How To Use Out of it In A Sentence

  • I'll get all the engine cowls off, get all the dust out of it, and a lot of areas have to be repolished.
  • Considering my diminutiveness, the size of the pail in my lap, and my drinking out of it my breath held and my face buried to the ears in foam, it was rather difficult to estimate how much I drank. Chapter 3
  • Many of the wrecks around our coasts are either mine or torpedo victims, and either way there is a colossal bang, the ship gets a big chunk blown out of it and the rest lands in a heap nearby.
  • Julian ought to have resigned, then he'd have come out of it with some credit.
  • Troops found the church with large holes blasted out of its cement walls and its tin roof collapsed.
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  • While he was busy, I punched a Tylenol caplet out of its plastic bubble. Ancient, Strange, and Lovely
  • I felt rather out of it in France because I can't speak French.
  • We're trying to drag the country out of its economic morass.
  • Staff have begun moving the remaining animals out of its zoo and mothballing the fairground.
  • Today, tourism has moved out of its ghettoes, with fincas, farmhouses and stone cottages reimagined as hotels and villas.
  • Soon enough, our intrepid reporter hero realizes that, due to some nuclear explosion experimentation, the earth has been thrust out of its orbit and is now spiralling towards the sun.
  • The food is then pushed out of its protective package and left in its serving dish to be cooked in a hot-air oven.
  • ‘It is a question of taking a tragedy and making a political issue out of it, attempting to wrong-foot the government on this issue,’ he said.
  • According to contemporary investigation, the processes of succussion or trituration disturb the atomic state of a drug substance by jolting electron (negative charge) out of its orbit.
  • I like busch light. but lemonade is good too! ya know you take a sour situation and make something good out of it. a great idea. Beer choice at Obama meeting touches off new debate
  • Raine took a big bite out of it, smiling as she did so.
  • We are knee-deep in financial trouble and have no idea how we are going to get out of it.
  • Friars Cowle, which was so snottie and greazie, that good store of kitchin stuffe might have beene boiled out of it; as also a foule slovenly Trusse or halfe doublet, all baudied with bowsing, fat greazie lubberly sweating, and other drudgeries in the Convent The Decameron
  • Never bite on such questions because they'll lead you into a trackless wasteland and you'll never get out of it.
  • Professing not to know that his nubile young companion on one particularly debauched evening was a call girl is even worse than knowing, and then trying to brazen your way out of it.
  • As the lunar disk cleared the horizon, it appeared that a chunk had been taken out of its bottom.
  • The tree seemed to dribble out of its branches like candlewax, and solidify into the spreading trunk and gorged roots. Wildwood
  • Out of its hole it resembles a tompot blenny in shape, but without the antlers and the smile.
  • Maybe a great Open Source platform will pop up from Sun or IBM or maybe Microsoft will decide to monetize the boojum out of it. Shirky FTW
  • Everything you own is second-hand or hand-me-downs, or given to you as a gift over the recent holidays and will become a recycle to your younger brother once you grow out of it.
  • The pallial eye is easy to notice when the snail lifts its operculum up and starts to come out of its shell with the aperture facing up. Cerithidea
  • Lawyers might make a bob or two out of it as well. Times, Sunday Times
  • Other stomach troubles came out of it, such as hiatal hernia, dizziness, extreme inflammation possible heart problems. Inflammation and diet | The Blog of Michael R. Eades, M.D.
  • I doubt we'll get any rain out of it, but I like to listen to Rip Van Winkle and the boys playing ninepins all the same.
  • Life is like a piano,what you get out of it,depends on how you play it.No sweat, no sweet.
  • I don't know or care who started it, but you do not address people in that manner in my classroom, in my hearing or out of it.
  • But they mocked it in a sufficiently understated manner that, if you'll indulge me, I'm going to try to get a little more mileage out of it.
  • It was sounding like a scratched holodisc right now and smoke was fuming out of it's light receptor.
  • I say that on a factual basis rather than making a political point out of it. Times, Sunday Times
  • We mixed it up in a meausureing cup (the hotdog had to be kind of mushed up first * barf, barf*) and poured it into a shot glass which we passed around and had to take a drink out of it. Super-suzan Diary Entry
  • Can't a groover just have a burger without having to scrape eight tons of shit out of it!!
  • The Farous' lament came to an end and the boy punched the tape out of its slot.
  • I think you should put the poor creature out of its misery.
  • Today, tourism has moved out of its ghettoes, with fincas, farmhouses and stone cottages reimagined as hotels and villas.
  • There's as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it
  • Once out of its protective box, any kind of radio wave can potentially ignite it until it is inserted inside the bomb.
  • No thanks to the spoilsports who are trying to take the fun out of it.
  • One small dolphin that washed ashore on a beach near Newquay appeared to have had a large chunk taken out of it by a shark. Times, Sunday Times
  • She makes some stuff which she calls farina out of it, and grieves bitterly that she is no longer young and spry enough to gather it for herself along the shore. Flint His Faults, His Friendships and His Fortunes
  • I say that on a factual basis rather than making a political point out of it. Times, Sunday Times
  • In size there is the difference between the huge _terminalia_ towering up 200 feet high and the tiny little potentilla; between the atlas moth 12 inches in spread and the hardly discernible midges; between the elephant, massive enough to trample its way through the densest forest, and the humble little mouse peeping out of its hole in the ground. The Heart of Nature or, The Quest for Natural Beauty
  • Then, in a minute, the Station relapsed into stupor as the stoker of the Cattle Train, the last to depart, went gliding out of it, wiping the long nose of his oil-can with a dirty pocket-handkerchief. The Lazy Tour of Two Idle Apprentices
  • We are at the bottom of a chalk-pit, Mr Charles," answered Tom, "the fellows have played us a somewhat scurvy trick, but I cannot but say that it was better than sending us over the cliff and breaking our necks; howsomdever, the sooner we get out of it the better as I'm wet to the skin, and would like to take a brisk walk homeward to get dry. Washed Ashore The Tower of Stormount Bay
  • Desiree walked to one of the windows, and tried to brush the dust out of it.
  • Before each new deal the dealer has the option to add more money to the kitty, but must not take anything out of it.
  • If only I can work out a way of securing it so it doesn't jiggle about, can I make a second plant out of it?
  • A car whined in protest , but skidded staunchly out of its driveway.
  • The feed only gets notice when we unhook it, and we're not fed the world by our umbilicals, we're pulled further out of it.
  • The other one had been taken out of its wrapper and put down on the mantel shelf. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • It seems to me that the State goes out of its way to accommodate unfortunate unwed mothers while holding hard-working spouses with children to child care costs as high as their mortgage payments.
  • I don't know about you, my reaction when Kitty Pilgrim reported that is that the Social Security Administration has to be out of its cotton-picking mind not to have advanced the interest of Social Security cardholders, which is all of us in this country, and to deal with that. CNN Transcript May 12, 2006
  • The problem is, I think, that respelling into German might make words fit more smoothly into German grammar, but it takes all the quien-es-mas-trendy? fun out of it. Languagehat.com: DOWNGELOADET?
  • Across the intervening levels the gale races in a straight line from the fort, as if breathed out of it hitherward. A Changed Man
  • The butterfly of the gospel has broken out of its chrysalis at Jerusalem and has flown to the centre of the civilised world.
  • But many Poles hold on to him as a very special person, a very special musician whose music really says Poland, especially when he took different forms, Polish dances, like the mazurka, and took a rustic dance and made high art out of it. Chopin With A Polish Touch
  • She took a pipkin from the hearth, where a small fire burned, though it was summer weather, as Dickie could see by the green tree-tops that swayed and moved outside in the sun, poured some gruel out of it into a silver basin. Harding's Luck
  • Then I began to open the slippery paper out of its folds.
  • The monster stumbled back as purple ooze started to spill out of its metallic form.
  • The room was nodding and chomping their clackers and chewing on the drink, mouthing every bit of taste out of it. CHASING the WHITE DOG
  • That copying something, that sharing something on - line which is infinitely duplicable and there right in front of you natural is different from taking, from going into a store and like sneaking out of it. CNN Transcript Aug 4, 2009
  • There are now electronic gizmos that do the job - and take all the fun out of it. The Sun
  • Mark was ill for most of the holiday so that took all the fun out of it.
  • For age, which naturally and unavoidably is but one remove from death, and consequently should have nothing about it but what looks like a decent preparation for it, scarce ever appears of late days but in the high mode, the flaunting garb, and utmost gaudery of youth; with clothes as ridiculously, and as much in the fashion, as the person that wears them is usually grown out of it. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. II.
  • I think the jury system is going to survive, with nibbles taken out of it.
  • Oh -- the way you get your foot out of a spittoon is just to unlace your shoe and take your foot out of it. The Day I Spoke for Mr. Lincoln
  • That way we risk flattening our financial system, squeezing the innovation out of it, trying to return it to the world of yesteryear, which is neither sensible nor economically productive. Tony Blair Takes on the World
  • The prose is lean and unembellished, and the story flows easily out of it.
  • I'm not saying the characters aren't trite, I'm just saying the film goes out of its way to portray the whalers as uninformed rather than demonizing them.
  • His brother in law gets into major trouble and it's up to the sarge to get him out of it.
  • Scientists have observed a dolphin trying to get a reluctant moray eel to come out of its crevice by poking it with the spiny body of a dead scorpionfish.
  • They both stood at the rail as the gangway was eventually raised and the ship was nudged out of its berth.
  • I wanted to grab my head and shake the cement out of it.
  • So a month later, the world press catches wind of the story and sensationalizes the hell out of it.
  • The clan of Kurush Khan, a subchief of one of the more barbarous Hyrkanian tribes from east of the Sea of Vilayet, had been driven westward out of its native steppes by a tribal feud. Conan the Freebooter
  • I had advanced so far as to sit down at my window again on my second morning, and to write the first half-line of the chapter and strike it out, not liking it, when my conscience reproached me with not having surveyed the watering-place out of the season, after all, yesterday, but with having gone straight out of it at the rate of four miles and a half an hour. Reprinted Pieces
  • The terrine is done when a skewer comes out of it piping hot. Times, Sunday Times
  • The smoke began to pour out of it as the sudden blaze died down.
  • Though this tale of reincarnation and a love that crossed generations starred the peerless Barbara Harris, as a psychically gifted young woman with a past life just waiting to leap out of her, it was generally agreed that the 1965 production was overdressed, overplotted and more or less out of its mind. NYT > Home Page
  • You can make waste sewer pipes out of it. Christianity Today
  • Lord Jesus Christ in incorruption, who continue constant in their love to him, so as not to be corrupted out of it by any baits or seductions whatsoever, and whose love to him is uncorrupted by any opposite lust, or the love of any thing displeasing to him. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • At that spot, they found a dead deer, still steaming, and took hungry, ravenous bites out of it.
  • With a twist she disembowels it, its rancid intestines spilling out onto the floor, and yanks her sword back out of its belly. Session 1: Every New Beginning « Love | Peace | Ohana
  • The animal was lured out of its hole.
  • There's as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it
  • A seaside council which stripped deckchairs, crockery, kettles and hotplates out of its chalets to save money is putting them in a museum ready for the day they become collector's items.
  • It's his turn to wash up but he'll try and duck out of it.
  • As the wick flared and settled, she placed the taper in a silver holder to allow it to burn out of its own accord.
  • She's been very depressed recently, but I'm sure she'll soon pull out of it.
  • This surrealism is particularly notable in Listen to Britain, a cinema-poem about the sounds of wartime London which reaches out of itself to become a stirring portrait of its people. GreenCine Daily: Weekend viewing in San Francisco.
  • Thus it is possible to speak of physical parenthood and of psychical parenthood, and thus not only to avoid the term reproduction, but to get better value out of its substitutes. Woman and Womanhood A Search for Principles
  • It still had sticks, rather than control yokes, and got most of its performance out of its light weight.
  • Her forehead was swelling like an anthill, with beads of blood flowing out of it instead of insects. Chocolate & Vicodin
  • The soul comes from without into the human body, as into a temporary abode, and it goes out of it anew it passes into other habitations, for the soul is immortal. Ralph Waldo Emerson 
  • I'd got myself into this marriage and I jolly well had to get myself out of it.
  • When he came out of it, he held a short, slender wand of a light silvery color.
  • Next Friday is Bastille Day, but even that famous celebration is unlikely to jolt sleepy Montpellier out of its drowsy charm.
  • A former professor talked me out of it in a letter in which she told me she personally did not think anyone could reach Papa.
  • As far as she was concerned, Timothy was ‘Daddy’, and there was no arguing her out of it.
  • What good is it being a kid if buttinsky grownups are going to take all the fun out of it? Healthful Treats for Hallowe'en? It's Sacriholidayous
  • Leave the knives and hot pokers out of it, is my advice.
  • Why would the hair be more relaxed once you took it out of its natural life into a whole nother thing? WHAT LOOKS LIKE CRAZY ON AN ORDINARY DAY
  • And if Mr. Perry were to win the nomination, he would face critics, among them Democrats, who have long complained that the state's economic health came at a steep price: a long-term hollowing out of its prospects because of deep cuts to education spending, low rates of investment in research and development, and a disparity in the job market that confines many blacks and Hispanics to minimum-wage jobs without health insurance. NYT > Home Page
  • There's as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it
  • Chantal's been depressed for days. I wish she'd snap out of it .
  • It is time also for Commonweal to make a policy of asking someone at Fordham or Columbia or NYU to read the technical appendix of a book and determine the adequacy of the sample design before it decides to make a gantze tsimmes out of it.
  • It took me about 2 minutes before I'd quietly undone the two zips on the tent door and silently projected myself head first out of it.
  • Sit with the music, blow a little smoke, time enough to snap out of it, sip the brandy.
  • However, on sunday he seemed a bit out of it, and on monday he was a bit wobbly and very huggy, which is unusual for him. January 22nd, 2009
  • All of the adult breeding pugs had luxating patellas, a congenital deformity likely to be passed along to their puppies where the kneecap dislocates or moves out of its normal location, which can be very painful and is expensive to treat. Wayne Pacelle: Tax Code Crackdown Leads to Rescue of 120 Puppy Mill Dogs
  • And finally she flares into full loquacious life; squiffy but skewering, hardly able to open her mouth without an extraordinary sentence rasping out of it. The Last of the Duchess; 13; The Village Social – review
  • It was an awful job and I'm glad to be out of it.
  • The resaw was to take a plank twice as thick and make two out of it. Oral History Interview with Orlin P. Shuping, June 15, 1975. Interview H-0290. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • In a gesture of support, the US has said it is in favour of Uruguay being bailed out of its financial crisis.
  • Krugman caught my notice for being one guy with a really nervy suggestion on how Japan could get out of its deflationary spiral.
  • Fish extract is used to fine the wine - to take all the cloudy particles out of it.
  • I swear they get a kick out of it: `Oh, no, I'm afraid that doesn't go up to a EE ', they shout across to the cubicle. LOSING IT
  • She has brought the alphorn out of its pastoral roots, teaming up with David Richards, a music producer who previously worked with the rock band Queen, to produce a CD with blues, funk and rock tunes. When She Blows the Alphorn,
  • In 1679 the territory of New Hampshire was carved out of it, and was established as a separate colony.
  • MANAMA—Bahrain gave its sternest warning yet to Iran to keep out of its affairs, saying an escalation in the two countries' dispute over Bahrain's recent crackdown on political unrest could even lead to "conflict. Bahrain Says Meddling by Iran Risks 'Conflict'
  • I think I’ll continue sleeping easy, knowing that W-asshat is out of it for good. Think Progress » College Republicans create ‘W’ Day to honor Bush.
  • Around the mizzenmast is the after-saloon, with eight cabins leading out of it. The South Pole; an account of the Norwegian antarctic expedition in the 'Fram', 1910 to 1912
  • they got a great bang out of it
  • I thought they were putting extra charges on the bill to bilk people who weren't paying attention - I expected them to be very accommodating about correcting the bill if I made an issue out of it.
  • He promised he'd help me decorate, but now he's trying to wriggle out of it.
  • Bored out of its mind, the monkey stares out of the cage with unseeing eyes.
  • Out of it would come one Sally, sister of its swarthy tenant, swarthy herself, shady-lipped, sad-voiced, and, bending over her flower-bed, would gather a "posy," as she called it, for the little boy. Autocrat of the Breakfast Table
  • There are as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it
  • She could keep Judi out of it, but ruin a good few careers, businesses and marriages.
  • Water gushed out of it, trickling down and mixing with the sweat across his face.
  • Trifling articles, like eggs or radishes, might be smuggled into a brown wicker basket with covers; but it did not consort with elegance to "trapes" home with anything that looked inconvenient or had legs sticking out of it. The Imperialist
  • Friars Cowle, which was so snottie and greazie, that good store of kitchin stuffe might have beene boiled out of it; as also a foule slovenly Trusse or halfe doublet, all baudied with bowsing, fat greazie lubberly sweating, and other drudgeries in the Convent The Decameron
  • Each time it launders our shirts, the industry cuts out of it a big piece of cloth. Dr. Vladimir A. Masch: Medicine vs. Economics
  • The t-shirt is white with a horrible looking plastic alien coming out of it, jaws open, blood everywhere.
  • There's as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it
  • They make such big money out of it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Without another word or look, Michael grabbed one of the pieces of wood and made a torch out of it.
  • What's the point of hosting the biggest teatime game show around if you can't get the odd holiday out of it? Times, Sunday Times
  • One facet of this tragedy is the absence of visionary leadership capable of leading humanity out of its quagmire.
  • If you burp a baby you rub its back gently to help air to come out of its stomach.
  • If the author says -- this is all about books, let's either write a contract that includes your Hollywood subagent as a signing party, if there ever is one, or just leave the film rights you don't handle out of it -- would the book agent call her a snooty diva and give her the boot? Archive 2006-10-01
  • She tries talking him out of it, and motivates him by offering him some ‘supplements’.
  • One or both of them might try to wheedle out of it if she left them a loophole. HARSHINI
  • Once they are enmeshed in the often-chaotic foster care system it is extraordinarily difficult to get out of it.
  • I don't know what I wanted to accomplish, but what I did get out of it was a week of after school detentions from Mrs. K.
  • While the sinking fund may not cover the full cost of such an operation, it can take the sting out of its tail.
  • It indicated that the countermanding, in order to get out of it, has to be unequivocal and the greatest countermand that one can offer.
  • As it was, they cut away the remnants of the mizzen-lower-topsail with their sheath-knives, and they loosed the main-skysail out of its bolt-ropes. CHAPTER XLVI
  • Stuyvesant allowed the burgomasters and schepens to nominate their successors, but the city did not have a schout of its own until 1660. The Land We Live In The Story of Our Country
  • The reason you've been out of it so long is mainly because of the sedation. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • The Washington Monument would stick out of it like a spike in a railroad tie.
  • Dividend cover is a measure of how many times a company can afford the dividend out of its current earnings.
  • I prefer the “mast of some great ammiral,” with all its tackle, to the Scotch fir or the alpine tannen; and think that more poetry has been made out of it. Life of Lord Byron
  • We can never thank her sufficiently for cutting out endless pages of songs and recitative by the melancholious old Hermit who, in the original version, was to commence the opera, and wander in and out of it incessantly. The Love Affairs of Great Musicians
  • Then he reached into his back pocket and pulled out his wallet, fishing a business card out of it.
  • With the duck put out of its misery, he told me he'd dispose of the body. FRIENDS FOR LIFE
  • Just think if you recycled all of these materials you won't need to stand on your wheeled bin to squeeze that last bit of space out of it and you might get your lid the whole way down!
  • The night-sisters moved softly to and fro on the beeswaxed boards, smoothing tumbled pillows, adjusting a splint or a bandage, calming the bearded children who fretted because they were hopelessly "out of it. A Tall Ship On Other Naval Occasions
  • His first song was played on his knees, pulling the mic down as if he were skulking in the corner of the room, wanting to play, but not make a drama out of it.
  • When I took this monitor out of its box, the first thing that impressed me was its narrow bezels - the frame that surrounds the glass screen.
  • Their logo is a silhouette of an apple with a bite taken out of it. The Sun
  • With your information, you'll be able to plea-bargain your way out of it by scapegoating some unsuspecting clock-watcher.
  • Greece's top central banker called on the government to speed up efforts to close the budget gap amid growing concerns elsewhere in Europe that Athens can't pull itself out of its debt spiral.
  • CHICAGO mdash; Sears may have moved out of its tower in downtown Chicago, but the company now wants to buy back a motorized scul pture in ... Sears, Willis Tower In Dispute Over Calder Sculpture 'The Universe'
  • There are as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it
  • We use ambada in curries for its tangy taste and we also make pickle out of it. Ambada in Brine
  • Go on do me a favour, do yourself a favour, take that vinyl out of its sleeve.
  • It let out a very unladylike roar, and pounced on Sawyer, who threw himself out of its path with inches to spare. COLDHEART CANYON
  • Their logo is a silhouette of an apple with a bite taken out of it. The Sun
  • I snapped out of it, and picked up the old fashioned telephone to call my sister.
  • The entry into loch Crinan is wide, and would admit of vefsels sailing out of it almost with any wind j and vefsels going southward cr northward with a fair wind, would not suffer any retardment by being obliged to alter th'iir course. The Bee, or, Literary weekly intelligencer [microform] : consisting of original pieces and selections from performances of merit, foreign and domestic : a work calculated to disseminate useful knowledge among all ranks of people at a small expense
  • We're trying to drag the country out of its economic morass.
  • One participant said it and related proposals were like "a self-financing Brady Plan," referring to the late-1980s initiative to dig Latin America out of its debt crisis. Greek Debt Talks Widen
  • So what may finally shake the UK stock market out of its rut?
  • The kids are manipulated and indoctrinated from a young age and it takes a long … long time for them to get out of it (if they ever do). Think Progress » Virginia GOP Mocks Epic Snow Storm As ‘12 Inches Of Global Warming’
  • As long as Waffle confines his performances to the privacy of his den, he will surprise himself with an experience that is as enriching for him as it is incommunicable to others (though his immediate family might get a kick out of it).
  • The front sight sat up out of its dovetail notch with light visible between it and the slide.
  • The land belongs to a Brazilian, who get three or four milreis a day out of it The Romance of Isabel Lady Burton
  • I clasped the shampoo bottle tightly and squeezed a small portion out of it and slowly worked it in my hair.
  • The general consensus is that they are in public life for what they can get out of it.
  • Over the last two decades, few industries have lobbied more ferociously or effectively than banks to get the government out of its business and to obtain freer rein for “financial innovation.” Archive 2008-02-01
  • We deserved so much more out of it. The Sun
  • MEET DAVE – Reviewed by David November 26th, 2008 — blogadmin The idea of Meet Dave probably proved irresistible on paper, but the movie Norbit director Brian Robbins makes out of it is painfully flat, unfunny and more adept at being product placement than entertainment. Planet-x.com.au » MEET DAVE – Reviewed by David
  • Two former students of Kingsdown School have been told to keep out of its grounds and area after terrorising teachers and pupils for a year and a half.
  • However it seems increasingly clear that it has been well out of its depth in the hard-nosed world of big business that the health service has now become.
  • The one rule that I think is absolutely absurd is when they fill divots with sand and you're not allowed to lift your ball out of it.
  • Much similar to the parting of the Red Sea, the white cloud split into two as the mad scientist confidently strolled out of it.
  • His stiff hair had grown out of its short haircut and flopped over his forehead. Between Worlds: A Reader, Rhetoric and Handbook
  • Instead of _taking_ "private property," Congress, by abolishing slavery, would say "_private property_ shall not be taken; and those who have been robbed of it already, shall be kept out of it no longer; and every man's right to his own body shall be protected. The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus
  • She would show the glittering arch of her upper third, occasionally, and scrape it along behind the comblike row; sometimes a pinnacle stood straight up, like a statuette of ebony, against that glittering white shield, then seemed to glide out of it by its own volition and power, and become a dim specter, while the next pinnacle glided into its place and blotted the spotless disk with the black exclamation-point of its presence. A Tramp Abroad
  • Such distance apart will be the measure of a diameter or a chord of the tube's section, according as the buttons have been kept in the diametral plane or moved out of it. Scientific American Supplement, No. 363, December 16, 1882
  • You stay out of it . It's none of your business.
  • Spot that and then get out of its way was his method. Times, Sunday Times
  • He wanted to be moved over into the convalescent ward, but Tatiana talked him out of it. THE BRONZE HORSEMAN
  • On the night of the 6th, a tremendous sea struck her on the stern, stove in all the dead-lights, and washed them into the cabin, lifted the taffrail a foot or more out of its place, carried away the afterpart of the larboard bulwark, shattered the whole of the stern-frame, and washed one of the steersmen away from the wheel. Thrilling Stories Of The Ocean From Authentic Accounts Of Modern Voyagers And Travellers; Designed For The Entertainment And Instruction Of Young People
  • Scientists have observed a dolphin trying to get a reluctant moray eel to come out of its crevice by poking it with the spiny body of a dead scorpionfish.

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