How To Use Entrap In A Sentence

  • She kept on struggling to loose herself, groping ineffectually at the deadfall that had entrapped her. SLEEP WHILE I SING
  • Result: The sword-like needle therapy is very effective to cutaneous nerve entrapment syndrome of the waist and buttock.
  • And that's another difference: Kate's e-mail "entrapped" Kinsella; Warman's e-mails aren't as subtle -- he doesn't entrap people into uttering racist remarks, he outright plants those racist remarks himself. Kate McMillan's prank - Ezra Levant
  • Welcome to the ‘surveillance society’, where the police can bug, wire-tap and even entrap you in the name of law and order.
  • This time (due next week with #2) I am totally contemplating the buzzcut for myself just to avoid hair entrapment again. The Grabbing Hands, Grab All They Can | Her Bad Mother
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  • The lower bands would cut tax for the less well-off, but the new higher bands would entrap many middle-class households, simply because house price inflation has increased the value of their homes.
  • Intravenous fluid loading before, during, and after rescue may protect against a catastrophic fall in blood pressure that can follow sudden release after prolonged entrapment.
  • Nobody seems interested in destroying, once and for all, the vicious circle in which this "vagary" of international fraud entraps us. January 2006
  • Five people found themselves on the wrong side of a door equipped with a faulty Stanley lockset and one reported becoming entrapped inside. Locks that won’t unlock recalled by Stanley Security
  • With the canopy of a star-spangled sky, the frozen stillness of stone entrapping centuries of history, and the soft sound of the waters, it is truly an experience that belongs to the realm of the unforgettable.
  • I hope you didn't put them in the trash can, because that would be entrapment again.
  • If this is part of the reason the anecdote raises a smile, comedy would seem to be functioning here at its moral, corrective level, scuffing the shine on vanity and entrapping the diabolical self.
  • He and his employers refute accusations that his style of investigation constitutes entrapment.
  • Sometimes they'll throw barbed wire and any other refuse into these ponds, and the diver can be entrapped in that substance.
  • She entrapped herself in the web of her own lies.
  • Underachievement often leads to unemployment and long-term disengagement, which is a vicious cycle and it is difficult to come out from such an entrapment. Tower Hamlets: Labour produces its intriguing new mayoral shortlist
  • The majority of these deaths resulted from suffocation or strangulation caused by entrapment of the child's head in various structures of the bed.
  • He blamed each of the shock blasts that had entrapped his recent life on the faces of the patrol. FIELD OF BLOOD
  • The hunters used nets to entrap the lion.
  • About a year ago, my military dreams began - intense visions of entrapment and escaping, of being marked in the eye with laser rays, etc.
  • Others have told me that they thought I was making some sort of sexist statement by showing an entrapped female.
  • We get a shot of Ben staring into his fish tank, a recurring symbol that emphasizes Ben's feelings of entrapment and aloneness.
  • Peripheral nerve entrapment syndromes have some clinical situations in common, so some common principles may be followed when deciding rehabilitation countermeasures.
  • He had been entrapped in this dark and bleak prison for years, and it was only recently that he had been able to escape its bars.
  • He would be incensed at having been entrapped by an ignorant enthusiastic declaimer into an admiration of objects whose authenticity may be questioned by the first cool examinant.
  • ‘Advertising false psuedo-medical procedures to entrap consumers is not tolerated,’ the Minister said.
  • The ‘click-happy’ masses of the advanced cyber age are already entrapped in a vicious cyber cycle of meaningless ‘clickery’.
  • By and large, he is a dramatist of deception and double-dealing, an architect of environments that entrap and extinguish their inhabitants.
  • Explanations for the cytokeratin immunoreactivity include locally entrapped mediastinal pleura or pulmonary epithelium.
  • In entrapment, swimmers can be pinned to the floor of the pool or otherwise trapped until they drown or suffer serious injuries, including disembowelment. Owning Up to a Boy's Death
  • As more and more responsible drivers are entrapped by inappropriately low limits and hidden cameras the stigma attached to speeding diminishes.
  • A lot of citizens are unhappy that their tax dollars are being spent on stings to entrap them, but the police retort that this is a bigger safety problem than you might realize.
  • It suggests that, on the contrary, it is this very world picture that prevents progress and entraps people in a culture of impotent resentment.
  • It was indeed a clever plan to entrap his opponent, but in the end he was hoist by his own petard.
  • Tension builds up, emotion fluxes, comedy alternates with despair, as the horror of the situation in which the three are entrapped unfolds.
  • Safety measures include metal detectors, closed circuit video, employee 'safe rooms' during emergencies, furniture arrangement to prevent entrapment of staff, and good lighting.
  • These rapidly became forays into entrapment of innocent people fingered by prison snitches trying to get their sentences reduced.
  • It is the most innocent and naive who find themselves entrapped.
  • She soon became resentful of her entrapment within a working-class community where she never felt at home.
  • Even in the bustle of the embassy, a small core of silence and sadness seemed to entrap the Ambassador and his wife. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • Occasional large zones of pink hyaline material surrounded and entrapped groups of the mononuclear and multinuclear histiocytes.
  • There's always a strange dichotomy between a city being entrapped by its representation and liberated by it.
  • Here is another push by capitalist forces to entrap areas of economic life that had once been outside the sway of the commodity form.
  • Entrapment: ‘a subtle and surprisingly virile performance’.
  • The French philosopher is best known for his theory that consumer society forms a kind of code that gives individuals the illusion of choice while in fact entrapping them in a vast web of simulated reality.
  • And while I verged on breaking down, I was roped into, very much against my will, a scheme to entrap Alison's husband.
  • She the heroine entrapped by family expectations; he a faithful and stoic, if unimaginative hero.
  • SB 1070 says employers who want to claim they were "entrapped" must show the idea of breaking the law started not with them but with police or prosecutors. East Valley Tribune - Today's Top Stories
  • Obviously he was another agent provocateur, entrapping a suspect. KARA KUSH
  • Reading his poems feels like you are watching him walk into a room full of mirrors; each entrap a small vision of the poet, but no image is ever complete.
  • His latest, Ondine (2009, Paramount, 12), finds Jordan returning to more rewardingly lyrical fare with a whimsical tale of a lonely fisherman (Colin Farrell) who catches a "selkie" (half woman, half seal) and finds himself entrapped in a tightening emotional net. Mark Kermode's DVD round-up
  • I'm not sure that I would buy the word 'entrapped'. Indymedia Ireland
  • Through the comb-like bristles of its baleen filters, it squirts out the seawater, entrapping krill by the bushel.
  • This disorder occurs because of median nerve entrapment distal to the elbow.
  • Deserters from foreign armies, prisoners of war, criminals, vagabonds, tramps, and people whom the crimps had entrapped by fraud and violence were the bulk of the regiments.
  • Taking entrapment first, a defendant caught in a sting almost always claims to have been entrapped.
  • The criminal big-shot, viewed in the distorting mirror of the satirist, is a parody of the American dream of success, ironizing the business ethic by the illegality of his methods as well as by his ultimate defeat; the inevitable fall of the big-time gangster creates a sense of entrapment in an economically determined reality. Singing Soprano, While Dissin' the Bass: America's White Thug Love & Ethnically Acceptable Violence
  • There is no downside unless a criminal defense lawyer is saying to him, you may be entrapped in answering a question innocently that may be viewed as not truthful, and you might be indicted.
  • A slick finish won't get dusty, but be careful not to get air-entrained concrete where air can get entrapped below the troweled surface, leading to spalls.
  • The questioner entrapped him into an admission of guilt.
  • Not only do the cables disappear behind the bodies of the sitters and skewer them to the walls, they also function as metaphors of entrapment and recall snares, chains, nets, lassoes and nooses.
  • The danger of sting operations is that the undercover cops must walk a fine line between making the bribe attractive enough to the target person and entrapping the target person.
  • Notwithstanding the aversion with which I regarded the idea of entrapping him into any disclosure he was not prepared to make voluntarily, I should have taken him up at this point, but for the strange proceedings in which I saw him engaged; whereof his putting the lemon-peel into the kettle, the sugar into the snuffer-tray, the spirit into the empty jug, and confidently attempting to pour boiling water out of David Copperfield
  • And to those who say "Don't our law enforcement officers have something better to do than trying to 'entrap' businesses?" we'd offer this response: Would you rather they were racing to the scene of an alcohol-related crash involving a car filled with teenagers? Postbulletin.com Local News
  • These people are entrapped, doomed, lost forever.
  • Neurological complications often reflect skeletal deformity, and the use of callipers, crutches, and wheel-chairs predispose to the development of peripheral nerve entrapment.
  • Perhaps more likely is the idea that British intelligence does know where he is and that they are monitoring his every move, hoping to use him as a ‘honeypot’ to entrap others.
  • We are not out to entrap motorists, we are trying to reduce the carnage on county roads.
  • The questioner entrapped him into an admission of guilt.
  • The lawyer entrapped the witness into contradicting himself.
  • Never mind that he seemed more like an innocent dupe entrapped by the intelligence services of Russia, Britain, and the U.S. The case against him has never been brought to trial, so we'll never know.
  • Grounding Totem: This totem will no longer absorb multiple effects from Entrapment in a 10 second period.
  • You are lucky, my Lord, that she did not attempt to entrap you. MEDALON
  • He said the decision would backfire and result in inefficiencies as the customs office was still entrapped in bureaucratic problems.
  • Alas! therein you deceive your selfe; for I have a thousand crochets working continually in my brain, whereby to entrap a wiser creature then a woman, yet veiled all under the cunning cloake of love, but sauced with the bitter Wormewood of hate. The Decameron
  • The lawyer entrapped the witness into contradicting himself.
  • Signs and symptoms may include diplopia, epistaxis, ecchymosis, crepitus, hypesthesia in the infraorbital nerve distribution, and restricted upward gaze secondary to inferior rectus entrapment.
  • Water entrapped by molten metal or slag may generate explosive forces that launch hot metal or material ores over a wide area.
  • I could have thrown my bootjack at him (it lay ready on the rug), for having entrapped me into the disclosure of anything concerning Agnes, however immaterial. David Copperfield
  • His intent was not entrapment so much as enwrapment, so that Tarrant could not, at some future date, try to claim no knowledge of this. Haven
  • Allied to the milkweed is another plant, the dogbane (_Apocynum_), which has a similar trick of entrapping its insect friends. My Studio Neighbors
  • The bloom contained iron slag and particles of charcoal entrapped in the metal.
  • The feeling of entrapment grows as the roads close and the power goes out.
  • Plant cells carry chloroplasts: organelles containing the pigment chlorophyll, which they employ to entrap sunlight.
  • The authors of the 1834 report depicted unmarried mothers as scheming seductresses who entrapped young men into paying for their children.
  • She flung wild glances, like those of an entrapped animal, up and down the big whitewashed room that panted with heat and that was thickly humid with the steam that sizzled from the damp cloth under the irons of the many ironers. CHAPTER I
  • LC pumps may be fitted with a facility for "bleeding" the system of entrapped air bubbles.
  • However, village residents flatly denied he was involved in embezzlement, saying that it was a dirty plot to entrap the clergyman.
  • These entrapment images are supplemented by yet another cage metaphor, created on this occasion by the camera tracking the two men from behind the railings.
  • He claimed the government had entrapped him into doing something that he would not have done otherwise.
  • Once we are entrapped in a dilemma then action of one sort or another is predetermined.
  • The book she becomes an emblem of her feeling of entrapment in her marriage.
  • The second is artful, cunning, and designing; shielding the rich man from the possibility of being entrapped, and affecting at the same time, to have a tender and scrupulous regard, for the interests of the whole community.
  • They have been unfairly targeted and the BBC has set out to try to entrap them.
  • Pleasure soon turns into the pain of postlapsarian knowledge, fury at her entrapment, and hatred of her consort, Pluto. Passion and Precision
  • This is consistent with the fact that olivine is typically entrapped in pyroxene and amphibole crystals.
  • I firmly believe my son has been entrapped by this cult.
  • This is a woman who is actively engaging the police and actively working with them to the point of suggesting how she might be able to entrap him from the very beginning of her work with the police.
  • II. ii.86 (166,4) [Not a man of those, but he hath the wit to lose his hair] That is, _Those who have more hair than wit_, are easily entrapped by loose women, and suffer the consequences of lewdness, one of which, in the first appearance of the disease in Europe, was the loss of hair. Notes to Shakespeare — Volume 01: Comedies
  • With the canopy of a star-spangled sky, the frozen stillness of stone entrapping centuries of history, and the soft sound of the waters, it is truly an experience that belongs to the realm of the unforgettable.
  • Naturally, Gingrich twisted reality by saying that it is the child labor laws that are "entrapping" children. Michael Genecin: Clashes Between the Young and Old: Newt Gingrich and the Republican Primaries
  • I've thought about it for several days, and the more I think about it, the more I realize I was entrapped, and the police had no business spying on me and wasting my time, in order to raise funds for the city.
  • So, at breakfast, @ he plays with her sense of entrapment, he is provocative and overbearing, confident in the outcome of their conflict. A DEATH IN THE FAMILY
  • However, 5% of patients with symptoms of PAD actually have popliteal entrapment syndrome or popliteal adventitial cyst. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • I have deep concerns that Tilly has entrapped the poor old SB operatives by offering co-operation and then running a sting on them. Police Need Intelligence Shock « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • The air entrapment of the liquid metal flow in the shot sleeve during the slow shot phase is one of the factors resulting in this kind of defect.
  • Jones told the hearing at Westminster Magistrates Court that British government and judicial officials had worked together to "entrap" Khurts. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • A gigantic instance of his scheming was the coup-de-main by which he succeeded in entrapping 11,000 Paduan soldiers, only 200 of whom escaped the miseries of his prisons. Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) The Age of the Despots
  • His father told the Jordan Times that his son remains innocent, and that the FBI was guilty of 'entrapping' his son. CBS 11 / TXA 21 - Dallas / Fort Worth's Source for Breaking News, Weather, and Sports
  • To prepare clindamycin phosphate liposome, and to determine the entrapment efficiency and particle diameter of it.
  • The tactics were branded as tantamount to entrapment by a television presenter when they were discussed on her programme.
  • It was indeed a clever plan to entrap his opponent, but in the end he was hoist by his own petard.
  • Sophists are seen to entangle, entrap, and confuse their opponents, by means of strange or flowery metaphors, by unusual figures of speech, by epigrams and paradoxes, and in general by being clever and smart.
  • The full differential diagnosis of PAD includes popliteal entrapment syndrome, popliteal adventitial cyst, or popliteal aneurysm, thromboangiitis obliterans, arteritis, and fibromuscular dysplasia. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • The bar owners said they don't want to be "entrapped" and face $500 citations from the state excise police. Evansville Courier & Press Stories
  • The police have been given extra powers to entrap drug traffickers.
  • Less common manifestations include cerebellar dysfunction, isolated dementia of the frontal lobe type, extrapyramidal signs, seizures, an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-like disorder, and entrapment neuropathy.
  • I actually have had multiple surgeries for cubital tunnel syndrome to feel an entrapped ulna nerve. Long-Term Talking Can Cause “Mobile Phone Elbow” | Lifehacker Australia
  • But for those who are entrapped within it - much as they have once been entrapped within nation-states - digital diaspora is the place of no-return.
  • The hunters used nets to entrap the lion.
  • She was an obstinate young person -- she was precise, she was scrupulous, she was of a secretive, untrustful turn of mind; and as she was ambitious for advancement from the dreary isolation of Point-o'-Bay Cove, she was not to be entrapped or entreated into what she had determined was a breach of discipline. Harbor Tales Down North With an Appreciation by Wilfred T. Grenfell, M.D.
  • What was it to him that these uneducated boors, in their feeble ignorance, tried constantly to entrap him into something which they called unorthodox, and to twist his words into the semblance of fancied heresy? St. Winifred's, or The World of School
  • Everywhere, whatever the script and however different the set looked, a sense of entrapment prevailed, like a thick, dark cloud enwrapping the stage and spreading to the auditorium.
  • Obviously he was another agent provocateur, entrapping a suspect. KARA KUSH
  • First they have to explain why they used prostitutes to entrap corrupt people.
  • She kept on struggling to loose herself, groping ineffectually at the deadfall that had entrapped her. SLEEP WHILE I SING
  • A demonstration of vulnerability can become, in the blink of an eye, an indulgence or exercise in self-regard and, soon after that, an entrapment in fraudulence.
  • I firmly believe my son has been entrapped by this cult.
  • Zanis replied that he'd pretended to smoke the pot in order to "entrap" the tenant, whom he wanted to evict. Chicago Reader
  • To call recent storylines a quagmire would cause me to go look up ‘quagmire‘ and make sure I’m using it correctly “a difficult, precarious, or entrapping position”, yeah he’s had a few of those. The Fifth Color – Accentuate the Positive
  • It is during this multi-crisis period that a victory from our athletes that could cure our mind-set, which is entrapped by the nightmare of sporting disasters.
  • I firmly believe my son has been entrapped by this cult.
  • He has persuaded John that every socially prescribed role entraps one in falsity, the clamour of petty needs, and graspingness.
  • The police have been given extra powers to entrap drug traffickers.
  • Notwithstanding the aversion with which I regarded the idea of entrapping him into any disclosure he was not prepared to make voluntarily, I should have taken him up at this point, but for the strange proceedings in which I saw him engaged; whereof his putting the lemon – peel into the kettle, the sugar into the snuffer – tray, the spirit into the empty jug, and confidently attempting to pour boiling water out of a candlestick, were among the most remarkable. David Copperfield
  • Now imagine a police force with the power to entrap you into crime in order to arrest you.
  • Police conduct would not amount to improper entrapment where it did no more than present the defendant with an unexceptional opportunity to commit a crime.
  • It's a Genie Plug, shown here entrapping a genie in a wooden bottle. What Is It? Game 114 » E-Mail
  • I thought then that he meant one great circle entrapped all of us. THE GOLDEN FOOL: BOOK TWO OF THE TAWNY MAN
  • Food is entrapped in mucous and transported by ciliary action to the esophagus.
  • Being "tabooed" by all the men who had even as much as caught a passing glimpse of her, this was her last resource -- she would entrap some unwary stranger, a man with money of course, and inveigle him into marrying her. Scottish Ghost Stories
  • Lassiter is the editor of the book Interrogations, Confessions, and Entrapment, and he has studied the psychology of interrogations for years, from the perspective of both law enforcement and the interrogee a suspect in questioning. Long Way Home
  • Then he knew that he was entrapped by the sand that was filtering into their shelter through the chinks in the zareba wall. Warlock
  • There's an old journalist question used to entrap people - it's so unethical, it's a joke.
  • I could start trying to entrap him now, through a long, excruciating, and possibly embarrassing process.
  • With rapt fascination I watched the ritualized escape attempt and re-entrapment of the hero every week.
  • As he now thought of that beautiful, clever enigmatic woman, Sonya, the one who might or might not have been set to entrap and betray him. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • I refer to a judge who's put himself at grave risk of blackmail, entrapment, compromise and hypocrisy.
  • These pharmaceutical compositions may be manufactured in a manner that is itself known, e.g., by means of conventional mixing, dissolving, granulating, dragee-making, levigating, emulsifying, encapsulating, entrapping or lyophilizing processes. FreshPatents.com: Notable Patent Applications - 07/22/2010
  • The police have been given extra powers to entrap drug traffickers.
  • With the mechanics of the DTC-975's thermal carafe lid being more complex than the glass carafe variety, it may be helpful to descale the lid to keep the ball bearings from becoming entrapped. Epinions Recent Content for Home
  • I´ve seen what people´s lives are actually like in unreconstructed tribal units, and the kind of brutality, unhappiness, narrowness, and spiritual impoverishment which is the human fate in such circumstances- and its a very hard fate to get out of, because a self-referential, collective self-hypnotic trance of entrapment within the tribal story is part of the landscape. Ladies and gentlemen, the Libertarian Party candidate for the President of the United States of America
  • Three fourths of the deaths were caused by entrapment in the bed structure leading to suffocation or strangulation.
  • Hamptons International has been accused of "entrapping" landlords with an undisclosed commission charge. Top stories from Times Online
  • His legacy reminds us that those who have grievances with the government can avoid entrapment by simply obeying the law while simultaneously working to establish justice.
  • OBJECTIVE To evaluate the quality of astragaloside liposome and determine its entrapment efficiency.
  • Documents filed in 36th District Court acknowledge the cops and a witness lied under oath in a 2005 drug case, but claim they were "entrapped" by bad advice from now retired Wayne County Assistant Prosecutor Karen Plants with consent from also now retired Wayne County Circuit Judge Mary Waterstone. Detnews.com - Local
  • But suppose it were De - la garde who had conceived the notion of entrapping her? Gatlinburg
  • Even now, nobody really understands why the glow of celebrity, so swiftly dimmed on the brows of the other likely lackwits, stayed with the couple whose incompetent, fumbling romance entrapped a nation's heart.
  • A national newspaper has been running a series of articles highlighting instances of speed camera vehicles parked in illegal places to entrap drivers.
  • She said there would also need to be safeguards in using surveillance recordings in court as evidence so that the person accused had the opportunity to explain what he allegedly said and the surveillance was not used to entrap the person.
  • Their passage through the rock tunnel was quicker on the return trip for they were confident of their way and feared no pitfalls hidden in the gloomy darkness, and they were impelled by a sense of entrapment and a growing fear of entombment.
  • The matrices tangle and entrap understandings of creation and knowledge to expose their threadbare construction.
  • Foam tends to increase skin temperature because foam materials and the air they entrap are generally poor conductors of heat.
  • He was entrapped to destruction.
  • Mr Justice Hart said that given the evidence of two meetings between Amir and Mr Kearns in particular, Mr Kearns had been "entrapped". Slugger O'Toole
  • The car is a two-faced modern symbol: a shiny icon of our freedom and our entrapment.
  • The newspapers would occasionally report on famous people entrapped by the police and tried for crimes.
  • As the tiny birds thrash around trying to free themselves they become even more entrapped.
  • The opening of the piece begins with the piano and slowly entraps the ‘voices’ of the string duo, creating a light, enchanting mood that takes on a life all its own.
  • No ordinary woman could have entrapped such a large-scale prelate.
  • The documentary provides an extraordinary glimpse into the attitudes of a working-class district and the desperate world of prostitutes entrapped by drug addiction, poverty and patriarchal cruelty.
  • You are lucky, my Lord, that she did not attempt to entrap you. MEDALON
  • Rather, through these physical embodiments of fecundity and vulnerability, entrapment and despair, she is uniquely able to comment about the female condition in a way which has lasting relevance to all humanity.
  • “It was you that entrapped me, ” began Gregory, shaking from head to foot, “entrapped me into——”85 The Man Who Was Thursday
  • These gases managed to escape entrapment of charcoal filters.
  • Even the "pacificator" would have been employed for its extermination, if, for no other reason, because of the fancied resemblance which it had always worn to Brother Stevens -- a resemblance which occurred to him, perhaps, in consequence of the supposed similarity between the arts of the libertine and those for the entrapping of his victims which distinguish the labors of the spider. Charlemont; Or, the Pride of the Village. a Tale of Kentucky
  • If present, they represent entrapped benign mesothelium or epithelium.
  • He was, at that moment, safely entrapped in the living room.
  • These clients often attempt to manipulate with words, performance skills, dollars and the reflected glory of their celebrity and then "entrap" the ofttimes well-intentioned but blindly ambitious physician into becoming a part of their "entourage. Celebrity "Roadkill": A Black Box Warning for Physicians
  • Critics said he devised stings that amounted to illegal entrapment.
  • Inexpressible were the anguish and confusion of the defendant, when she found herself thus entrapped, and reflected, that she was on the point of being detected of felony; for she at once concluded, that the snare was laid for her, and knew that the officer of justice would certainly find the unlucky watch in one of the drawers of her scrutoire. The Adventures of Ferdinand Count Fathom
  • It was no easy matter to oblige her cousin to understand what she meant; but at last the declaration that she had refused her old lover because she had placed her affections upon Edwin Lechmere, whom she was endeavouring to "entrap," was not to be mistaken; and the country girl was altogether unprepared for the burst of indignant feeling, mingled with much bitterness, which repelled the untruth. Turns of Fortune And Other Tales
  • It also held open the possibility that he had been entrapped by the British Secret Service.
  • Every reader of a novel is borrowing, if not stealing, someone else's experience; and behind the pleasure of that borrowing there will hover, if we let it, a worry not so much about the fictionality of our lives as of their entrapment in déjà vu. Ian McEwan's 'Solar': The Fat Man's Vengeance (New York Review)
  • Imprints in the bottom surface of the delamination represent entrapped bleed water.
  • Notwithstanding the aversion with which I regarded the idea of entrapping him into any disclosure he was not prepared to make voluntarily, I should have taken him up at this point, but for the strange proceedings in which I saw him engaged; whereof his putting the lemon-peel into the kettle, the sugar into the snuffer-tray, the spirit into the empty jug, and confidently attempting to pour boiling water out of a candlestick, were among the most remarkable. David Copperfield
  • For after all it concerns the child; and is it quite an accident that, weaning him away from lovely things that so lovelily call themselves 'love,' 'home,' 'mother,' we can find no more alluring titles for the streets into which we entrap him than 'Educational On The Art of Reading
  • Daniel came hurrying along the passage, and thoughts of entrapment seemed all at once far-fetched. THE GOSPEL MAKERS
  • Somewhere or other that downy bird Kipling observes that the lesson of the island race is to put away all emotion and entrap the alien at the proper time. 16 I learned it in my cradle, long before he wrote it, and have practised it all my life with some success, and only this difference, that for "entrap" I prefer to substitute "escape". Watershed
  • Even in the bustle of the embassy, a small core of silence and sadness seemed to entrap the Ambassador and his wife. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • All who have witnessed the tying of captives in a keddah wherein a whole wild herd has been entrapped, testify to the uncanny human - like quality of the intelligence displayed by the tame elephants who assist in tying, leading out and subjugating the wild captives. The Minds and Manners of Wild Animals A Book of Personal Observations
  • As he now thought of that beautiful, clever enigmatic woman, Sonya, the one who might or might not have been set to entrap and betray him. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • The risorius and the buccinator muscles assist in the retraction of the lips, as well as support entrapment of air within the oral cavity.
  • It blasts up the drifts like white dirt dug from the earth, a frozen burial ground encircling our thin tent, entrapping us. The Amber Sea

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