How To Use Clammy In A Sentence

  • The first was that, though the sea was indeed rough, there was little rain, and the air lacked the clammy humidity of a thunderstorm.
  • The words, the thoughts, came fully formed into his mind through a kind of clammy telepathy. The Day of the Dissonance
  • By 52 you'll be begging for the clammy grip of death. The Sun
  • He broke out in a cold sweat, feeling the trickles of perspiration run down his clammy face.
  • The damp, clammy fabric clung to my legs. Times, Sunday Times
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  • Shock victims often have a weak pulse, pale and clammy skin, and breathe with difficulty.
  • My palms started to feel clammy as beads of sweat collected on my forehead.
  • I looked up trying to hear the message, I felt a cold, clammy hand touch my cheek.
  • I went clammy, cursing myself for not having escaped sooner. THE TARTAN RINGERS
  • The air was pale and clammy, chilling them so that they all got out their thick cloaks, and huddled in them.
  • When reached for comment, Adam L a/k/a clammyc noted that the timing of this post was merely "happenstance". by: you @ soon Blue Jersey - Front Page
  • You can feel if the patient is clammy and if the pulse is regular or not - you cannot get that from a machine. Times, Sunday Times
  • Secondly, my face would frequently drain itself of colour and coat itself with a clammy sweat.
  • The fog was entirely harmless, though, and just left father and son cold and clammy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The air was getting chillier now; damp and clammy, as though a storm were brewing.
  • Her stomach heaved and her hands were damp and clammy.
  • There was a light, cool breeze, which was pleasant enough except that it made the skin feel chilled and clammy.
  • Her angularity could be softened by a hanging mist - even a clammy one. DISPLACED PERSON
  • Frequently the caseous clots are not to be seen, and the stool has a clammy look reminding one of glazier's putty, while the color varies from dirty white to pale grayish yellow. Scientific American Supplement, No. 392, July 7, 1883
  • On a nice breezy day in the Canyon, it could feel pretty good to feel clammy, so cotton would be a wise move.
  • We could almost touch its cold and clammy surface. Between Worlds: A Reader, Rhetoric and Handbook
  • I was doing just that, with my left hand on the table, when a clammy hand was placed on mine. Times, Sunday Times
  • My forehead was all sweaty, my hands clammy, and my body was almost shaking.
  • My shirt was clammy with sweat.
  • A wince of pain flashing over her pale, clammy features told me she was slowly remembering.
  • The skin is pale, cool, clammy and moist with profuse sweating, and the pulse rate is weak.
  • Too bad the valley did not match the view-bare trees on either side of the road stretched riblike limbs toward them; a clammy, spectral mist rose from stagnant pools of water as they passed through the Beguilers 'swamp. The Robin And The Kestrel
  • He felt sweaty and clammy, and his feet were screaming because he still hadn't found a chance to switch his boots.
  • The fog was entirely harmless, though, and just left father and son cold and clammy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The parking lot is full, the grass is covered with cars, there are even cars out on the street, everywhere there are cars, and in each car are people sheened with sweat, going nacreous as onions fried in butter; I can see through their clammy melting skin to the dry dusty dust of their bones. Wine Poetry
  • My pyjamas were sticking to my clammy skin and my duvet was a concrete block pressing on my chest. Times, Sunday Times
  • My skin was pale and clammy, and was covered in tiny pearls of sweat that slacked my hair into a messy drip.
  • a clammy handshake
  • Patients often feel cool, yet clammy or sticky to touch, and sometimes have dilated hand veins.
  • Both fabrics wick perspiration away from your skin while natural fibers like cotton and wool tend to get damp and clammy with sweat.
  • As the poor Flutterer, who by hard struggling has escaped from the birdlimed thorn-bush, still bears the clammy Incumbrance on his feet and wings, so am I doomed to carry about with me the sad mementos of past Imprudence and Anguish from which I have been imperfectly released. Coleridge & Southey Letters
  • Its stultifying and baleful influence is transmitted by the clammy grip of its three main tentacles: the universities; the ‘experts’, and, above all, the media.
  • At four in the morning, in sheets clammy with sweat, she was still awake.
  • It's more of a moist, clammy heat that feels almost solid.
  • Each time I was sweating, but cold and clammy to touch. The Sun
  • The sky bore only a few thin clouds, and the air was warming after the clammy chill of the rain.
  • My skin was cold and clammy with sweat, my hands shaking slightly, and blood pounded through my head, leaving it warm and blurry.
  • Sweltering heat and clammy weather can at times really put you off.
  • My hands and armpits were damp and clammy with sweat.
  • Her shirt clung to her petit frame, causing the skin to prickle and become clammy.
  • Red-eyed and clammy, he suggested I lay my head down on my table like he did, thus blocking out the sounds of heaving and the sight of greenish, glassy-eyed misery all around us.
  • We could almost touch its cold and clammy surface. Between Worlds: A Reader, Rhetoric and Handbook
  • She flailed her arms trying to grab hold of something, but her hands were wet and clammy and slid off of everything she touched.
  • But soon four hours 'deprivation of the drug gave rise to a physical and mental prostration that no pen can adequately depict, no language convey: a horror unspeakable, a woe unutterable takes possession of the entire being; a clammy perspiration bedews the surface, the eye is stony and hard, the noise pointed, as in the hippocratic face preceding dissolution, the hands uncertain, the mind restless, the heart as ashes, the "bones marrowless. The Opium Habit
  • The air became thick and clammy; it was as if you were breathing through a straw.
  • Mahoney's mouth was dry and his face clammy, and his heart elated. SEIZE THE RECKLESS WIND
  • A clammy conferva covers everything except the mosaics upon tribune, roof, and clerestory, which defy the course of age. Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series
  • Woolf was one of those authors whose "paper rivers" formed the origin of Laing's watery obsessions, and there's an intriguing correspondence between "sources": rooting in "a copse of hazel and stunted oak" to find the indefinite "clammy runnel" of the Ouse, and shuffling among original manuscripts in a bone-dry archive. To the River: A Journey Beneath the Surface by Olivia Laing – review
  • They had just gotten their new Clammy Sosa costume and had requested a trap door in the mouth to spit items out, such as baseballs or gloves. USATODAY.com - Holy Canary: Mascot troupe takes off
  • By 52 you'll be begging for the clammy grip of death. The Sun
  • Acute stress is characterised by increased heart and respiration rates, rising blood pressure, sweaty palms, and clammy skin.
  • Her skin felt clammy and damp, just as her hands had felt back at the school earlier that afternoon.
  • Yes, it stunk of smoke and sick in there, and the air was cold and clammy, but I could ignore these minor flaws.
  • He was feeling the clammy cold that seemed to penetrate his thick coat and chill his bones.
  • Then, with a kind of clammy thickness, repulsion and fear came down upon me like the folds of a collapsing tent. The Girl In A Swing
  • My shirt stuck to the clammy sweat on my back.
  • He felt his heartbeat pick up a little and a clammy prickle of sweat on his palms and under his armpits. T2: INFILTRATOR
  • My forehead, clammy and cold, stuck to my fingers like blood.
  • He felt his heartbeat pick up a little and a clammy prickle of sweat on his palms and under his armpits. T2: INFILTRATOR
  • Their houses are so built that the clammy air cannot escape. Sources of the West: Readings in Western Civilization, Volume 1: From the Beginning to 1715
  • The very thought of his cold clammy hands repulsed me.
  • And what better way to give one's self into autumn's clammy grip than with the kind of multisensory wigout at which those daring dandies at the Pussycat excel? Clubs picks of the week
  • All this was summed up in the “Shrum Curse,” a phrase bannered on the front page of the New York Times as the clammy darkness of impending defeat seemed to be settling over Kerry’s campaign for the nomination in late 2003. No Excuses
  • Both fabrics wick perspiration away from your skin while natural fibers like cotton and wool tend to get damp and clammy with sweat.
  • Three long years, hundreds of hours of private negotiations and planning sessions, shmoozy dinners, trips to Chicago and clammy handshakes all culminated in this moment: voting on a deal with Chicago-based Merchandise Mart Properties Inc. to build and operate a county-funded convention center and medical mart, this decade's can't-miss taxpayer-funded project. Cleveland Scene
  • Your spacious three-bedroom dwelling is now a clammy bedsit, vibrating with underlying tension.
  • clammy weather
  • Secrets & Lies," is an expert at the kind of clammy pathos that epitomizes Gladys at her most trying. NYT > Home Page
  • The clammy atmosphere of espionage is wonderfully conveyed. Times, Sunday Times
  • I felt my throat constricting and my hands became clammy.
  • If you wake up feeling too hot or clammily cold, and your clothing and bedding are soaked or damp and clammy, you have night sweats.
  • Sheets from the bed clung to her clammy skin and her forehead was matted in sweat.
  • The clammy atmosphere of espionage is wonderfully conveyed. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was nice to shower in a tub he'd cleaned himself, instead of those truck-stop showers, which always felt kind of clammy and slimy and fungusy. Homebody
  • My hands were getting clammy and I was feeling a slight degree of nervousness.
  • The threatening, clammy Scottish summer turned the skies grey last week.
  • He's just fat and has clammy skin. The Sun
  • My shirt was clammy with sweat.
  • Wenger needs to generate momentum and he must do so in a finely balanced Champions League play-off against pacey and threatening Serie A opponents and in hot and clammy conditions. Arsène Wenger left with no margin for error in Udinese tie
  • The edamame was hot and steamy rather than puritanically cold and clammy.
  • My shirt stuck to the clammy sweat on my back.
  • “George” Inn. The ragged walls of our rooms were clammy with dirt, the smoky rafters foul with cobwebs, and the floor, bestrewed with kit, in terrible confusion, was black with hosts of cockroaches, ants, and flies. Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah
  • And the thing that you get in the airport, because the temperature's always that kind of clammy thing, so that your nipples actually bristle against your shirt. CNN Transcript Jun 22, 2008
  • But Tony felt hot and clammy, perspiration making his shirt cling with all the discomfort of a wetsuit on dry land. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • This ailment earned the title dumping syndrome, and suffering patients would feel nauseated, clammy, and sweaty. You: On a Diet
  • It was a dank, clammy night, made gloomy by the intermittent drizzle that had become steadier as the light of day faded with the sunset.
  • a person who is algid is marked by prostration and has cold clammy skin and low blood pressure
  • Looking out over the valley she suddenly felt cold and clammy. Know Your Own Mind
  • It was made through a clammy stone, that became oozier and wetter as I went down. The Signal-Man by Charles Dickens | Solar Flare: Science Fiction News
  • Jenny ran fingertips across the indrawn cheeks, so lifeless and clammy.
  • It is a close, clammy, breezeless night; the heavy blue drapes around the opened windows lie unperturbed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her stomach hurt, her head throbbed, and her hands felt clammy and cold.
  • The basement was dark and clammy, filled with dreadful silence and the heavy stench of pain and doom.
  • Forty minutes after the test began she remained cold, her skin was clammy, and she was pale and depressed. An Alternative Approach to Allergies
  • Forty minutes after the test began she remained cold, her skin was clammy, and she was pale and depressed. An Alternative Approach to Allergies
  • Her friends noticed that she had cold, clammy skin and a rapid but weak pulse and was turning blue. An Alternative Approach to Allergies
  • Their trips ranged from traveling in the back of a convertible and staying in a nice hotel to long, hot bus rides and being lodged in a stockade, said Sandee McClammy, a baritone player from Mesquite, Texas.
  • Also, the creepiest images - the ones that linger like the impress of clammy fingers on the back of your neck - are in the first volume.
  • You can feel if the patient is clammy and if the pulse is regular or not - you cannot get that from a machine. Times, Sunday Times
  • The way it would warm cold and clammy skin, or make a pearl of sweat roll down my face.
  • Mercy! they felt so kind of clammy they made me jump. In the Closed Room
  • Soon the lingering sent of burning coal permeated the clammy air.
  • My shirt stuck to the clammy sweat on my back.
  • It was made through a clammy stone that became oozier and wetter as I went down. Stories of Mystery
  • I feel bad, "Boruc has said, holding his head over the toaster to create a" clammy "feeling and adopting a sickly facial expression. Football transfer rumours: Glen Johnson to Juventus?
  • Lumps of steak pie; livid red meat, clammy puff pastry.
  • The profs are gawking, cotton-mouthed, at the bounty of stilettoed vixens; they burrow clammy hands in snug chinos pockets like nervous ethnographers dropped into an Amazon tribe of sexpot savages. FLY FISHING WITH DARTH VADER
  • He was discharged by junior doctors with painkillers but collapsed in his holiday apartment after becoming clammy and sick. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then he could see the modest bookseller, somewhat clammy in his extremities and lost within his academic robe and hood, nervously fidgeting his mortar-board, haled forward by ushers, and tottering rubescent before the chancellor, provost, president (or whoever it might be) who hands out the diploma. The Haunted Bookshop
  • He's just fat and has clammy skin. The Sun
  • It's plain to me, frae words he lats fa 'noo an' than, that, instead o 'lea'in' the warl 'ahint him whan he dees, he thinks to lie smorin' an 'smocherin' i 'the mools, clammy an' weet, but a 'there, an' trimlin 'at the thocht o' the suddent awfu 'roar an' din o 'the brazen trumpet o' the archangel. Malcolm
  • There was a spider on my bed last night, and the atmosphere in London was very clammy.
  • Each time I was sweating, but cold and clammy to touch. The Sun
  • In the opening lines, the reader is thrust straight into the clammy, dark, bitter atmosphere of a pawnbroker's on Christmas Day, run by a man who immediately admits that he is no angel.
  • Patients often feel cool, yet clammy or sticky to touch, and sometimes have dilated hand veins.
  • At such times I could see his villanous face plainly, and, when the sulphur from the matches irritated his lungs, between the raspy cough that followed and the clammy mud in which I was lying, I confess I shivered harder than ever. YELLOW HANDKERCHIEF
  • My palms were clammy, I was jumpy, and my parents were standing right behind me.
  • 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
  • The air grew cold and clammy. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's ever so close in the lounge, dear, clammy, muggy, stuffy, humid, hot.
  • Shock victims often have a weak pulse, pale and clammy skin, and breathe with difficulty.
  • My palm was clammy from holding onto the gold pendant hanging from my neck for so long in the summer temperature.
  • The clammy, damp air stuck to her skin.
  • No florescent glare from up above, no cold clammy hands handing you sheets and sheets of forms to fill out, no strange stares from underneath bi-focal lenses, no beigy-grey paint peeling from the walls, no ghetto plastic chairs that are about to collapse from underneath you .... Moschikat Diary Entry
  • I felt myself begin to sweat and tried to control it, unwilling to force Andrew to hold a sweaty, clammy hand.
  • Wind-whipped sheets of rain and blasts of cold clammy air penetrated every layer of clothing.
  • You can feel if the patient is clammy and if the pulse is regular or not - you cannot get that from a machine. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beads of sweat dotted his forehead and his skin felt clammy.
  • Both fabrics wick perspiration away from your skin while natural fibers like cotton and wool tend to get damp and clammy with sweat.
  • She complains in pillbox about not being able to sit down and her hands getting clammy. Archive 2007-08-26
  • Everything in the boat was damp and clammy. Three Men in a Boat
  • Water dripped from a leak in the ceiling, and the air was clammy.
  • Her skin became clammy and cold to the touch, and the room began to shift and sway beneath and around her.
  • At four in the morning, in sheets clammy with sweat, she was still awake.
  • You that pictural of consolidation angelically with you and it voidance your own, eurocentric your blending for the screwbean. may be pathogenically archdiocesan for its compelling bazar, but its use of murkily fur is clammyweed the drug hectometer upturned with freebee to smolder. Rational Review
  • Nigel of the clammy hands and Peter of the bow legs and disappearing chin?
  • Journalists looked up from their buckshee Jacob's Creek and marketing men took their clammy hands from their secretaries' knees.
  • She gave a little shudder when she touched his clammy hand.
  • Looking out over the valley she suddenly felt cold and clammy. Know Your Own Mind
  • In the cold clammy caves of the Claddagh, the mould of the sea happily coexisted with the mould of the river.
  • The broken-down, slimy, clammy and cold basement was my refuge from them.
  • The damp, clammy fabric clung to my legs. Times, Sunday Times
  • For the next three days the raft lay in a dense, clammy shroud.
  • ‘Calm down,’ I said, unsticking her hair from her clammy face.
  • Sweat trickled over my clammy skin as ragged gasps echoed over the still silence of dark.
  • You may suddenly break out into a sweat with cold, clammy skin.
  • Everything in the boat was damp and clammy. Three Men in a Boat
  • Her skin was cold and clammy to the touch also as Rebecca held her tiny frail limp hand.
  • Lissa crumpled the paper into her clammy palm.
  • An inexplicable, mind-numbing weariness settled over me, dank and clammy as pond-mist.
  • I was doing just that, with my left hand on the table, when a clammy hand was placed on mine. Times, Sunday Times
  • He could feel the clammy touch of water or mud soaking through his trousers as he held the bowl between his knees and unstoppered the flask.
  • My pyjamas were sticking to my clammy skin and my duvet was a concrete block pressing on my chest. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a kind of locust, called the clammy-barked, found in the Among the Trees at Elmridge
  • Though the sea was indeed rough, there was little rain, and the air lacked the clammy humidity of a thunderstorm.
  • At such times I could see his villanous face plainly, and, when the sulphur from the matches irritated his lungs, between the raspy cough that followed and the clammy mud in which I was lying, I confess I shivered harder than ever. YELLOW HANDKERCHIEF
  • But Tony felt hot and clammy, perspiration making his shirt cling with all the discomfort of a wetsuit on dry land. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • She had fortunately chosen one of her heavier outfits as the night fog was still thick and clammy in the chilly, still morning air.
  • The air grew cold and clammy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Both fabrics wick perspiration away from your skin while natural fibers like cotton and wool tend to get damp and clammy with sweat.
  • He felt his heartbeat pick up a little and a clammy prickle of sweat on his palms and under his armpits. T2: INFILTRATOR
  • McCain taps lobbyist for transition (see also clammyc, Kos, McLobbyist transition team head was ultimate Nixon insider) Discourse.net: Friday McCain/McSame Bashing (Repaired)
  • It is my heavily researched belief that high pressure has a horrible effect on people, they're sticky, they're clammy, their bile rises and they snap at each other.
  • He was climbing out of bed and donning clammy, greasy shearing mocker.
  • Her friends noticed that she had cold, clammy skin and a rapid but weak pulse and was turning blue. An Alternative Approach to Allergies

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