How To Use Lacer In A Sentence

  • Je vais pour brancher une des lampes de la vitrine que ma patronne etait en train de placer dans la vitrine et la j'entends un gros BAAAAM puis des bruits de verre qui tombent a terre! Pinku-tk Diary Entry
  • Like a lacertine Vicar of Bray, he varies incontinently from buff to blue, and from blue back to orange again, under stress of circumstances. Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
  • This stuff doesn't merely placate the listener with predictable, danceable nursery rhymes but lashes out and lacerates the eardrum relentlessly.
  • And they want Captain Largo to get us out checking the appropriate chapter houses to see if he's been doing any placer mining. THE WAILING WIND
  • He would tell me who I was, and his judgment was lacerating, merciless.
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  • The Company's flagship product, the Sharps Disposal by Mail System (R), is a cost-effective and easy-to-use solution to dispose of medical waste such as hypodermic needles, lancets and any other medical device or objects used to puncture or lacerate the skin (referred to as "sharps"). Undefined
  • I had major lacerations to my left mid thigh.
  • The flake mica produced in the U.S. comes from several sources: the metamorphic rock called schist as a by-product of processing feldspar and kaolin resources, from placer deposits, and from pegmatites. Mica
  • The bullet passed from right to left markedly upwards and forwards, enters the right abdominal cavity where it transfixes and mutilates the right kidney, transfixes the right lobe of the liver, transfixes diaphragm, transfixes the lower lobe of the left lung, transfixes sibson fascia on the left, lacerates the left common carotid artery and emerges through wound no. 'I Saw a Nightmare …' Doing Violence to Memory: The Soweto Uprising, June 16, 1976
  • Small lacerations on the face usually heal well with this preparation.
  • Instead, a micro Ducati motorcycle would be taking the top placer on his victory lap.
  • We should prevent products from rip and laceration in the course of transportation and install.
  • Lacerated in the press, he eventually incinerated his drawings.
  • A wire caught Jim around the neck and he luckily escaped with lacerations.
  • He said he'd bring a pouch of placer gold, copies of old letters from Theodore Mott to his lawyer up in Denver. THE WAILING WIND
  • Personals placers aren't exactly defying defined cultural roles; most women wrote ads seeking economic security, while men sought younger, attractive partners.
  • Thus Flora on one occasion had been reduced to rage and despair, had her most secret feelings lacerated, had obtained a view of the utmost baseness to which common human nature can descend -- I won't say _a propos de bottes_ as the French would excellently put it but literally _a propos_ of some mislaid cheap lace trimmings for a nightgown the romping one was making for herself. Chance A Tale in Two Parts
  • Several others, including two drivers, sustained lacerations after being beaten with blunt instruments, but were not admitted to hospital.
  • From an examination it appeared that a neglected lacerated cervix during the birth of the last child had given rise to endometritis, and for a year the patient had suffered from severe menorrhagia, for which she was subsequently treated. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • For, although they refer to lacerations of the hand, it is clear from the photographs used to illustrate the paper, both on the front and inside the journal, that these are incised wounds.
  • Tapioca: A superfine grind of the starch from cassava tubers, and is used to thicken puddings, soups and pie fillings as well as functioning as an egg replacer in certain vegan mixtures. Archive 2009-07-01
  • This family of reptiles is allied to the living monitor, and its appearance in a primary or paleozoic formation, observes Prof. Owen, is opposed to the doctrine of the progressive development of reptiles from fish, or from simpler to more complex forms; for, if they existed at the present day, these monitors would take rank at the head of the Lacertian order.
  • Other exhibits focus on placer and lode deposits, major gold rushes, and uses of gold through the centuries.
  • Bon ben moi j'arrive pas malheureusement… je me réjouissais déjà de placer mon petit commentaire vidéo JUSTE derrière Loïc Le Meur, mais non, je n'ai pas réussi à enregistrer… j'ai pu m'authentifier, mais quand je clique sur le bouton d'enregistrement ou sur enter ou return ou n'importe quoi, ça ne commence jamais à enregistrer… bouhhh Trying the Seesmic Video Plugin — Climb to the Stars
  • The former exhausts itself first in fantastic lacertine forms, twisted into the shapes of the commencing letters or words of the writing, to which the suggestion of some Byzantine MS, perhaps occasionally adds a frame. Illuminated Manuscripts
  • In conducting coastal open air placer mining or shore-based well drilling to exploit seabed mineral resources, effective measures must be taken to prevent pollution to the marine environment.
  • Vanhooydonck B, Van Damme R (2003) Relationships between locomotor performance, microhabitat use and antipredator behaviour in lacertid lizards. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • The manacle around my neck tugged on my skin, lacerating my raw flesh.
  • Sometimes the producers went to absurd lengths to protect their advertisers and product placers, pixelating one of the inmates T-shirts to cover up a rival furniture product.
  • About two-thirds of the world's tin is obtained from placers and one-third from vein or "lode" deposits. The Economic Aspect of Geology
  • Among the reptiles are isolated populations of four species: toad-headed agama Phrynocephalus versocolor, multicellated racerunner Eremias multiocellata, Gobi racerunner Eremias przewalskii and patterned grass-snake Elapha dione; also the locally rare adder Vipera berus, moccasin snake Aghistrodon halys, Tlafe agilis and sand lizard Lacerta agilis. Uvs Nuur Basin, Russian Federation, Republic of Tuva and Mongolia
  • The slender body, well-developed limbs and long tail of most species are indicative of the superior sprinting abilities of lacertids.
  • ‘I may see patients who need their jaws removed, jaw surgery for overbites and underbites, surgery on skeletal deformations, trauma patients that have suffered fractures and lacerations,’ Baker says.
  • In the early years of the century, there were hundreds of child placers in the United States.
  • The Biceps brachii is a flexor of the elbow and, to a less extent, of the shoulder; it is also a powerful supinator, and serves to render tense the deep fascia of the forearm by means of the lacertus fibrosus given off from its tendon. IV. Myology. 7d. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Arm
  • For me, the big moment of "The Big Picture" was standing in front of Pollock's shimmering, lacertine labyrinth "One: Number 31, 1950," and looking downfield at David Smith's "Australia" 1951. A Retrospective's Tale of Two Cities
  • The area no longer has any active mines, but there are large tracts of land under claim for placer mining.
  • -- Edges of colonies: e, Lobar-lobulate; f, auriculate; g, lacerate; h, fimbriate; i, ciliate.] (F) ~Optical Characters~ (after Shuttleworth). The Elements of Bacteriological Technique A Laboratory Guide for Medical, Dental, and Technical Students. Second Edition Rewritten and Enlarged.
  • Despite this ecological variation, lacertids do not display an equivalent amount of anatomical variation.
  • Under the YPA and Mining Land Use Regulations, placer miners must restore the land and any fish-bearing streams.
  • He had a swollen right orbit, a laceration over the right elbow, and bloody discharge from both nostrils.
  • Tantalus, ut famast, cassa formidine torpens; sed magis in uita diuum metus urget inanis mortalis casumque timent quem cuique ferat fors; nec Tityon uolucres ineunt Acherunte iacentem nec quod sub magno scrutentur pectore quicquam55 perpetuam aetatem possunt reperire profecto; quamlibet immani proiectu corporis exstet, qui non sola nouem dispessis iugera membris obtineat, sed qui terrai totius orbem, non tamen aeternum poterit perferre dolorem60 nec praebere cibum proprio de corpore semper; sed Tityos nobis non est in amore iacentem quem luctus lacerant: at quem exest anxius angor aut alia quauis scindunt cuppedine curae. The Powers of Hell
  • The boy had received horrific injuries in the attack, including lacerations to both arms.
  • There were prominent bilateral scalp contusions with soft tissue and intramuscular haemorrhage, symmetrical parietal skull fractures with coronal sutural diastasis, and a lacerated dura mater with extrusion of brain and blood.
  • According to Iliev, Pazhin, who plays in Ukraine, has a torn ankle tendon, while Zagorich has a lacerated calf muscle.
  • Stephen said the medical report showed no abrasions, lacerations, tears or discharge.
  • The sharp stones lacerated his feet.
  • Right now, he's fortunate that the laceration is the only thing that he sustained. Thestar.com - Home Page
  • Besides, things which may perhaps be practiced innocently where they are familiar, produce a moral dilaceration in the course of their being introduced where they are new. Cotton is King, and Pro-Slavery Arguments Comprising the Writings of Hammond, Harper, Christy, Stringfellow, Hodge, Bledsoe, and Cartrwright on This Important Subject
  • -- The usual signs of fracture in connexion with some serious complication, such as laceration of bladder or rectum, injury to the peritoneum, division of arteries and veins. An Epitome of Practical Surgery, for Field and Hospital.
  • The act or rending asunder, or the state of being rent asunder or broken in pieces; breach; rent; dilaceration; rupture; as, the disruption of rocks in an earthquake; disruption of a state. Planet Sun
  • A section of experts have been saying that since Pakistan beat India without him, there is hardly any need of a world class placer who might create problems for the team management.
  • Lizard, through such forms as _lesarde_, _lezard_, _lagarto_, _lacerto_, is from the Latin _lacertus_, a lizard; while closely related is the word alligator by way of _lagarto_, _aligarto_, to alligator. The Log of the Sun A Chronicle of Nature's Year
  • Huic rogationi partim conscii sibi, alii ex partium invidia pericula metuentes, quoniam aperte resistere non poterant, quin illa et alia talia placere sibi faterentur, [238] occulte per amicos ac maxime per homines nominis Latini et socios Italicos impedimenta parabant. C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino
  • Pour emp阠her ce malheur on placera la plus grande quantit� de ribaudequins vers les angles du corps de bataille, et l’on t鈉hera de se tenir serr� de mani鑢e � ne point se laisser entamer. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • To them, as soon as gold was discovered, were added bonanza, eldorado, placer and vigilante. Chapter 3. The Period of Growth. 4. Loan-Words and Non-English Influences
  • Born in Placerville, California, where his maternal grandparents were forty-niners, Gagliani grew up in the Italian community of San Francisco.
  • Saith Ponocrates: At Montpelier, John Chouart having bought of the monks of St. Olary a delicate set of decretals, written on fine large parchment of Lamballe, to beat gold between the leaves, not so much as a piece that was beaten in them came to good, but all were dilacerated and spoiled. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • As it descends through the arm, it lies at first lateral to the brachial artery; about the level of the insertion of the Coracobrachialis it crosses the artery, usually in front of, but occasionally behind it, and lies on its medial side at the bend of the elbow, where it is situated behind the lacertus fibrosus (bicipital fascia), and is separated from the elbow-joint by the Brachialis. IX. Neurology. 6b. The Anterior Divisions
  • It contains a stupendous object called BL Lacerta, which is known as a "blazar", a distant galaxy being torn apart by a super-sized black hole. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph, Sunday Telegraph
  • I had my base camp here" — a red square — "and I was tracking this humpback lacertilian through here" — dotted yellow meanders. Perseus Spur
  • These pioneer prospectors practiced surface mining, obtaining gold from the alluvial deposits called placers.
  • The first was an emergency suturing of her scalp lacerations and insertion of an intra cranial pressure monitor through a burr hole.
  • The Wicklow placer raced into a 7-nil lead, but the young Moone player got more into the game and was soon on level terms with some great service and passing shots.
  • LORD: A laceration is a cut which, in fact, can be received as a result of falling on the cement floor from a high velocity at six feet. CNN Transcript Jul 14, 2005
  • Running from neck to thigh, the bloody laceration tore his flesh, showing more of his innards than could be wanted.
  • Spartan boy who let a beast gnaw out his bowels till he died without expressing a groan, is a faint bodily image of this dilaceration of the spirit and exenteration of the inmost mind, which Calantha with English literary criticism
  • The habitual spectators at the School of Medicine, the College of France, and the Faculty of Sciences, know how experiments are made on the living flesh, how muscles are divided and cut, the nerves wrenched or dilacerated, the bones broken or methodically opened with gouge, mallet, saw, and pincers. An Ethical Problem Or, Sidelights upon Scientific Experimentation on Man and Animals
  • Los que dirigen nuestra economa, pensaba Nikola, en el mundo occidental, nos permite disfrutar de un alto estndar de vida, de placer comparado criminal nuestros vecinos al sur de la lnea imaginaria que llamamos lmite. Archive 2009-12-01
  • Flora on one occasion had been reduced to rage and despair, had her most secret feelings lacerated, had obtained a view of the utmost baseness to which common human nature can descend -- I won't say _a propos de bottes_ as the French would excellently put it, but literally _a propos_ of some mislaid cheap lace trimmings for a nightgown the romping one was making for herself. Chance
  • The motor on the outstroke crosses V-shaped parts about from one-sixth to one-seventh from the out end, the displacer charge now passing into the motor cylinder, displacing the exhaust gases by these ports and filling the cylinder and the space at the end of it with the explosive mixture. Scientific American Supplement, No. 484, April 11, 1885
  • These goals can be achieved by treating simple lacerations of the hand conservatively instead of with sutures.
  • Gold is found in a wide variety of geologic settings, but placer gold and gold veins are the most economically important.
  • Terrified and panicking, he tried to kick in a glass door to escape his pursuers and, in doing so, fatally lacerated himself.
  • Fourteen specimens are obviously from placer deposits.
  • Le sue lettere avrebbero potuto essermi di conforto; ma quando io le riceveva era già trascorso lo spazio di due giorni dal momenta in cui furono scritte, e questo pensiero distruggeva tutto il bene che esse potevano farmi, e la mia anima era lacerata dai più crudeli timori. Life of Lord Byron, Vol. 5 (of 6) With His Letters and Journals
  • lacerate leaves
  • About half the injuries involve fractures, lacerations, contusions, or sprains from people tripping over extension cords.
  • Satan, then, as the Tempter is the great placer of "scandals, Epistles to the Seven Churches in Asia.
  • Vicky said it tasted of candyfloss, but there was also a sharpness that reminded me of the mouth-lacerating ‘Rhubarb and Custard’ penny chews from when I was little.
  • A few years later a crisis of confidence led him into an almost reclusive lifestyle, where he would paint to get away from the pain and, more disturbingly, lacerate his skin because he believed he wasn't attractive to the opposite sex.
  • It was when she shook hands with him and lacerated her tender skin in the fisty grip of his rope-calloused palms. CHAPTER V
  • His poem - for all the mellifluousness of its alexandrines - was a lacerating attack upon the proposition that "tout est bien."
  • Extensive slit-like cuts in this region, when deep enough to lacerate the keratogenous membrane, are sometimes followed by the growth of a fissure in the horn, and what might almost be termed a permanent sand-crack results. Diseases of the Horse's Foot
  • Le sue lettere avrebbero potuto essermi di conforto; ma quando io le riceveva era gia trascorso lo spazio di due giorni dal momenta in cui furono scritte, e questo pensiero distruggeva tutto il bene che esse potevano farmi, e la mia anima era lacerata dai piu crudeli timori. Life of Lord Byron With His Letters And Journals
  • `Is this anything like a placer mine after they've got the gold out? HIGH STAND
  • These are superficial lacerations of the intima that do not involve the media or adventitia.
  • Piso, that when he answered him he fetched one of his brows up to his forehead, and bent the other down to his chin; Respondes, altero ad frontem sublato, altero ad mentum depresso supercilio, crudelitatem tibi non placere. The Essays
  • There are also $60 satellite games held on most days once the main game has finished, during which the top ten placers win a free seat!
  • He had a further accident lacerating his tendons and breaking his left wrist.
  • I had risen early, and though I had made an unusually careful toilet, calling Yorke to my aid to see that every lacer was fresh and securely tied, and my buckles shining, yet I had made much haste also, not knowing at what hour mademoiselle proposed starting, and fearing greatly to annoy her by being one moment tardy. The Rose of Old St. Louis
  • Woody plants show three ecological strategies: deciduous woody in summer: Thamnoseris lacerata var. lobata (Asteraceae-Cichoroideae), the only tree on the island. bushy woody, evergreen, microphyllous (small leafed): Frankenia vidalii (Frankeniaceae) and Atriplex chapinii (Chenopodiaceae). woody, bushy, with succulent leaves: Suaeda nesophila (Chenopodiaceae) and Maireana brevifolia (Chenopodiaceae). San Félix-San Ambrosio Islands temperate forests
  • A white tunic and a paenula of fine white cloth or a lacerna, both being long and ample so as to fall in becoming folds, would be the best. Beric the Briton : a Story of the Roman Invasion
  • He suffered severe bruising, lacerations, and a dislocated elbow, plus shock and the loss of blood.
  • He had a strong, consistent serve, he was an accurate placer of the ball, and could lob and volley with equal panache.
  • Indeed, for the third and fourth placers, it was their first trips outside their home land.
  • The ore itself had to be weathered before sluicing in a process similar to gold placering, in which dirt was washed through sluice boxes so that heavier elements-like gold and sapphires-dropped to the bottom and became lodged in riffles.
  • She lacerates Obama, his administration and his family for failures in government spending, foreign policy, business, education, immigration, morality and faith. In 'Obama Diaries,' self-absorbed musings
  • Second, they are acknowledging you are a good placer.
  • Boule is a smart synthesis of Parisian-inspired sweets, including a pâtisserie (pastries), glacerie (ice cream and sorbet), chocolaterie (truffles) and confiserie (assorted confections). The Lobby from SPG
  • A puncture had suddenly worsened and blown, with the damaged tyre now in danger of lacerating the car.
  • His legs were deeply lacerated, but his life was saved when a stranger managed to pluck him from the waters.
  • There are a number of endemic subspecies found in this ecoregion including the Gredos ibex (Capra pyrenaica victoriae) and a number of herpetofauna species, Lacerta monticola cyreni, Salamandra salamandra almanzorensis, and Bufo bufo gredosicola. Iberian conifer forests
  • Nimue is specifically named as a Lady of the Lake; she is the defeater, or perhaps simply replacer, of Merlin at Arthur's Court.
  • They lacerated him for saying he wanted the Democratic Party to reach out to working-class Southerners who drive pickups bearing Confederate-flag decals.
  • A midline incision is used, and the first step is to remove blood and clots and control active bleeding from liver lacerations by packing.
  • It ascends obliquely in the groove between the Biceps brachii and Pronator teres and crosses the brachial artery, from which it is separated by the lacertus fibrosus; filaments of the medial antibrachial cutaneous nerve pass both in front of and behind this portion of the vein. VII. The Veins. 3c. The Veins of the Upper Extremity and Thorax
  • Long ago Faith had said in Soolsby's but that he "blandished" all with whom he came in contact; but Hylda realised with a lacerated heart that he had ceased to blandish her. The Weavers: a tale of England and Egypt of fifty years ago - Volume 2
  • One could be a shooter, one could be a back-up shooter in case the shooter's balls go, and a placer as well as a back-up shooter.
  • There is no better way of testing whether pain has been felt than by taking the lacerated or contused gums of the patient between the index finger and thumb and making a gentle pressure to collapse the alveolar borders; invariably, they will cry out lustily, _that is pain_! Scientific American Supplement, No. 275, April 9, 1881
  • The region of Morelia, in addition to Art and Culture, also offers Natural Beauties such as the Route of Health, Morelos National Park, and Picturesque Towns such as Charo, Capula, Tiripetío, Cuitzeo and Huandacareo, the last of which offers the opportunity to visit archaeological zones of La Noapalera and Tres Cerritos, and enjoyment of representative culinary treats such as pollo placero ( "marketplace chicken") and candies such as dried fruit pastes called "ates" and a caramel-based confection called "morelianas. Introduction to Michoacán - the soul of Mexico
  • —The artery is superficial throughout its entire extent, being covered, in front, by the integument and the superficial and deep fasciæ; the lacertus fibrosus (bicipital fascia) lies in front of it opposite the elbow and separates it from the vena mediana cubiti; the median nerve crosses from its lateral to its medial side opposite the insertion of the Coracobrachialis. VI. The Arteries. 4b. 2. The Brachial Artery
  • The ER was a mixed blessing: her insides were burnt and lacerated and her arms were a contused mess, but they all thought she was crazy. 365 tomorrows » 2007 » October : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • The physical abuse included severe beatings with knobkerries which resulted in bruises, broken limbs and widespread lacerations.
  • Currently, some of the known deposits (mainly bar placers with easily recoverable gold) are mined by prospector cooperatives.
  • The Company's flagship product, the Sharps Disposal by Mail System (r), is a cost-effective and easy-to-use solution to dispose of medical waste such as hypodermic needles, lancets and any other medical device or objects used to puncture or lacerate the skin News
  • With a desperate movement she tore the lacerated cloth of his trousers open to his hip. WHEN THE APRICOTS BLOOM
  • Sometimes the producers went to absurd lengths to protect their advertisers and product placers, pixelating one of the inmates T-shirts to cover up a rival furniture product.
  • He had a basal skull fracture, lacerations to his scalp, facial abrasions and contusions to both frontal cerebral lobes.
  • Grimmjow's ultimate technique is called Desgarron or "laceration" in Spanish which projects energy claws at an opponent. Xml's Blinklist.com
  • The associated minerals are the important indicator of the genesis and enrichment of placer gold.
  • Bon ben moi j'arrive pas malheureusement… je me réjouissais déjà de placer mon petit commentaire vidéo JUSTE derrière Loïc Le Meur, mais non, je n'ai pas réussi à enregistrer… j'ai pu m'authentifier, mais quand je clique sur le bouton d'enregistrement ou sur enter ou return ou n'importe quoi, ça ne commence jamais à enregistrer… bouhhh Trying the Seesmic Video Plugin — Climb to the Stars
  • On the exterior of the sternum was a laceration an inch and a half in length, covered by a spumy fluid, from the centre of which was heard a gurgling noise, showing that a wound had penetrated into the sac of the pleura. The Dog
  • [5458] Vult placere sese amicae, vult mihi, vult pedissequae, Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Again, the more ancient Crocodilia and Lacertilia have vertebrae with the articular facets of their centra flattened or biconcave, while the modern members of the same group have them procoelous. Essays
  • Therefore, following the convention used by Rewcastle, the immobile, unified lacertilian crus-astragalocalcaneum will be referred to here as simply the crus.
  • So they made us put stones in our shoes and ropes around our waists which lacerated our skin.
  • Mr Copeland, in his gentlemanlike way, completely lacerated the Government's position.
  • The bell on the orthodox church called the members of Mr. Peck's society together for the business meeting with the same plangent, lacerant note that summoned them to worship on Sundays. Annie Kilburn : a Novel
  • Men don't lacerate themselves in their attempts to get laughs.
  • He is a television regular, lacerating the aspirations of bumbling, wannabe chefs.
  • It was a huge abdominal laceration, right through muscle, peritoneum, bowel, and a healthy segment of the lower lobe of the liver. A FEW SHORT NOTES ON TROPICAL BUTTERFLIES
  • Iguanas are one of the five generally recognized infraorders of the lacertilian suborder of reptiles which includes all lizards. The Three Eyed Iguanas of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
  • A major vessel has been lacerated.
  • The band ricocheted from one genre to another, often stopping to blend elements into a kicky pastiche of jump blues, beat poetry and lacerating alt-rock/rap.
  • A retroverted uterus, a lacerated perineum, such minor difficulties as flat feet, such major ones as valvular disease of the heart, are causes of ill health to be ruled out before "nervousness" (or its medical equivalents) is to be diagnosed. The Nervous Housewife
  • Look for herpetic lesions, condylomas, and lacerations.
  • His lacerating lyrics set to heavy squalls of blues-rock riffage made a stand for disaffected youth everywhere. The Sun
  • Multo autem minus doctrina de reprobatione terreri debent ii, qui cum serio ad Deum converti, ei unice placere, et e corpore mortis eripi desiderant, in via tamen pietatis et fidei eo usque, quo volunt, pervenire nondum possunt, siquidem linum fumigans se non extincturum, et arundinem quassatam se non fracturum, promisit misericors Deus. The Creeds of the Evangelical Protestant Churches.
  • Earl passed a treatment room off ER where another youthful trainee, this one masked and gloved, frowned mightily as he wielded a suture and hemostat over a child's lacerated cheek. Mortal Remains
  • The victim was brought into contact with the glass and serious lacerations were caused.
  • But that horror gave way to a more intense and thrilling emotion as he saw the face -- although strangely free from laceration or disfigurement, and impurpled and distended into the simulation of a self-complacent smile -- was a face he recognized! From Sand Hill to Pine
  • They were encouraged by his progress and the lack of any infection in his lacerations.
  • Among the first of the top placers to test their mettle against the course was O'Connor on the mare Wyndham, who came home with only 2.6 time penalties.
  • She suffered serious head injuries and a badly lacerated leg and never regained consciousness.
  • Already without guard Bobby Jackson, who will miss three months because of wrist surgery, the Kings lost center Brad Miller to a shin laceration late in the first quarter and guard Doug Christie to an ejection in the third. USATODAY.com
  • She pulled the bandage away from the skin and regarded the laceration with a critical eye.
  • Cwla members understood that commercial child placers frequently appealed more effectively than they did to birth mothers, and knew they had to compete more vigorously.
  • Athletes who sustained a traumatic laceration requiring repair were eligible.
  • Iron Jay is urging all the top placers from the Olympia to compete at the Arnold.
  • Between these extremes are cases in which the capsular and synovial layer are extensively lacerated without involvement of the bones, and others in which the bones are implicated without serious damage being done to ligaments or synovial layer -- for example, by a bullet passing through and through the cancellated part of one of the constituent bones, or by a fissure extending into the articular surface. Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
  • Colchida nec referam uendentem regna parentis et lacerum fratrem stupro segetesque uirorum10 taurorumque trucis flammas uigilemque draconem et reducis annos auroque incendia facta et male conceptos partus peiusque necatos; septenosque duces ereptaque fulmine flammis moenia Thebarum et uictam, quia uicerat, urbem15 germanosque patris referam matrisque nepotis natorumque epulas conuersaque sidera retro ereptumque diem; nec Persica bella profundo indicta et magna pontum sub classe latentem inuersumque fretum terris, iter aequoris undis. A New Poetry
  • We should prevent products from rip and laceration in the course of transportation and install.
  • Blood was obtained by carotid artery laceration.
  • —The artery is superficial throughout its entire extent, being covered, in front, by the integument and the superficial and deep fasciæ; the lacertus fibrosus (bicipital fascia) lies in front of it opposite the elbow and separates it from the vena mediana cubiti; the median nerve crosses from its lateral to its medial side opposite the insertion of the Coracobrachialis. VI. The Arteries. 4b. 2. The Brachial Artery
  • His leg lacerated by the tiger's claws.
  • She looked pale and sick and scared, and all her testimony was broken by a shaking, lacerating cough. MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
  • These veins usually bear free coarse-grained, high-grade gold and produce most of the placers in the province.
  • They try to perforate the uterus, to get the foetus out, but often lacerate the cervix along the way, so many bleed heavily or leave tissue in the womb which becomes infected. Unsafe abortion in Zambia
  • The star of I Love You Phillip Morris, The Truman Show, Man on the Moon and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind teams up with the primed-for-prime-time players to lacerate today's headline-splashing people and events. Tonight's TV Hot List: Saturday, Jan. 8, 2011
  • Instead of making that kind of attack, I wanted to make one that was satirical - one that would lacerate, tear apart, shred the CIA by burlesquing them, by using these great materials.
  • Lacerations are common simple problems; their treatment requires tremendous resources.
  • His leg was lacerated by the tiger's claws.
  • The man's face was severely lacerated in the accident.
  • The quick session produced no jams, no misdirected shots, and best of all, no springs flying through the air looking for a face to lacerate. Paradise General
  • The first care of the two unspilt friends was to extricate their unfortunate companions from their bed of quickset — a process which gave them the unspeakable satisfaction of discovering that they had sustained no injury, beyond sundry rents in their garments, and various lacerations from the brambles. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club
  • Lacfdfiemoaium 273, 3 lacemnda 350, ix lacerant 298, 4 Quinti Horatii Flacci Opera
  • Placer’ gold deposits are those that accumulate in the sediments of stream beds.
  • How I avoided serious lacerations I will never know.
  • Again the rope whistled in the air, again it grided across the boy's naked back, and once more the crimson furrow bore witness to the violent laceration. Eric, or Little by Little
  • A doubtful look crossed Lena's face, which wt had suffered a thousand tiny lacerations and were leaking out pain. HOMELAND AND OTHER STORIES
  • She was suffering from a badly lacerated hand.
  • Excessive dietary fat intake bring adverse affects to health, the low_fat food develop quickly worldwide. Fat in food may replaced by formulating with fat replacer.
  • His fist smacked into her chest and she grunted in pain but held fast, despite her lacerated hands.
  • ‘Omnivory in lacertid lizards: adaptive evolution or constraint?’ THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH
  • In patentibus Asiae campis certo die congregant se, eam quae novissime advenit lacerant, inde avolant. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • He had a basal skull fracture, lacerations to his scalp, facial abrasions and contusions to both frontal cerebral lobes.
  • It takes almost no force for one of these points or edges to cause a laceration.
  • Osculi sensus, brachiorum amplexus, kissing and embracing are proper gifts of Nature to a man; but these are too lascivious kisses, [5116] Implicuitque suos circum meet colla lacertos, Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Her bare feet were lacerated as she dug through the wreckage.
  • Of greatest interest here, however, is the function of the lacertilian mesotarsal joint.
  • A washing machine he was putting into the skip slipped backwards, gashing his forehead, splitting his nose and leaving his fingers badly lacerated.
  • This page gives you lots of information, with pictures, of the various kinds of lacertilians.
  • The first care of the two unspilt friends was to extricate their unfortunate companions from their bed of quickset -- a process which gave them the unspeakable satisfaction of discovering that they had sustained no injury, beyond sundry rents in their garments, and various lacerations from the brambles. The Pickwick Papers
  • In a Stirling refrigerator, this phase angle is provided by the relative movement of the piston and the displacer.
  • —A third head (10 per cent.) to the Biceps brachii is occasionally found, arising at the upper and medial part of the Brachialis, with the fibers of which it is continuous, and inserted into the lacertus fibrosus and medial side of the tendon of the muscle. IV. Myology. 7d. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Arm
  • He was concerned he wouldn't measure up to the rest of the group, " said Randy Yost, committee chairman and former CEO of Placer Bank of Commerce in California.
  • A badly lacerated knee meant he missed the Third Test but the attrition rate in the Kiwi camp meant that instead of being able to put his feet up, he had to travel to France to play in a one-off Test.
  • A washing machine he was putting into the skip slipped backwards, gashing his forehead and leaving his fingers badly lacerated.
  • You will be publicly lacerated by a few managers who will feel obliged to feign indignation that you didn't select his county's full-back/full-forward, whatever.
  • Gratiarum choro stipata, et toto Cupidinum populo comitata, et balteo suo cincta, cinnama fragrans, et balsama rorans, calva processerit, placere non potent nee Vulcano suo. Gryll Grange
  • Characterized by hard-driving drumbeats, guitar-driven melodies and truly larynx-lacerating vocal work, this mix is your initiation to a genre of music that is heavier than a speeding locomotive.
  • On a busy night in the Harcourt Hotel in September 1999, a glass stem broke and lacerated her left wrist.
  • An automotive road spring bolt rapid replacer comprises a shell component, a power input mechanism, a triple retarding mechanism and a power output mechanism.
  • Nonetheless, I do firmly believe that with all that money pouring in, the English FA could spread it around to all the teams, with the lowest placers getting a slightly larger percentage.
  • The lacerations probably looked pretty bad right after the accident, but they were what we call superficial. LET ME CALL YOU SWEETHEART
  • Her transactions and interactions with clients add up to a lacerating portrait of contemporary mores among the wealthy and the legions of us who depend on their largesse.
  • It was a huge abdominal laceration, right through muscle, peritoneum, bowel, and a healthy segment of the lower lobe of the liver. A FEW SHORT NOTES ON TROPICAL BUTTERFLIES
  • Coahuilaceratops is a chasmosaurine ceratopsid, often called a "ceratopsian" or "horned" dinosaur, and was almost certainly an herbivore. EurekAlert! - Breaking News
  • Even my shadow brushing against him would lacerate his nerves. I'LL TAKE YOU THERE

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