How To Use Hawk In A Sentence

  • IHSB: The way to describe the first pro season for the most oddly named man alive (Allen Lorenz Pollock = A.J. Pollock?) is solid but unspectacular, which is disappointing given that the organization expected him to rip through Mid-A South Bend given that Midwest League Competition wasn't foreign to Pollock, given that Notre Dame plays an exhibition game against the SilverHawks at the beginning of each season. AZ Snakepit
  • Lime hawk moth moth is named after the hawk because it capable of powerful, long- distance flight. Times, Sunday Times
  • Close to the mangroves a big hawksbill turtle surfaced then lay motionless in the sunshine, no doubt sunbathing.
  • Hytra Grouper on a bed of salicornia and spinach accompanied with a crayfish sauce scented with pelargonium at Hytra It's daybreak at Athens' Agora, or central market, and the air is buzzing with the cries of fish mongers hawking the day's catch. Not Your Typical Greek Salad
  • Mohawk is a polysynthetic language, in which noun objects can easily be incorporated into the verb.
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  • The photo plates also age and sex accipiters, those hawks that flap, flap, sail, and are the mostly likely the ones that raid our feeders of hapless birds.
  • Ruth Hawkin was sitting at the kitchen table, a forgotten cigarette in the ashtray next to her transformed into three inches of marled grey ash. A Place of Execution
  • Above the clasped hands are a peace pipe and a tomahawk.
  • I used to muzzleload, had a TC Hawkin flintlock, as heavy as that barrel is it would take alot to burst it, dunno if "modern" muzzleloaders are as hefty or not, but I assume they are just for product liability reasons. Flying Ramrods and Broken Noses
  • Your advertisers saw your terrific ratings that spanned across the board -- your demo being virtually every demo -- so they hawked everything from Viagra to gaming and condoms to candy bars during your time slot; those ratings were due partly to the Sci-Fi Channel's smartly treating you like its golden child, not emaciating your following by constantly changing your air time (did someone say, "Fascape"?). Mike Ragogna: OMG! No More BSG!
  • Some species with large mouths and small bills, such as nighthawks, whip-poor wills, and the aptly named frogmouth owls, open their bills wide as they fly into insects, and the prey is captured in the birds’ gaping maws.
  • Pettin's men surged up the steps at them, weapons flashing in the guttery light; Del's screaming, shrill as an angry hawk's, stabbed through Joanna's panic like the senseless sounds of nightmare. The Silicon Mage
  • The fact is that any Democrat's heroic war record functions mostly as superficial innoculation against charges of sissiness during campaigns, and it's the reason you see so many more Republican chickenhawks than anti-war Dems in public office these days. Hullabaloo
  • From the cooler water morwong, to a splendid angelfish and the brightly speckled hawkfish, this oceanic haven in the middle of a vast sea vibrates to the rhythm of the Pacific's currents.
  • This place was afterwards enlarged, and converted into stables for horses; but the old name remained, and now most stables in London are called mews, although the word is derived from falconry, and the hawks have long since flown away. Old English Sports
  • The birds include ten species of herons including grey heron Ardea cinerea, goliath heron A. goliath and yellow-billed egret Egretta intermedia, hammerkop Scopus umbretta, four of the six West African species of stork, ducks, five of the six West African species of vulture, hawks, plovers and francolins and black-winged stilt Himantopus himantopus. Comoé National Park, Côte d'Ivoire
  • Hey liberals, chickenhawk is better than chickenshit, wouldn’t you agree? Think Progress » Drudge Falsely Smears Gore
  • At this stage, as Hawks monopolised possession, their fans were calling for the ball to go wide.
  • Paul watched carefully the vagaries of her excitement, and kept his sharp hawk's-eye upon everything; he had quite made up his mind not to dangle for two years, as he had round Colette de Rosen. The Immortal Or, One Of The "Forty." (L'immortel) - 1877
  • Two years ago Jeremy Hawkins downshifted from London's financial district, where he had worked for 23 years, to a home-based life.
  • The goshawk's tail is long, but wider than those of the other accipiters; this is the best way to distinguish a Goshawk from a Cooper's Hawk.
  • As evidenced by his seven interceptions this season, he's a ballhawk who has a knack for popping up in unexpected places.
  • Critics say the bill threatens some of the most ecologically unique areas of the Tongass forest, namely karst limestone habitat, as well as two subspecies: the Queen Charlotte goshawk and the Alexander Archipelago wolf. Mongabay.com News
  • The line should allow the Seahawks to play smash-mouth football when the game situation or weather dictates.
  • The hawkers, or dragon nymphs are longer and thinner and they patrol up and down looking out for prey on which to swoop.
  • Ethan Hawke rubbed the scruff on his chin and leaned forward in his chair for emphasis.
  • He's the man who helped persuade hawkish editors at influential Newsweek magazine to oppose the Vietnam War.
  • Abraham Granish, Winehouse's great-great grandfather, was a Russian immigrant described as a "hawker", selling goods door-to-door, who lived in the Spitalfields area of the capital. News24
  • Over the course of the year, he's almost hit on the head by a sparrowhawk, gets a whiff of "bad badger breath" when three cubs cannon into his lap, and watches two stoats massacre a screaming leveret, their normally creamy bibs "the colour of a slaughterman's apron". A Year in the Woods: The Diary of a Forest Ranger by Colin Elford
  • Operation Nighthawk, " for instance, showed that someone grabbing a cab at Kennedy Airport runs a 66% risk of being overcharged for a ride to Manhattan.
  • When Hawkins missed a difficult green the colour finished hanging over a corner pocket and Parrott was left in a full ball snooker.
  • Quiet people have the loudest minds. Stephen Hawking 
  • Preyed upon by hawks, foxes, and weasels, they may also fall victim to domestic cats.
  • The municipal officer demands a bribe from a hawker; the bureaucrat refuses to register a land title or a marriage; the traffic cop beats the rickshaw-driver who can't afford to pay his weekly installment, known as hafta. India's Middle Class Hungers for Undemocratic Change
  • The"sacred ecosystem," as executive director Hawk Rosales calls it, isthreaded by waters like Wolf Creek (right), focus of aproject to restore salmon habitat.
  • Single leaf from a Missal, in Latin Germany, Hamburg, shortly before 1381 Illuminated by Meister Bertram von Minden The young people hawking are fashionably dressed: the youth wears a red pourpoint with a dagged hem, a particularly tight chaperon, narrow belt, and open shoes. Fashion in Art: Medieval France and the Netherlands
  • Tall grassland is scattered with hawkweed, ragwort, wild carrot and melilot flowers, along with clumps of bird's-foot trefoil, lucerne and goat's rue, and there are regular uprisings of brambles and wild rose, and sprawls of sallow and birch scrub. Country Diary: Canvey Wick, Essex
  • The patch - painted to depict a North American Indian mythical half-eagle, half-hawk thunderbird - is hallowed ground.
  • Owning a castle is the ultimate cach é," says Andrew Hawkins, head of international property at Chesterton Humberts. Challenges of Castle Ownership
  • Having maneuvered through the boles of the blue trees of the grove and into the open plain beyond, Saffron and Hawk decided to head off in the direction of a grassy hillock they spotted about a kilometer away.
  • Sometimes seen feeding alongside vultures at carcasses is the longer-necked and larger-headed crested caracara (Polyborus plancus), a hawk with distinctive markings. Did you know? Mexico's vultures have very different eating habits.
  • They are alert, hawk-eyed, sharp-witted, with lightning reaction times. Times, Sunday Times
  • His critically acclaimed band Playgroup brought live electro to the club long before ironic mullets and fauxhawks became de rigueur.
  • Jerusalem's wish-list includes nuclear-capable Tomahawk cruise missiles, real-time satellite intelligence and funding for missile defence.
  • The 6-foot-7, 210-pounder is expected to be a major inside presence for the Redhawks when he's healthy. Ohio Valley Conference
  • The aerodynamic forces generated by rigid and flexible geometrically scaled hawkmoth wings were measured.
  • Obama was hawkish about Afghanistan during the campaign, despite well-aired fears that Afghanistan is a quagmire-in-waiting. War: Politics and Power
  • Hawk_, _The Tunning of_ Elianer Rumpkin: In many of which, following the humor of the ancientest of our Modern Poets, he takes a Poetical The Lives of the Most Famous English Poets (1687)
  • Although the Hawk is primarily a training aircraft, it can also be used in a ground attack role.
  • The job now goes to Josh Brown, a free agent signee from the Seattle Seahawks. Long road back to playoffs underway in St. Louis
  • Voles are an important source of food for many predators, including snakes, hawks, owls, coyotes, weasels, foxes, mink and badgers.
  • It was all right, maybe, for Stephen Hawking to airily dismiss time as a human construct.
  • In 1609–10, Champlain fought the Mohawk with this arquebuse à rouet, a wheel lock weapon that did not require a burning match. Champlain's Dream
  • It is known to harass birds as large as Red-tailed Hawks or vultures, causing them to disgorge food.
  • The area is home to a variety of other birds, including nesting bald eagles, hawks, owls, bluebirds and several other songbirds, wild turkeys, herons, and waterfowl.
  • The kestrel is the commonest hawk in the southern parts of England, so that many opportunities occur to observe his habits; and there ought not to be any doubt in the matter. The Life of the Fields
  • If you were one of the 16,300 fans who drove through the late autumn mist to sit on those unforgiving wood bleachers on Saturday afternoon, you probably didn't know that the Jayhawks were under the weather, and you probably would have watched the first half and assumed "the crud" was the name of KU's new offense. KansasCity.com: Front Page
  • This recipe uses the Night Hawk seasonings, but unlike the restaurant, which deep-fries its CFS, Mr. Alexander fries it in a cast-iron skillet as his mother did. One Big Table
  • When I tipped my head back, I saw the hawk buckle its wings and plummet behind the trees.
  • He is a great falconer, and has promised to fly his hawks on Friday for my amusement.
  • When it comes to things as precious as the nightingale's song, you need to watch this lot like a hawk. Times, Sunday Times
  • After a long playoff drought, Blackhawks fans starving for success got, well, nothing.
  • It is an indication of his stature as a journalist that even his arch enemy described him as "an extremely able man and a first-class newshawk."
  • But most of the film could have been made by almost anyone, even though I doubt anyone else would have made so much of the connection Alexander has with a hawk - Stone loves his totemistic avatars.
  • It was all right, maybe, for Stephen Hawking to airily dismiss time as a human construct.
  • Even the most hawkish leaders baulked at countenancing a right of pre-emptive action when the world's principal disputants both had nuclear missile submarines designed to evade a surprise attack.
  • The MiGs dropped like hawks stooping on their prey, four silver-gray aircraft with backswept delta wings. Carrie
  • European hawkweed having flower heads with bright orange-red rays; a troublesome weed especially as naturalized in northeastern North America; sometimes placed in genus Hieracium.
  • There's no reason now why a foreign policy hawk should make common cause with a religious conservative. Times, Sunday Times
  • Legendary cosmologist and author Professor Stephen Hawking is reported to be 'comfortable' after being rushed to hospital from his home in Cambridge. Archive 2009-04-01
  • The Tongass supports brown bear, wolverine, northern goshawk, marbled murrelet, marten, Sitka black-tailed deer, the Alexander Archipelago wolf, and healthy runs of five salmon species.
  • Those investors are watching like hawks as we vote today. The Sun
  • In short, he could make up for a forgettable season with a memorable postseason, if only the light comes on in time to help the underachieving Seahawks.
  • Unlike in the case of established shops, these hawkers give them an option for bargaining too.
  • Smith, a tweener, started three years at left end in the Redhawks' 4-3 defense after beginning his redshirt freshman year at linebacker when that position was depleted by injuries.
  • I reminisce about the sight of a hawksbill turtle and the sound it made as it swept its fins over the sand for a comfortable spot to lay eggs.
  • ELIZA CARLSON, FRIEND OF DEBBIE HAWK: You know, the day that she went missing is only things that I know from my friends, but the things that I can tell you about Debbie is that, you know, she ` s just one of those people that, once you meet her, you ` re never going to forget her. CNN Transcript Jun 28, 2006
  • The Hawken brothers used the Kentucky as a model for their guns, but the barrels were much shorter (26 to 38 inches), because their users had discovered that a long-barreled rifle, regardless of its advantages, was a damned unhandy thing to hunt with from horseback. Why Shorter is Better
  • WASA has begun a $2.6 billion project, the largest the authority has built, to reduce nitrogen and trash flowing to the rive r from its combined sewer overflow system, said George S. Hawkins, WASA general manager. Trash-free Anacostia?
  • Red-tailed hawks have a white chest and a "cummerbund" of dark feathers. Greeley Tribune - Top Stories
  • I could softly talk into the microphone and record the type of clouds billowing above, the look of the dew on the grass, the hawk gliding overhead, the ripe dewberries at my feet.
  • On four dives there we would see a hawksbill turtle, huge parrotfish, various morays ranging from massive to tiny, jack, snapper, batfish and numerous other species.
  • Is it that different from the travelling pedlar who hawked his wares warning that he wouldn't be there tomorrow?
  • In 1974 Hawking made the discovery that black holes give off radiation.
  • There are few youths have sic true judgment as you, respecting the wisdom of their elders; and, as for this fause, traitorous smaik, I doubt he is a hawk of the same nest. The Fortunes of Nigel
  • He was seen at the time by many of his critics as a unidimensional hawk.
  • The entire research team is supposed to be hawking itself around, in one piece, to anyone who will listen. Times, Sunday Times
  • Almost from the moment you step off the plane, you will be accosted by touts, hawkers and rogues.
  • He wore coaching shorts, his three-button Ro-Hawks our nickname polo shirt, and a Ro-Hawks hat, and he always had a whistle around his neck. Heartbreak &triumph
  • In addition to the sheep and wool market, Hawkshead was well known for its cattle market.
  • For diners who simply cannot get enough of Penang's famed hawker delights, check out the nasi pattaya, char koay teow, teo chew mee sua and satay. Surf while dining in style
  • He is enormous, with a caveman's backward-sloping brow, a hawklike proboscis, and a lumbering walk.
  • Hawking radiation, involving massless virtual particles and particle-antiparticle pairs, for example, may explain mass and radiation leakage from blackholes.
  • The Atlanta prez says if the Hawks don't get their act together soon, ‘changes will be made.’
  • Now he is largely viewed as a hawk and lickspittle himself. Times, Sunday Times
  • Purple gentians and orchids, blue scabious and harebells, orange hawkweeds, and cream and pink yarrow provide a kaleidoscope of colour to enjoy at the end of your walk.
  • On December 17, 1903, at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, the Wright Brothers' Wright Flyer became the first powered, heavier-than-air machine to achieve controlled, sustained flight with a pilot aboard.
  • Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change. Stephen Hawking 
  • Then he thinks about the funeral which he can't attend as he might be asked to say something, and you know, thawken uf hawf wif uh mowf fuff ov pubbuhs. Nick Mamatas' Journal
  • Sagan, Johanson, Hawking and others generous coverage to enunciate their beliefs.
  • Higher and higher climbed the starlings, still maintaining tight formation, until the hawk, seeming to realize the futility of its effort, turned and volplaned to earth.
  • Green and hawksbill turtles use the beaches for nesting, and the resort has a small hatchery.
  • What Hawkins does best is build a steady pace into each track to make a stream of bubbling sounds and images.
  • But our haimish breed of armchair soldiers hasn't been confronted with the draft, rationing, or the bill for our foreign adventures; these homespun hawks haven't had to cut back on resources, food, or any comfort, however slight, as part of the war effort. Ben Tripp: It's Time to Grow Up
  • There is a glorious passage by Henry Thoreau of his encounter with a nightjar relative called a nighthawk. Country diary: Holt, Norfolk
  • In the ship Chief Bender, Mohawk and steelman extraordinary, talked to the Shed and to one Charley Red Fox. Space Tug
  • I had to put my views into print to be scanned by thousands of educated people, including a number of hawk-eyed and censorious experts.
  • Rove sr. is a chickenhawk draft-dodger for Vietnam, he should have his ass in Iraq NOW. Think Progress » Rove heckled.
  • Israel's hawkish Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also opposes the creation of a Palestinian state.
  • A couple days ago I saw a spotted flycatcher hawking for bugs in one of the tamarisk trees behind our building.
  • In a hawkish, emotional speech to the Romanian parliament, Tony Blair said Milosevic was the real target of the war.
  • For centuries hawksbills have been hunted for this carapace, the natural source of tortoiseshell, and for eggs highly prized in some societies.
  • The hawks saw the new policy as providing political cover for war, humoring the international community while remaining hostile to the return of the weapons inspectors.
  • A school near his family village has been named in his honour and street traders hawk T-shirts and calendars bearing his image. Times, Sunday Times
  • The birds include ten species of herons including grey heron Ardea cinerea, goliath heron A. goliath and yellow-billed egret Egretta intermedia, hammerkop Scopus umbretta, four of the six West African species of stork, ducks, five of the six West African species of vulture, hawks, plovers and francolins and black-winged stilt Himantopus himantopus. Comoé National Park, Côte d'Ivoire
  • The area supports a number of species locally threatened or at their biogeographic limits, including golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos, prairie falcon Falco mexicanus, ferruginous hawk Buteo regalis, loggerhead shrike Lanius ludovicianus, merlin Falco columbarius, Brewers sparrow Spizella breweri and grasshopper sparrow Ammodramus savannarum. Dinosaur Provincial Park, Canada
  • Shops began to open and street vendors hawked vegetables loaded onto donkey carts.
  • The minute I turned fifty, doctors started hawking the premenopausal hormones right away. Roseanne Archy
  • Gradually market traders and hawkers moved in until eventually the tunnel became a seedy backwater.
  • Sixty degrees wasn't vertical, but that wreck hung in front of the Kittyhawk's nose like a picture on the wall.
  • 'Your message re the krytron that provoked Hawkins's ire must have been badly handled.' Santorini
  • I was recently advised of a splendid plan to unloose some sparrow hawks in Glasgow's parks and squares.
  • If you're lucky, you can sight one of the smaller numbers of red-shoulder hawks, red-tail hawks and the elusive, endangered Peregrine Falcon.
  • A random search by CFO magazine recently uncovered E-tail sites hawking pipe cleaners, arugula seeds, and aglets (those little plastic things on the ends of shoelaces).
  • My goal is simple. It is complete understanding of the universe, why it as it is and why it exists as all. Stephen Hawking 
  • Eat sparingly and avoid food sold by hawkers at stations. Times, Sunday Times
  • Angel didn't know if she was strong enough to be the sunlight to Hawk's stained glass. A WOMAN WITHOUT LIES
  • Other members of the hawkweed group include Common Cat's ear; there are also many hawkbits and hawksbeards, all of which have dandelion-like flowers.
  • He shoved his lean, hawklike face into the very center of the slimy, squirming mass, and with his several ancient fangs bit into the heart and the life of the matter. The Water Baby
  • The word, which also occurs in German as Krämer, doesn't show up in English, but it does in Scots as cramer 'one who sells goods at a stall or booth; also a pedlar or hawker'; Scots also has the base noun crame 'booth or stall where goods are sold in a market or fair.' Languagehat.com: THE FOREIGN IN ENGLISH.
  • Turtles, green and hawksbill, still browse among the sponges and coral of the reefs.
  • Birds of prey also suffered, with many sparrowhawks and kestrels too badly injured to survive, though many owls were successfully treated and released.
  • `Did you ever ask Highhawk what he meant by that reference to the uncommitted crime? TALKING GOD
  • Hawk & Dove would be interesting, seeing two brothers debate militarism and pacifism from a Japanese perspective. More manga remakes
  • Once again we are invited to pick with hawk-eyed dispassion through the secrets of a rich, cruel family. Times, Sunday Times
  • Carry the youth to the presence, and I will remain here, with bridle in hand, ready to strike the spurs up to the rowel-heads, in case the hawk flies my way. — The Abbot
  • The Hawk 200 is a single-seat, lightweight multi-role combat aircraft for air defence and ground attack missions.
  • As the match began the blustery wind freshened and cooled with the huge Hawks flag fluttering above the old pavilion.
  • Out spreads the canvas -- alow, aloft-boom-stretched, on both sides, with many a stun 'sail; till like a hawk, with pinions poised, we shadow the sea with our sails, and reelingly cleave the brine. Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2)
  • “That sounds fun,” she replied, then turned her hawk-eyed stare to Derek. Flirting with Disaster
  • Flowers are hexamerous, tubular, whitish and odoriferous, pollinated by relatively specialized vectors as large bees and hawkmoths.
  • Explore the castle gardens, hawk and owl centre and maze, or join in with a theatre workshop. Times, Sunday Times
  • The goshawk is a royal fowl, and is armed more with boldness than with claws, and as much as kind taketh from her in quantity of body, it rewardeth her with boldness of heart. Mediaeval Lore from Bartholomew Anglicus
  • The measurable slowing of the ball under the roof is indisputable thanks to another technological advance—Hawk-Eye. Wimbledon Roof Slows Balls Down
  • [G] iven the strong resistance to further QE from some hawkish Fed officials, the program that eventually emerges, most probably at the next [Fed] meeting in early November, will be too timid to have any real impact," said Paul Ashworth, senior U.S. economist for research consultancy Capital Economics. Bernanke Preps Markets For Further Fed Action Despite Questions About Impact
  • The whole thing sticks in my throat like a fish bone, and I've got to hawk it up or choke to death on it.
  • I know that Hawke is the Changeling, so who could the Psy be? hhmmmm .... maybe Sienna ..... Archangel's Consort
  • The Penguins also added some missing toughness, claiming right wing Craig Adams off waivers from the Chicago Blackhawks. Penguins land Guerin, Adams in deadline deals
  • The "dovish" Biden position called for relying primarily on assassination, while the "hawkish" McChrystal stance embraced both assassination and more troops. Fred Branfman: Petraeus Must Go: Mass Assassination of Muslims Threatens Us All
  • At noon when we stopped, the men rolled up a barrel of pork on to the deck and one of them, named Cheek bestrided with a tomahawk, crying out "give the word Captain. Three Years Among the Indians and Mexicans
  • His high-crowned grey hat lay on the floor, covered with dust, but encircled by a carcanet of large balas rubies; and he wore a blue velvet nightcap, in the front of which was placed the plume of a heron, which had been struck down by a favourite hawk in some critical moment of the flight, in remembrance of which the king wore this highly honoured feather. The Fortunes of Nigel
  • Vendors hawked their wares while gesturing wildly, and groups of dirty street urchins played amidst the chaos, laughing and catcalling to one another.
  • One time I come across one of numerous hawksbill turtles feeding undisturbed on the reef.
  • Ms Hawkins handles the company's accounts.
  • At the same time, many on the left are deeply disappointed by his hawkishness. Times, Sunday Times
  • His crest hung on the wooden wall, the black hawk with wings perched in a frightful pose staring at her with its piercing golden eyes.
  • Geese, ducks, sparrows, and hawks are heading south in numbers.
  • I felt a little uncharitable: maybe they were just honest but hard-up Grimsby trawlermen, reduced to hawking their catch on the streets.
  • Possibly the most visually striking of all of the South American psittacines, the hawk-headed parrot, Deroptyus accipitrinus, is becoming more common in aviculture.
  • Hawksnest, over beyond, I noted, had its pseudomorph too; a newspaper proprietor of the type that hustles along with stolen ideas from one loud sink-or-swim enterprise to another, had bought the place outright; Redgrave was in the hands of brewers. Tono Bungay
  • Hawks was the driving force behind the project.
  • You'll see vendors hawking everything from incense to books on the latest conspiracy theory.
  • I've heard falconers say that a goshawk is like a loaded gun: you know it will go off but you don't know when. Country diary: Wenlock Edge
  • She liked to shop, casually wandering throughout the market, occasionally listening to the white clad merchants hawk their wares.
  • For his grand home-coming, the characteristic hawkish frown and razor sharp intellect were cast aside to reveal the softer side of the man who brought history to the masses.
  • Men and women everywhere hawked government-controlled newspapers printed on a grayish, low-grade newsprint no doubt full of comparably dull propaganda.
  • It's worth repeating because the Jayhawks were labeled as "bunked Undefined
  • Never one for preamble, Vaughn's heavy features were hawklike with concentration.
  • Awnings shade raucous vegetable sellers while swarthy men with wooden carts hawk pomegranates, dates and mangoes.
  • The three more hawkish members point to still robust growth in the economy and nagging worries over persistent inflation, now being fuelled by record oil prices. Times, Sunday Times
  • While I don't want to stint on my daughter's safety - I have every intention of buying a car that can take a side-on collision from a Tomahawk missile - I am constantly amazed at the precautions we must take these days.
  • But he was scoreless from the field in the final 11 minutes as the Hawks suffered their fourth straight road loss. USATODAY.com
  • With my short Mohawk that looks like a crew-cut at first glance or under a hat, my army jacket, baggy work jeans and boots, I could easily be a pubescent boy.
  • A magnificent convolvulus hawk moth was spotted by the Suffolk lepidopterists gliding in downriver along their bank. Wildwood
  • Economists noted, though, that the tone of the minutes of the December MPC meeting had turned "hawkish" - suggesting rate rises are now more likely than a second round of quantitative easing. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Her marble fireplace business has grown from humble beginnings, when she hawked marble tiles round shops, to the ultimate in trendsetting home design.
  • Passed a hawk on a reflector post on the drive home, and it wasn't a roughleg! Grouse Diary Entry
  • Hawker has always enjoyed the great outdoors. Times, Sunday Times
  • Oh, yes, doncha all know that there are one set of rules for Socialist Community Organizers and another for folksy, lipstick-besmirched hawkey mawms? Think Progress » MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell Mocks Sarah Palin By Writing ‘Cheat Sheet’ On Her Hand
  • Forget Hawkeye and the Snickometer, Channel 4 should be hiring a lip-reader and registering the verbals on a swearometer.
  • A hawk swooped low over the field.
  • There is no known bird with "seahawk" as part of its accepted common English name. What is a Seahawk?
  • Aping the seventies, this bar is for lounging and proves very popular among the more sophisticated of nighthawks prior to later excesses of the night.
  • Acura RDX $37,165    acura.com With a hyperactive turbocharged four-cylinder engine, the RDX is a crossover for boy-racer types who've chopped off their mohawks and outgrown their souped-up Civics. Test: No-Tape HD Videocams, Killer Snowboards, Hype-Worthy Crossover Utility Vehicles
  • The nest was protected from the wind and from the eye of any roving hawk looking for an easy meal. TREASON KEEP
  • The court heard that Hopkins, who has kept and bred falcons for 22 years, bought the goshawk after meeting a man at a falconry event.
  • The route follows well waymarked paths from Hawkshead across low pastures to the charming settlement of Colthouse.
  • Nolan then called a gutsy, inventive game - direct snaps to receivers, an onside kick right after halftime, a phony fake punt and two attempted fourth-down conversions when the game still was winnable - yet nothing worked against the Seahawks 'sturdy defense. USATODAY.com - Football - San Francisco vs. Seattle
  • It was composed of turtle soup made of the most delicate hawks bills, of a surmullet served with puff paste (the liver of which, prepared by itself, was most delicious), and fillets of the emperor-holocanthus, the savour of which seemed to me superior even to salmon. Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
  • The cuckoo, which resembles a sparrowhawk or a kestrel in flight, can be difficult to identify.
  • At the end of the wall we inadvertently disturbed a hawksbill turtle resting among the fronds of a soft coral.
  • Bobby hoisted his one-year-old son, Aidan, into a backpack and went to transfer two pet hawks from their outdoor weathering perch to an indoor mews.
  • The Tomahawk cruise missile, born in 1972 and built here ever since, has flown the coop.
  • The partnership built up a country clientele through itinerant trading with a hawker's licence.
  • The lawns are luxurious, the sky is blue, and a lone hawk circles above, gives a plaintive cry and wheels away.
  • Our hawksbills were visiting in search of food and unintimidated by the sharks or by us.
  • With the Firehawk, a key technique to remember is ALWAYS use the hold fire stance with your Firehawks.
  • Riley and Griego got cooking nearly three years ago when they became mid-term potluck roommates in Jayhawker Towers. LJWorld.com stories: News
  • A hawk caught the updraft over the canyon, side-slipping on thin air. Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine
  • The South is more hawkish on foreign policy, according to the data, while the East and West Coast states are the most dovish.

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