How To Use Inkling In A Sentence

  • Small boys waved their hands to us, the water-carrier carrying his tight goat-skin from the wells set his cups a-tinkling, as though by way of a God-speed, and then M'Barak touched his horse with the spur to induce the bravery of a caracole, and led us away from Djedida. Morocco
  • Steven glanced at me, his eyes once again twinkling.
  • He had a gentle, kindly manner, twinkling eyes and quick smile, a keen sense of humour and a penetrating wit.
  • Serve with a sprinkling or raisins or chopped dried apricots. The Sun
  • The laser's optical system would have to overcome the distorting effect of atmospheric turbulence, the variations in pressure and temperature that refract starlight to create the "twinkling" effect in the night sky. Pentagon Loses War to Zap Airborne Laser From Budget
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  • With white lights twinkling around the street-facing windows, a single red rose on our table and the candle lamp glowing between us, our fondue dinner felt almost romantic.
  • The opening vignette, ‘Lullaby for a Broken Dog’ is simple piano tinklings and a man's spoken words over the hiss and pop of a needle on an old record.
  • Good, bad, or meaningless, there it will be: bunchy with fat or sagging from the bone, fading, freckling, wrinkling, and drooping so long as flesh endures. Beginner’s Grace
  • Then you dip it in batter and deep fry it before sprinkling icing sugar on top. The Sun
  • It's in all its glory and ready to go back indoors for the tinsel and twinkling lights. The Sun
  • But they can have had little inkling of the social revolution or the economic upheavals that the next half-century had in store. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the end of that period I had recovered, and all that remained from the effects of the bowstring was a slight wrinkling of the skin from distension, and the deep blue mark round my neck which I have just shown to your highness. The Pacha of Many Tales
  • Twinkling flashbulbs lit up Centre Court like fireworks in the night when Sampras kissed the trophy once again, his eyes glistening from the tears he had shed moments earlier after he whacked his final service winner to beat Patrick Rafter 6-7 Sampras wins historic Wimbledon title
  • Look at yourself. Are your eyes twinkling? Is your heart dancing? Are your lips smiling? If yes, then you are truly enjoying your life. RVM 
  • The bachelors and male coquets of the Tahitians and French, with a sprinkling of all the foreigners in Papeete, the officers and crews of the war-ship Zélée and sailing vessels, smoked and endeavored to segregate vahines who appealed to them. Mystic Isles of the South Seas.
  • It's soft female harmonies layered on top of tinkling bells, xylophones and other gentle, celestial sounds.
  • But the mountain still blushes with the palest of pinks, suffusing the blues that give an inkling of the intense cold.
  • To get some stars and stripes in, a sprinkling of stars appeared on ankle boots or on chiffon dresses that added a Nineties grungy feel. Times, Sunday Times
  • Valerie heard sounds of the forest, the chirping of birds and the tinkling of water from a nearby spring.
  • In his act the pill of political polemic may be sugared with a sprinkling of dirty jokes, but it's always there.
  • The idea that mountain folds, and the lesser rugosities of the Earth's surface, arose in a wrinkling of the crust under the influence of cooling and skrinkage of the subcrustal materials, is held by many eminent geologists, but not without dissent from others. The Birth-Time of the World and Other Scientific Essays
  • But through the wide streets and through the narrow ones, under the archways into the market gardens, across the bridge and into the square where the "glockenspiel" played its old tinkling tune, everywhere the Citadel looked down and always The Rat walked on in his dream. The Lost Prince
  • These were wild and miserable thoughts; but I cannot describe to you how the eternal twinkling of the stars weighed upon me, and how I listened to every blast of wind, as if it were a dull ugly siroc on its way to consume me. Chapter 17
  • His thick brow wrinkling in thought, the archdruid neared the trunk once more. WORLD OF WARCRAFT STORMRAGE
  • The gaudy decorations are out, the over sized Yuletide props have been forklifted into position by underpaid migrant workers, and the same CD played at this time every year since 1989 can be heard tinkling through the mall.
  • Add a sprinkling of pepper.
  • The final effect was rubbing a glue stick randomly on the snow and sprinkling it with silver glitter for that sparkly look that snow sometimes has.
  • The first inkling that something was not right came as summer drew to a close. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was shaking food into the aquarium, holding a container like a pepper shaker, sprinkling Vitablend into the water.
  • The Abbé Vincent, after sprinkling all the spectators with holy water, presented the paten to the wife of the king's pantler, Jordan, that she might kiss it. Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No 3, September 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy
  • Feeling disconnected in a chattering city of twinkling lights. Times, Sunday Times
  • Have you ever thought how great it would be if someone took the ickiest aspects of monogamous lifestyle BDSM, blended it with a double measure of religious-right patriarchy, then added a generous sprinkling of disturbing domestic violence? Happy Slapping
  • They were amazed at the bright twinkling pattern of starlight as it shone through the window.
  • Her eyelashes are almost as light as her hair, and I can see a sprinkling of tiny freckles on her nose and cheeks.
  • Then the accompanying bouillon, a spicy broth scented with chilli and cumin with the customary soft, but not mushy, root vegetables and a sprinkling of firm, floury chickpeas.
  • Serve with a sprinkling of parsley or chives on top of each portion. Asthma and Eczema - special diet cookbook
  • Organisers are promising a magical weekend of ice sculptures and outdoor entertainment, ironically with a sprinkling of snow guaranteed. The Sun
  • In the twinkling of an eye Flemming tried the cross-buttock, but it seemed that Merriwell had been expecting just such a move, for he passed his left leg behind Fred's right and through in front of Fred's left. Frank Merriwell's Races
  • He had it all mapped out and made certain Sally didn't have the slightest inkling that anything was up.
  • At least the riders get the small sprinkling of Stardust there is. Times, Sunday Times
  • All very fancy, with a pianist tinkling away in the background. The Sun
  • Equally amazing was the ability of the sell-out audiences at the outdoor amphitheater in the celestial vault of the Parc du Château de Florans, a venue bordered by 365 plane trees and a sprinkling of sequoia redwoods, to accommodate and enjoy the extraordinary range of performances, often on two different programs per evening, from solo recitals of the most intimate nature to the great concertos with orchestra. Laurence Vittes: Pianists Are Lords of the Ring in La Roque d'Anthéron's Festival 2011
  • And that piano does keep tinkling in the background. Times, Sunday Times
  • Finish by sprinkling the extra grated cheese on top of the moussaka, then bake at about 160°C for about 30-45 minutes until the topping is nicely golden brown.
  • According to Miranda he told her the story " with twinkling eyes ".
  • In ceremony, he appears as an old man with a cane, wearing a broad-brimmed straw hat, and is typically smoking a pipe and sprinkling water on others. The Bushman Way of Tracking God
  • At dusk, as darkness is falling, small red or yellow lights are twinkling in the dark-blue autumn mist.
  • When she was out of the room her mother laid down her sponge and sighed, her hands aching and the soap wrinkling her skin.
  • Anthony threw himself back in his chair as the delicate tinkling began to pour out and overscore the soft cooing of a pigeon on the roofs somewhere and the murmur of bees through the open window. By What Authority?
  • The wine is very juicy with ripe berry fruit, brambles, a sprinkling of spice and round tannins.
  • I finally panicked one more time as I was sprinkling the caramelized, toasty brown, cooling almonds with sugar and I accidentally dumped more on than I intended.
  • He still continued, however, cautiously to progress along the road on which be was benighted, and at length the twinkling of a distant light raised some hope of succour in his heart.
  • Among the family and friends were a sprinkling of political figures.
  • And there's Bill Lee, a.k.a. "Spaceman," an iconoclastic cult hero to college-age Boston fans in the late '70s, a quintessentially flaky southpaw who once boasted of sprinkling marijuana on his breakfast cereal -- before the buttoned-down Red Sox brass exiled him to the Montreal Expos, in whose uniform he is (sadly) pictured in the card collection. FOUND: Lots and lots of baseball cards
  • Then remember the sprinkling of magic that weaves around him. The Sun
  • The Inn was all aglow with lights twinkling from its many stories, a beacon on the hill above Freeport.
  • Two or three years 'growth will raise these plants above all grass and low vegetation, and a sprinkling of laurel, rhododendron, hardy ferns and a few intermingling colonies of native wild flowers such as bloodroot, false Solomon's seal and columbines for the East, as Studies of Trees
  • Linen, always a staple for summer, is blended with synthetics like rayon and polyester to add sheen and reduce wrinkling.
  • The first inkling we had of Cliff's problem was when he didn't come to work.
  • There is in these stories a curious mixture of humour, insight and pathos, with here and there a dash of grimness and a sprinkling of that charming irrelevancy which is of the essence of true humour. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 101, August 29, 1891
  • A short, vigorously cheerful woman in a twinkling red dress walked about, greeting each person.
  • But of our hotch-potch of nationalities fore and aft there is no person who catches an inkling of their language or nationality. CHAPTER XXXVI
  • When it has paid its tribute to the royal pile, and visited its gardens and pastures, it flows down the long avenue leading to the city, trinkling in rills, gushing in fountains, and maintaining a perpetual verdure in those groves that embower and beautify the whole hill of the Alhambra. Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 8
  • His good old wife had gotten down her best "chancy," white with blue rimming, while the cloth on the table was as white as snow, and the floor spotlessly neat with its heavy sprinkling of white sand. The old plantation : how we lived in great house and cabin before the war,
  • The sprinkling of French is perfect, and your readers answered any questions I had about renseigner v. aider. Machine à coudre - French Word-A-Day
  • I saw lights twinkling in the little town below us.
  • Behind and in front, musicians played Lydian airs on flutes and pipes, shook sistra with their little tinkling bells, and clanged great cymbals. Funeral Games
  • After dinner, when Celia was playing an "air, with variations," a small kind of tinkling which symbolized the aesthetic part of the young ladies 'education, Dorothea went up to her room to answer Mr. Casaubon's letter. Middlemarch: a study of provincial life (1900)
  • The gums were full of budgies, skawking and whistling their parodies of songbirds; finches wheeled from branch to branch; two sulphur-crested cockatoos sat with their heads to one side watching her progress with twinkling eyes; willy-wagtails fossicked in the dirt for ants, their absurd rumps bobbing; crows carked eternally and mournfully. The Thorn Birds
  • A sprinkling of international football stars boosted the celebrity of the gathering alongside politicians, media folk and, of course, men and women of letters from clinical and academic medicine.
  • So we're getting these inklings of what it is, but we just can't know, and there isn't going to be any way to know this early.
  • He is a papered Hanoverian warmblood that has a sprinkling of handpicked Arabian blood.
  • The pitcher stared down Pat Burrell after a called third strike to end the first, and Burrell jawed at Halladay while sprinkling in profanities. Phillies Extend NLCS With Game 5 Victory, Giants Lead 3-2
  • He put is arm around her waist and drew her close to him, his eyes twinkling mischievously.
  • He held his pale, grubby hand out towards Janet with two twinkling things in it. CHARMED LIFE
  • Vitamin C therapy is known to combat mottling, wrinkling and sagging skin resulting from sun overexposure, a common concern among active people.
  • It's hard to know where to start when your best inkling is to read some papers and try to find time with the overbooked senior graduate student. Postdoc Possibilities and Preferences
  • There is also an underground water sprinkling system for the garden, flood lighting, an alarm system and oil-fired central heating.
  • It's in all its glory and ready to go back indoors for the tinsel and twinkling lights. The Sun
  • How to give an inkling of the loss? Times, Sunday Times
  • They seemed rare round there from the time he took; and I was just casting about in my mind as to what method would be best to employ in getting up the smooth, yellow, sandy-clay, incurved walls, when he arrived with it, and I was out in a twinkling, and very much ashamed of myself, until Silence, who was then leading, disappeared through the path before us with a despairing yell. Travels in West Africa
  • Soon we were above ground in a silvery twelve-seater custom van, my seatmate fiddling with a loaded ashtray, fine gray dust sprinkling his shiny black tasseled loafers.
  • With the soft music in the background, the room seemed alive, and the small, twinkling colored sparks of light turned the room into a fairyland full of stars.
  • Draco leaned his bare back carefully against the rough bark of the beech tree staring up at the moon and the brilliant twinkling stars.
  • He could have passed for an officer of the navy, with his young, strong features, floppy dark hair and twinkling eyes.
  • But as they grew, they took to following me everywhere, first cheeping like the tinkling of little bells, later clucking in animated adult discussion. Birdology
  • The stage was like an enchanted garden with the musicians surrounded by pink twinkling trees and glittering silver statues. Times, Sunday Times
  • I heard it first crinkling through the bottom of the pine tree when I was looking at the sky; I looked down to see it probably 30 feet away waddling towards me, nose down in search for grub. The "only real option"!
  • I was back where I belonged, tinkling the ivories, name on every bus shelter in town. MR STARLIGHT
  • Shoving his hands into the pockets of his tremendously puffy jacket, he heard crinkling and pulled out a slight crumpled piece of paper.
  • This little device is called aspergillum, after the Latin word for sprinkling, which is aspergo.
  • I stared at his hand, and after a beat of silence, grasped it firmly, my eyes twinkling dangerously.
  • Into their midst he went and a good horse was picked out and lariated in the twinkling of an eye and quickly hoppled and turned loose. Beadle's Boy's Library of Sport, Story and Adventure, Vol. I, No. 1. Adventures of Buffalo Bill from Boyhood to Manhood
  • Like any good doctrine, there is a sprinkling of mysticism and a touchy-feely woo-woo factor that readers can ignore or embrace.
  • Remove from the oven and serve a sprinkling of chopped parsley. Times, Sunday Times
  • He captures the twinkling eyes and mischievous grin brilliantly. The Sun
  • Glass fell, twinkling in the firelight like stardust dropping from the sky.
  • The comedy circuit on the Fringe has been a trading floor, with television and radio producers buying talent and sprinkling stardust over performers.
  • I have stood on the summit of Ben Nevis in winter after completing a snow-and-ice climb, and looked down on the twinkling lights of Fort William, with a star-spangled firmament above.
  • On our visit the restaurant was decked out for the festive season, with myriad glinting fairy lights and the obligatory sprinkling of canned snow around the windows.
  • Her mood can change in the twinkling of an eye.
  • Twinkling sleighs, sporting six pairs of reindeer and a fat-free Santa, decorate even the most modest of houses.
  • Their flames looked orange and violet against the clear grey blue of the sky where already a few stars were twinkling. The Railway Children
  • This evening there was no sprinkling of locals to gaze at us unashamedly out of cunning, peasanty eyes. DEATH IN PURPLE PROSE
  • What they ignore is the story hidden behind the twinkling lights.
  • He returned with a twinkling smile and two large bath towels. Times, Sunday Times
  • That great sprinkling of stardust over a plausibly assumed 'ordinariness' with which we identify is what chemistry is all about.
  • Two pairs of eyes locked together, both sets of eyes twinkling with the deepest of emotions.
  • There are some bright new southern stars twinkling as our northern lights try to recharge their batteries.
  • Few had the slightest inkling about the kind of music that was being played by the band.
  • His laconic intellect and twinkling eye will never be forgotten by those who knew him.
  • For why, the soothfastness of this thing is only in God, and in thee is but a blind abiding of His will, without certainty of one moment, the which is as little or less than a twinkling of an eye. The Cell of Self-Knowledge : seven early English mystical treatises printed by Henry Pepwell in 1521
  • She had green eyes, and a light sprinkling of freckles across the bridge of her nose.
  • He took her hand and kissed it, his cobalt eyes twinkling.
  • sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal
  • A fresh run of smaller fish and a sprinkling of fresh-run big fish liven things up in September.
  • Is that the tinkling of wedding bells we can hear? The Sun
  • A few drops spilled over the edge, sprinkling the pitted surface of the bar and puddling in the deep grooves of the worn wood.
  • The disease also clogs the body's lymph drainage system and that results in swelling, thickening and wrinkling of the skin.
  • The first inkling of Cheney's disenchantment with Bush came in a long account in Time magazine of his failed attempt to win a presidential pardon for his aide Lewis "Scooter" Libby.
  • Malvina looked across at her patient, a slight frown wrinkling her young face as she wondered at his ill-health.
  • The camera pans across a galaxy of stars and planets, novae, and nebulae twinkling in the blackness.
  • She stared into my eyes for a moment, twinkling with personal satisfaction.
  • I had an inkling that she was pregnant.
  • Put your thyme in the coffee grinder to get a convenient powder for sprinkling over roast meats and vegetables. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mory gives him her famous glare and rolls the shaker towards him, sprinkling salt all over.
  • Sprinkling the starter diet or a small quantity of oat groats on the mat close to the feeder allows the pigs to become acquainted with the feeder.
  • I'm glad you found it funny, it shows that maybe I do have the remote inkling of a sense of humour hidden somewhere in my tiny brain.
  • The only other distraught note was the occasional wrinkling seen in the tutu skirts.
  • Irish lady, with twinkling eyes and a pernicketty strong will, and a brogue she transferred deliciously into her broken French. A Prisoner in Fairyland
  • Organisers are promising a magical weekend of ice sculptures and outdoor entertainment, ironically with a sprinkling of snow guaranteed. The Sun
  • Greywolf" caps the EP with twinkling sci-fi music that gives way to a machinated wheeze, and features the ramblings of a man. The Seattle Times
  • Add a light sprinkling of glitter gel for added dazzle or jazz up the sides or back with hair jewels.
  • And hymns in the cozy parlor, the tinkling piano our guide.
  • Alternatively we could use it as soon as we got the slightest inkling of a pandemic strain emerging. Times, Sunday Times
  • Adding a few drops of calming essential oils, such as lavender, bergamot or rose to your bathwater, or sprinkling them on your pillow, will help you to feel relaxed.
  • Heathrow's answer to this is a player piano tinkling merrily nearby. Times, Sunday Times
  • There's a liberal sprinkling of referentiality, Easter eggs of nods to other writers, and to particular pulp stylings, and a lot of that intertextuality is going to be lost on those who haven't read the type of thing I'm riffing off, but the key conceits are maybe not so hard to grasp without a grounding -- the book itself, the Cant, gravings, angels. What is Literary Fiction?
  • Is there any food you can eat, supplement you can take, or nutrient-rich lotion you can rub on that will keep your skin from sagging and wrinkling as you age?
  • With a sprinkling of new players still bedding in, they looked ill at ease in the face of a familiar, and formidable, United side.
  • The mood of the crowd can change in the twinkling of an eye.
  • During both seasons the dirty white of the face and cheeks is only relieved by the dark facial streak, which is short and narrow, but defined by a sprinkling of rufous hairs; the lateral and pygal bands are very faintly indicated, the dark bands being more rufous, the light band rather paler than the grey fawn colour of the upper parts of the body; breast and belly white; tail and ears moderate in length, the former blackish-rufous. Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon
  • She took that as a yes and helped me finish off the remaining tortellini with a healthy sprinkling of Parmesan.
  • How much in advance I don't know, but we would probably have some kind of inkling that it was going on. Hits and Missiles
  • The hilltops were covered with a sprinkling of snow.
  • The advertisement, which has been lampooned mercilessly, shows her speaking in a soft voice against a smoky grey background and tinkling piano music. Times, Sunday Times
  • The two men sat on the front steps at "Elm Bluff", and as Prince's eyes wandered over the exceeding beauty of the "great greenery" of velvet lawn, the stately, venerable growth of forest trees, wearing the adolescent mask of tender young foliage, the outlying fields flanking the park, the sunny acres now awave with crinkling mantles of grain, he sighed very heavily at the realization of all that adverse fortune had snatched away. At the Mercy of Tiberius
  • The melodies lay prettily embedded in tinkling bells and other atmospheric effects, but there was little worth remembering beyond the composer's good intentions. Times, Sunday Times
  • Stir in a sprinkling of fresh thyme leaves and seal. Planning the Organic Herb Garden
  • Even when the tame _cabestro_ came, with tinkling bell, to entice Vivillo away, she could hardly bear to leave him, though she well knew that he was safe; that his wounds would be skilfully tended; that he would be restored to health, and that, in very shame (when the story was made known), Carmona must surrender the bull to her. The Car of Destiny
  • Heathrow's answer to this is a player piano tinkling merrily nearby. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then you dip it in batter and deep fry it before sprinkling icing sugar on top. The Sun
  • So, amid fairytale fire torches and twinkling candles, we were led to our very own reindeer sleigh in the middle of an enchanted snow forest. The Sun
  • Then did thy mother's husband take the barley for sprinkling, and began casting it upon the hearth with these words, "Ye Nymphs, who dwell among the rocks, grant that I may often sacrifice with my wife, the daughter of Tyndareus, within my halls, as happily as now, and ruin seize my foes! Electra
  • The Old Testament was written in Hebrew, with a sprinkling of Aramaic.
  • I was vested in riassa, epitrachelion, and phelonian (in other words: long black robe, decorative stole and sort of a liturgical cape); I'm saying the words: "By the sprinkling of this Holy Water, may every evil action and demon be put to flight …" and the choir and parishioners are chanting the Theophany hymn. ORTHODIXIE ... Southern, Orthodox, Convert, Etc.
  • 'tinkling' of Peter's hammer to know a brief respite. The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume III The Songs of Scotland of the Past Half Century
  • Serve the feijoada with the salsa and top with a good sprinkling of pangrattato and the reserved coriander leaves. The Sun
  • The die was curved surface held down. The position of drawing rib was determined according to the analysis on the wrinkling trend of sheet bar made by DYNAFORM software.
  • Don't you lose any time about your absolutions, - washing, you know; but just jump into a pair of bags and Wellingtons; clap a top-coat on you, and button it up to the chin, and there you are, ready dressed in the twinkling of a bed-post.
  • I fancy an inkling of the truth dawned in that Dutchman's soul at last, for he made no further reference to either garnets or mundic. Campaign Pictures of the War in South Africa (1899-1900) Letters from the Front
  • At nine o'clock went to the Vatican; two large fantails with ostrich feathers; ladies penned up; Pope; cardinals kiss his hand in rotation; address in Latin, tinkling, like water gurgling from a bottle. Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals In Two Volumes, Volume I.
  • For Jill, in the twinkling of a star, had let fall the enveloping cloak, standing for one second like some exotic bit of statuary in her black billowing satin trousers and infinitesimal coatee over a silver-spangled frothy vest, her great eyes dancing with glee over the face veil. Desert Love
  • Croutons and bacon bits are absent and unmourned, but the salad would be better served by fresh Parmesan than the sprinkling of Kraft-style grated that is present.
  • Wherever possible, try to simply deter ants by sprinkling eucalyptus oil or crushed garlic cloves along their paths.
  • They were at their twinkling best, refusing to let the city sleep.
  • The rain wasn't pouring down, nor was it sprinkling, it was a nice little shower.
  • The house is built of reddish granite in what is called the baronial style, with a sprinkling of peaked gables and pepper-box turrets, and Life of Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen — Volume 2
  • Only an experienced needlewoman could do justice in words to such a variety of rimplings and crinklings, of pleatings and puckerings, of gaugings, rufflings, gofferings, and pin-tuckings as it is possible to find; though somebody with a knowledge of heraldry could perhaps convey a few of the designs in such terms as nebuly, raguly or dancetty (semée, he might add, of starfish proper). Try Anything Twice
  • Look at yourself. Are your eyes twinkling? Is your heart dancing? Are your lips smiling? If yes, then you are truly enjoying your life. RVM 
  • You can remove a red wine stain from a carpet by sprinkling salt over it.
  • And ooh, I could just see the noses wrinkling and the brows furrowing.
  • Hoss grinned as she put a finger to her lips, her eyes twinkling.
  • Anecdotal evidence from friends suggests that no matter how much delicious food we prepare with our kids, it's almost impossible to avoid advertising that equates falling leaves with crinkling Mars Bar wrappers. Linda Novick O'Keefe: Octoberliscious
  • Certainly the fight to be the best of the rest hardly seemed to inspire too many on Saturday, with more than a fair sprinkling of orange seats unwarmed by backsides at Tannadice.
  • Flavour seafood rice with a generous sprinkling. Spice up tomato or cream sauces for fish and chicken.
  • Some paddocks or parts of paddocks should get a sprinkling of grass seed if they are badly damaged.
  • Spoon over sufficient vinaigrette, add a generous sprinkling of finely snipped chives and the eggs. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was also known to mock the holy sacrament of baptism by sprinkling water on her mother's head and reciting the appropriate words.
  • Few people apart from experts in the field have any inkling that Nietzsche predeceased his sister by some 35 years.
  • He coaches on the show and will soon be sprinkling some stardust on her debut album.
  • The day was cloudy and it was sprinkling rain intermittently. May 2004
  • The reason I wanted to see this beach is because the book said that if, conditions were right, the sound of the waves hitting this unique shoreline of flat, shingle-like “pink rhyolite and felsite bedrock” makes a tinkling, bell-like sound. Day in the Life of an Idiot
  • I can be getting on really well with a girl but as soon as I get an inkling that there might be a chance of anything happening, I just freeze up.
  • Friends say they had no inkling of the rage tormenting Stack, whom they called carefree, friendly and professional. WIBW - HomePage - Headlines
  • Stand her in the middle of a darkened Victorian dining room draped with holiday greenery, a Christmas tree twinkling in the corner.
  • Ryan prods, his eyes twinkling brightly with mischief.
  • I saw lights twinkling in the little town below us.
  • The dialogue is vigorous and inventive, with a bold sprinkling of verbal tics and oddities that only makes it more convincing. Times, Sunday Times
  • He blinked his ebony black eyes, the irises twinkling with delight.
  • Patricia, what were the first inklings you had about this story?
  • Serve in large bowls with liberal sprinklings of Parmesan and huge glasses of wine.
  • Dew glistened in the grass on the side of the road like little twinkling diamonds in the rough.
  • His eyes were twinkling with mischief and a playful smile hovered on his lips.
  • At the top there was a slight sprinkling of snow, and clouds hung over the lofty Ortler group of peaks. Revenge!
  • [Twinkling] I shid zay glass o '' arf an '' arf's about yure form. A Bit O' Love
  • sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal
  • After all, where were the magic pixies sprinkling marzipan holly berries over pre-Colonial scenes of people broasting chestnuts?
  • The Rocky Mountains in the west of the State are brown and arid during the summer months with sprinklings of coniferous trees on their parched slopes.
  • Organisers are promising a magical weekend of ice sculptures and outdoor entertainment, ironically with a sprinkling of snow guaranteed. The Sun

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