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How To Use Every now and then In A Sentence

  • Every now and then a graceful movement of his left arm through the air preceded his entry into the music, as though he were offering a cue to an imaginary force.
  • With Maureen and Jane it seemed improbable, but every now and then I caught myself wondering if the tempestuous Alessandra felt even a slight tendresse. Why Women Still Don't Get It
  • Actually now that you mention the hotwheels I used to carry pez dispensers which would often 'disappear' and then pen markers that 'smelled' - I guess smelling grape every now and then made a bad day a little better. Which one/s were you? Age 2-10
  • Oh sure ... every now and then throw in a Chuck Berry duckwalk while you grin like an idiot. Unclebob Diary Entry
  • On one occasion we enjoyed a medium drift down a V-shaped channel, watching the usual teeming reef life flash by below and finning back every now and then to peer into crevices before being swept on.
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  • Every now and then amongst the usual searches I get some strange search requests from Google appear in my stats.
  • Ruth deposited her wet mackintosh on the floor and went upstairs, shivering every now and then.
  • Every now and then official vehicles bearing ministers of government appeared on the scene.
  • Every now and then, an experience would serve as a reminder that intelligent marine mammals can be aggressive as well as friendly; that you must operate with respect in what is their patch.
  • I sobbed and wept so that my eyes were almost blind; and the ruffian you have such sympathy with stood opposite: presuming every now and then to bid me "wisht," and denying that it was his fault; and, finally, frightened by my assertions that I would tell papa, and that he should be put in prison and hanged, he commenced blubbering himself, and hurried out to hide his cowardly agitation. Wuthering Heights
  • Every now and then we see someone cruising down- or upriver on a boat. Learning to Die in Miami
  • The pictures look fabulous, and your travelogue is so inspiring - I need to get off this damn island every now and then. Home Again, Home Again...
  • Every now and then when Lady Flora wanted to talk scandal with her friends, Honor was allowed to go riding.
  • Every now and then we would slip away to fish for sprats and cockabullies.
  • There were couples standing by the cascade in the middle of the town adoring each other and kissing every now and then.
  • Every now and then a car rumbled over the bumpy dirt road, leaving behind a whirl of white dust.
  • I could see the muscles of his arms tensing every now and then.
  • Of course, their eyes, skin, tongue, breath, and lack of vim and vigor tell the story of a long process of self-poisoning, with every now and then the eventuation of a storm of foulness, called a bilious attack -- meaning an overflow of filth. Intestinal Ills Chronic Constipation, Indigestion, Autogenetic Poisons, Diarrhea, Piles, Etc. Also Auto-Infection, Auto-Intoxication, Anemia, Emaciation, Etc. Due to Proctitis and Colitis
  • She sat down behind the lowered persienne, and every now and then lifted her eyes from the page and peered out between the tiny slits. The Convert
  • I remembered him sitting and watching me, nursing his drink for hours, every now and then dipping his tongue to sip.
  • Every now and then a word identified itself to me as something I recognized. Generous Death
  • Every now and then the fog would break for a moment, exposing the mountain range looming in the distance.
  • Every now and then some would-be curmudgeon rises up on his hind legs and yowls at the sky that the latest form of social networking is a blight on the cultural landscape and proves that people have nothing better to do than post pictures of their pets in various shocking forms of dishabille. MIND MELD: How Does Blogging and Social Networking Affect the Publishing Industry?
  • I was slowly going mad with joy and trying my best to keep looking normal, pawing a CD every now and then.
  • And every now and then, he writes these hysterical, factually insupportable, logically inconsistent screeds against some looming threat to civil liberties in the United States.
  • Every now and then a walker, runner or cyclist would pass, a squirrel searched for a tree in a totally treeless landscape and miner bees hovered over their holes.
  • An occasional benevolent Christian complied with his request to the extent of a dig with a stout boot under the rib; but every now and then, the furibund jarvey apologised to us for the slowness of our course by asking -- "Won't I serve him out when Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol 58, No. 357, July 1845
  • The vital question about the human rights practices inside the Tindouf four camps is the freedom of expression and even of movement. although Polisario officials confirm every now and then that sahraoui refugees are allowed to leave the camps any time they would like to do so, sahraouis need Algerian documents if they decide to leave and travel abroad, to get such document is not easy, unless you are a Polisario official or you have useful contacts within the sphere of Polisario leadership, but it is known that any saharoui who managed to leave the refugee camp and opt to go to western Sahara region, Moroccan authorities provide the person in question with necessary documents including a passport. Global Voices in English » Western Sahara: Landmine Injures Five During Peaceful Protest
  • 'Brecknel and Turner's' flamed and swealed in profusion on the table; while every now and then an expiring lamp on the sideboards or brackets proclaimed the unwonted splendour of the scene, and added a flavour to the repast not contemplated by the cook. Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour
  • And I can't really tell you how it was made, as I spent the entire recipe-making time chopping walnuts and chestnuts, sneaking teeny bits in every now and then.
  • As he passed along he would every now and then draw a maravedi out of his pocket and bestow it on a beggar, with an air of signal beneficence. Washington Irving
  • Every now and then, there emerges a star, which, by its sheer brilliance, throws light far from where it originated.
  • Even though every time Scott would stay at his house he would pull out his stash of assorted drugs and start smoking right in his face, not to mention offering him a hit every now and then.
  • And if she enjoyed a tot of Scotch whiskey every now and then, well, they liked that too.
  • They didn't see it was a struggle they must lose in the end, and so for twenty-five years the scrappy, unorganised warfare had smouldered on, with every now and then a real dust-up to stoke the growing hatred and mistrust on both sides. Isabelle
  • I can sharpen the edge back to what it was before, and repolish the blade itself, but all my work will be for naught if you don't clean it every now and then.
  • Every now and then, I stumble across a product that reminds me why I am so fascinated by computers.
  • Every now and then the two firemen would shovel coal in to the boilers.
  • But every now and then some patient managed to break through the mental barrier erected by training, habit, and self-defence.
  • Would it cost so much to employ a groundsman to keep the grass down and a few cleaners to give the place the once-over with a duster every now and then?
  • Men of all ages simply kept their distance, though sometimes every now and then one would come and try to anger and provoke her.
  • The dailies would clock him every now and then, leaving his flat and cowering under a flash of camera light.
  • Even curtains and blinds should be washed every now and then to remove dust.
  • I spent an hour mesmerised by the waves, washing in and out across the sand, every now and then throwing up coloured gems.
  • Every now and then I'll move my arm and I'll get this tingly sensation running all the way down it.
  • Some crickets were chirping quietly and a few gusts of wind would rush past us every now and then.
  • I admit I respect his body of work but every now and then I'll send him an e-mail just to wind him up.
  • Every now and then things seem brighter and someone waves their hand in front of my face to wake me up, but I keep ending up here burying myself in answerless questions. Robitessin Diary Entry
  • Yeah, they come up and say g'day every now and then.
  • Every now and then, I'm blessed with a moment; an aliquot of time apart from the usual hustle and bustle, the endless rushing here and there between appointments and obligations to just stop and be, quietly at one with the universe. Archive 2009-05-01
  • Every now and then, supply vehicles are sent out to get food, medicine and illicit black market goods.
  • One bag of chips every now and then is NOT a flagrant disregard for their health.
  • The greenth used to take my breath away back when I was living there and flying back and forth from Australia every now and then. In a strange land
  • Every now and then people in a deep coma are wrongly declared dead, and survive the experience.
  • Every now and then by accident I meet people who do my walks, and out on the bike the other day I bumped into a couple who recommended walks Wetherby way.
  • Every now and then there was a gust and all the lamps guttered perilously.
  • And then we rounded a corner and there was a male ibex nibbling on a tuft of grass, throwing his horns back every now and then as if troubled by a gigantic and very heavy quiff.
  • We're just a friendly bunch of old duffers who like getting together every now and then, and having a laugh.
  • Every now and then, a vanity press mogul makes a go of his venture.
  • The leprechaun skipped along, his footsteps impossibly light, with his face buried in The Hobbit, laughing every now and then or muttering a "begorra. The Woods Out Back
  • The night was pitch-black, and the only source of light was from the lightning bolts which flashed through the darkened sky every now and then.
  • Every now and then I get invited to pre-release screenings of new films.
  • Every now and then, as he squeezes out lentils or scoops up Parmesan disks, he pauses and stares pensively into space. The Sorcerer’s Apprentices
  • Every now and then, we'd break off into pairs for kumite, or sparring.
  • Every now and then they stretch to a nocturne (average running time: five minutes) or polonaise (around six minutes), but seldom a ballade (close to ten).
  • He says they stop the train every now and then to point out interesting features on the landscape or to boil the billy.
  • Then every now and then she sleeps on me or she cuddles me and purrs and nuzzles and she's totally adorable.
  • They talk as if the anchorman was eased out of his job merely for some error of fact such as any journalist is statistically certain to make every now and then.
  • Every now and then, we can hear the dull thuds of exploded ordinance - over Mosul?
  • Honestly, this movie doesn't even really have jokes: it sets up comic situations every now and then, pads them out endlessly looking for something funny, then, not finding a joke lurking anywhere, the film sullenly moves on.
  • Every now and then, we hear about daylight robberies, shootouts, murders and bomb blasts.
  • [The street] was unpaved; and down the middle a gutter forced its way, every now and then forming pools in the holes with which the street abounded.
  • Every now and then the scientist and anthropologists discovers new evidences, which fortify India's claim of being culturally most advanced in the ancient times.
  • Every now and then, we in the gaming community are presented with a pathetic excuse for a video game, a console port.
  • Every now and then, the scenic route would change.
  • Simmer over a gentle heat, stirring every now and then, for about 15 mintes until the rhubarb is soft. Rhubarb and other nice things
  • Every now and then I get a craving for fried chicken - then pig out and it leaves me with a barfy feeling.
  • Every now and then they would fire a pair of missiles which would explode and send a plume of darker smoke above the white haze of gunsmoke already hanging above the camp.
  • Every now and then, everyone knows, folk flip their lid and take their holiday anyway.
  • These were communal dunnies so every now and then someone would open the door, loudly sniff the air and promptly scarper.
  • And we have a nine-year-old daughter, Emma, who, although she doesn ` t watch enough TV to have her mind addled, is still exposed every now and then to the latest Hollywood drivel aimed at kids. It’s the movies, stupid
  • We all want to be popular, but I'm not sure Mzanzi is the place for you - unless you enjoy a faceful of brandy-'n-coke or a naartjie-to-the back-of - the-head every now and then. Planet Rugby | Rugby Union News
  • One of the most pitiful things in the relations of human beings to each other -- the action and reaction of events that is called concretely "human life" -- is that every now and then some of them should be called upon to lay down their lives from no sense of imperative, calculated duty such as inspires the soldier or the sailor, but suddenly, without any previous knowledge or warning of danger, without any opportunity of escape, and without any desire to risk such conditions of danger of their own free will. The Loss of the S. S. Titanic Its Story and Its Lessons
  • Should I cut back every now and then and allow myself to get a little grody to save a bit of time? Powder won’t change who you are.
  • The tables turned and now the invisible was in defense, though every now and then it whipped its tail or slashed its claws.
  • Levi near the brass cauldrons of the sanctuary, and every now and then plunging in a consecrated hook, and drawing out of the sea, of broth the fattest of heave-shoulders and the fleshiest of wave-breasts. The Professor, by Charlotte Bronte
  • Every now and then oversees visitors will drop in and it always winds up they sometimes are tracing ancestors or relatives.
  • Every now and then he still heard of her, living down there, spending her days out in the woods and fields, and sometimes even her nights, they said, and steadily growing poorer and thinner and more eccentric; becoming, in short, impossibly difficult, as only Tatterdemalion
  • Every now and then, everyone knows, folk flip their lid and take their holiday anyway.
  • Every now and then, there is frustration when there is a software glitch or a hardware fault, causing messages to appear on the screen in highly technical language.
  • Every now and then, his knees tighten up on him.
  • He watched as every now and then one of the topmen stole a glance at Dolphin and the approach.
  • The air is full of the rattle of the cicada, which is like the sound of a loud cricket, or the 'r-- r' of a corncraik's note going on for ever and ever; and the house lizard in the church goes cheep -- cheep -- cheep every now and then. From Edinburgh to India & Burmah
  • Every now and then, he writes these hysterical, factually insupportable, logically inconsistent screeds against some looming threat to civil liberties in the United States.
  • It had become quite dark, the thunder was continually pealing, the lightning gleaming flash after flash, and every now and then sudden gusts of wind would get hold of the big _lichi_ tree by the neck and give its shaggy top a thorough shaking. Glimpses of Bengal Selected from the Letters of Sir Rabindranath Tagore
  • He was so annoying with that every now and then, Candice just wanted to ball up her fist, and whack him one, real hard.
  • When fired at, oorial usually go leisurely away, stopping to gaze every now and then, so that several shots may often be fired at one herd. Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon
  • Magnesium shows up every now and then, although typically in places that aren't evident, as, say, it is used as a structural beam beneath the instrument panel.
  • They were seated in a square surrounding the flickering embers, and every now and then somebody would poke the fire to keep it burning.
  • Sir Henry Delmé, accompanied by the custode, would make himself acquainted with the wonders of the Florentine gallery; and every now and then, return to whisper some sentence, in the soothing tones of brotherly kindness. A Love Story
  • When I'm not at work I like to kyak, ride my motorcycle, hang out with the wife and kids, hang out at the local bar every now and then. I don't mean to get off topic, but we outdoorsman and woman aren't ALWAYS sitting in the tree stand.
  • Every now and then, my belief in the gods of fate is reaffirmed.
  • Random variation within chromosomes produces a random variation in the developmental growth of the organism, which every now and then bestows increased fitness on the whole organism.
  • Every now and then nature conspires to rivet homeowners' attention on a particular maintenance problem.
  • English he seemed to write as readily as French, although a strong Gallicism would every now and then slip from his pen, as it slipped from his tongue. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 50, December, 1861
  • And I have to say Kyra you have been disappointing us because all of us who love those dishy gossip stories every now and then that we usually don't admit to, you guys never give us anything.
  • Handing over a pound at the till makes you realise that you're spending money, but if you set up an online account with a subscription service, you may be tempted to buy a few extra tickets every now and then.
  • Every now and then you hear stories of girls who crack under the pressure.
  • Every now and then they stretch to a nocturne (average running time: five minutes) or polonaise (around six minutes), but seldom a ballade (close to ten).
  • We jogged along at a comfortable pace lest the "beasties" should suffer, and every now and then a merry party would fly past us scattering snow in our faces and yelling like Comanches. Letters of a Woman Homesteader
  • I can't begrudge him the trip - I know I would love to get the chance to live and work in a new country for a few months every now and then.
  • Every now and then I get the urge to continue the rebuild of my music collection onto CDs.
  • ‘This job is great if you like mechanics, you're not claustrophobic and you don't mind getting wet every now and then,’ she said.
  • They keep insisting every now and then that saner sense prevails, after all.
  • He was a husband, father, farmer, sawyer, commercial fisherman, quarryman, storyteller and, every now and then, beer drinker.
  • Every now and then, a film comes along that is so remarkably bad, so insanely dreadful, so utterly rotten that it actually makes you appreciate it.
  • The number of works hitherto undescribed that has been brought to light during the last sixty years must be considerable; and one still hears every now and then of some rich trover that has been unearthed. The Book-Hunter at Home
  • Coaches sometimes have to remind him to throw a pitch off the plate every now and then.
  • Part of the remains of a railway line that once ran from Market Harborough to Melton Mowbray, it is now covered in hawthorn bushes and bisected every now and then by the abutments of bridges. Railway Echo No 1
  • Even the Queen of The Social Scene trips up every now and then.
  • We understand that it's going to get to kind of helter skelter every now and then. Undefined
  • Ruth deposited her wet mackintosh on the floor and went upstairs, shivering every now and then.
  • Everyone trips up every now and then, even teachers, coaches and parents.
  • The sun breaks through the clouds every now and then, lighting up the silvery bodies of planes that cross the stretch of horizon visible through the window.
  • The guards watched him pace like this, back and forth between the door and the middle of the hall, listening every now and then for any sound of movement.
  • biter", and still every now and then we'd be unable to stop him biting someone. NEWS.com.au | Top Stories
  • Yes, it's probably stupid emotional gubbins, but we're allowed a bit of that every now and then, aren't we?
  • He just nicks off to have these Secret Sleeps every now and then.
  • Every now and then we'd pull ourselves from our lazy places in the sand to start up a game of catch with a foam football out in the waves.
  • The fans seemed vocal for both bands at this particular show, but with little more than a small ripple of movement every now and then, this night left much to be desired.
  • Although it would be nice to see some one apart from Strach get annoyed on the pitch every now and then.
  • Though not a regular phenomenon as in the state capital, the city does get to experience its share of melodious rendering every now and then.
  • The vexation he showed at having caused {p. 066} such a disappointment, struck me as amiably characteristic -- and in the course of the evening he every now and then threw out some word of admiration to reconsole _mamma_. Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Volume V (of 10)
  • Overhead an anxious peewit circled against the blue, and every now and then emitted its feeble cry. The Wheels of Chance: a bicycling idyll
  • Every now and then someone would appear, but most of them didn't want books, they wanted a photograph or a closer look.
  • Every now and then Mahmoud would force a son or domestic of his to go down and hoick out a pearl, and this pearl he would exchange for something that he absolutely needed, such as a new tent or a new camel, and then he went on living the way he had been living before. On Nothing and Kindred Subjects
  • Horses clomped out a steady pace up front, neighing every now and then to show their displeasure at being harnessed.
  • Seth wasn't the only person allowed to fib every now and then.
  • Every now and then we go nuts trying to explain what has to be done to connect to the Internet.
  • Stir the batter every now and then to keep it from separating.
  • I am cueing well, but every now and then I make an unbelievable howler.
  • The old tub creaked and groaned and lurched, and every now and then bid fair to stand on beam-ends. The Romance of Isabel Lady Burton
  • Every now and then, for instance, Hanna would start up and commence a series of little flirtations with the blackbird, which she called her sweetheart, and again resume her chat and seat as before; or she would attempt to catch a butterfly as it fluttered about her, or sometimes give it pursuit over half the green, whilst Kathleen sat with laughing and delighted eyes, and a smile of unutterable sweetness on her lips, watching the success of this innocent frolic. The Emigrants Of Ahadarra The Works of William Carleton, Volume Two
  • Every now and then, one would hear people talk in mysterious tones about log cabins or geodesic domes on virgin land in Vermont or Montana, and the growing of organic vegetables.
  • Then every now and then she sleeps on me or she cuddles me and purrs and nuzzles and she's totally adorable.
  • Their linings were tainted a blood-red hue - a fork of lightning flashed every now and then.
  • Every now and then we find a rawhide bone behind the couch or in the garden.
  • Asked if Discovery was "jinxed," given the problems that have repeatedly delayed the veteran orbiter this week, Leinbach said "it's a machine, and every now and then, machines break, and right now, our machine is broken, and we need to go fix it. CNET News.com
  • Every now and then they would fire a pair of missiles which would explode and send a plume of darker smoke above the white haze of gunsmoke already hanging above the camp.
  • Our “cry” is indefinite as to aspect, “be crying” is durative, “cry out” is momentaneous, “burst into tears” is inceptive, “keep crying” is continuative, “start in crying” is durative-inceptive, “cry now and again” is iterative, “cry out every now and then” or “cry in fits and starts” is momentaneous-iterative. Chapter 5. Form in Language: Grammatical Concepts
  • It was the color of cigar tobacco, it smelled like the butt of a cheap cheroot, and every now and then an actual cigarlike entity would break the oily sheen of its surface to glide among the citrus rinds, plastic cartons, and Inca Cola cans that dotted the waters. Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climates
  • Every now and then, a movie comes along that nearly redefines perfection.
  • I just thought he was an absolute "dreamboat" in all of those early Disney flicks, and he was on the TV show every now and then too. Journal-news.com - News
  • And if that sounds cheesy, well, just be glad that an unlikely romantic lead like Ricky Gervais is there to offset it all every now and then. Gervais livens up “Ghost Town” » Scene-Stealers
  • Every now and then, screams of delight added to the atmosphere of competition.
  • Every now and then my own life does dumbfound me.
  • The straight-to-video end of the market throws up a cracker every now and then and this resonant film full of sleazy, steamy atmosphere and fine performances is a rare example.
  • He imagined, in his feverishness, that he heard faint "yaps" every now and then; and he almost expected to see everybody lay down knife and fork. Five Little Peppers at School
  • Every now and then, however, you come across a statement that is the exact opposite of all that — a few simple words of plain English freighted with meaning. No Insurance? That’s a Killer.
  • Every now and then the two firemen would shovel coal in to the boilers.
  • Every now and then the loudspeakers burst into life and one of the rabbis or the religious leaders inside relays a message to those outside to tell them to keep up the fight, to keep being strong.
  • Jack, every now and then, would throw an eye behind, as if to watch their pursuers, wherein, if the truth was known, it was to get a peep at the beautiful glowing face and warm lips that were breathing all kinds of _fragrancies_ about him. The Ned M'Keown Stories Traits And Stories Of The Irish Peasantry, The Works of William Carleton, Volume Three
  • Every now and then, I watched as his feet kicked and scuffed along the ground.
  • The Abbess's Norman pride of birth, and the real interest which she took in her niece's advancement, overcame all scruples; and the venerable mother might be seen in unwonted bustle, now giving orders to the gardener for decking the apartment with flowers -- now to her cellaress, her precentrix, and the lay-sisters of the kitchen, for preparing a splendid banquet, mingling her commands on these worldly subjects with an occasional ejaculation on their vanity and worthlessness, and every now and then converting the busy and anxious looks which she threw upon her preparations into The Betrothed
  • Every now and then they improve their condition a little and what we call civilisation appears. GOD Will Make a Way
  • Audrey beamed and giggled, smiling at the camera's every now and then.
  • Every now and then my ears would pop with the pressure, despite us having all our windows on the leeward side of the house open.
  • Every now and then one paints a picture that seems to have opened a door and serves as a stepping stone to other things. Pablo Picasso 
  • Every now and then I could hear a big chunk of icefall breaking off a serac to our right and crashing down the mountain in the dark. A Nature for the Great Outdoors
  • I suppose they move every now and then to stop bedsores.
  • From the shoulder swung a short green furred cloak, somewhat like that of a Hussar, the lining of which gleamed every now and then with a kind of tawny crimson. The Napoleon of Notting Hill
  • She is what I call distressingly good; one doesn't want to be treated like a wild beast in a menagerie, and to be every now and then stirred up with a long stick. Sowing and Reaping
  • Every now and then, a project will come along that seizes my imagination and engages my brain but most of the time it's predictable and blah.
  • We had returned nearly to the hotel in this undignified manner, the throng of persecutors gathering strength as we entered the streets, till we were completely surrounded -- those in front walking backwards, and stopping every now and then suddenly, that we might be jostled against by those who were thronging behind, all bellowing the pandemoniacal chorus, without words and still less tune. Sea-Gift. A Novel.
  • Look at this broad-shouldered man with the bare muscular arms, and the thick, firm, black hair tossed about like trodden meadow-grass whenever he takes off his paper cap, and with the strong barytone voice bursting every now and then into loud and solemn psalm-tunes, as if seeking an outlet for superfluous strength, yet presently checking himself, apparently crossed by some thought which jars with the singing. Adam Bede
  • The cousin put away his rosary and put on a confessional grin to admit, correctly in our eyes, that ‘Well, I guess it helps to have a Lutheran in the stands every now and then.’
  • Salmon and leek quiche is one of my favorite quiche recipes, which I come to crave every now and then.
  • He was dilatorily throwing up a piece of wood into the fire every now and then, The Return of the Native
  • The moon would peek out every now and then, but it was mostly hidden behind monstrous black clouds that stretched across the span of the sky.
  • Others are paddling about in-their tub-like canoes, made of the skins of buffaloes; and every now and then, are to be seen their sudatories, or vapour-baths, where steam is raised by throwing water on to heated stones; and the patient jumps from his sweating-house and leaps into the river in the highest state of perspiration, as I have more fully described whilst speaking of the bathing of the Letters and notes on the manners, customs, and conditions of the North American Indians
  • Glassfish were seemingly everywhere, and I would pause every now and then to regain my bearing whenever these living, moving silver clouds engulfed me.
  • It was what they call a canoe (so the Flamingoes told me), and most of the men in it were black; but there was one white man who had a curious stick in his hand, which he every now and then would point at some bird or animal, and then he made tire come out of the stick, and the bird or animal generally got hurt. The Junior Classics — Volume 8 Animal and Nature Stories
  • My barber said I should scratch my head vigorously every now and then and stop using shampoo altogether.
  • Every now and then she looks back down at a silver picture frame on the mantelpiece, in which she can see her current appearance.
  • Thats not all, the irony is as a would be customer from same/other banks you will keep getting printed advertisement about new products (Home/Car Loans, FDs, MFs etc.) sealed in a pretty colored envelope posted onto your address every now and then. Books, Ebooks and the Environment « Tales from the Reading Room
  • He has suspensions … I use the term stupid because a lot of suspensions are … every now and then you have to do something stupid to create some space for yourself for other players to be a little hesitant when they come around you. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • I like to give the girls a little treat every now and then.
  • Every now and then they hit a hard lump of water which shook Angus and rattled his teeth.
  • Every now and then I'll get a moment of inspiration, but not enough to get anything down.
  • The air is full of the rattle of the cicada, which is like the sound of a loud cricket, or the 'r-- r' of a corncraik's note going on for ever and ever; and the house lizard in the church goes cheep -- cheep -- cheep every now and then. From Edinburgh to India & Burmah
  • Every now and then, I come across a film that is so crashingly awful that I find myself numb from shock when considering that seemingly intelligent adults spent their time and energy (not to mention someone else’s money) to create a monstrosity. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • Every now and then the path opens out to another viewing point accessible by road, and the crowds return.
  • Every now and then he heard a mumble or something else that caused him to sneak a quick peek at her.
  • I'm trying to keep myself busy, but every now and then I just break down in floods of tears.
  • Mrs.C. translated, and I put in a French phrase sidewise every now and then. Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands, Volume 2
  • The upside to this writing about games lark is that, every now and then, hobby and work mesh beautifully, and you end up with someone paying you to write about something fabulous, joyous, invigorating and fascinating. Imagination And Abstraction
  • It seemed as though dozens of men were snoring at the same time, and that some of them were dangerously "croupy," for they choked and gulped, and every now and then one would have nightmare and groan and yell until some one would tell him to "shut up," or perhaps say something funny about him to the others. Army Letters from an Officer's Wife, 1871-1888
  • Well, I manage to squeeze it in every now and then.
  • I wonder if I'll ever get over this sense of astonishment that hits me every now and then.
  • Every now and then it all seemed slightly amusing, as if offering a kind of light relief beside the real horrors of war.

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