How To Use Rung In A Sentence

  • From the early 1620s, coastal Indians supplied wampum (sacred shell beads, polished and strung in strands, belts, or sashes) to Dutch traders who exchanged it with inland natives for beaver pelts.
  • They are then strung from trees and dangle in the scorching sun. Times, Sunday Times
  • The guards and porters walked about, the bell was rung, the signal was given ad the train started off.
  • However, the Medical Council feels it is hamstrung by 20-year-old legislation which restricts it from expanding the council to cope with its heavy workload.
  • Eli undershot this dark system. i oversaw Jaime when ate me Sky! it told present arch, that enwound sadly... above plough reeved whistle, driving wrung anti the week despite blue chance: "who he gainsaid us? 26th January '05
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  • With the public onside, the Department of Postal and Telegraphs was established in 1883 with Prince Bhanarungsi as director-general.
  • I ai n't never rung my bell once --- not like Sheila, who rings it every five minutes. LOSING IT
  • Colourful wild flowers sprung up by the roadside, purple violets and white daisies dotted among the grass.
  • The charity added that birds that no longer performed had their necks wrung. Times, Sunday Times
  • That would give the government a much-needed handle on economic policy-making, which has been hamstrung by opposition obstructionism.
  • She's beyond cool, with a grungy glamour, and looks so great when she dances.
  • Nets are strung on the exterior frame to catch falling objects, and every other floor is planked to stop falls.
  • The castles which had sprung up during the civil war without the licence of the king -- the 'adulterine castles,' as they were called -- and there were no less than 365 [10] of them -- were to be destroyed, and order and good government were to return. A Student's History of England, v. 1 (of 3) From the earliest times to the Death of King Edward VII
  • He'd tied his sneaker laces together, and now had his shoes strung about his neck.
  • These games could be defined simply as ` handball played with a paddle, 'the only difference being that paddleball employs a perforated wooden racquet and a large spongy ball, while racquetball, which is rapidly pushing both handball and paddleball into obscurity, employs a small strung racquet and a lively rubber ball. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIX No 1
  • I became delirious, and quitting that staircase, which methought it was impossible for me to reascend, I sprung forth into the void with an execration. The Paris Sketch Book
  • The liveliest restaurant scene is in the city centre, where many chic eateries have sprung up in recent years.
  • He came to believe that working people, poor people, put down and stepped upon, had to organize if they were going to clean up the slums, fight the corruption that exploited them, and get a handhold on the first rung of the ladder up and out. Bill Moyers: Saul Alinsky, Who?
  • The last pack remembered was killed about thirty-five years ago; and within these ten years one solitary greyhen was sprung by some beagles in beating for a hare. The Natural History of Selborne, Vol. 1
  • On the afternoon of the Saturday in Easter week, say these writers, the priests of the eighteen principal 'deaconries' -- an ecclesiastical division of the city long ago abolished and now somewhat obscure -- caused the bells to be rung, and the people assembled at their parish churches, where they were received by a 'mansionarius,' -- probably meaning here 'a visitor of houses, '-- and a layman, who was arrayed in a tunic, and crowned with the flowers of the cornel cherry. Ave Roma Immortalis, Vol. 1 Studies from the Chronicles of Rome
  • He stood, his foot on the lower rungs of a ladder that led to the upper shelves, with his weight propped on his elevated knee.
  • Hamstrung by his uncle, he was having to go through an exasperating charade in order to nobble the project. THE GWEN JOHN SCULPTURE
  • These were either fixed into metal settings or drilled along the prism axis and strung as beads.
  • At the end of the lines, he strung his artificial lures, big lures that resembled skipjack tuna when striking the surface of the water. A FEW SHORT NOTES ON TROPICAL BUTTERFLIES
  • Tsimbls used to be strung with thinner strings and less tension, in contrast to the Hungarian-Romanian cymbaloms of today, which use piano wire strung with a barbaric tension of 40-50 kilos per string.
  • The Sergeant gave her a pentagonal shaped cabin slightly larger, slightly more comfortable than the one she had had downstairs, sporting retractable shelves which sprung out here and there to alter the shape of the room.
  • The mizzen-topsail, which was a comparatively new sail and close reefed, split from head to foot in the bunt; the foretopsail went in one rent from clew to caring, and was blowing to tatters; one of the chain bobstays parted; the spritsailyard sprung in the slings, the martingale had slued away off to leeward; and owing to the long dry weather the lee rigging hung in large bights at every lurch. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 11
  • The nave but essentially well-meaning Peter's interaction with his flawed clients formed the centre of the piece and much of the comedy sprung from the dynamic duologues.
  • The large cat had sprung on her in her trace-like state and sunk its fangs deep into her leg.
  • In this way, Hawley’s goals surpassed those of the Self-Strengthening Movement out of which the C.E.M. had initially sprung and according to which the Chinese mind was, as an essential tenet of that movement, to remain inviolable to external influences. The Romance of China: Excursions to China in U.S. Culture: 1776-1876
  • He is the rock star in all but name, wearing the same lank mane and trademark grungy threads.
  • Beck did this so often that comedian Lewis Black strung them together on The Daily Show in what he called a medley of Beck's "Hitler Tourette's Syndrome. Mark Green: FOX's Six Tricks: How to Spot the Next Sherrod
  • The sprung fibreglass poles pop into place, then all you have to do is knock a few pegs into the ground. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘In the midst of all this,’ he writes of the era of Generation X and grunge rock, ‘satire alone could be safely, unequivocally embraced, because it acknowledged the sanctity of nothing at all.’
  • Small schools have sprung up all over the country, laying accent on the quality of the relationship between teacher and student.
  • The grungy banditos had to escape Blythe, but they were afraid of getting pulled over on the way out of town.
  • It has been long enough that my memory of the specifics is patchy, but I did like the fact that his journeys felt almost like a variety of short stories strung together with an overall narrative structure, which is something I enjoy. REVIEW: The Accidental Time Machine by Joe Haldeman
  • Therefore the argument which had sprung up between them during dinner had ended by being not so much a duel as a brawl: and while duels with food are both entertaining and eupeptic, brawls are neither. Mrs. Miniver
  • Jimmy then sprung up, opened the door, and saw his four best buddies.
  • It is just one, however, of several that have sprung up to assist car buyers.
  • Something that implies that the top-string, or 'chanterelle', was, because of its vulnerability, single strung. WN.com - Articles related to Virus Ravages Cassava Plants in Africa
  • Changes were being rung on the usual male-female antinomies—shopping, burping, etc.—when one of the wives went a little too far. The Human Car Wash of Self-Esteem
  • Their sound was noisy and funky and grungy and to many fans this album was seen as their high point.
  • Silent Hill is the best possible movie that can be wrung from a video game. 2006 April « the balcony fool
  • The women in Indonesia and Malaysia wear what is known as baju kurung and baju kebaya. Archive 2009-09-01
  • Anything to avoid landing on the bottom rungs of the differentiation ladder. Times, Sunday Times
  • We got Little Richard to play piano and had Alice Coopers producer Bob Ezrin--we worked till ‘91 and we got dropped because we weren’t grungey. "Keep Playing Till She's Naked"--An Interview with Ronnie Magri
  • For this island whereon ye stand is no true island, but a great fish stationary a-middlemost of the sea, whereon the sand hath settled and trees have sprung up of old time, so that it is become like unto an island; 8 but, when ye lighted fires on it, it felt the heat and moved; and in a moment it will sink with you into the sea and ye will all be drowned. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • To get some stars and stripes in, a sprinkling of stars appeared on ankle boots or on chiffon dresses that added a Nineties grungy feel. Times, Sunday Times
  • Suddenly one of the men sprung forward in an attempt to grab Rachel.
  • While sternwards whirled unstrung—pale beads of foam, Morning at Sea in the Tropics
  • Cheap foam mattresses are less comfortable than sprung ones and will wear less well. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the word cheap I felt a deep sense of dishonor, a sense that I now was at the lowest rung of this society, that I had fallen low. Nomad
  • I cautioned calmly as I unstrung my bow, coiling the string.
  • Adam Brody says his new animated series Good Vibes is the grungier version of his former hit show, The O.C. Adam Brody Calls His MTV Series Good Vibes the "Grungier" O.C. -- With Horny Surfers
  • She was dynamic, a bit high-strung, of strong character, and completely devoted to the cause.
  • To my own "frangine" who has just rung from the airport to say she is back home again after trekking for three weeks in the mountains of Bhutan and is on her way over to tell me of latest adventures, laughingly hinting that this was the hardest trek yet! La frangine - French Word-A-Day
  • Marriages have been sundered, careers wrecked, confidences shattered, boners unsprung. Pieces of Lou, pt. 2
  • Booker T. Jones collaborated with Neil Young and the Drive-by T.uckers on a rockin 'instrumental set that emphasized aggressive guitar and grungey rhythmic drive as much as Jones' famous B-3 organ. StarTribune.com rss feed
  • Lanterns were strung in the trees around the pool.
  • Seattle grunge outfit Nirvana topped the list with Smells Like Teen Spirit, followed by Rage Against the Machine's Killing in the Name.
  • At suitable sites, mist nets are strung up, and traps laid that harmlessly snare the birds as they come down to roost or rest.
  • The speaker strung together a series of jokes.
  • At regular intervals along these walls occur little towers, for their defence, reminding one of beads strung on a rosary; the great watch-tower at the gate, with its projecting machicolation, forming the pendent cross, -- the whole serving to guard the town within from the dangers of war, even as the rosary protects the city of Mansoul from the attacks of Sin and Death -- though, sooth to say, since the invention of gunpowder and the Reformation, both the one and the other appear to have lost much of their former efficacy. Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader Being Selections from the Chief American Writers
  • From that tree-top, what birded chimes of silver throats had rung. The Piazza Tales
  • After clothes and linens had been thoroughly rubbed and scrubbed using homemade soap made from beef tallow and lye (soap-making is another whole story), they were wrung out by hand and placed in a second tub to be rinsed.
  • We sprung for expensive couchette seats, and ended up with our own little cabin on the boat.
  • SOund ob hoomans chin hittin teh alumin.. alumen… teh metal rungs ub teh ladder on the wai down … Didn’t mean to - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • He wrung the clothes before putting them on the line to dry.
  • He reckons they're too soft on mass murderers and says they ought to be strung up.
  • I reached down and pulled my binder up from the metal rungs on the underneath of my chair that held books.
  • I swung myself onto the ladder and felt for the next rung.
  • Deep violet pools caught him in their depths and gently wrung a smile from his aching skull. THE WOLF AND THE DOVE
  • Platzoff wrung from him an unreluctant consent to extend his visit at The Argosy Vol. 51, No. 4, April, 1891
  • In contrast, boho grunge layers hid any extra pounds. Times, Sunday Times
  • And then there were the bones-a bear's digit, with the great curved claw still attached; the complete vertebrae of a small snake, articulated and strung on a leather thong, so the whole string flexed in a lifelike manner; an assortment of teeth, ranging from a string of round, peglike things that Jamie said came from a seal, through the high-crowned, scythe-cusped teeth of deer, to something that looked suspiciously like a human molar. Dragonfly in Amber
  • The church bell used to be rung to signify disaster.
  • A cottage industry has even sprung up among companies that provide information about other people seeking information.
  • She was a nervous, highly strung and jumpy individual. Times, Sunday Times
  • The big problem, as I understand it, is the unsprung mass of the wheel. Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » The electrification of motoring
  • A lot of the other songs on the record have more of an alternative, grungy feel.
  • She shows us ponchos have a grungy side by teaming this slouchy slashed top with pink cords.
  • Kou wrung out his wet clothes and set them over the side of the tub.
  • Although Italian director Luchino Visconti was a pioneer of the grungy, grit-and-all filmmaking style called neorealism, he also loved all things grand and operatic. Express Milwaukee
  • I still want him to fall for me afterward - should I just wear something regular, something that shows off my figure, dress up, or go grunge?
  • A range of buildings have sprung up along the river.
  • He climbed the ladder, testing each rung carefully.
  • Yet those on the bottom rungs of the publishing ladder are happy to aim lower. Times, Sunday Times
  • My daughter had rung the ward concerned but got a very tart response as she was not a relative, even though she had been authorised by the husband to take this step.
  • He's professional, he's smooth, he's never late, he's not strung out, his appearance is immaculate.
  • The mainstream, or what I call the borderline, bettor isn't interested unless it's strung out," said Jimmy Vaccaro, director of Lucky's sports books. Las Vegas Sun Stories: All Sun Headlines
  • Heavy rains could combine with high tides and runoff from the north into the Chao Phraya River, which divides the city known to the locals as Krung Thep or the 'City of Angels' in reference to the Thai kingdom's glorious past. Rainforest Portal RSS Newsfeed
  • Perhaps something new and different, yet traditional, will spring from its roots, like Goodhue's Gothic sprung from the earlier work of Pugint, Scot and Bodley, or how Comper's unified eclecticism came from everything he saw, but we have to start somewhere, and there is still so much to learn, in terms of design and craftsmanship. The Dangers of Architectural Positivism
  • I couldn't get back to sleep after he'd rung.
  • The case had sprung open into two halves, hinged in the middle. LIRAEL: DAUGHTER OF THE CLAYR
  • Fig. 9, A side view of rimmed hoop wh A strake, which is the short ifoi with which the common wheel is rung. A Treatise on Carriages: Comprehending Coaches, Chariots, Phaetons ...
  • Bells were rung at either end of a conversation to signal the beginning and end of the call.
  • Thus our instincts certainly cause us to believe that the sun will rise tomorrow, but we may be in no better a position than the chicken which unexpectedly has its neck wrung.
  • These beads are also strung into pendants, necklaces, bracelets or attached to clothing or furnishings and finger rings.
  • These two movements have one thing in common: they have sprung spontaneously from the individual's deep and firmly rooted conviction that the ordinary man and woman is capable of making a meaningful contribution to peace. The Nobel Peace Prize 1977 - Presentation Speech
  • They strung a net between two palm trees and bobbed about in an energetic game of four-a-side volleyball.
  • But along came Tom, with his low-cut velvet hipsters and his slinky jersey dresses, and grunge was sent scurrying off back to Seattle.
  • But our currency is hamstrung by severe structural distortions in both the economic and financial spheres.
  • There is definite documentary evidence that both the citole and the gittern were normally strung in gut.
  • No one's outside, though a few assorted articles of clothing are strung up on laundry lines.
  • Tunisia had strung a quintet across midfield, conceded territory and possession but bit on the counter and led in the eighth minute.
  • The reception began under towering oak trees strung with lights, next to a fire pit.
  • A suggestion from a friend in Thailand or a new picture in National Geographic would always mean a new pushpin on the map, and the red line would need to be restrung. Peter Winter: The Great Ride Forward: Motorcycling Southeast Asia
  • She said: 'She is a highly strung fox terrier. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some appear to have just discovered grunge; others wear navy-colored jackets with red sports letters.
  • Are we looking at something kept immaculate like the USS Enterprise, something a bit grungier like the Millennium Falcon, or something else entirely? Superhero Nation: how to write superhero novels and comic books » The Five Page Challenge!
  • Debbie looked satisfied, and wrung out the dishcloth more cheerfully.
  • Across the mountains, in Kosovo, there is 60% unemployment and small brothels are strung along the back streets of almost every town.
  • The bell has rung - stop writing now.
  • The bernicle, or brent goose, is interesting from the curious superstition which formerly prevailed respecting it, as it was supposed to have sprung from the shell called the barnacle or lepas, which adheres to the bottoms of ships, and which has a fringe of cirri projecting from between its valves bearing some faint resemblance to the feathers of a bird. The Lady's Country Companion: or, How to Enjoy a Country Life Rationally
  • In the reviews of Studia Fennica Folkloristica no.s 2 and 3 in the 1999 issue of Folklore, the Finnish word runo was misprinted as rung.
  • He saw his arrow hit its mark and calmly unstrung his bow before replacing it in his quiver.
  • But out of this adversity has sprung a surprisingly fine vintage.
  • TAFF (strick struck strangling like aleal lusky Lubliner to merum-ber by the cycl of the cruize who strungled Attahilloupa with what empoisoned El Monte de Zuma and failing wilnaynilnay that he was pallups barn in the minkst of the Krumlin befodt he was pop-soused into the monkst of the vatercan, makes the holypolygon of the emt on the greaseshaper, a little farther, a little soon, a lettera - cettera, oukraydoubray). Finnegans Wake
  • A black, grungy trench coat hung loosely over his lanky frame, and his face was hidden in the darkness under a fedora hat.
  • He also told them a story called "The Wheat and the Tares," of a man who sowed good seed in a field, but when it sprung up and bore grain there were weeds growing among it called tares, for an enemy had sowed the seed at night and it had grown up with the wheat. Child's Story of the Bible
  • The soggy firewood was gathered, tents put up, and a line strung between trees to hang the wet gear to dry.
  • Bruce wrote and sang all of Cream's toughest material - White Room, Sunshine Of Your Love - with a voice as angelically strung-out as Jeff Buckley and as gutbucket dirty as a 100 year-old-blues preacher.
  • Part of the Bandora family, the Orpharion is a smaller wire-strung instrument with a similar scalloped body shape.
  • There had suddenly sprung up a "Brickfielder", that dreaded wind, which may be considered one of the worst plagues of Sydney.
  • Bishop Wilton is a delightful village, strung linear along a sparkling beck, containing old brick houses in a little valley terraced with sinuous greens.
  • She'd rung up to discuss the divorce.
  • Small timers, such as pickpockets, can be easily thwarted by carrying only sturdy, shoulder-strap purses, not carrying obvious camera or laptop computer bags or exposed cameras strung about your person, and by putting your cash out of harm´s way in a little bag hung around your neck and stowed under your shirt. Mexico City: Biggest city guide for the savvy traveler
  • The parties he threw were as eclectic as music itself; visitors would sometimes find grungy rockers eating traditional Italian meals prepared by his mother.
  • In one of the pictures, Runggye Adak is looking directly at the tough-looking guy in the white shirt (his black armband on his upper right sleeve indicates that he could be a citizen monitor of some sort who helps to maintain public order), who is perhaps translating for a Chinese plain clothes security official. Kate Saunders: Pictures From Tibet That Tell a Story of Courage
  • There has never been a time when the cry for unlimited congressional power has rung so hollow.
  • Allows you to keep dressing in a somewhat grungey, not bothered way. Times, Sunday Times
  • Next, dissolve some pure soap flakes in warm water and rub all over the furniture, paying careful attention to the soiled areas, with a towel wrung out in this soapy water.
  • A grungy man with an evil, nearly toothless grin crouched behind it.
  • They lay under ropes, strung up to hold saline drips. Times, Sunday Times
  • The dragon swished its tail, and for the dozenth time that afternoon Yrung flew through the air. Squired-Up
  • The anklet on each foot had replicas of 10 wild chamomile flowers strung together.
  • Under some bushes by the palisade was a ladder of rope, the rungs, however, of wood. After London Or, Wild England
  • Having spent the last week crossing the Mojave, Scott and I were grungier than usual.
  • We got strung out along the trail at times, so you could have quiet contemplation if you needed it, or walk with the people you liked best. Times, Sunday Times
  • Electricity is now provided free through cables strung along the roads. Times, Sunday Times
  • He reckons they're too soft on mass murderers and says they ought to be strung up.
  • Marius then recognized the fact, that what he had taken for a shapeless mass was a very well-made rope-ladder, with wooden rungs and two hooks with which to attach it.
  • When greasy rungs are climbed, fat is fatal. Times, Sunday Times
  • Carter throws me a menacing look, but is unable to follow up with a threatening comment, because the bell has just rung.
  • Twain strung it out beyond reason, carried away by the exuberance of his own burlesque; but it is a vital and integral part of the story. Untagged book meme
  • Cheap foam mattresses are less comfortable than sprung ones and will wear less well. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now a third spurned woman has come out to say he strung her along before going off and getting married in secret. The Sun
  • There being no Introit, when the Kyrie is done, the priest intones the Gloria in excelsis, which is then sung with the same rite as on Holy Thursday; all the bells of the Church are rung for the beginning of the celebration of Easter. Compendium of the 1955 Holy Week Revisions of Pius XII: Part 6.2 - Holy Saturday and the Blessing of the Font, Litany of the Saints, Mass and Vespers
  • It is also asked whether we are to believe that certain monstrous races of men, spoken of in secular history, have sprung from Noah's sons, or rather, I should say, from that one man from whom they themselves were descended. September 2nd, 2009
  • Described as post-grunge rock, it strips all the guts and glory out of the grunge we know and love, leaving the listener with watered-down middle-of-the-road ambiguity in both music and lyric.
  • His adoption of a soldier's guise gives the usually scrubbed detective a much grungier look, making him seem less an interloper than an authentic member of the poverty-choked netherworld he's infiltrating in his search for the gun.
  • The vast majority of the interdivisional games is being scheduled by bottom-rung Division I teams, a species that has proliferated in recent years, but some bigger names do it, too. When
  • Grungy bands of humans huddle around rubbish fires in hovels constructed of old tires and scrap metal.
  • In her eyes I saw the eyes of Igar when I was Ushu the archer, the eyes of Arunga when I was the rice-harvester, the eyes of Selpa when I dreamed of bestriding the stallion, the eyes of Chapter 21
  • By 1,000 BC the first permanent settlements were established, strung along the shore like a long string of muddy pearls that were placed at a days rowing distance apart.
  • I will pass into oblivion, to the vile dust from whence I sprung, unwept, unhonored, and unsung. . . The Curse of the Wendigo
  • Spring is sprung, hormones are jumping, hearts are thumping and the seasonal cycle of attraction's in full swing once more.
  • If to recall good deeds erewhiles performed be pleasure to a man, when he knows himself to be of probity, nor has violated sacred faith, nor has abused the holy assent of the gods in any pact, to work ill to men; great store of joys awaits thee during thy length of years, O Catullus, sprung from this ingrate love of thine. The Carmina of Caius Valerius Catullus
  • It had a sprung floor and when mum and dad bought me a pogo stick for Christmas I went straight through it.
  • The key lies in the fact that the units of meaning, words, can be strung together in different ways, according to rules, to communicate different meanings.
  • I stood up, and wrung out my hair, and went to my satchel and pulled off the shift that was clinging to me, and rubbed myself dry and put on a fresh shift.
  • Who said ballet was only for highly strung wrecks? Times, Sunday Times
  • The pair denied making the call so the police communications centre redialled the number that had rung 111 and to the young woman's embarrassment the phone she was holding started ringing. Undefined
  • The oldest thing I might have had–if I had sprung for it–would’ve been a late 17th century disbound copy of an Otway play. For Phil | clusterflock
  • Aside from a few occasions, we rode in file, all strung out, from the start until Pradollano.
  • Greek, Latin, and the newly discovered Sanskrit, Jones says, show an “affinity ... so strong that no philologer could examine all the three without believing them to have sprung from some common source which, perhaps, no longer exists ...” Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • Artists and intellectuals are called upon not to offer critique or alternative visions but to sidle in compliantly amongst the lowest rungs of this same pantheon and so to boost its size and glory.
  • The arrangement is designed to allow young couples to get a foot on the first rung of the housing ladder.
  • One of the things I find most interesting about grillades is that it's one of those dishes that has a place on all rungs of the social ladder.
  • Two of the rebel leaders were strung up.
  • Sometimes the train puffed between lines of grey slab fencing in which were armies of white skeleton trees that had been 'rung' for extermination, or with bleached stumps sticking up in a chaos of felled trunks, while in some there had sprung up sickly iron-bark saplings. Lady Bridget in the Never-Never Land
  • He is still on the bottom rung of the political ladder.
  • The look is a bit grungy, certainly retro but has the air of authenticity. Times, Sunday Times
  • More-realistic animated characters take more time to create, and efficiencies have to be wrung from elsewhere in production.
  • Seizing my hand, he wrung it as thoroughly as he had wrung Jane's, beaming like a younger edition of the immortal Mr. Pickwick all the while.
  • By the quantity of provision which I had consumed I should guess that I had passed three weeks in this journey; and the continual protraction of hope, returning back upon the heart, often wrung bitter drops of despondency and grief from my eyes. Chapter 7
  • He shook his brown hair out of his eyes as he unstrung his longbow.
  • Substansi UU Perfilman itu jelas amat birokratis, eksesif, cenderung represif. Global Voices in English » Indonesia: Controversial new film law
  • The soggy firewood was gathered, tents put up, and a line strung between trees to hang the wet gear to dry.
  • When relocating the company in October from its famously grungy Madison Avenue offices to bright new digs off Park Avenue, he assigned himself an office no larger than those of other key executives.
  • A small cottage industry of biotechnology firms has sprung up to investigate this, using a variety of methods.
  • Not only could fat be wrung out of the bread, there were dark foreign objects within its matrix, which upon further investigation turned out to be little globules of maple syrup.
  • The Hugo show held at Berlin Fashion Week, which wrapped up Saturday, is a high-profile, established event in a city known more for its grungier, hipster styles. At Hugo Boss, Tradition With a Twist
  • Instead the staff were in relatively unprotected temporary offices strung along the heavy compound walls near one corner at the main gate, the precise corner where the bomb was detonated up against those large walls.
  • In Rungpore and Dinajpoor, about 9,000 plants are required for a beegah, each being about a foot in length. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • She's bookish, highly-strung and overeager as the film commences.
  • Liberty and civilization are only fragments of rights wrung from the strong hands of wealth and book learning. 
  • Sheridan depicts drug-filled cesspools not to criticize or protest, but to claim that they form merely the bottom rung of an ever-ascending ladder of success.
  • My conscience got so expansive and fine-strung it lamed me across the shoulders to carry it around with me. THE PRINCESS
  • Dont nobody know what happened except chris brown rihanna and whoever was with them at that time so people can stop talking all that mess about chris brown even though he shouldn ` t have hit her in the first place and just wait to see what she does cause she so sprung that she might drop the charges and they go live happily ever after. Chris Brown & Rihanna Moving In Together
  • Hot tears sprung into her eyes and her throat began to constrict.
  • Elise's jewellery is distinguished by large stones such as rose crystal, turquoise and coral, strung together to make chunky chokers and necklaces - often with quirky bits and bobs attached.
  • He reckons they're too soft on mass murderers and says they ought to be strung up.
  • This bas-relief was surmounted by a projecting plinth, upon which a variety of chance growths had sprung up, — yellow pellitory, bindweed, convolvuli, nettles, plantain, and even a little cherry-tree, already grown to some height. Eug�nie Grandet
  • This is life in a swamp, a primeval wet forest from which the great diversity of Australia's modern fauna sprung.
  • The sets were lavishly grungy: all rusting metalwork, peeling plaster and torn posters.
  • After that the dogs were strung out afresh, and Julyman "mushed" them on, and brought them abreast of the train of the waiting Oolak. The Heart of Unaga
  • Being ruled by Venus, planet of love and beauty, you've always had the inclinations of a new romantic, even when grunge dominated.
  • When the bedesman had pray'd and the dead bell rung, Kilmeny

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