his team needed and the final whistle confirmed their place in the last four. |
|
They were irate, and justifiably so, though it was nothing to what they'd feel at the final whistle. |
|
It will ache before the game but once the whistle goes, it will be banished from his mind. |
|
But Liverpool fought like tigers and erupted in joy at the final whistle, with an all-English semi-final to look forward to. |
|
He had a great love of traditional Irish music, being very accomplished on the melodeon and concertina, but the tin whistle was his favourite. |
|
It's a great relief for me to finally find this song, and be able to play it at my leisure, rather than just whistle an aimless tune to myself. |
|
It was another bizarre sight but even the half-time whistle, once it finally came, did little to stem the tide of extraordinary events. |
|
|
When he was finally contented with what he saw, the shrill cry of his whistle swelled throughout the football field. |
|
So I held on to the string, and the whistle continued and the little train bucketed along like a mad thing till I was told to let go. |
|
Ref blows the full-time whistle and you video the teams shaking hands and walking off the field. |
|
But that does not mean the remainder of the existing commercial loan portfolio is as clean as a whistle. |
|
I'm not saying I was clean as a whistle back then, but I did learn to read music. |
|
British agriculture on the whole is as clean as a whistle, compared to some other parts of Europe. |
|
His father played the pipes, tin whistle and fiddle and was a notable musician in his day. |
|
As quiet as he is off the ice, he's a stubborn, bullheaded Irishman when they blow the whistle to start the game. |
|
For example, on one occasion he embarked on the story of his first marriage and ended up telling me how he likes to whistle tunes in the street. |
|
Ungainly but smooth, this theme gives the audience something to whistle on the way home. |
|
A wooden vessel maneuvered to dock at a pier on Mahakam Ulu River, the sound of its whistle wailing far and wide. |
|
The sheep halted, and at the whistle the dog proceeded with short flanking runs which headed them into the gap. |
|
After nearly twenty minutes of this pointless and boring jabber, the coach blew four quick whistle blasts and gave a long, loud holler. |
|
Tunisia put the ball in Spain's net, but the whistle had long since gone for offside. |
|
Despite my tear-stained cheeks in 1973, seeing Stokoe's unbridled joy at the final whistle is still a memory that I am pleased to have witnessed. |
|
His way of calling out an opposing player was to whistle a high, hard slap shot to serve notice of his intent. |
|
Many years ago in England, pub frequenters had a whistle baked into the rim or handle of their ceramic cups. |
|
His only accompaniment was the soft hiss of snow passing beneath his skis and the low whistle of the wind as it shaped the loose powder. |
|
However, his powder-puff effort dropped short and the referee's whistle blew immediately to signal the end of a bitty match. |
|
The shrill sound of the tea whistle gives Beth a reason to avoid the question. |
|
|
The Captain let out a low whistle as he opened the cabinet, its contents a vampire killer's dream. |
|
All right, here's something else to whet your whistle, low-carb, low-calorie drinks, you're seeing a lot more new versions of these. |
|
After whetting the whistle at the pub, many will go on to dance at one of London's countless dance clubs. |
|
The first half took time to catch fire as play was constantly interrupted by the referee's whistle. |
|
Eventually, there was a sharp whistle and the boys looked around at the whistler. |
|
Managing a game is not simply blowing the whistle when an infringement occurs and keeping the score and time. |
|
She was about to explain, when a high-pitched whistle from somewhere in the middle of the soldiers sounded. |
|
The three-minute whistle and subsequent mad scraping of chairs made me think more of PE than physical intimacy. |
|
He blew two longs, a short and a long on the steam whistle as the train inched toward its top speed of 20 miles an hour. |
|
The whistle shrilled and he moved the kettle to a hot pad on the counter for a moment. |
|
He described the male call as a high-pitched whistle repeating a long, drawn-out KI-WI sound about 30 times. |
|
Following Cullen's goal, Padraig Kenny fired over three quick points before the final whistle sounded for a stunned Gortletteragh. |
|
South Africa attacked from the opening whistle forcing mistakes from the England side. |
|
But the final whistle was greeted with roars of joy mixed with relief from the Holte End as the score from the Stadium Of Light filtered through. |
|
On the final whistle he had already ripped the captain's armband from his shirt. |
|
Wallace blew his shrilly whistle and dismissed the team, who tiredly made their way to the locker room. |
|
By the time the final whistle shrilled through Dr Cullen an exhibition of scoring had been given by the Kildavin-Clonegal team. |
|
Hall, a close friend of the 20-year-old, was especially delighted that Routledge received a standing ovation on the final whistle. |
|
The Tramore defence was unyielding, however, and the final whistle sounded as Richard Hickey cleared the ball to midfield. |
|
She was out by the playground when the whistle blew, signaling the end of lunch recess. |
|
|
You can imagine my surprise to hear a loud train whistle as I approached the track. |
|
The train whistle blew twice, signaling that the two o'clock train was going to pull out of the station. |
|
He plays Celtic whistle, didgeridoo, panpipes, flute and bass flute in his trademark blend of Celtic, classical, jazz and folk music. |
|
Boris had the crowd enthralled with his dexterity on the whistle and harmonica. |
|
As the referee's whistle sounded to signal the foul, Mark crashed hard, landing awkwardly on his left ankle. |
|
Ten minutes later the gym teacher, Mr. Johnson, huffed into his whistle signaling the end of the class. |
|
The lead was reduced to six points but Silsden managed to hold on with Bowness slotting a drop goal as the final whistle blew. |
|
When it began to whistle she took it off and poured the hot water into two mugs. |
|
The kettle began to whistle, and she broke herself out of her reverie and made two mugs of tea. |
|
Instantly the whole hill became spotted with white puffs of smoke, and bullets began to whistle through our little grove. |
|
After a simple, single whistle from Arvid, they set off at a hearty gallop southeast across the great meadowlands. |
|
We sell these world wide to hotels who use them for the concierge to whistle up a taxi! |
|
Yeah, I only get to see something about twice a year but they can whistle for my money so long as they promote this animalistic behaviour. |
|
The ball fell to Jimmy Hedges and his strike was again blocked on the line as the whistle went. |
|
The whistle is to be blown only in the event of emergencies and must be visibly worn at all times while on the premises. |
|
Other cases getting the brush-off involve federal employees blowing the whistle on security lapses and fraud. |
|
It was at that point that the screw thread stripped and the pressure blew the whistle up in the air. |
|
Bedard had contended she was forced out of her job at Via after trying to blow the whistle on sponsorship-related activities she saw there. |
|
Turnbull is the only one of the 50 subjects so far to blow the whistle on what he now believes is a scandal. |
|
Ordinary people are probably afraid to blow the whistle on gangsters who would just as soon shoot them dead as not. |
|
|
Residents on a troubled Lancaster estate are bring urged to blow the whistle on noxious neighbours. |
|
When Carolyn Hewson quit the AMP board in December 2001, she had a chance to blow the whistle on the disaster that lay ahead. |
|
A new Moscow police web site lets users download passport applications and migration cards and even blow the whistle on crooked officers. |
|
Keenan tried one last run but was hauled down, Morrison and company held Couper up, and when the whistle went it was pandemonium as the Hawks celebrated. |
|
Anders Frisk blows his whistle for full time and the stadium erupts. |
|
The colors are crisp and clear, the picture as clean as a whistle. |
|
What will be going on behind the sideline masks they will wear for most of the time tomorrow when the whistle shrills the start of the Allianz Hurling League final? |
|
The Urlaur fans sensed a comeback and this was confirmed just before the shrill of the half-time whistle when Barry Nolan hit a curling shot into the bottom corner. |
|
The rhythm of the engine, the shrillness of the whistle and the lyrical quality of the train trailing off from the place are a part of the lives here. |
|
Helen's father asked them to whistle as they podded the peas. |
|
The invention relates to a whistle for use in umpirage of athletic games and in security jobs including guiding and signaling to gathering people. |
|
They both know that victory is essential and neither of them throw in the towel until the final whistle has been blown so I wouldn't take my eyes off this game for a second. |
|
He spoke frankly only after the whistle had already been blown. |
|
There were great scenes of excitement when the final whistle blew with the Mercy obviously very relieved to have won this game having made the long trek north. |
|
This was an odd game of rugby in which the home side led from the first minute until the last but never looked safe until the final whistle had blown. |
|
There was an intriguing cameo as the half-time whistle blew. |
|
Kevin admitted to being choked with pride when the final whistle blew and TV viewers across the world saw the Ireland manager punching the air with joy. |
|
Like those two characters, who are friends off-duty but become antagonists when the workday whistle blows, until they punch out at the end of the day. |
|
Even long after the final whistle had blown, Cooper was still being congratulated by his City team-mates as he went to join his friend's birthday celebrations. |
|
The whistle of the teakettle blew and interrupted his musings. |
|
|
Although I admit to being one of those who'll slate a referee at a match, I also understand the enormous task they face once the whistle is blown. |
|
She wheezed ever so slightly, a small whistle that sounded almost musical. |
|
Then students are free to add clay to make their whistle into a figure, bird, airplane and so on, first testing the unfired whistles to see if they are pleasant-sounding. |
|
Audible signals are principally the locomotive whistle and the detonator. |
|
He blew the whistle on CIA waterboarding, but the government keeps trying to sweep the issue, and him, out of sight. |
|
The game got off to a brisk start and there had already been a few helpings of excitement before Kenny Clark blew his whistle to award the team a penalty. |
|
This must be one of the few parts of the world where wine, walking and sea air are bound up with the hoot of the whistle and the hiss of the brakes. |
|
To savour that undefinable feeling and sense of satisfaction when the final whistle blew almost makes the trials and tribulation of recent days worthwhile. |
|
Its gentle whistle sounds like a tempest tumbling madly through a turbo. |
|
One blackbird wearing an orange beak sat on a branch and made a faint noise like a rubber duck with its whistle full of pudding, a tweet with the edges rubbed smooth. |
|
Getting the odd whistle or rude comment is par for the course. |
|
Victoria Kezra on the nerd dog whistle Guillermo Del Toro is blowing in his cool new giant robot movie. |
|
It says a lot about a match when the most dramatic moments come after the final whistle has been blown, when both managers get to bickering about the referee. |
|
The interplay between keyboards, flute, guitar and even a rocked out penny whistle is absolutely mesmerizing, with each musician pushing the other to the limit. |
|
As I submit to the ever-changing nebulosity above me, the distant melancholy moan of a train whistle carries through the valley and touches me, reminding that I am not alone. |
|
Mrs. d' Urberville instructs Tess to whistle to the bullfinches that Mrs. d' Urberville treats as pets and Alec surprises Tess as she's practicing her whistling in the garden. |
|
Andy Day had given them the lead with a 40-yard shot into the top corner, but by the half-time whistle it was all square as the Swans replied with a Scott strike. |
|
He kept blowing a dog whistle in a fruitless attempt to coax Molly out. |
|
X rays are light emitted at much higher frequencies than humans can see, in the same way as a dog whistle blows at a frequency that is beyond the sensitivity of the human ear. |
|
The victor is the player who, when the referee's whistle goes to take the kick, can extirpate all of his surroundings and focus on the fundamental task in hand. |
|
|
In my report I mentioned the lovely tin whistle playing at the offertory. |
|
Among the lots was a bosun's whistle given to the widow of a passenger to enable her to communicate after she was struck dumb from grief at losing her husband. |
|
When Ko reluctantly sat down in her new seat, the man next to her gave out a long, low whistle and grinned, exposing his six gaping teeth with a gold crown. |
|
As soon as he blew the whistle for half-time, referee Mr McNamara consulted with his linesmen and the two managers, decided the pitch was unplayable and abandoned proceedings. |
|
The department also recommends that fishermen have a First-Aid kit, a basic tool kit, a whistle and a Global Positioning System to indicate position. |
|
But after running the rule over the club's playing squad in pre-season, he's liked what he's seen and can't wait for the first whistle at Swansea tomorrow. |
|
Or we simply learn how to artfully rebuff advances by subtly threatening to blow the whistle on despicable and degrading behavior. |
|
He is on trial along with three others, and Bogucki is blowing the whistle on government practices he says are not fair play. |
|
Trouble arose after the final whistle when a gang of 200 to 300 Leeds supporters gathered outside in wait for Cardiff fans leaving the Elland Road stadium. |
|
This contest was no different, but it was clear from the time that referee Alan Lewis first put his whistle to his lips that it would be Fijian invention which triumphed. |
|
He called four foul throw-ins, invoked the six-second rule against a keeper who had just come on as a substitute and found himself being exceptionally whistle happy. |
|
Flutists are asked to sing through their instruments, pianists are asked to whistle and moan, and instrumental scores are visually twisted into circles or cruciforms. |
|
He thought of their merry singing, their coarse and wheezy whistle. |
|
Behind them, the man in the cowboy hat let out a whistle and they stopped. |
|
He put his fingers to his mouth and gave a loud whistle to signal his men. |
|
The odd whistle and occasional murmur slipped through from the usually voluble Parisians but otherwise they remained as unemotional as the protagonists on court. |
|
Justin gave a low whistle as he signaled to a waiter for a seat. |
|
Brian Foste's well struck shot to goalie Tom Nolan's left was greeted by cheers by the home supporters and less than a minute later the final whistle sounded. |
|
It will not be the crowd or the prospect of penalties that will induce butterflies in the game's most hyped striker, nor even thoughts of the first whistle sounding at 8pm. |
|
The final whistle sounded seconds afterwards and Towers had survived. |
|