How To Use One by one In A Sentence

  • So I opened each pod one by one, plucking the beans inside.
  • Ray was knocking them down one by one, unlike his tragic ancestor who only knocked himself down.
  • None of them were bleeding, so she fetched a washcloth and bathed them, one by one, just to be sure there wasn't any dirt in the wounds. GALILEE
  • I quit talking as his hands began to knead my tired, knotted muscles and one by one, I felt them all begin to slacken.
  • As they are picked off one by one, the pace remains snappy and the viewing experience is over before you know it. The Sun
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  • The contestants are eliminated one by one until the last two compete in a head-to-head contest.
  • They round up all the villagers and execute them one by one.
  • One by one they closed or merged with a fund that had a broader remit. Times, Sunday Times
  • All those little frog fastenings—he itched to unfasten them one by one. How to Woo a Reluctant Lady
  • The glass threads are then pressed into the mastic vertically one by one.
  • One by one, his rivals sped past until he found himself trundling behind in eighth. Times, Sunday Times
  • Navy commandoes slid down to the vessel one by one, yet then the unexpected occurred: The passengers that awaited them on the deck pulled out bats, clubs, and slingshots with glass marbles, assaulting each soldier as he disembarked. The Volokh Conspiracy » Pro-Palestinian “Peace Activists”
  • One by one the witnesses narrated the sequence of events which led up to the disaster.
  • Chief mate, give me your bunker records please. I have to check them one by one.
  • She got rid of her victims one by one, with cold and calculated precision.
  • Just as the exquisite sea-anemones and all the graceful ocean-flowers die out at some fathoms below the surface, the elegances and suavities of life die out one by one as we sink through the social scale. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 20, June, 1859
  • When the candidates lined up one by one to be photographed beside her, McDonough held each person's hand, said something friendly and smiled unselfconsciously until the flash in the camera went off.
  • One by one ten guards clad in dull armor emerged from the entrance and stomped heavily towards the waiting Rathgal Tayotos and Shase.
  • One by one they had taken waterproof oilskins and boots from the lighthouse; the last one had apparently locked the outer door behind him.
  • One by one they were released into the River Stour from the jetty by the sailing club near the slipway at Quay Street.
  • Then breaking the surface, one by one, the swimmers form a new line, a line that charges ahead like an angry serpent.
  • A professional hit man is killing the team one by one.
  • We left quietly, one by one, without telling anyone and without taking anything with us.
  • One by one, states are pulling the plug on the chairs popularly known as Old Sparky.
  • One by one, red-coated soldiers goose-stepped in.
  • The team dispersed in ignominious defeat, and it was not until after dark that the dogs came sneaking back, one by one, by meekness and humility signifying their fealty to White The Love-Master
  • But it so chanced, that Bello's crafts, one by one meeting the foe, in most cases found the canoes of Vivenza much larger than their own; and manned by more men, with hearts bold as theirs; whence, in the ship - duels that ensued, they were worsted; and the canoes of Vivenza, locking their yard-arms into those of the vanquished, very courteously gallanted them into their coral harbors. Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. II (of 2)
  • Thus also in the sports which have made us happiest and been recollected as folk and individual memories, the particular occasions in which great deeds were done by great heroes, even, in a diminuendo, done by oneself, were then gathered into the collectivity of family or national storytelling. 'A Short History of Celebrity'
  • One by one, the icons of a different Tory party have been thrown away. Times, Sunday Times
  • One by one the maidens waltzed with the young prince, hoping to win his heart, but his heart belonged to Odette.
  • Instead, she has picked off her potential rivals one by one. Times, Sunday Times
  • To his horror he saw that the thatch was aflame, the rotten pillars were catching fire one by one, and the rafters were burning like tinder. The Art of the Story-Teller
  • Indeed, even those academics unversed in the culture of the small college probably will not find them particularly surprising, taken one by one.
  • The desk, said to have belonged to the martyred poet Federico Garc í a Lorca, is passed along one by one among Ms. Krauss's characters. A Desk and Its Stories
  • Five small ships were commandeered without incident, but soldiers rappelling from helicopters onto the deck of the Marmara, with some 600 passengers on board, were attacked by several dozen activists armed with bars, slingshots and knives as they landed on deck one by one, according to video footage released by the military. Israel's Deadly Flotilla Raid Ruled Legal
  • One by one, in order of seniority, employees' names were called and they trooped forward to receive a thin smile and an envelope from Eloise.
  • One by one, he picked up the diamond necklace, the ruby necklace, the sapphire ring, and the onyx ring.
  • the prisoners came out one by one
  • There would be a ring of dudes and one dude would be in the middle and then one by one, someone would tackle you and if you fell in the first minute, you had to run a mile as fast as you could.
  • It's a straightforward, unimaginative slasher picture about a serial killer convict, one Leo Rook, who kills off warders and fellow lags one by one when they are marooned on a lighthouse.
  • The women came out one by one, dressed in their finest linen, and with ceremonial headdresses and jewellery.
  • After their cream tea the residents are helped one by one from their chairs by nurses and deposited on their frames. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then, as the heat of the coals wilted the maguey, we would fold the pencas over, one by one, in a basket weave over the top of the coals.
  • Memory's pearls, in all the purity of their gleaming preciousness, were counted one by one by the flute and dulciana; and the sadder tones of the waldflute proclaimed the finding of the cross. The Rosary
  • Christian should reluctantly give up, one by one, the pleasures of the world; and look back upon them, when relinquished, with eyes of wistfulness and regret: because he knows not the sweetness of the delights with which true Christianity repays those trifling sacrifices, and is greatly unacquainted with the _nature_ of that pleasantness which is to be found in the ways of Religion. A Practical View of the Prevailing Religious System of Professed Christians, in the Middle and Higher Classes in this Country, Contrasted with Real Christianity.
  • Instead, she has picked off her potential rivals one by one. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hank grabbed his bandoleer and started to check the ammo clips one by one.
  • She had gone in; but she would soon reappear, for it could be seen that she was carrying little new cheeses one by one to a spring-cart and horse tethered outside the gate — her grandmother, though not a regular dairywoman, still managing a few cows by means of a man and maid. The Romantic Adventures of a Milkmaid
  • The contestants are eliminated one by one until the last two compete in a head-to-head contest.
  • She opened the croft gate, and the women filed in, one by one before us, and stood on the unploughed plots of the croft.
  • This caused delay of several days, but once the new breechblocks were completed one by one the guns were rushed to use.
  • A few recalled memorable collective punishment: a whole class getting caned, one by one, for substandard academic performance, or because one miscreant declined to come forward. Archbishop wrestles with doubts on school paddling
  • • Reintroduce such starchy vegetables and tubers as calabaza, yuca (cassava root or manioc), potatoes, taro, arracache, yams (ñame), and yautia, in small amounts and one by one. THE NEW ATKINS FOR A NEW YOU
  • Tristyn picked up the pile and began to sift through the letters one by one, setting the bills in one pile for her next call with her mother, her mother's personal mail and her own.
  • One by one the crowd was released, sometimes rushing like untameable animals, speaking quickly in hurried, excited tones as they offered things to be signed, taking pictures of us and with us.
  • He felt as if he had been led through the seven deadly sins one by one, with lust leading the way.
  • We have visited professors' offices one by one, and announced the event in our classes.
  • Barnaby starts to snuff the candles out one by one with a long silver snuffer. SEA MUSIC
  • It regarded them severally, then individually, peering at them one by one as though taking roll. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • They were brought in one by one by detectives. The Bullet Catchers
  • The world was turning off its lights, one by one... A gust of wind shook the windowpane. EVERVILLE
  • She then opened the container and one by one removed the six items and placed them on the counter.
  • One by one, he disentangled the fish caught by their gills in his net.
  • The command line arguments are then accessed one by one from the stack and stored in the memory area until the command table gets full.
  • The board's budget is often approved through a process called seriatim in which the five commissioners sign off on a proposal one by one in sequence. Audit Watchdog, Chinese Counterparts Restart Inspection Talks
  • One by one the wolves crept nearer, jaws opened, tongues lolling as if they laughed at her helplessness. THE WOLF AND THE DOVE
  • One by one they closed or merged with a fund that had a broader remit. Times, Sunday Times
  • One by one, shadowy, transparent figures of skinny, bony people appeared all around.
  • The only time consuming piece of this snack is that you need to let the layers set up one by one. Peanut Butter Cup Rice Krispie Bars | Baking Bites
  • They unstrapped each of us (none of us could reach our own straps) and escorted us out one by one.
  • Now and again some workman would stop to light his pipe, but the others tramped on round him with never a smile, never a word to a mate, pasty faces all turned towards Paris, which swallowed them one by one
  • In Hong Kong death registration at one of four death registries is required by law and is usually done by one of the more educated relatives of the dead person.
  • One by one, they will shut until coal mines are finally consigned to history.
  • But suppose she could replace all of his memories, one by one, as minerals migrate through a fallen log to create petrified wood. THE BROKEN GOD
  • He arrived in Whitby at a time when rural Methodist chapels were closing one by one and believers were few and far between.
  • In the second chapter, the basic conception , characteristic as well as the average design method about built-in system are presentation one by one.
  • One by one, most of the bears either changed their views or found themselves shunted aside. DOT.CON
  • I want to feel the fruits one by one, test the quality of the skin, sniff the aromatic oils that tell me an orange is going to be a delight rather than a dull, routine element consumed to satisfy dietary needs only.
  • Lining up in a rainbow of small, banana-shaped plastic boats, one by one we steered our kayaks across the angry stretch of open water.
  • Slowly, I turned round and round to look into the face of each of the kibbutzniks, one by one.
  • We skied down the slope one by one.
  • Page 334 esthetically, intellectually, and as a mold of form one of the very lowest of the low order of batrachia, will eat his fill of leaden shot, when thrown to him one by one, until by excess of artificial weight he is utterly unable to move. Recollections and reflections : an auto of half a century and more,
  • One by one, plump little bodies accumulated, tied to the cantles and pom'mels of saddles. Elvenborn
  • The former lifeguard leapt in and rescued them one by one. The Sun
  • But as the shrinking demand for classical recordings, or a glutted market, led to a marked decline in sales, and recording costs continued high, labels started dropping orchestras one by one. NSO back on the record -- or CD
  • Oh, and the donkeywork is done by ones PhD student who is now to busy to archive, and one obviously wouldn’t stoop to that sort of thing oneself. Wilson et al 2007 « Climate Audit
  • One by one his fellow passengers passed it back to him with smiles. Times, Sunday Times
  • One by one, each one turned their defeated eyes upon the discouraged paramedics and stunned police officer that stood just on the opposite side of the doors.
  • What will they do when they stand before God's holy throne and watch helplessly as, one by one, many of their sheep are condemned because they were never confronted about their sins?
  • Along the tour, the brattier guests keep discovering some nasty surprises, and one by one, the tour group thins out.
  • The world was turning off its lights, one by one... A gust of wind shook the windowpane. EVERVILLE
  • Mail bomb campaigns typically generate terror by sending devices one by one to diverse targets over an extended period of time.
  • One by one they moved, shuffling closer to the reassuring glow and pulling their thick cloaks tightly about their heads. The Gods of Asgard
  • The team dispersed in ignominious defeat, and it was not until after dark that the dogs came sneaking back, one by one, by meekness and humility signifying their fealty to White Fang. The Love-Master
  • The just-hatched cuckoo, still blind and featherless, has a special hollow like a dimple on its back, so that it can hump out of the nest, one by one, its companion fledglings.
  • The cop plays cat-and-mouse with the robbers, knocking them off one by one, all the while carrying on a verbal sparring match with the ringleader via walkie-talkie.
  • The women broke into a wailing chant, swaying backward and forward in abandonment, while one by one the men succumbed to the excitement till only Sime remained. THE MASTER OF MYSTERY
  • However, the "resentful" Afghans picked off the column of men, women and children returning to the safety of India one by one in a series of attacks and ambushes. OPEN THREAD
  • One by one the marker flares went out, swallowed by the approaching mass.
  • And in the midst of it, far away though they were, they saw the palace of the Queen of the South; and it was so full of windows all looking toward the sea, and they were so full of light, both from the sunset that was fading upon the water and from candles that maids were lighting one by one, that it looked far off like a pearl, shimmering still in its haliotis shell, still wet from the sea. The Book of Wonder
  • He pulled them out, one by one, tossed them into the river, and belted the Burberry again. A SEASON IN HELL
  • One by one, then ten by ten and twenty by twenty, the frail sacks of flesh stirred and began to pick themselves up, the stronger aiding the weaker; they climbed to their feet or rolled to sit up, groggy, shaky, hair a mess, unbelieving and begrimed. Dead Zero
  • One by one, silently, they head out the door, across the lobby and into the waiting chartered bus.
  • Certain desirable objets such as old roof tiles, an ancient cartwheel, a granite water trough and other items we hardly thought of as portable disappeared one by one from the building site.
  • One by one they moved, shuffling closer to the reassuring glow and pulling their thick cloaks tightly about their heads. The Gods of Asgard
  • One by one they moved, shuffling closer to the reassuring glow and pulling their thick cloaks tightly about their heads. The Gods of Asgard
  • But the monster in the appearance, must swallow one by one soldier of fortune.
  • One by one, live birds are hung by the feet on a moving line of hooks called shackles and mechanically stunned, decapitated, and scalded to remove the feathers.
  • It is a pitiful sight, and when one by one the women have made their bargains, we notice that the shopboard is depleted of its heap of scrags and odds and ends. London's Underworld
  • I see that film as evidencing the insidious effects of a creeping, dangerous worldview slowly infecting a small group of people, and then one by one destroying them.
  • The miserable prisoners, yoked at the neck, their faces burned red by this sudden exposure to the sun after years of darkness, were led up one by one to the carnifex, who took them down into the Carcer and strangled them—thankfully out of sight, but still I could see that Cicero was keeping his face averted and talking fixedly to Hybrida. CONSPIRATA
  • One by one they began to rain down on the earth, shining brightly in a glittering dance before they faded at the edge of the world.
  • After their cream tea the residents are helped one by one from their chairs by nurses and deposited on their frames. Times, Sunday Times
  • Stones belonging to the stylobate (lowest row of stones) of the naiskos have been studied one by one for cracks that needed consolidation. Interactive Dig Sagalassos - Restoration Report 8
  • She opened the jar and dribbled a thin line of clear liquid over his cuts, one by one.
  • One by one, rinse each leek under cool water, taking care to wash away any dirt trapped between its layers.
  • One by one they go, and not a regret embitters their departure; the young succeed them in their places, Louis Quatorze is swelling larger and shining broader, another generation and another France dawn on the horizon; but for us and these old men whom we have loved so long, the inevitable end draws near and is welcome. Memories and Portraits
  • Certain desirable objets such as old roof tiles, an ancient cartwheel, a granite water trough and other items we hardly thought of as portable disappeared one by one from the building site.
  • Other well-placed individuals, appalled by the crass attacks on him by baying Conservative hacks, are now emerging, one by one, to have their say. Archive 2009-11-01
  • Powerful unforeseen forces jeopardize the peaceful stability of mathic life and the established ennui of the Extramuros — a threat that only an unsteady alliance of saecular and avout can oppose — as, one by one, Erasmas and his colleagues, teachers, and friends are summoned forth from the safety of the concent in hopes of warding off global disaster. 2008 July | Fanatical Pupil
  • A cloud was slowly spiraling towards the sun and they retreated, moving to the edge of the forest, watching the skeletons appear one by one.
  • When Giselle Kapochany's beautiful soprano voice began to sing ‘Stille Nacht’ under the starry sky, one by one doors opened onto lit rooms, and voices from many countries joined in.
  • The house-boys were directed to fetch handcuffs, and, one by one, the Lunga runaways were haled down out of their trees and made fast. Chapter 11
  • According to the only survivor, his comrades went under one by one.
  • Driver update software can save you a lot of time, as they will scan your existing driver files and provide you with all of the latest versions of device drivers available, so you will be able to plug in and start using your devoices straight away without having to up date the drivers one by one. DonationCoder.com Forum
  • One by one, like a flight of swallows, our more meagrely sparred and canvassed yachts went by, leaving them wallowing and dead and shortening down in what they called a gale but which we called a dandy sailing breeze. A Collection of Stories
  • One by one, each was filled by a sphere of rose-gold light, crackling and hissing as arcs of sorcerial lightning arced across them and linked all six in a network of coruscant flame.
  • But time goes by, and your friends start getting older and dying off one by one, and you just start realizing life isn't that precious.
  • They live in a beachside villa before their exes arrive one by one. The Sun
  • Blankets and oxygen were pulled over to the canoeists and rescuers, who were left on the island until the RAF helicopter arrived and lifted them one by one over to the river bank.
  • He saw them, one by one, leave their cotton at the ginhouse, and trail despondingly off to their cabins. Winter Evening Tales
  • PNM members gave picong as UNC MPs stood up not in unison, but one by one, and sometimes very, very slowly, as was the case of Kelvin Ramnath. TrinidadExpress Today's News
  • Hamilton went through those confederations one by one, sparing his audience a discussion of other examples although they would, he said, prove that the principle was destructive “even as far back as the Lycian and Achaean leagues.” Ratification
  • The snipers picked the soldiers off one by one as they ran for cover.
  • Having just bought a collection of nearly 100 old jazz albums, Woker was tending to them, one by one.
  • He finds Obama's position "dismaying" and even quotes British political philosopher Edmund Burke: "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle. James Warren: This Week in Magazines: What's at Stake in the Election, Atlantic's Redesign and The New Yorker's Brainiacs
  • One by one his fellow passengers passed it back to him with smiles. Times, Sunday Times
  • One by one, they enter a rickety freight elevator, manned by a kind young fellow in a dog collar; he directs them down a long, white hallway.
  • One by one each soldier approached the coffin and gave a final salute.
  • So it commissioned some of its best wizards to build a machine that, presumably, would work much more accurately and at a somewhat brisker rate than Marissa Mayer turning pages one by one. In the Plex
  • One by one the others perform the same feat, and continue the sport for hours, striving which can produce the loudest brattle while turning. A Popular Account of Dr. Livingstone's Expedition to the Zambesi and Its Tributaries
  • One by one. Like bugs beneath his heel.
  • It is as if the actors in a burlesque had one by one left the stage and obligingly posed for a photographist.
  • Flower - de - luce climbed all the braes one by one to overlook the visit of darkness like Psalters.
  • Instead, she has picked off her potential rivals one by one. Times, Sunday Times
  • One by one, its children learn of their society's dark underbelly and so become adults.
  • One by one the houses burst into flames.
  • Everyone in it seemed to stir into immediate life at cockcrow, and the farm then spun and whirred like a complicated bit of clockwork until after sunset, when one by one the cogs and wheels that made it run began to fall away, rolling off into the dark to seek supper and bed, only to reappear like magic in their proper places in the morning. Sick Cycle Carousel
  • The council builds its calendar for the year around its priority issues, examining them one by one.
  • One by one the men step forward and deliver angry, defiant messages. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thank you to the human who arrived in a natty blue uniform, removed the cover and climbed into the hole to lift us one by one into warm hands.
  • Soldiers rappelling from helicopters onto the deck of the Marmara, with some 600 passengers on board, were mobbed by several dozen activists as they landed on deck one by one. Israeli Inquiry Finds Flotilla Interception Was Legal
  • One by one they put their collection plates on the alms dish. GOODBYE CURATE
  • One by one the receding gondolas turned and came nearer, one bright eye gleaming at each prow, as they stole like conspirators upon the gaily lanterned barge. A Venetian June
  • One by one explosive device was detonated when the robot bomb, the other explosive devices at the four successfully removed by bomb disposal experts.
  • One by one they stepped out onto the thin cable slung beneath each yard-arm to pull up the sails and make the gaskets fast.
  • It's a different atmosphere with the undergrads gone, and my fellow grads slipping one by one onto flights home.
  • It also shows that even single electrons - proceeding one by one - interfere.
  • One by one they trotted and cantered over little crossbars and verticals and then filed out into the smaller grass ring that adjourned the hunt field.
  • Will you count off the figures one by one so that I can write them down?
  • For a time no sound was heard save the dull "plunk" of sinkers as the lines, one by one, were flung into the water. A Little Bush Maid
  • One by one, the aged tottered in, each one seemingly more decrepit than the one before.
  • Now Forgacs and a company called Sciperio have developed a device with printing heads that extrude clumps of cells mechanically so that they emerge one by one from a micropipette. Boing Boing: April 9, 2006 - April 15, 2006 Archives
  • Forming us into a row on deck, and calling our names one by one, this functionary handed to each a billet, permitting the holder to go ashore, on condition of an instant compearance at the pontifical police-office. Pilgrimage from the Alps to the Tiber Or The Influence of Romanism on Trade, Justice, and Knowledge
  • The queen bee is serviced by her male drones, and then she kills them off one by one.
  • And one by one they triumphed. The Sun
  • In the spring of 1995 the main Nightingale mine workings were investigated, and on each subsequent trip, workings were examined one by one in a northerly direction.
  • The lady gimleted us again one by one with her blue eyes. New Treasure Seekers
  • All that the rescue helicopters and a hovercraft could do was pick their bodies from the sea in the dark, landing them one by one on the beach.
  • Dust filled the air as one by one the vampires met their doom.
  • Slaves to unnumbered ancient ‘taboos,’ superstitions, prejudices, and fallacies, which one by one are slowly but surely weakening under the clear light of the morning of science; the savior of mankind.
  • She will make the "bottle" of lavender by weaving satin ribbon through the stem "bars" of the "cage" that she has formed from the lavender tiges (the stems having been bent, one by one, back over the bundle of flowers, interning the lavender like so many sweet-scented prisoners). Tante Marie-Francoise
  • After thoroughly investigating their backgrounds and their political beliefs, he had approached them one by one.
  • One by one the ten rings blazed brightly with orange and red flame, but Lauren still would not talk.
  • All these jobs can now be done by one single machine.
  • With a huge white canvas on the easel before them, artists were called, one by one randomly, given a minute to convey his idea by a deft stroke in his chosen colour.
  • He, too, made his farewells, and one by one the others left until only Kate Pulaski remained, carefully picking up the bellflower. The Beast That Resembles A Poem(A Handy Resource for Architects,Engineers, and Students)
  • Three students and a teacher made speech one by one and each had his strong point. Regardless of freshman of undergraduate or doctor of literature, they were all tub-thumping.
  • One by one the wolves crept nearer, jaws opened, tongues lolling as if they laughed at her helplessness. THE WOLF AND THE DOVE
  • When the field was reduced to the final twelve, lesser talents got knocked off one by one.
  • This paper distinguishes the teachers' professional ethical code with those non-moral codes one by one, and points out the causes and inappropriateness of their confusion.
  • One by one the men made the shore, weary and bedraggled, limbs aching from the strain of fighting the storm.
  • One by one as we scurried them towards the tow-line and began to lever them into harness, they raised their muzzles and let out a yowl to wake the dead.
  • One by one, the other barbarian tribes step up to join the bling fest. Times, Sunday Times
  • I bought the buildings and rehabbed them one by one.
  • But one by one, the stars made their escape from the red carpet, and soon Bardem was hanging out on the loading dock smoking corner alongside girlfriend and Oscar winner Penelope Cruz and The Hurt Locker's Jeremy Renner. Onstage drama and backstage delight at the Academy Awards
  • THOUSANDS of sheep, soft-footed, black-nosed sheep—one by one going up the hill and over the fence—one by one four-footed pattering up and over—one by one wiggling their stub tails as they take the short jump and go over—one by one silently unless for the multitudinous drumming of their hoofs as they move on and go over—thousands and thousands of them in the grey haze of evening just after sundown—one by one slanting in a long line to pass over the hill— Sheep
  • The U.S. Coast Guard, going in and plucking, one by one, these victims from rooftops and other areas along the Gulf of Mexico.
  • We listened as, one by one, each politician related the same kinds of war stories.
  • One by one, they staggered to the podium, like footballers with groin strains.
  • All these jobs can now be done by one single machine.
  • One by one, other houseboats come into view and join our convoy astern.
  • One by one the Minitel's services disappeared, including the wildly popular adult chat services dubbed "convivial messaging" by France Télécom. France Télécom to Bid Adieu to Minitel
  • One by one the old buildings in the city have been demolished and replaced with modern tower blocks.
  • The logic-defying atmosphere of Bosch receded from his art, and although he continued to explore themes of vice and folly, laughter and delight, he increasingly presented these as affairs of flesh-and-blood people in recognizable surroundings, as in "The Blind Leading the Blind" 1568, whose sightless wanderers pitiably tumble one by one into a ditch. Earthy Grandeur
  • As they ran one by one past the Master, calling to each other to “Come and see the auld tower blaw up in the lift like the peelings of an ingan,” he could not but feel himself moved with indignation. The Bride of Lammermoor
  • They had erected each post, one by one, sinking it deep into the caliche hardpan upon which the town was settled, and then into the softness of the sand below.
  • But the guilt has been creeping up on me, grasping at my skin, gnawing away at my bones, chewing on my heart, mauling my conscience, and spitting out my toenails one by one.
  • By reel three, the film has become a creature feature, as they are picked off one by one by a stealthy hunter.
  • An etching, done by one of my great-great aunts, of a path leading uphill in the moonlight, to a small cottage where smoke curls invitingly from the chimney; 2009 January « Becca’s Byline

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