How To Use Escape In A Sentence

  • As most Parisians escape the city in August there will just be me and Darren and a couple of million other tourists in town that weekend.
  • Having had some narrow escapes the priest was eventually arrested as a recusant priest and was tried by revolutionary Court.
  • They point out that, for customers, obsoleting an investment is not an ‘escape’ but a ‘closed door.’
  • They all escaped after jumping from the top floor of the burning house thanks to their neighbours' help.
  • Ireland we say 'aitch' that is the Presbyterians do - for some reason which escapes me Catholics say 'haitch' - another argument for integrated education. Behind the scenes at the UK's highest court
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • The gang escaped with a haul worth hundreds of pounds.
  • And when he escaped, might it not have been to these ancient, forested hills? Times, Sunday Times
  • They thought he had escaped through a specially constructed tunnel.
  • Minutes after they escaped, there was a fire flashover and the whole building went up in flames.
  • How about how the door of your car opens as you back up from the burnout to let burnout smoke escape the cockpit?
  • Monasteries, breaking the Lawes of obedience, and being addicted to pleasures of the flesh, are become lascivious and dissolute, making the world beleeve, that whatsoever is convenient for other women, is no way unbeseeming them, as thinking in that manner to escape. The Decameron
  • But they escaped the relegation trapdoor by just one point as Leicester were held at Stoke. The Sun
  • He made his escape on the back of a motorbike.
  • With the exception of one guy, whose name escapes me right now, the DJs are a pretty poor bunch too.
  • Apparently some creature called a kobold escaped from wherever my grandfather trapped it, and it has teamed up with Milo. Master of Mirrors
  • Aaewin asked without thinking, clapping her hands over her mouth after the words escaped.
  • It is thought the hapless cat had been trying to escape after becoming trapped in a sewer. The Sun
  • Stewart's pigeon house almost succumbed under a drift six feet high, and half the pigeons escaped where the weight of sand forced an opening in the galvo.
  • He escaped a rolling road block by turning into the street where he lived, only to find it blocked by another police car. Times, Sunday Times
  • Prisons overbook for the same reason holiday camps do: to compensate for the inevitable number of detainees who fail to show up for confirmed reservations for one reason or another, or those who escape. Welsh prisons overbooked
  • Once the new bacteriophage is packaged, the now-virulent viruses lyse the host cell and escape into the surrounding medium to infect other hosts, producing further progeny.
  • Taken from their families and forced to live in "white" orphanages, three mixed-race aborigine children escape, traveling 1500 miles back home, using the title fence as their guide. Cinematical
  • Whether it is a native cat, previously thought extinct, or an escaped exotic pet, the Beast of Bodmin is a creature that refuses to disappear.
  • This conundrum poses two questions: First: does collective stupidity actually have a bottom limit or is it some kind of great cosmic suckhole from which reason and common sense simply cannot escape? The End-of-the-World Survival Kit
  • Royale, with a bayonet at his loins, and only escaped by taking refuge under the porte-cochere of No. 6. Les Miserables
  • The lorry driver escaped unhurt, but a pedestrian was injured.
  • I'd like to escape the office treadmill.
  • No problem: just stay below escape velocity. The Harper Dictionary of Science in Everyday Language
  • The escapement is a conventional in-line Swiss lever type, but with all parts made from plastic, excepting the impulse pin. Boing Boing: November 5, 2006 - November 11, 2006 Archives
  • Now England are the great escape artists. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Sub – Prior readily obeyed the first part of the Abbot’s injunction, but paused upon the second — “It is Friday, most reverend,” he said in Latin, desirous that the hint should escape, if possible, the ears of the stranger. The Monastery
  • A dirty orange glow escapes from half-open hatches, grilled vents, and small square windows of grimy glass, and the clangour of beaten metal can be heard far out into the endless snowstorm. Weapon Of Choice short story – excerpt « INTERSTELLAR TACTICS
  • Labor Party leaders have denounced the talk as an attempt by the right to escape indirect blame for the assassination.
  • Fluttering and screaming, the bird made every effort to escape, but not before Dee was aware of a label tied round his neck. Traditions of Lancashire, Volume 2 (of 2)
  • Escape Velocities - Bound and Unbound Orbits - Circular Orbits - Various Forms of Energy - Power.
  • The one dramatic moment in the film, when Wayne tries to escape from his captors, is a let-down, and it doesn't last nearly as long as one would hope.
  • He tried to escape by diving into a river.
  • His escape meant that he had to be figuratively executed, with the result that the people, ideas, and culture associated with him were outlawed and destroyed in his stead.
  • That unexpectedly collapses it into a black hole, a supermassive region with a gravitational pull so strong not even light can escape.
  • no escape from the ghetto of the typing pool
  • The escape route then passed through large boulders and up a steep hillside. Times, Sunday Times
  • The rest is torment and anguish, from which she seeks to escape by turning inwards. The Times Literary Supplement
  • A cruiser and a destroyer, both badly hit, thus became the only survivors to escape. Nemesis: The Battle for Japan, 194445
  • Jordan was the first in his family to escape such servitude.
  • The breakout brings to 15 the number of awaiting-trial prisoners who have escaped from police holding cells in the Transkei since the weekend.
  • The raiders then escaped with about £ 300 from a safe.
  • Some escaped after a bouncer battered down a partition wall. Times, Sunday Times
  • We know that the type of escape hatch that's on the Kursk is the same that's been on the Kito (ph) class submarines, and these -- the LR5 has exercise with in the -- with a NATO Polish Kito class submarines. CNN Transcript - Breaking News: Russian Submarine Accident: Rear Admiral Cobbald Discusses Rescue Equipment Being Sent Out to Site - August 18, 2000
  • I sighed softly, relieved to have escaped another untimely lecture.
  • The murderer attempted to escape from law punishment by spoiling his own face.
  • The Puritans left England to escape being persecuted.
  • While several councils have been fined for signing-off deficient work, in other cases councils have escaped responsibility because builders used independent certifiers.
  • The so-called "particularism" of Israel's idea of God was in fact the real strength of Israel's religion; it thus escaped from barren mythologisings, and became free to apply itself to the moral tasks which are always given, and admit of being discharged, only in definite spheres. Prolegomena
  • Healthy hares can easily outrun foxes, but can rarely escape relentless packs of hounds chasing them for up to 90 minutes.
  • During labour, the bag of water surrounding the baby in the womb often tears, and the water escapes through the vagina in a "gush". Chapter 12
  • Every system which would escape the fate of an organism too rigid to adjust itself to its environment, must be plastic to the extent that the growth of knowledge demands.
  • This is a fact the significance of which cannot escape anyone, and one which incontestably marks an epoch from the point of view of chemists. Marie Curie - Nobel Lecture
  • Then he arose and clomb the mast to see an there were any escape from that strait; and he would have loosed the sails; but the wind redoubled upon the ship and whirled her round thrice and drave her backwards; whereupon her rudder brake and she fell off towards a high mountain. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Can classical music escape the noose? Times, Sunday Times
  • Most of it, however, had escaped into the atmosphere as heated gas and likely would not recondense for several hours. Harbinger
  • The two hostages of the escape attempt received medals of valour and were credited by the local press for thwarting the escape.
  • To escape from the Moon's gravitational field, a sample must be accelerated to a velocity above 2.4 kilometres per second.
  • He kept his hand firmly clamped on her wrist so that she would not escape him.
  • Florida escaped the pains of the lagging economy nationwide elsewhere because the state has such a small manufacturing base.
  • Prince Charles does not escape raillery from others.
  • I wouldn't mind death, so I could escape my tormentors here, but I fear the painful ways of dying the men here invent.
  • The lid prevents the escape of poisonous gases.
  • So it seems that overnight the one little pussy escaped from the alley.
  • Two suspects who had fled the stolen car involved in the chase escaped and were being sought in a house-to-house search.
  • The hours of liberty are long, full of wonder and narrow escapes, precautions, hidden devices and daring.
  • The established churches may be dying back in Christianity's historic heartlands, but Jesus himself shows an astonishing ability to escape their confines and find a new life as an all-purpose 21st century guru.
  • Honest serials play fair with these cliffhangers, putting the hero into danger and giving the audience a week to sweat over how he will escape the peril.
  • She points out that there is some irony in living in a "Lake House" without a lake and even though, as I pedantically remind her, the word lake is Anglo-Saxon for "running stream," which we do have, and not a standing body of water, which we don't, her logic does not escape me. Broken Music, A Memoir
  • Thus we can calculate how many atoms would cross the exobase fast enough to escape into space.
  • I began to panic, terrified that the car would burst into flames and I wouldn't be able to escape.
  • As it was, we escaped with our lives - but it was a close-run thing.
  • The characteristics that best predicted autotomy - smaller body size or female gender - also correlated with a lower escape rate by the alternative escape tactic, struggling and pinching the predator.
  • The story is told in flashback to how she was captured trying to escape from the city. The Sun
  • Fans get banned for life, players escape with a fine and a reprimand. The Sun
  • Both worked in a classified military training program known as sere — for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape — which trains soldiers to endure captivity in enemy hands. Rorschach and Awe
  • Nothing was different except for a large mousehole shape gap in the bottom of the awning where the intrepid explorer had made his escape.
  • This is a young man who wants to escape the apron strings and do things for himself. Times, Sunday Times
  • The prisoner escaped from the prison by knotting the sheets together and climbing down them out to the window.
  • Even a lowly salad fork that needs lining up does not escape David's sharp eye.
  • When we focus only on delinquent students, we allow some of the real culprits in this cycle of school degeneration to escape unscathed.
  • Wall Street's old-timers knew from hard experience that, despite the hype, the market could not escape the law of gravity.
  • She offered Billy a clear route of escape from his drab existence, even if was hard to understand how she could really be interested in him.
  • The disparity in halves hasn't escaped the coaching staff's attention. Washington Redskins are halfway there: First two quarters have been better than last two
  • The prisoner escaped through a hole in the wall.
  • This is a place to escape to, where you can sleep surrounded by whitewashed stone walls and lush gardens. Times, Sunday Times
  • He escaped with a hard glare. Times, Sunday Times
  • Having thus escaped the danger, the Romans threw their sentinel down the rock; while on Manlius they conferred by vote a reward for his bravery, intended more for honour than advantage; for each man gave him a day's rations, which consisted of half a Roman pound of meal, and the fourth part of a Greek cotyle of wine. Plutarch's Lives, Volume I
  • A dropped tail continues to wriggle, keeping the attention of the predator focused on it while the prey makes its escape.
  • He was lucky to escape with just a bruised ego when he fell off his bike.
  • Returned home he relates the incident, and only through his mother's intercession escapes a thrashing from his honest father, for telling a lie.
  • And yet those same acts today escape formal sanction.
  • The pair escape to his rooftop garret and, free from the cares of the world, begin a passionate love affair.
  • These English colonists were a pious, self - disciplined people who wanted to escape religious persecution.
  • The village has escaped all modern developments, yet without becoming twee or 'preserved'.
  • Further questioning revealed that the purpose was to allow flood water to escape more quickly.
  • But they ended up with a huge crowd as punters flocked into the tent to escape the lashing rain. The Sun
  • I started this blog as a creative outlet, a much needed release, an escape from reality.
  • Venetians cheered from the rooftops as the docks burnt but the medieval city escaped damage. Times, Sunday Times
  • There follows a succession of adventures, dangers, narrow escapes from death, and general blows of malign Fate.
  • THE author of 'Lorenzo Benoni' is GIOVANNI RUFFINI, a native of Genoa, who effected his escape from his native country after the attempt at revolution in 1833. Poems: Descriptive, Dramatic, Legendary and Contemplative, by William Gilmore Simms, Esq. In Two Volumes: Vol. II. I. Southern Passages and Pictures; II. Historical and Dramatic Sketches; III. Scripture Legends; IV. Francesca Da Rimini
  • The dream world is supposed to house escape, and yet the troubles and torments of the real world constantly find there way into the fantastical mix.
  • The park was not a private place, but at night it was a good place to let you think, if you needed to escape for a minute or two.
  • The Government is not peddling a myth; it is trying to escape from a horror story. Times, Sunday Times
  • They were lucky to escape with only mild concussion and bruising.
  • These include agoraphobia, the opposite of claustrophobia, when sufferers fear public situations from which escape may be difficult or embarrassing or where help will not be at hand in the event of a panic attack.
  • He didn't allow any word to escape his lips.
  • I'm afraid words have escaped me, and perhaps it is better as so.
  • Of such soldiers, few could be tempted to sally from the gates; and none could be persuaded to remain in the field, unless they wanted strength and speed to escape from the The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • A significant fraction of their water content can emerge from the explosion at a speed below the escape velocity of Mercury.
  • He escaped with a cracked rib and bruising.
  • Even the thin can't escape the waist/belly concertina effect that happens after a certain age when you sit down.
  • All escape routes were blocked by armed police.
  • My mother begged me to escape and hide till the selection of our area of the ghetto was over. Times, Sunday Times
  • What is even more violent is that in order to escape further pain and buffets, Cheryl found herself clinging for salvation in this instant to the very same social yardstick used to measure her a non-person.
  • The intersections become street-performing pitches, and crowds of hundreds watch someone escape from a straitjacket or juggle machetes or eat fire.
  • Freedom from habit or formula. Escape from daily routine or the ordinary. Unworldly. Transcending the conventional.
  • To escape a drenching, I sheltered in a clump of trees.
  • Make sure the condition of the spark arrestor on top of the chimney is inspected so that there are no tears in the fabric that would allow embers to escape.
  • They escaped after the woman pretended she would run away with him. The Sun
  • But no amount of framing could escape America's religious conservatism. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hunter put Stevens in a snooker on the yellow, and the Welshman attempted a daring escape through the narrowest of gaps.
  • Nor had she looked narrowly into his eyes and espied the imminence of his escape, as he'd feared she could. BARN BLIND
  • Although the oil-rich kingdom has escaped the sort of unrest unleashed in Egypt, Libya or Tunisia, there have been signs of domestic discontent over high unemployment, as well as some nervousness that Saudi Arabia's Shiite Muslim minority could be inspired by the protests of their co-religionist neighbors in Bahrain. Saudi King to Return Home as Turmoil Sweeps Region
  • We present them the example of France as an unanswerable proof that one great nation can maintain bimetallism, and that by maintaining it she escaped the worst evils that have affected the monometallic countries, and assured for herself an extraordinary progress and prosperity. If Not Silver, What?
  • The pope and the king of France taught Edward II to dissolve the preceptories, to the number of twenty-three, belonging to the Templars; in 1410 the Commons petitioned for the confiscation of all church property; in 1414 the alien priories in England fell under the animadversion of the government; their property was handed over to the crown and they escaped only by the payment of heavy fines, by incorporation into English orders, and by partial confiscation of their land. The Age of the Reformation
  • The officers of the xebecs knew they couldn't outmaneuver or outrun the British so they decided to scuttle their craft, toss their armament overboard and escape on foot to the north.
  • I escaped him and went to the bathroom and vomited again and again until I felt that if I puked one more time, my body would disappear.
  • Fortunately for us, we had made ourselves perfectly acquainted with the country the previous day, and instantly realized that escape by our right (as we faced Lucknow) was impossible, because of a huge impassable _jhil_. Forty-one years in India From Subaltern To Commander-In-Chief
  • High on the chalk Downs there was no escape from the elements and within seconds ladies wearing light Summer clothing were thoroughly soaked.
  • Claims 1965 shootdown, (Marine Captain) held in Hanoi, stabbed guard and escaped! Heroes or Villains?
  • So that it was not as if she was trying to escape from an immediate threat of violence to her.
  • Curtis earned an Academy Award nomination for his performance in 1958's "The Defiant Ones, " playing an escaped racist convict chained to a black prisoner, portrayed by Sidney Poitier.
  • As he could not get justice he decided to escape. Times, Sunday Times
  • Kuyt escaped from Benoît Assou-Ekotto once to a flick-on from Carroll and set up a thwarted shooting opportunity from Charlie Adam as a result before the inevitable substitution arrived. Luis Suárez back for Liverpool but Dalglish starts with Andy Carroll
  • In my sixth year I did make myself a smaller canoe, but I did not try to escape in it.
  • They offered a thanksgiving to God for their escape from the shipwreck.
  • Don't call in all our bad debt, we told them, and in return we'll label as terrorists these freedom-fighters who want to escape your insane corporate fascismand you can even come to Cuba and "interrogate" them. Freedom!
  • I left the rest of my shopping and ran for the car, knocking over a display of biscuits in my haste to dodge people and escape.
  • The grungy banditos had to escape Blythe, but they were afraid of getting pulled over on the way out of town.
  • They were frequently threatened with execution if they tried to escape.
  • You escaped serious injury by a whisker, so consider yourselves very lucky.
  • He may have to make one in the second innings if his team are to escape this mess. Times, Sunday Times
  • Like the pillow the white on white design and three flag insignia is classic, elegant, and free of worry as the pillow features double stitching ensuring a sealed hypoallergenic pillow that no down will escape. A “Spruce Goose” of a Pillow
  • In her bedroom she buried her face in the pillow while numerous sobs escaped her, shaking her slim body uncontrollably.
  • Apparently with parties and spray tans to think about, that little detail escaped her tiny mind. The Sun
  • There are also leaders outside of the parliament who escape prosecution because they have been granted immunity by their own governments.
  • How ever did he manage to escape unhurt?
  • The plant escaped from the fields and naturalized in the fencerows. A Patchwork Garden: Unexpected Pleasures from a Country Garden
  • As the breeze changed into a south-western gale, few of the passengers escaped seasickness.
  • Shots were fired and Tony narrowly escaped with his life.
  • I escaped with severely bruised legs.
  • The thieves escaped in a stolen vehicle.
  • And is that an escape hatch in the ceiling? Times, Sunday Times
  • He cast about for an escape route.
  • Only Protestants escaped the onslaught, though they were never supporters of the regime.
  • He sought escape in the bottle from hard realities.
  • Heat-jaded Sahibs and Memsahibs came here to escape the coast's hottest months, they invented snooker at the pukka Ooty Club and came to gossip at Charing Cross - locations were named by the British.
  • Missouri fortunately escaped. opened my trunks and boxes and exposed the articles to dry. found my papers damp and several articles damp. the stoper had come out of a phial of laudinum and the contents had run into the drawer and distroyed a gret part of my medicine in such manner that it was past recovery. waited very impatiently for the return of The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
  • They escaped after the woman pretended she would run away with him. The Sun
  • I am privileged to have escaped the monotonous toil of endless physical labour and to have experienced a soft life in which I have been able to indulge my passion for history.
  • The war criminal laid violent hands on himself to escape punishment.
  • US marshals specialize in finding fugitives and escapees.
  • If you're thinking of building an escape raft, all you'll get is balsa wood.
  • There were also few reports of civilians using the ceasefire to escape the city. Times, Sunday Times
  • The first film they previewed for me was Cinescape Editor-In-Chief Anthony C. Ferrante's feature film debut BOO!
  • As a result of that, he had been imprisoned, but had in some way managed to escape and make his way to this country.
  • Meanwhile, there are deadly viruses to be destroyed and burning buildings from which to escape. Times, Sunday Times
  • That his emotions never escape from their beginnings is shown by the way in which, after projecting into him a hallucination of romantic identity with Julia, the regime makes sure that his early feelings return: 'Do it to Julia! The Hell of Nineteen Eighty-Four
  • As defeat stared him in the face he ordered his cavalry to cut their way through the enemy lines and escape to Plymouth.
  • If air is trapped in the radiator it will escape through the valve and hiss. The Sun
  • He lay down in the exact center of the circle, keeping close to the ground in order to escape the heat.
  • Her beautiful hands held a cup to the lips of the stranger; while her long hair, escaped from its bands, fell in jetty ringlets, and mingled with his silver locks. The Scottish Chiefs
  • Keep the summer fires burning and clasp tightly the beauty products that are the epitome of escapes to hot climes. Times, Sunday Times
  • I certainly felt bound to the river for restoring my equilibrium, for calming my senses and for providing me with an escape from the city.
  • But they do like to dig up the garden, and are renowned as crafty escape artists.
  • Others have been dislocated from work, escaped from an abusive relationship or just have low self-esteem, which is where Mr. Ramchandani comes in. New Suits for New Starts
  • A wire caught Jim around the neck and he luckily escaped with lacerations.
  • The film also hammers the myth that one of the princesses escaped and fled to America. Times, Sunday Times
  • The whole continent is unowned and has no permanent population, and as such it offers a more complete form of escape than anywhere else on the planet.
  • We are all shackled to reality but free to dream of the great escape. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bind the ganster to the seat with rope lest he should escape.
  • When Nia walked into Rephaims house, the bright and festive dcor surprised her, a stark contrast to the rooms appearance when shed escaped earlier. The After Wife
  • This thrilling new series charts audacious prison escape attempts. The Sun
  • The little ship tried to escape when the big pirate ship bore down.
  • During the Khmer's rule, two folds of iron sheets encased in electrified barbwire to prevent escape enclosed it.
  • The only painting of his to change hands in recent years was a Nativity, stolen in 1969 from a church in Palermo - where Caravaggio had painted it after having escaped from gaol in Malta.
  • No voter escapes the tidal wave of gush. Times, Sunday Times
  • The sergeant has come instead for a blacksmith who can promptly mend the broken cuffs so that they can be put to use this afternoon in the hunt for two escaped convicts.
  • Of young men die many, of old men escape not any. 
  • Listing 11 shows an example of the escape sequences for a string that uses a single quote as an apostrophe.
  • His defence that King John had disafforested Brewood saved his life and he escaped with only a fine.
  • The core question in that debate is: can a liberal world escape the perils of anarchy?
  • Gaolers were amateurs and for a few bawbees you could escape.
  • A lorry driver had a lucky escape after his vehicle and a tractor apparently collided and the lorry ploughed into a hedge.
  • After midnight, outspanning in a piercing wind, we formed square; main guard was posted over the General's car, and those lucky enough to escape turn of duty huddled together under cloaks and dozed fitfully until two-thirty. With Botha in the Field

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy