How To Use Barrow In A Sentence

  • Evidence of much earlier habitation came to light with discoveries of tiny flint blades from 5000 B.C. and two henges, eight Bronze Age round barrows, and an Iron Age settlement.
  • Fleet Street was choked with red-headed folk, and Pope's Court looked like a coster's orange barrow.
  • Barrow had taken an oath to study divinity when he was admitted as a fellow, and, after briefly studying medicine, he began studying divinity again.
  • In a moment," Eric said, "the wheelbarrow got bowsed over, when I managed, worse luck, to fall underneath; and then, finding I couldn't get up again, I hailed you, brother. Fritz and Eric The Brother Crusoes
  • Drummer Ste Barrow is frantically searching for a replacement having just split the skin on his bass drum.
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  • The recalls for Barrow and Beveridge are just reshuffling.
  • A wheelbarrow pusher can complete a return journey of 30 m in each direction whilst a shoveller is filling a 50-litre barrow. 1.1. Survey of local conditions and site reconnaissance
  • Heiser doesn't use a backhoe to muck out the corral where he winters his yearlings; he uses a wheelbarrow.
  • Each in turns fills a wheelbarrow and then with great effort pushes it to where the other man is digging, and empties it. Modern Literatures of the Non-Western World: Where the Waters Are Born
  • When we tried to microwave some frozen whale blubber sent down from Barrow, we ended up laughing as the muktuk sizzled and got tough. Ellen Frankenstein: From Tofu to Muktuk
  • Today's modern carts come in different forms; barrow, hand truck, wagon, wheelbarrow, push cart, handbarrow, handcart or gurney.
  • The horse stands thirteen hands if an inch; the van is a converted coster's barrow. Try Anything Twice
  • I was on herrick 8/9 and carried belt kit and a daysack. it my belt kit i carried ammo, bowman and FFD's In the daysack i had more ammo spare batteries water Time for the Assault Wheelbarrow (tm, patent pending)? Army Rumour Service
  • Jamie Barrow concluded the scoring when he scampered onto Smith's pass to rifle the ball past Knowles.
  • A young man was bending low to push a heavily loaded barrow up a slope.
  • The literary masterpiece Barrow draws on to illumine the path of conversion and repentance is Dante's Purgatorio.
  • Workers in bright-yellow hard hats are beavering away, moving bucketloads of stones in wheelbarrows and trying to clear a pile of rubble with a digger.
  • Trade on the Barrow was booming with up to 50 boats owned and worked by the Graignamanagh boatmen who worked the navigation system until trade ceased.
  • The costermonger Ewen Keeley used this barrow to sell fruit and vegetables on London's streets. Rare Antique Costermonger Barrows For Sale by Trainspotters.uk.com
  • Potter and Injun Joe were carrying a handbarrow with a rope and a couple of shovels on it. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
  • The most likely source of destruction is now from badgers which have already caused much damage to barrows, burial sites and other monuments.
  • He noted the incidence of barrows reused as Saxon cemeteries and other Saxon burials on or near parish boundaries in Wessex.
  • On one eventful night we saw some refuse fish being wheeled off in a barrow, and we begged leave to abstract a fish, which was -- I say it without fear of contradiction -- the knobbiest and scaliest member of the finny tribe. The Chequers Being the Natural History of a Public-House, Set Forth in a Loafer's Diary
  • He also bought a barrowful of topsoil and plants to finish it off. Times, Sunday Times
  • A butterfly was flapping around the wheelbarrow looking for a fragrance to match the colour of that great metallic flower.
  • Also in the barrow ditches were woodchips and offcuts from the construction of the mound's timber revetment.
  • Today, there were hourly buses between Buxton and Stockport, New Mills and Piccadilly, Barrow and Piccadilly, Southport, Wigan and Piccadilly.
  • Barrow was positively obsequious to me until he learnt that I too was the son of a labouring man.
  • This theft was premeditated because the barrow is completely worthless to anyone other than a trader.
  • He will then embark on a walking history of the town, providing a talk on The Grand Canal and Barrow navigation.
  • Although the Tridents have never been into a refit, there would have been similar checks on welds during construction at Barrow.
  • In the autumn of that year, he went on the Bureau of Indian Affairs supply ship North Star to Point Barrow.
  • The actual truth lies midway between the "evenness" of Evelyn and the "great hills" of Pepys, and to the man of Wilts that word "Plain" will ever summon up a vision of rolling downs, a short, crisp, elastic turf dotted with flocks, and broken here and there by some crested earthwork or barrow, which rears itself from the undulating Down, and breaks the skyline with its sharp outline. Stonehenge Today and Yesterday
  • Led by Dr Susan Ovenden, the new geophysics scans hope to clarify anomalies previously detected near a scattering of Mesolithic flints found during the excavation of the Bronze Age barrow on the Tankerness site.
  • Old gardening boots, wheelbarrows, and toolboxes can make whimsical substitutes for expensive outdoor containers.
  • To allow room for a wheelbarrow or garden cart, plan on 2-to 3-foot-wide walkways.
  • I let the stuff glop into the pail I was given to store it in until I came down the ladder to put it in the wheelbarrow.
  • Here too in one of these small hamlets through which we passed Ruskin with a gang of his pupils in flannels started roadmaking, and for days and weeks were to be seen at their arduous task of digging and excavation, toiling and moiling with pick, spade, and barrow, while From John O'Groats to Land's End
  • Indeed, I could have loaded them all onto a borrowed costermonger's barrow and shifted them myself if I'd needed to.
  • Before that we have a fancy-dress wheelbarrow race: one person sits in the barrow while the other pushes. Times, Sunday Times
  • But Newton's exploitation of the kinematic conception went much deeper than had Barrow's. Continuity and Infinitesimals
  • Splitting into a wheelbarrow or trailer parked alongside the splitter speeds up the job and reduces operator fatigue, allowing one to work for longer periods of time.
  • When the leaves were done, many barrowloads of chips were wheeled from the wood to the shed, and another dollar earned. Little Men: Life at Plumfield With Jo's Boys
  • The divine Isaac Barrow resorted to this panpharmacon whenever he wished to collect his thoughts.
  • When you get to the last trench, fill it with the soil from the barrow.
  • The bizcacha has one very singular habit; namely, dragging every hard object to the mouth of its burrow: around each group of holes many bones of cattle, stones, thistle-stalks, hard lumps of earth, dry dung, etc., are collected into an irregular heap, which frequently amounts to as much as a wheelbarrow would contain. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
  • Glasgow's Barrowlands has been host to many a star, from Donatella Versace and Lulu to Simple Minds and Runrig.
  • The wheelbarrow seemed to want to shake me off like a steer at a rodeo.
  • With its prehistoric burial mounds, barrows and encampments, its feudal laws and time-trapped settlements, the New Forest is anything but dull.
  • The only comparisons we know are two Early Bronze Age barrows in Northamptonshire, at Irthlingborough, and Gayhurst.
  • We might as well have got a wheelbarrow, filled it with 20 notes and set fire to it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Minister O'Donoghue also spoke of the town as a popular boating centre and a base for the pleasure barges on the Barrow.
  • The rink will literally be smashed up, the ice wheeled out in barrows and deposited in an environmentally friendly fashion.
  • They also suggest that even if some Barrow's Goldeneyes molt on freshwater lakes near the littoral zone, most males frequent the brackish waters of estuaries similar to their wintering habitat.
  • The flint axehead used had been left at the barrow, its battered and damaged cutting edge precisely fitting some of the cutmarks on the wood.
  • Mrs. Frost was ever on the alert lest any of her smaller children should get in the way of these huge rubber-tyred vehicles tearing along at reckless speed, -- and old Josey Letherbarrow resolutely refused to go outside his garden gate except on Sundays. God's Good Man
  • (Woden's last words to Balder are famous); the riding round the pyre; the eulogium; the piling of the barrow, which sometimes took whole days, as the size of many existing grass mounds assure us; the funeral feast, where an immense vat of ale or mead is drunk in honor of the dead; the epitaph, like an ogham, set up on a stone over the barrow. The Danish History, Books I-IX
  • He took a short cut across the fields to save 200 yards but had to lift the barrow and its contents over 11 stiles.
  • I visited a round barrow right in the middle of the heath. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then he would ride a bicycle back and forth, and then he would push a wheelbarrow back and forth. Christianity Today
  • And third wheels were only good for tricycles and wheelbarrows.
  • In prehistoric Britain early agricultural communities deposited their dead in communal, highly visible locations such as chambered tombs, barrows and burial cairns.
  • Some "were literally arriving in wheelbarrows" at clinics to enroll in the scaleup, said Jeff Stringer of the Centre for ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Set in idyllic surroundings, with the sound of the Barrow flowing gently over the weir in the background, the studio is the perfect location for an artist.
  • There are good reasons for suggesting that the pit was a grave, and that the wood was all that remained of a palisaded barrow, not unlike examples excavated in the Netherlands.
  • Today's modern carts come in different forms; barrow, hand truck, wagon, wheelbarrow, push cart, handbarrow, handcart or gurney.
  • He is now planning to do the same with a motorised wheelbarrow. Times, Sunday Times
  • I usually dig in a small barrow load of compost in late summer.
  • If the first half belonged to the Cougars the opening period of the second half certainly belonged to Barrow.
  • There had been pilfering of a rather more than casual order: shovels, wheelbarrows and gumboots from the building site. PASSION IN THE PEAK
  • A pair of porters holding a handbarrow between them stared in horror. Lord of the Isles
  • On the day of the switch, they formed a procession, piled all their goods on wheelbarrows and handcarts, and returned to Pavement where they set up their stalls.
  • While you cheer for one and deride the other watching the show, their minions are walking out of your back door with a wheel barrow full of cash. Poll: Will Obama visit help Corzine ?
  • ‘Make yourself useful,’ I said, dumping a pitchfork full of manure and straw into the wheelbarrow.
  • The quayside location is convenient to a range of city centre employment and transport hubs, with Tara Street and Barrow Street Dart stations located nearby.
  • In the west country a few burials of this date in stone-lined cists are known, and around the river Humber a localized tradition of inhumation burials under square barrows developed.
  • Together, they have scaled the stony scramble of Stirrup Crag at Yewbarrow, hit the heights of Helvellyn twice and negotiated the precarious pathway of Striding Edge.
  • A gigantic oak had been felled by a recent storm & my 10-year-old son & I decided to spend the day together, me chain sawing the oak & splitting the wood, & my son piling it up in the wheelbarrow & hauling it back up to the deck.
  • At the center of each of the barrows is an underground chamber built of huge vertical slabs of stone, and within each tomb are the large and imposing statues that once served as guardians of the dead. One River
  • Old gardening boots, wheelbarrows, and toolboxes can make whimsical substitutes for expensive outdoor containers.
  • Time was getting on, but, fortunately, there was a flower seller's barrow at the end of the footbridge and I stopped and started to select flowers for a handsome bouquet.
  • They produced a storming first half display which rocked Barrow to their boots.
  • She gathered two stacks of hay into a wheelbarrow and pushed the barrow to the stall that was vacant.
  • He habitually wore shabby tweeds and a cloth cap of the kind favoured by Cockney barrow boys, also by country squires.
  • If you're a company like Microsoft, and you can issue a three-year bond for a ridiculous 0.875 percent coupon, then you should be borrowing as much cash as you cart away in a wheelbarrow.
  • We get up at 6.30 am and head out to the beach with our wheelbarrows, shovels, rakes, machete and rubbish bags.
  • I used hot glue to attach the cutting board to the front edge of the wheelbarrow.
  • The junior team, with a very young side, were defeated last week in an away game to Barrowhouse in Division 3.
  • The boxes were heavy, and the mansion so huge that I wished for a cart or a wheelbarrow.
  • Addington is the larger of two adjacent long barrows overlooking a tributary of the Medway.
  • It was taken to the blunger by wheelbarrow, or horse and cart, and more recently in bogies on a small narrow gauge railway by a pulley system linked to the steam engine.
  • In the yard, a black man pushed a wheelbarrow over low-cut grass, picked up fallen palm fronds and stacked them high. Miracles, Inc.
  • Sergeant John Manuel, who was also known as Jacky, died when a wheelbarrow full of explosives detonated beside him in Helmand Province. WN.com - Articles related to US warned Britain: you must send more troops to Afghanistan
  • In April of 1677 Barrow travelled to London where he contracted malignant fever.
  • Plain English" such a one will call his desideratum, as one might call the viands on a New Cut barrow Mankind in the Making
  • Under Duport, Barrow studied Greek, Latin, Hebrew, French, Spanish, Italian, literature, chronology, geography and theology.
  • Barrowvians, _i. e._ a grotesque kind of phantasm that frequents places where prehistoric man or beast has been interred; Planetians, The Sorcery Club
  • He started a fruit barrow down the bottom of Queen Street.
  • But that afternoon an army of more than 50 men began scraping the snow and ice into heaps that were removed in wheel-barrows, handcarts and small wagons and dumped on the track bordering the pitch.
  • Silinga said he thought the robbers used the wheelbarrow to carry off their loot as its tracks seemed headed in the direction of nearby Ntshabeni.
  • Huge oil tanks were ruptured by the force of the waves and they spewed their contents into the streets and into a fresh water lake used by Barrow for water ’.
  • These conferences are made possible through the benefaction of the Barrow Cadbury Trust.
  • Potter and Injun Joe were carrying a handbarrow with a rope and a couple of shovels on it.
  • She gathered two stacks of hay into a wheelbarrow and pushed the barrow to the stall that was vacant.
  • Their tools were jacks, picks, crowbars, wheelbarrows and handcarts.
  • Throughout his career since leaving Cambridge he pursued an interest in archaeology, at first studying barrows and burial sites and later hillforts.
  • Then round the corner came a vagrom man, wheeling flowers in a barrow. Something New
  • But it isn't a hymn sheet he's handing round, it's what he calls notre petite aide-memoire a one-page conversion table setting out, for the comfort and convenience of our readers, what is understood in the real world by such lighthearted expressions as shovel, trowel, pickaxe, heavy and light wheelbarrows and the like. The mission song
  • Their tools were jacks, picks, crowbars, wheelbarrows and handcarts.
  • The Barrowsiders would probably be satisfied to put up a good performance against this much vaunted Laois side.
  • Would Mr. Barrow 'larn' him"; so Graham buckled to for over an hour. Three Years in Tristan da Cunha
  • Graham Barrow's side currently sit fifteenth in the League Two table.
  • I sat on the wheelbarrow and sank my teeth into a fresh loaf. Dry bread was the norm.
  • Copleland council have always been blinkered towards below Bootle, regeneration for here is not on the agender except at a price. lowerer copeland have had to learn to diverify with help of residents moving in from away and spending their money on tourism, the goverment have not helped us, we are just a bit of land that stands between sellafield and barrow and they that they dont want us .. Evening Mail news round-up
  • Cockneys traditionally speak in a rhyming slang which supposedly originated among barrow boys who didn't want their customers to understand what they said to each other.
  • The first one was put upon a long handbarrow, over which the captain had previously spread a tablecloth, and, followed by the ladies, was deposited by the side of the body of Red. Romance of California Life
  • Centuries ago, builders used buckets, barrels, and wheelbarrows to help erect the pyramids.
  • The chamber, originally roofed by a large capstone, now fallen, opened directly onto the front of the barrow.
  • A contract to rebuild a stretch of the A5087 on Rampside Road in Barrow is a pilot scheme in which recycled glass is mixed in with the stone aggregate normally used in the lower layers of the road.
  • I clambered on to the wheelbarrow, to pray for a healing miracle, laying aside my glasses and hat.
  • One must lament, too, the destruction of the ancient earth-works, especially of the barrows, which is going on all over the downs, most rapidly where the land is broken up by the plough. A Shepherd's Life Impressions of the South Wiltshire Downs
  • I took the barrow handles and wheeled it away, biting my lips, for it had suddenly struck me that Sir Francis thought that I was talking to a boy who was my companion in the workhouse, and it seemed as if fate was fixing the term pauper upon me so tightly that I should not be able to get it removed. Brownsmith's Boy A Romance in a Garden
  • As in many monument complexes, burials were inserted into existing mounds, and barrows were built among and onto them.
  • You knows as how the witches in Wales fly upon broom-sticks: but here was flying without any broom-stick, or thing in the varsal world, and firing of pistols in the air, and blowing of trumpets, and swinging, and rolling of wheel-barrows upon a wire The Expedition of Humphry Clinker
  • Just chuck me in an old wheelbarrow or prop me on the pavement. Times, Sunday Times
  • We left some of our gear in the swim and borrowed Adrian's wheelbarrow to transport our bivvy and remaining gear from our car to the swim.
  • His sister carried him in a wheelbarrow to seek medical help - there is no ambulance service here.
  • Cory hastily drained the bottle, recapped it and laid it in the barrow, then seized the handles.
  • Kathryn grinned and placed the pitchfork in the wheelbarrow, which she moved to the manure pile quickly.
  • He trundled a wheelbarrow to the backyard.
  • Wheelbarrows of booze arrive and a ghetto blaster is turned up to the max. The Sun
  • Also on Friday night there was plenty of fun and frolics with the ever-popular wheelbarrow race making a welcome return while it was in many of the local pubs that the festival kicked off in earnest.
  • Potter and Injun Joe were carrying a handbarrow with a rope and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
  • Our exercise machines are post-hole diggers, shovels, rakes, push mowers, and wheelbarrows.
  • Would you rather push the barrow or pull it?
  • This one-woman band fiddled and jigged from Dent to Barrow to Bradford during her recent winter tour, bringing a smile to the faces of shoppers across the North.
  • Sergeant John Manuel, who was also known as Jacky, died when a wheelbarrow full of explosives detonated beside him in WN.com - Articles related to US warned Britain: you must send more troops to Afghanistan
  • I usually dig in a small barrow load of compost in late summer.
  • But barrows, tombs, sacred springs, stone circles and surviving customs are satisfactory starting points for the study of non-revealed religious or magical rites.
  • Barrow Drive was the big fancy for the Novice Chase but he hit the deck six fences out.
  • Recent departee Damien Reid scored a hat-trick for Barrow in their 48-0 derby hammering of Workington last week.
  • Barrow graduated in 1649 and successfully competed for a college fellowship in the same year.
  • Traces of old habitation abound; there are many barrows and one perfect kistvaen. The Cornwall Coast
  • In summer, we went swimming in the Barrow every day, and swam until we were blue with the cold, our teeth chattering as we practised for competitions.
  • This was, by far, Carlow's best performance of the year, exorcising that horrific hammering in Ballina five weeks ago when Mayo beat the Barrowsiders by 15 points.
  • All the Joint Chiefs except for Barrow had said, aye aye, sir, we'll go over to Congress to testify in favor of eliminating restrictions on women in combat.
  • This is also when the remaining four phases of the oval barrow were fashioned. BRITAIN BC: Life In Britain and Ireland before the Romans
  • It is an Act to prevent obstruction, and I think that its whole scheme shows that it is aimed at barrow-boys, costermongers, hawkers or others who expose goods in the street for sale and offer them for sale at that time.
  • For awhile, it seems as though certain doom is descending upon Barrow, Alaska, and the mood will blanket the entire picture. “30 Days of Night” feels as long as its title » Scene-Stealers
  • Fleet Street was choked with red-headed folk, and Pope's Court looked like a coster's orange barrow.
  • There's something other-worldly about the Orkney Islands, with its legions of lichen-clad standing stones, which sprout from ancient barrows against the spectacular northern sky.
  • The wheelbarrow needs filling, after all. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not content with this bit of high-altitude aptitude, the equilibrist re-crosses the falls, first blindfolded, then on a bicycle, then on stilts, then pushing a wheelbarrow while carrying a man on his back.
  • Late in the 3rd millennium BC, a round barrow was raised over a Beaker grave at Hemp Knoll in the chalk downland of southern England, three miles south-west of Avebury in Wiltshire.
  • 'And wheeling an "asker" in a barrow, is not that work?' said he; 'then fling yon muckle stone in to boot: stay, The Cloister and the Hearth
  • At first cremation was the rule, as were flat or low graves, though later the tumulus or raised barrow became standard.
  • An inquest was opened and adjourned to a date to be fixed at Barrow Town Hall on Monday.
  • Also a diagonal backward arrow , works the same as a normal barrow.
  • It is in the autumn that the moles heap up meanders of miniature barrows, built of the softest brown loam; and in the turbaries the turf-cutters pile larger and darker stacks of peat. The Nebuly Coat
  • I recall the shy smile of the spectacled granny riding in a wheelbarrow pulled by her son.
  • Choose a site that's level and shady, has good drainage and allows easy access to wheelbarrows, garden paths and hose hookups.
  • Barrow-wheeling icers follow, sliding in their cartloads of crushed ice.
  • Mr. Barrow, in his travels through the southern parts, of the continent of Africa, discovered native nitre, which is probably similar ta the rock saltpetre of Kentucky. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society
  • The Elves have been known to bury their dead at these points in great high mounds or barrows.
  • Now Dennis has turned his dream into reality, he believes he is about to cash in on a small fortune from other builders who, like him, are tired of struggling with their barrows.
  • Isaac Barrow's father, Thomas Barrow, was a linen draper by trade.
  • The barrows had been left upturned beside the mixer at the end of the day on Wednesday. THE BOOK LADY
  • The barrow was used from the 1930s to hold Garsons Farm produce which was sold at Borough Market in London Bridge.
  • I usually dig in a small barrow load of compost in late summer.
  • If you're a company like Microsoft, and you can issue a three-year bond for a ridiculous 0.875 percent coupon, then you should be borrowing as much cash as you cart away in a wheelbarrow.
  • The word kurgan means "barrow" or "artificial mound" in Turkic and Russian. Archive 2007-05-01
  • The destruction was so complete that the structure had to be gutted and removed by hand and wheelbarrow, piece by piece.
  • A young man was bending low to push a heavily loaded barrow up a slope.
  • I suspect it's for harvesting turnips - slice underneath, stab with the hook and throw in the barrow - but whatever, it's an vintage piece of kit.
  • Human activity on the Plain can be traced back at least 4,000 years - as ancient tracks, barrows (grave-mounds) and field systems testify.
  • Suddenly, as if by magic, many of the barrows and their owners disappeared.
  • Elterwater slate dresser Clifford Barrow drew the crowds as he sliced through stone to produce 19-inch roofing slates, used on buildings across Britain.
  • Why bothey to push about a sackbarrow when giros and daytime TV beckons? The Coconuts Of London
  • The easy walk was a shorter version of Jim's walk, and both walks finished with the climb to Hoad Hill and the Barrow Monument.
  • On one eventful night we saw some refuse fish being wheeled off in a barrow, and we begged leave to abstract a fish, which was -- I say it without fear of contradiction -- the knobbiest and scaliest member of the finny tribe. The Chequers Being the Natural History of a Public-House, Set Forth in a Loafer's Diary
  • Many of our other lawn and garden projects are also popular with tole painters, including our planter collection that consists of a garden wheelbarrow, plump little pig, and dairy cow planter.
  • We also have their fleeces; despite my ludicrous barbering attempts of a month or so back, the two sets of wool completely filled the wheelbarrow.
  • He said: 'What appeals to me about having my remains in this long barrow is the permanence of the structure and the landscape. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘Dollar, dollar, dollar,’ rang through the air from all directions and people huddled around barrows freshly loaded with the end-of-week bargains.
  • This new genus is Pilbarascutigera and is described in the paper “A new genus of scutigerid centipeds (Chilopoda) from Western Australia, with new characters for morphological phylogenetics of Scutigeromorpha” by G.D. Edgecombe and L. Barrow within Zootaxa 1409: 23-50 (2007) Archive 2007-02-01
  • I visited a round barrow right in the middle of the heath. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pete had a lovely barrow, everything at chest height.
  • Behind them, Father Luke was wheeling a barrow, on which was a huge gleaming urn full of hot soup.
  • The parodic cupid's dart is described with the maximum of periphrasis compatible with not actually disguising what the organ is, ‘a piece of flesh, the characteristic part of a barrow-pig’.
  • I put the rake in the shed, emptied the sawdust in the brush in back of the house, and parked the wheelbarrow in front of the steps.
  • There were some barrows with a political message, like to one containing just a pile of manure with a sign saying Sponsored by Brussels.
  • We diligently found fallen trees and branches, cut them into logs and wheeled them up the hill in the barrow to the hostel.
  • Just five balls were bowled in Barrow's innings when rain forced the players off the field.
  • ‘We propped up one end of the screen on a wheelbarrow and spaded the plants, compost and all, up onto the frame,’ she says.
  • This new genus is Pilbarascutigera and is described in the paper “A new genus of scutigerid centipeds (Chilopoda) from Western Australia, with new characters for morphological phylogenetics of Scutigeromorpha” by G.D. Edgecombe and L. Barrow within Zootaxa 1409: 23-50 (2007) Archive 2007-02-01
  • Then he would ride a bicycle back and forth, and then he would push a wheelbarrow back and forth. Christianity Today
  • Bishop Lyttelton used to plague me to death about barrows, and tumuli, and Roman camps, and all those bumps in the ground that do not amount to a most imperfect ichnography; but, in good truth, I am content with all arts when perfected, nor inquire how ingeniously people contrive to do without them -- and I care still less for remains of art that retain no vestiges of art. The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4
  • Hence an awareness of the inverse of differentiation began to evolve naturally and the idea that integral and derivative were inverses to each other were familiar to Barrow.
  • ‘Sorry guv,’ came the reply, ‘all my fancy wrapping materials are in my store up by the Strand and I can't leave the barrow.’
  • The Croft garden doesn't have many large trees from which we can gather more than a barrow or two of leaves, but of those we do have - rowan and Norway maple - put on a colourful show before leaf-fall.

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