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How To Use Blain In A Sentence

  • With Spartan fortitude he had to squeeze his chilblained feet into wet socks and soggy boots frozen solid.
  • The rapid change in temperature can lead to chilblains and dry skin.
  • His stunt mimics magician David Blaine's attempt to survive 72 days in a glass box above London but Michael decided he would use the idea to raise cash for charity.
  • January, February, and March bring a great cold, and inhumane conditions of food and weather for the girls - long marches to church in the blistering cold wind, swollen and flayed fingers and feet, and chilblains on the hands.
  • His hands turned red and chilblained from the water into which the potatoes dropped. Son of a Witch
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  • Allen kept staring at Earl's sternum, bare; the young, healthy skin fogged with red chilblain under the clumsy coat. ABSOLUTE ZERO
  • Blaine got up and strode toward the opening hatch on the back of the enormous plane.
  • After surviving all that, a kind of blissed-out surety had settled over him-of course Roland would stump Blaine, who would then keep his part of the bargain and set them down safe and sound at his final stop (whatever passed for Topeka in this world). Wizard and Glass
  • Unfortunately for Barbie, Blaine is always hopped up on coke and is probably more interested in Ken anyway.
  • The pupils are hard at work and Blaine will be treated to a display including a lampshade which induces insanity, a multi-coloured straitjacket and a speech by each pupil explaining their work.
  • They did the deal with Dubois, and Blaine, the current tranny road train driver, and a new Chilean mechanic, to give them the ability to ambush this particular trip, aided by their heavily armed cybernetically enhanced hybrid kangaroo warriors. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror: On the Oodnadatta - Alastair Reynolds
  • Gymnastics Championship on Sunday, hanging onto the lead he built over Jason Gatson and Blaine Wilson in preliminaries and putting to rest any doubts about who is really the best male gymnast in the country. USATODAY.com - Hamm defends and leaves no doubts
  • From the same cause, the captain himself and several of his people had their fingers and toes chilblained. Narrative of the Voyages Round The World, Performed by Captain James Cook
  • Her burning throat was raw from hurling Christmas carols out against the keening wind in an effort to tempt passersby to purchase the rolls of music clutched in her chilblained fingers. A GIFT OF LOVE
  • He was James Garfield, a Republican leader in Congress. Soon, both Sherman and Blaine asked all of their delegates to vote for Garfield.
  • Blain is reluctant to make forecasts, and in team meetings the mantra of one game at a time has been chanted, borne of bitter experience.
  • Blain described central and peripheral nervous system effects associated with low-level exposures to organophosphates.
  • (_c_) Frequently the whole foot is like a big "chilblain" and is very hot, red and swollen. 1914
  • Also special: Kurt, who gets a big swoony win as well — no trophy, but a trophy boyfriend, plus a performance spotlight alongside Blaine after schooling the Warblers star on his "numerous" solos: "I feel like we're Blaine and the Pips. Matt's TV Week in Review
  • her poor chilblained hands
  • A few years back I ignored the need for winter socks and got a mild attack of chilblains, the first I've had since I was a child and, if I can so engineer it, the last I shall ever have.
  • In fact, some of it is downright worth the chilblains.
  • SILENCE, A THING YOU KNOW LITTLE ABOUT, EDDIE OF NEW YORK," Blaine said with no pause at all, and Eddie felt his heart drop a little. Wizard and Glass
  • Perhaps one of the chilblain-fingered girls behind the counters down below had been the "Sympathiser" to whom she had been indebted for a shilling. Mrs. Day's Daughters
  • The train is full of very painful feet: like a form of large burning chilblain all over the foot, and you can't do anything for them, poor lambs. Diary of a Nursing Sister on the Western Front, 1914-1915
  • The blain is a vesicular enlargement on the lateral and under part of the tongue in horses, oxen, and dogs, which, although not of unfrequent occurrence, or peculiarly fatal result, has not been sufficiently noticed by veterinary authors. The Dog
  • Archaeologist Robert J Wallis and anthropologist Jenny Blain have been talking to modern British pagans about their beliefs and their interests in archaeological sites.
  • By blood, frogs, and lice; by flies, death, botch and blain; [614] "Everyman," with other interludes, including eight miracle plays
  • When sliced, and applied externally, the raw Onion serves by its pungent and essential oil to quicken the circulation, and to redden the skin of the particular surface treated in this way; very usefully so in the case of an unbroken chilblain, or to counteract neuralgic pain; but in its crude state the bulb is not emollient or demulcent. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • Elderly people, whose circulation is less efficient than it used to be, people who don't take enough exercise, and those suffering from anaemia, are also susceptible to chilblains.
  • As a cream or ointment, it can be applied directly to bruises, sprains, strains, chilblains or painful varicose veins - but only on unbroken skin.
  • Goldston will be eligible for a parole hearing when he is 68 years old, said prosecutor Blaine Bowman.
  • Blaine's mom was just getting home from work.
  • The hurried yells of the seaman brought Blaine's head up, and induced his head to lazily drift upwards, towards a large raft that had been shucked out to the bow.
  • He carried on working to the end - dressed in the high starched collar and cravat of his youth and dispensing old-fashioned remedies, medicines, and cures which he prepared himself, for ailments as diverse as bronchitis and chilblains.
  • Blainey suggested that bases were established at both Sydney and Norfolk Island in 1788 because New Zealand flax and Norfolk Island pine could provide ropes, sailcloth, and masts for the British navy.
  • Blaine bristled internally at the mention of the word parade. The Kennedy Detail
  • The best approach to chilblains is to avoid developing it by limiting exposure to cold, dressing warmly and covering exposed skin. Health News from Medical News Today
  • Late that evening Dick Blaine, returning from a desultory dinner at the club across the river, very nearly fell into the trap-door, for the hamal had run away too, thinking he would surely be accused of all the mischief, and no lamps were lit. Guns of the Gods
  • He hated Blaine, and he had reason to; for Blaine had, during his short career as prime minister, evinced a strong disposition to clutch all Canadians who were caught fishing for tomcod in American waters. Eugene Field A Study In Heredity And Contradictions
  • It's one of those stuffy phrases coined by the bureaucrats upstairs, hunched at their desks with a drip on their nose and frayed cuffs and patched elbows, their chilblained feet squeezed into their cracked patent-leather shoes and a mug of cold tea beside them as they scratch the epitaph across the file in longhand, like vultures picking at the bones of a dead mission. Northlight
  • About five minutes later, Blaine flicked the comm back on, his finger hovering next to another switch.
  • Tartars are affildled with ulcers, made by the cold, of the nature of what we call chilblains, but greatly worfe; and m Poland and Lithuania there rei {ns a peculiar difeafc called the plica poknlcaf fo terribly painful and pflfenHve, that fcarce any thing can be thought oi worie. Encyclopædia britannica;
  • But I was not so to be finished off, though feeling in my knuckles now as if it were a blueness and a sense of chilblain. Lorna Doone
  • This new route presents a golden opportunity to use the rolling stock that was mostly idled when the Blainville line was electrified.
  • Before another word could be spoken, though, the basement door opened again and my mother and I both looked over to see Blaine step into the kitchen.
  • My fellow man sent me to the chilblain capital of the world," Petinos retorted. Bridge of the Separator
  • Professional thrill-seeker David Blaine set a new world record for breath holding on Oprah on Wednesday. David Blaine “Oprah” April 30th Guinness Underwater Breath Holding Record
  • Page 7 and Blaines, and gently rejecting one offer after another, until she married at thirty-three - an advanced stage of spinsterdom, then - honest Capt. Marion Harland's autobiography : the story of a long life,
  • Once upon a time David Duckham, a genuine genius, stood on the wing at Twickenham and could count chilblains in bigger numbers than passes. Six Nations 2011: No need to turn tank-stoppers into ballerinas | Eddie Butler
  • Spring and a release from scratchy underclothes and chilblains and runny noses and afternoon dusk and drafty passages. Earl of Durkness
  • You would simply prioritise the foot that had more chilblains.
  • Claire's eyes quickly filled to the brim with tears, and her head fell to Blaine's hand.
  • A Montreal native, Blain came to prominence in the 1980s with her impact-heavy brand of political art and is now known around the world.
  • I know you’re fussy, so I’ll tell you straight out …. .ummm … …. arrr … …. .ahhhhh … .. there’s only one ‘l’ in chilblains. Smoke
  • When once I had seen from the leads of our house the quag of reeking life around, the stubs and snags of chimney-pots, the gashes among them entitled streets, and the broken blains called houses, I was quite ashamed of paying any thing to become a Christian. Erema
  • Carotene, in the translate into inside body vitaminic A, can avoid blain blain problem!
  • If you still have some Sudocreme lurking around your flat from when Tadpole was in nappies, use it on your chilblains. Smoke
  • In the long run this may lead to chilblained hands and/or feet.
  • Two generations back they still stood dark and empty; people avoided them as they passed by; the boldest schoolboy only shouted through the key-hole and made off; for within, it was supposed, the plague lay ambushed like a basilisk, ready to flow forth and spread blain and pustule through the city. The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson - Swanston Edition Vol. 1 (of 25)
  • It is often mistaken for blain, -- inflammation of the tongue, or black tongue, -- and usually occurs in the winter, or early in the spring. Cattle and Their Diseases Embracing Their History and Breeds, Crossing and Breeding, And Feeding and Management; With the Diseases to which They are Subject, And The Remedies Best Adapted to their Cure
  • After I ordered us a large pizza and a bottle of pop, I hung up again and went back over to where Blaine was sitting.
  • Today he could not imagine such heat; he knew by the time they reached Branton, his fingers and toes would be chilblained. The Falcons of Montabard
  • In fact, corrupt to medical treatment. Have early socially " stamp infrangible blain " say, how punish, each have wise move.
  • Consequently, this will result in chilblained or frostbitten hands, feet, and ears.
  • The thought of chapped hands and chilblains was almost terrifying, and his heart sank at sight of the double storm-windows, which he knew were solidly fastened and unraisable, while the small ventilating panes, the size of ladies 'handkerchiefs, smote him with sensations of suffocation. THE PRODIGAL FATHER
  • Mind, and muscle, and stamina, and soul, were challenged in a contest with this Shorty, a man who had never opened the books, and who did not know grand opera from rag-time, nor an epic from a chilblain. THE STAMPEDE TO SQUAW CREEK
  • As a result of these walks in the cold mornings I got bad chilblains on my hands.
  • Allen kept staring at Earl's sternum, bare; the young, healthy skin fogged with red chilblain under the clumsy coat. ABSOLUTE ZERO
  • How the long winter nights must fly by at Chez Blaine.
  • It is not easy to believe that others are more successful, but the popular renown of the specific survives in spite of all, probably thanks to a simple accident of identity between the name of the remedy and that of the infirmity: the Provençal for "chilblain" is _tigno_. Social Life in the Insect World
  • A lethargic Blaine, sporting a new bushy beard and matted hair, rewarded them with weak waves and beatific smiles.
  • I am too old to have anything other than chilblains as a sign of physical inflammation from the chest down.
  • You don't hardly hear of chilblain feet now, but then most every child you saw had cracked heels. Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves Georgia Narratives, Part 4
  • Most of the pitchers are highly regarded prospects except for former Padre reliever Blaine Neal and former D-backs sidearmer Mike Koplove. Breakin’ for All-Stars
  • He and Darren Cousins have been opening the bowling for Northants, and Blain has also been contributing with the bat from his position deep in the tail.
  • That is a lie, because I sboke as blain as anythin '. The Valley of the Kings
  • There was no change of clothing to be had; wet boots enclosed ill-stockinged, chilblained feet; bodies remained unwashed through lack of basic facilities, or from sheer tiredness.
  • Mr. Blaine's wonderful magnetism, the impression he made upon every one, and his tactful flattery of local pride, did a great deal to remove the prejudices against him, which were being fomented by a propaganda of a "mugwump" committee in New York. My Memories of Eighty Years
  • They recently opened electrification from Windsor to Blainville, and they electrified the track between CP and CN tracks, using overhead catenary the whole way.
  • Just ask the chilblained citizens of Minnesota.
  • There are people who believe that their Sony-Ericsson scarab not only spreads sweetness and light, but can also cure chilblains. IPhone worship has seen the media lose all sense of proportion
  • I pulled into a spot at the very end behind Tim Blaine 's Crown Victoria. BREACH OF DUTY
  • Blaine's eyes flicked open, and swept around his new med bay.
  • To prevent chilblains, avoid exposure to cold.
  • In the London cold, ‘She developed chilblains, and this annoyed her’.
  • There is often a link between racism against other sections of the Australian community and antisemitism, as reports of physical manifestations of antisemitism have increased at times of harassment of Asian Australians after Professor Geoffrey Blainey's claim of the imminent Asianisation of Australia in 1984, when Indigenous organisations and individuals were facing intimidation in 1988 and when the anti-immigration One Nation Party enjoyed short-lived electoral success in the late 1990s There is no evidence to suggest that Australians in general think of Jews in negative terms. Undefined
  • The soles of his feet were raw with chilblain.
  • When he was lowered to the ground, his box was tipped on its side to enable an emotional Blaine to stagger out wrapped in a rug.
  • In consequence of the formation of tumors about the throat in cattle, from inflammation of the parotid gland, blain, etc., so characteristic of this species of animals, it sometimes becomes necessary to perform this operation in order to save their lives. Cattle and Their Diseases Embracing Their History and Breeds, Crossing and Breeding, And Feeding and Management; With the Diseases to which They are Subject, And The Remedies Best Adapted to their Cure
  • Roderick, Lord Blaine, Earl of Acrux, DSC, GCMG, Captain ISN (Ret. THE MOAT AROUND MURCHESON'S EYE
  • Having spent far too much time in front of the telly barracking for Australia and its allies in Iraq, the Professor missed Geoffrey Blainey's review in the New Criterion.
  • Blaine bunted in a run, bringing his mother such glee she screamed like she was birthing him all over again. Parents Behaving Badly
  • He was neither a professional anecdotist, like another famous American talker, Mr. Chauncey Depew, nor a man on the watch for something to disagree with, like Mr. Blaine, nor even, as was his admirable successor, Mr. Phelps, a man of long silences broken by flashes of humor. Stories of Authors, British and American
  • 'I shall speag to you,' said Darco, 'with an egsdreme blain-ness. Despair's Last Journey
  • In addition, because the cold is more restrictive to your blood supply, you can suffer chilblains and damage to tissue.
  • ‘Bob of Dumblain,’ under the influence of half a mutchkin of brandy, he seemed to trot merrily forward, with a happy indifference to the state of the country, the conduct of the party, the end of the journey, and all other sublunary matters whatever. Waverley
  • It is used as a substitute for tar and as an external application for rheumatism or chilblains.
  • Kafka was supposedly mourning the loss of spirituality and mysticism in the modern age - so perhaps he would have been heartened by Blaine's revival of public interest in the art.
  • e main frontage rd & prospect 2221 e main frontage rd albert lea mn northtown mall 599 northtown dr ne blaine mn radison rd & 109th 2331 108th lane ne blaine mn brooklyn blvd & 55th 5512 brooklyn blvd brooklyn center mn A Complete List Of Starbucks Locations That Will Be Closing - The Consumerist
  • Most went barefoot, and some suffered chilblains.
  • I guess you know it, Miss Lilly, that with all the honors we got by our daughter, we're still blain, respegtable beoble. Star-Dust
  • Blaine admitted -- in what he thought was a "confidential" company-wide conference call convened to explain the attempted Hart takeover to employees after they'd read the news on The BRAD BLOG -- that the company hadn't actually acquired the the IP from Smartmatic in their deal. Brad Friedman: EXCLUSIVE: On Heels of Diebold/Premier Purchase, Canadian eVoting Firm Dominion Also Acquires Sequoia, Lies About Chavez Ties in Announcement
  • Soon enough, as the mist subsided, Blaine and Claire found themselves staring at a speedboat, helmed by a man in sunglasses.
  • One tank barely ten meters from Blaine had taken a shot full broadside.
  • Press Association Steven Frayne While he may not yet be a household name like David Blaine or David Copperfield, his mind-bending skills are creating a buzz. Magician Steven Frayne Gets Back to Reality
  • When the chilblains vesicate, ulcerate or slough, it is better to omit the aconite and apply the other components of the liniment without it. Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889
  • Allen kept staring at Earl's sternum, bare; the young, healthy skin fogged with red chilblain under the clumsy coat. ABSOLUTE ZERO
  • In fact, corrupt to medical treatment. Have early socially " stamp infrangible blain " say, how punish, each have wise move.
  • He walked up to Blaine just as the helicopter rotors disengaged.
  • Spring and a release from scratchy underclothes and chilblains and runny noses and afternoon dusk and drafty passages. Earl of Durkness
  • A crowd of hundreds and a television audience of millions watched as Blaine began his self-imposed ordeal.
  • Blaine was a rare raconteur and his talk had this great merit: never did I hear him tell a story or speak a word unsuitable for any, even the most fastidious company to hear. Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie
  • Finally, a winded Blaine plopped down in a small clearing, and breathed hard.
  • If chilblains develop, don't scratch them; soothing lotions such as witch hazel or calamine will take away most of the discomfort.
  • Childhood memories, of toasty firesides, warm bedtime drinks and even playing in the snow are all very quaint and charming but I can do without chilblains, in memory or in reality.
  • In modern, centrally heated homes, chilblains occur less and less.
  • Many people suffered badly with chilblains on their feet, hands or ears, but no uniform regulations were bent to allow for more protection for the sensitive areas which itched and caused a lot of discomfort.
  • As a cream or ointment, it can be applied directly to bruises, sprains, strains, chilblains or painful varicose veins - but only on unbroken skin.
  • Blaine couldn't help but notice that they were armed with projectile weapons.
  • Are long blain blain and gynaecology concerned on the face?
  • That Senator Blaine Mayer, who wants to prosecute a man who has saved millions of lives over seven seasons, might get to pay for his dumminess is almost too much to ask for. Asymmetric
  • The inevitable coughs and colds of winter, the chilblained hands and heels, kept him busy replenishing the medicine cupboard in the infirmary, and thanks to the necessary brazier his timber workshop was somewhat warmer to work in than the carrels of the scriptorium. The Confession of Brother Haluin
  • Blaine and Helena marry; Helena dies in sleazy circumstances. MIND MELD: SF/F Books That Would Make A Great TV Series
  • Clearly, de Blainville's language echoes through this passage framing the scientists' concerns about human animality and sexuality.
  • DESCRIPTION: A chilblain is the swelling and inflammation of body tissue as a result of exposure to cold temperatures. THE NATURAL REMEDY BIBLE
  • I shouldn't have, but I did... blain what is votd ? hated the video by the way. sorry. VOTD: Droll Na’Vi Make Up Tutorial | /Film
  • Undue muscle tension causes bodily deformity, and vagotonia results in the production of such conditions as chilblains, asthma, intestinal trouble, etc.
  • Standing, barefooted in the dew-lush grass of spring on the Minnesota farm, chilblained when of frosty mornings I fed the cattle in their breath-steaming stalls, sobered to fear and awe of the splendor and terror of God when I sat of Sundays under the rant and preachment of the New Jerusalem and the agonies of hell-fire. Chapter 6
  • Two generations back they still stood dark and empty; people avoided them as they passed by; the boldest schoolboy only shouted through the keyhole and made off; for within, it was supposed, the plague lay ambushed like a basilisk, ready to flow forth and spread blain and pustule through the city. Edinburgh Picturesque Notes
  • The Blaine Formation is over 200 m thick, composed of interbedded mudstone, gypsum in beds up to 10 m thick, and has regionally traceable members of limestone and dolomite.
  • A lot of thinking went into Waldron-Blain's game; it was based on a card game called Dvorak which is open source and open-ended-winning the game and playing the game is based partially on general rules of Dvorak, but also on specific rules agreed upon by the players-because Waldron-Blain wanted to make a game that reflected the politics within the game itself. Vue Weekly
  • Blaine was a great and famous politican and diplomat in American history, and he was respected as the founder of Pan-Americanism.

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