How To Use Bloodless In A Sentence

  • This was the first bloodless revolution the city, which has been burned down forty times in its history.
  • To speak generally, if we take all animals which change their locality, some by swimming, others by flying, others by walking, we find in these the two sexes, not only in the sanguinea but also in some of the bloodless animals; and this applies in the case of the latter sometimes to the whole class, as the cephalopoda and crustacea, but in the class of insects only to the majority. On the Generation of Animals
  • A bloodless revolution is possible, but only if it's supported by a clear majority of the populace, who are no longer afraid to say what they think for fear of being shot.
  • Twelve political parties and three coalitions are fielding candidates in the election, organised just six months after a bloodless coup toppled the president.
  • His mistake was to anger his nephew, who proclaimed a republic in a bloodless coup in 1973 while he was on an island off Naples, taking mud baths for his lumbago.
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  • We must remember this fact because it refutes the argument that one imposes a blockade, embargo, or sanction as a bloodless and humane way of coercing the leaders of a target country.
  • Neither we nor they seem to understand why this new, bloodless God should even matter.
  • In their universe all is bland, bloodless, bleached of character.
  • By mid February he had assumed control of the city in a remarkable bloodless coup.
  • Her bloodlessness functions at times as delicacy here, especially in the awkward courtship scenes, but her acting always seems like play-acting to me.
  • “Many” suggests some quantification, and a willingness to have terror and rockets to keep land suggests a deep bloodlessness. The Volokh Conspiracy » Bernstein (Robert!) Denounces Human Rights Watch:
  • Bloodless programs now offer services in virtually every specialty, including trauma, hematology, critical care, internal medicine, and orthopedic surgery.
  • Rome, pick up Prince Charles, put him on the magic carpet, fly to London, clap the Cap of Darkness on him so that nobody can see him, set him down on the throne of his fathers; pick up the Elector, carry him over to his beloved Hanover, and the trick is done -- what they call a bloodless revolution in the history books. Prince Ricardo of Pantouflia being the adventures of Prince Prigio's son
  • She was bloodless and the bones of her face had risen up against the fabric of her skin.
  • Bloodless and many footed animals, whether furnished with wings or feet, move with more than four points of motion; as, for instance, the dayfly moves with four feet and four wings: and, I may observe in passing, this creature is exceptional not only in regard to the duration of its existence, whence it receives its name, but also because though a quadruped it has wings also. The History of Animals
  • In 2003 with considerable CIA help, Georgia's President Saskashvili came to power in the so-called bloodless "Rose Revolution. Using Georgia to Target Russia
  • She bit her lower lip, which had gone pale and bloodless.
  • Barney whirls on him and glares - eyes big as goose eggs, lips pursed and bloodless.
  • The skin was thin and bloodless, the fingers spatulate, a swollen knob at each joint and knuckle.
  • I was, in effect, going to stage a bloodless coup. FRIENDS FOR LIFE
  • Reports from the area indicate that it was a bloodless coup.
  • Bloodless and many footed animals, whether furnished with wings or feet, move with more than four points of motion; as, for instance, the dayfly (ephémeron) moves with four feet and four wings: and, I may observe in passing, this creature is exceptional not only in regard to the duration of its existence, whence it receives its name, but also because though a quadruped it has wings also. ScienceBlogs Channel : Life Science
  • Her character portraits are cold and bloodless, the larger vision is prosy and constipated, and her self-conscious literary tone has the musty odor of a vanity-press poetry journal.
  • Perhaps Elizabeth LeCompte found Francesco Cavalli's 1641 baroque opus, La Didone, a trifle bloodless-she's corrected that hematic imbalance by splicing the opera with scenes from the 1965 B-flick Planet of the Vampires. Village Voice - The most recent 10 stories
  • I was, in effect, going to stage a bloodless coup. FRIENDS FOR LIFE
  • The comparative "bloodlessness," however -- the absence of life and colour in the earlier and older writer -- acts as a sort of veil to them. The English Novel
  • I am what the doctors call anaemic; a rather bloodless creature. Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • Tyrtaeus this commoner of Nizhni Novgorod spurs on his troops of freedom-loving heroes to conquer, as it were, the placid, self - satisfied literatures of to-day, and bring new life to pale, bloodless frames. The Man Who Was Afraid
  • And church and state pause in this made vortex of chaos to prate of the ills of pugilism; to legislate and perorate anent bloodless boxing bouts; to prosecute a brace of harmless pugs. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 12
  • The bloodless coup which drove him into exile in 2006 might have been the end of him as a politician. Times, Sunday Times
  • Until recently compilations of slave trade statistics have seemed to reduce one of the darkest episodes in world history into a set of abstract and bloodless figures.
  • The unusually bloodless conflicts of the past 12 years have made political leaders somewhat risk averse.
  • This was a prologue to today's bloodless revolution.
  • Truce Bloodless Surge Win Within obaid karki an outcast underdog libertarian diogenesist kabbalist spinoziste qutbist pantheon hexalingual automath former uae under secretary independent street-knowledge urban talking-head. unaffiliated to a state, an organized religion group, a sect or a kin and an anti tribal gentile .... WN.com - Articles related to Biden seeks thaw between Iraqi political rivals
  • I scratch my face to feel a bloodless mound.
  • History, particularly the disastrous Italian legacy in Libya, has been a constant element in Gaddafi's speeches since he took power in a bloodless coup in 1969.
  • For many, scientific materialism is not a bloodless philosophy but a passionately held ideology.
  • Rather than visceral, this section is bloodless and cold. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Landing in France in March 1815, he deposed the Bourbons in a bloodless revolution.
  • At this the disaffected cohorts proclaimed the name of their lawful sovereign; the Barbarians, astonished by the defection of their Roman allies, dispersed, according to their custom, in tumultuary flight; and Mascezel obtained the of an easy, and almost bloodless, victory. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • We need to abandon the fantasy of a bloodless war and get this fight over with, I think.
  • What she had done was to lead a stealthy if not quite bloodless coup. Spitfire Women of World War II
  • Her fingers suddenly look anemically bloodless, their paleness complemented by her white long sleeves.
  • As a Strict Wahhabi David Petraeus Style Truce Bloodless Surge Win Within obaid karki an outcast underdog libertarian diogenesist kabbalist spinoziste qutbist pantheon hexalingual automath former uae under secretary independent street-knowledge urban talking-head. unaffiliated to a state, an organized religion group, a sect or a kin and an anti tribal gentile .... WN.com - Articles related to Biden seeks thaw between Iraqi political rivals
  • It was very neat, and practically bloodless.
  • Tom's evil genius did not lead him into the dens of any of those preparers of cannibalic pastry, who are represented in many standard country legends as doing a lively retail business in the Metropolis; nor did it mark him out as the prey of ring-droppers, pea and thimble-riggers, duffers, touters, or any of those bloodless sharpers, who are, perhaps, a little better known to the Police. Martin Chuzzlewit
  • Rather than visceral, this section is bloodless and cold. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Not coincidentally, this is the group most likely to become the target of the contempt and thus the very public venom of extremists on the far-right and the far-left, working in unacknowledged but full concert, keen to neutralize people they see as spineless, bloodless sell-outs. Bradley Burston: Leftists Who Love Israel -- A Self-Help Guide
  • Martial law was imposed when the government was ousted in a bloodless coup after months of political turmoil in the capital Bangkok. The Sun
  • In obedience to by-laws and shareholders, a corporation is a serenely calculating, bloodless, bodiless profit-machine.
  • I mean, jeez, if I'm going to wallow in obvious hipsterism, I want it to at least be fun and well-executed, not ironically arch, foppish and bloodless.
  • This woman, this humourless bloodless shambles of a person, was entirely sure that the sign was not open to interpretation by her or anyone else.
  • Yesterday, she called for a bloodless revolution as she began rebuilding her opposition movement. The Sun
  • Reports from the area indicate that it was a bloodless coup.
  • From washing the town's soiled linen to loaning it money was a change so sudden and radical that the rise made him dizzy; he was apt, therefore, to be a little erratic, his manner varying during a single conversation from the cold austerity of a bloodless capitalist to the free and easy democracy of the days when he had stood in the doorway of his laundry in his undershirt and "joshed" the passersby. The Fighting Shepherdess
  • Reports from the area indicate that it was a bloodless coup.
  • His early solitude narrowed his affinities, and gave a kind of bloodlessness to his style; clear in hue, fine in texture, it is apt to want the mellow tinge which indicates a robust and copious life. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
  • What she had done was to lead a stealthy if not quite bloodless coup. Spitfire Women of World War II
  • It's cold and bloodless, but efficient and accurate.
  • Martial law was imposed when the government was ousted in a bloodless coup after months of political turmoil in the capital Bangkok. The Sun
  • It made him seem rather bloodless, rather passionless.
  • The eye fluid nourishes the bloodless lens and cornea.
  • The fact that England's revolution was bloodless implicitly grounds his claim that Enlightenment in Britain differed in significant ways from Enlightenment in France.
  • However, a rueful subordinate describes him as "bloodless" - and, certainly, his fame as the late John Paul II's "enforcer" was not unearned. The Guardian World News
  • As for the blood from the wound inflicted by Obi-wan in the cantina, remember he first lopped an arm off in a bar on coruscant (the shape shifting bounty hunter) and the wound was bloodless. Parenting 101
  • Martial law was imposed when the government was ousted in a bloodless coup after months of political turmoil in the capital Bangkok. The Sun
  • The campaign would be short and relatively bloodless.
  • the bloodless carcass of my Hector sold
  • Over 30 countries experienced nearly entirely bloodless revolutions in the span of a few months in 1989-90, and nobody saw it coming.
  • Whatever dramatic effect is achieved by Batman's vicious "interrogation" is dulled by the film's general bloodlessness and the Joker's seeming imperviousness, etc. On Violence and Restraint in The Dark Knight
  • In 1986, a bloodless overthrow brought an army officer to power.
  • She felt safe the moment that she was perched on the arm of her grandfather's chair, her soft clasp about his stiff old neck, her tears flowing over her cheeks, all pink anew, escaping upon his wrinkled, bloodless, pale visage and taking all the starch out of his old-fashioned steinkirk. The Frontiersmen
  • an insipid and bloodless young man
  • The soul-shattering scream still wrenched from Elaine's bloodless lips.
  • HARRIS: On the streets of Bangkok, relatively quiet today after what's being called a bloodless coup in Thailand. CNN Transcript Sep 20, 2006
  • The younger dog had, if you like, staged a bloodless coup. THE DOG LISTENER: Learning the Language of your Best Friend
  • Then I saw that his bloodless lips were pulled back from his huge white teeth ... I trembled with fear and horror.
  • No smile or laughter escaped from those bloodless lips.
  • They have a rooted aversion to it and never employ it in their clothing, because it suggests to their fancy the idea of bloodlessness -- of anaemia and death. Alone
  • On the wall across his desk sits an analog clock, a bloodless white against the deep red painted background.
  • The skin was thin and bloodless, the fingers spatulate, a swollen knob at each joint and knuckle.
  • In pictures he appears bloodless and stern, but in the flesh he is surprisingly normal.
  • In their universe all is bland, bloodless, bleached of character.
  • This was the first bloodless revolution in Tbilisi, a city which has been burned down forty times in its history.
  • Giving has an emotional component, after all, and most of the new charity sites still feel a bit bland and bloodless.
  • She moved a little closer to Cecil in a rather pathetic gesture of reliance upon that acidulate, bloodless comradeship that was all he had to offer her. Tour de Force
  • It might almost have been a bloodless coup. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was deposed in a bloodless coup led by his Defence Minister and backed by the army. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the wall across his desk sits an analog clock, a bloodless white against the deep red painted background.
  • Nowhere does it say "bloodless"- in fact, in the example given by Random House, with the history of extreme violence in the days of strikebreakers, there is the clear implication of threats of violence. Blackmail and Policy
  • No; she had not the slightest idea; it was not her business to "pry" and Mrs. Wick closed her bloodless lips with virtuous severity. Will Warburton
  • But bloodless revolutions have been rather rare in Europe.
  • These months following October's bloodless coup have been eventful indeed.
  • There was something comforting about a bloodless world of victorious cops and exemplary parenthood. Times, Sunday Times
  • Devolution of function from central government to the stronger local units would have involved an intensification of the land value charges at the expense of income taxes - a bloodless revolution!
  • The country's first free elections 20 years ago this month became known as the bloodless revolution. CNN Transcript Jun 20, 2009
  • His thin, bloodless lips were a pale pink and were in danger of turning white in contrast to his nearly-black dark brown hair.
  • The father took over in a bloodless coup in 1970 and maintained a vast army of secret police and informers.
  • At least a part of the social process that leads these minds through that particular looking glass is the personal bloodlessness of their product. Oppenheimer
  • On July 23rd 1952, Nasser helped to organise a revolt against the Royal Family and King Farouk was overthrown after a few days of bloodless rebellion.
  • Bloodless programs now offer services in virtually every specialty, including trauma, hematology, critical care, internal medicine, and orthopedic surgery.
  • In other words, clever endings can't conceal that his films are essentially bloodless, forgettable exercises.
  • The rebel soldiers seized power in a bloodless coup.
  • It's a chilling scene, and, despite its bloodlessness, is difficult to watch.
  • These recommended practices provide guidelines for use of pneumatic tourniquets, which primarily are used to occlude blood flow and obtain a near bloodless field for extremity surgery.
  • Her bloodlessness functions at times as delicacy here, especially in the awkward courtship scenes, but her acting always seems like play-acting to me.
  • Of creatures that can fly and are bloodless some are coleopterous or sheath-winged, for they have their wings in a sheath or shard, like the cockchafer and the dung-beetle; others are sheathless, and of these latter some are dipterous and some tetrapterous: tetrapterous, such as are comparatively large or have their stings in the tail, dipterous, such as are comparatively small or have their stings in front. The History of Animals
  • According to this morning's papers, ‘This was a bloodless revolution’ and ‘People power prevailed’.
  • To paraphrase Jefferson, they can effect a bloodless revolution.
  • Politically bloodless liberals would respond that, net-net, government forcings do much social good despite breaking a few eggs, such as the Catholic Church's First Amendment sensibilities. Transformers
  • The former army officer seized power in a bloodless coup in 1994 and once pledged to lead Gambia for a billion years. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her face was white as sheet, her lips bloodless.
  • He was deposed in a bloodless coup led by his Defence Minister and backed by the army. Times, Sunday Times
  • Britain's class war had been a brief, bloodless skirmish.
  • As the exhibition notes say, the drawing has ‘an air of sweetness, safety, bloodlessness.’
  • One advantage of cyberwarfare over conventional military action is that it can be precisely targeted and bloodless. Times, Sunday Times
  • The younger dog had, if you like, staged a bloodless coup. THE DOG LISTENER: Learning the Language of your Best Friend
  • There, amid torqued stanchions, lay a limp figure, pierced in many places and bloodless. GuildWars Edge of Destiny
  • An example of the authors' bloodlessness is their assertion that ‘Henry V's troops before the Battle of Agincourt were scared and concerned about the future’.
  • bloodless surgery
  • After a succession of Presidents, in 1964 the military took control following a bloodless coup.
  • It might almost have been a bloodless coup. Times, Sunday Times
  • All I wondered was, why was the approach to the "positive impact model" of game design taken by these industry luminaries simply to build familiar violent conflict and dress it up with a little side-order of moral intrigue or bloodlessness? Archive 2008-03-01
  • It was a rather respectable sodality, dedicated to celebrating the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688, a relatively bloodless coup that installed William and Mary of the House of Orange on the English throne, and established Protestantism as the state religion. Reactionary Prophet
  • But we cannot say simply that all bloodless animals produce a scolex, for the classes overlap one another, (1) the insects, (2) the animals that produce a scolex, (3) those that lay their egg imperfect, as the scaly fishes, the crustacea, and the cephalopoda. On the Generation of Animals
  • He struck up a partnership with Cipriani and Angelica, and their repertoire of bloodless mythological scenes adorned with dimpled putti is synonymous with the art, despite the many portraits engraved in stipple.
  • Martial law was imposed when the government was ousted in a bloodless coup after months of political turmoil in the capital Bangkok. The Sun
  • The situation reminds us of fifteenth-century Italy, where casualty-averse mercenary condottieri conducted protracted and nearly bloodless warfare.
  • They weren't cruel people - just bigoted, bloodless and closed-minded.
  • Umbrellas may be 'hedged about' by cobweb statutes; I will not swear it is not so; there may exist laws that make such things property; but sure I am that the hissing contempt, the loud-mouthed indignation of all civilised society, 'would sibilate and roar at the bloodless poltroon who should engage law on his side to obtain for him the restitution of a-- lent Umbrella! Umbrellas and Their History
  • Yesterday, she called for a bloodless revolution as she began rebuilding her opposition movement. The Sun
  • charts of bloodless economic indicators
  • This war had to be fought fast and relatively bloodlessly.
  • But at least the original series had vigor, whimsy, and raw emotion, not just bloodless ethical commitments and busty telepaths.
  • Then, in 1970, Qaboos bin Said, the Sandhurst-educated 29-year-old heir to the Omani throne, overthrew his father in a bloodless coup.
  • One hopes that the war will be quick, bloodless and easy and that we will not have to fight a long- drawn-out battle of attrition.
  • Her character portraits are cold and bloodless, and her self-conscious literary tone has the musty odor of a vanity-press poetry journal.
  • It may be, then, that I have the makings of a soulless, bloodless, heartless academic in me; it may be that I have no moral sense, no conscience, no shame.
  • The former army officer seized power in a bloodless coup in 1994 and once pledged to lead Gambia for a billion years. Times, Sunday Times
  • La Didone, a trifle bloodless-she's corrected that hematic imbalance by splicing the opera with scenes from the 1965 B-flick Village Voice - The most recent 10 stories
  • He smiled, a thin sliver of teeth between his bloodless lips.
  • The rebel soldiers seized power in a bloodless coup.
  • tried to speak with bloodless lips
  • Blonde hair spilled onto the ground, leading the eye to a bloodless face, the eyes closed and features still.
  • Fortunately for Fodor, Egier was able to suggest a third option -- so-called bloodless surgery using an experimental blood substitute called Hemolink. The Quest For Artificial Blood
  • Saviour's body and blood, with numerous crossings, genuflexions, the elevation of the host and especially the self-communion of the priest, as an offering of the body of Christ a bloodless sacrifice for the sins of the living or dead; all of which was read and done by the _priest himself_ before the altar; and which preceded the sacramental communion of the congregation, and was the only preparation for the communion. American Lutheranism Vindicated; or, Examination of the Lutheran Symbols, on Certain Disputed Topics Including a Reply to the Plea of Rev. W. J. Mann
  • The women, with tears and appealing gestures, crowded around the officer, begging him to spare their sons and husbands; the men stood silent, with bloodless faces and dumb imploring eyes.
  • The violence is pervasive but relatively bloodless, and is pretty much in accordance with the action on a TV show. Christianity Today
  • Beside her in the passenger's seat, Beth clutches her hands together so hard that the fingers are white and bloodless.
  • Of creatures that can fly and are bloodless some are coleopterous or sheath-winged, for they have their wings in a sheath or shard, like the cockchafer and the dung-beetle; others are sheathless, and of these latter some are dipterous and some tetrapterous: tetrapterous, such as are comparatively large or have their stings in the tail, dipterous, such as are comparatively small or have their stings in front. The History of Animals
  • It's dry, bloodless, and emotionally disengaged; but most annoyingly of all, it's self-consciously ‘literary’ in such a mimsy, precious way.
  • President of Chile, was presented to the Latin American nations -- his party and his doctrine -- as an example of what they called a bloodless revolution. UNIVERSITY SPEECH BLASTS CPR BETRAYAL
  • In the midst of this _entourage_ stood the "bar-keeper," and in this individual do not picture to yourself some seedy personage of the waiter class, with bloodless cheeks and clammy skin, such as those monstrosities of an English hotel who give you a very _degout_ for your dinner. The Quadroon Adventures in the Far West
  • There's a wonderful texture and vibrancy to the music, and a sweetly melodic tone to her voice, but the lyrics are vapid and the production just a little too clean and bloodless.
  • It was mechanical, lifeless, bloodless and monotonous, but the material was brilliant.
  • In three months of daily protests, except for a few instances of arson and the police murdering one protestor, the Black Power revolution was bloodless.
  • Christopher Bigelow, a devout Mormon bored by the bloodlessness of mainstream Mormon culture, created the Sugar Beet, a website of Mormon satire modeled on The Onion, then started Zarahemla Books, a publisher of edgy Mormon literature. Holly Welker: Latter-Day Saints and Modern-Day Pioneers
  • By mid February he had assumed control of the city in a remarkable bloodless coup.
  • Devotees of slasher flicks will be appalled by the relative bloodlessness.
  • Shaving the top off a naevus bloodlessly doesn't make any difference to its risk of becoming malignant – infact, it strongly suggests that themole is benign and therefore nothing to worry about. Doctor, doctor: Popping pills, plus moles and melanoma
  • The icy bloodlessness of bureaucratic language is usually directly proportional to the horrors it is trying to disguise. Think Progress » Cheney Calls Katrina an “Exercise.”
  • Martial law was imposed when the government was ousted in a bloodless coup after months of political turmoil in the capital Bangkok. The Sun
  • From IV 2-10 he discusses the parts, both internal and external, of the ˜bloodless™ animals, i.e. the crustaceans, testaceous mollusks, cephalopods and insects. Aristotle's Biology
  • She still hadn't said a word, but her face was bloodless, her lips white.
  • The golden-haired man sits on the edge of his couch, drumming his fingers atop the coffee table so hard that his fingertips turn a bloodless white.
  • As a result he recruited a band to record this debut album, and his synth-pop, once rather bloodless, became more visceral with the addition of guitar and drums.
  • Seen close, she's even more pale than she appeared under club lights two nights ago, and there's a bloodlessness to that pallor that I've never seen but have heard described.
  • If they had succeeded, it would have been a bloodless revolution, and our lives today might be different and immensely better.
  • And it was hard enough to think about her in the dream, what with her pale skin and bloodless face.
  • a bloodless coup
  • Bloodless and bladdery things ran hither and thither noiselessly. For the term of his natural life
  • Martha is a bloodless engineer in the kitchen, as well as a disciplinarian in the dining room.
  • Only its bloodless nature garnered it a G rating rather than PG. It's not a lighthearted romp like many of Disney's other animated movies.
  • Some of Richards's work smacks of the laboratory, and isn't helped by his charmless, bloodless prose style, laced as it is with briskly self-satisfied flourishes which his opponents saw as insufferable arrogance.
  • Here, the mise-en-scene becomes almost televisual (albeit high-class television), with a flat, unidimensional naivete and bloodless characters.
  • Her hair was pure white, her skin was ivory white, and her lips were almost bloodless.
  • Sebastian's face was as pale as his hands, nearly bloodless, and pointed in a rather elfin manner.
  • In the Russian estimation, this could be a relatively bloodless outcome. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was something comforting about a bloodless world of victorious cops and exemplary parenthood. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet he is anything but a bloodless administrator, for he stands ready to take over if the platoon commander is sick, wounded or on leave. Dusty Warriors: Modern Soldiers at War
  • He heard a moan come from her bloodless lips and then the door was shut and his wife cut from his view.
  • Which makes it all the more disappointing that the language used by most start-ups is so cold, so bloodless, so calculating.
  • He cut tax rates from 70 to 28 percent, restored our spirit, rebuilt the armed forces into the most formidable the world had ever seen, and led us to bloodless victory in the Cold War.
  • If I knew -- if I _knew_ --" he said, and his burning eyes searched the bloodless face beneath him. Ailsa Paige
  • There was something comforting about a bloodless world of victorious cops and exemplary parenthood. Times, Sunday Times
  • The violence is pervasive but relatively bloodless, and is pretty much in accordance with the action on a TV show. Christianity Today
  • Reports from the area indicate that it was a bloodless coup.
  • In such a revolution, even if it is bloodless, complete justice can never be attained.
  • Chatichai Choonhaven in a bloodless coup on Feb. 23.
  • the coup disposed of the dictator bloodlessly
  • The October Revolution was carried through in a nearly bloodless coup by the Bolsheviks under the leadership of Lenin.
  • She fell to her knees, small noises escaping her bloodless lips.
  • It had proved to be such a simple matter, after all: one bold stroke; a tussle, happily bloodless, with the plutocratic dragon whose hold upon his treasure was so easily broken; and presto! the hungry proletary had become himself a power in the world, strong to do good or evil, as the gods might direct. The Price
  • In A Taste of Armageddon, Kirk and crew actively destroy the systems that allow the planet to engage in bloodless wars. The Memory Hole
  • Her face was as bloodless as wax and was a little turned aside. Emily Fox-Seton
  • He remarked: "There are many ways, systematical and comparatively painless, or at any rate bloodless, of causing undesirable races to die out. Morality is Objective (And People Are Wrong)
  • The bloodless coup which drove him into exile in 2006 might have been the end of him as a politician. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is almost as if, by buying these innocent, bloodless lamb cutlets, we feel able to rise from the table guilt-free.
  • His purple eyes are dull, and his skin is as bloodless as a corpse's.
  • In the Russian estimation, this could be a relatively bloodless outcome. Times, Sunday Times

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