How To Use Spectator In A Sentence

  • Marshals struggled in vain to prevent spectators rushing onto the racetrack.
  • And most spectators are alert, many of them bringing their own baseball gloves to catch souvenirs.
  • Well, in view of the fact that there is a slave part in it, I shall do just as I said and make it tragi-comedy. nunc hoc me orare a vobis iussit Iuppiter, ut conquaestores singula in subsellia eant per totam caveam spectatoribus, si cui favitores delegates viderint, ut is in cavea pignus capiantur togae; Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi Amphitryon, The Comedy of Asses, The Pot of Gold, The Two Bacchises, The Captives
  • Will spectators be able to afford multiple games at the same ground in a short space of time? Times, Sunday Times
  • The event allowed us to gain feedback from spectators and weightlifters.
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  • The game ended a few hours too early, leaving players and spectators unsatisfied.
  • The sword chunked home at his feet to the accompaniment of a collective "ah!" from the spectators. Dragonfly in Amber
  • Our goal is for the spectators to be entertained for four hours not only by the racing, but also by the raceway.
  • In addition, there would be a spectator app that tracks horses' positions and provides audio commentary and video content from the weighing room. Times, Sunday Times
  • Figure of Eight racing is not for faint-hearted drivers or spectators, but it provides some of the most thrilling racing on the short circuit scene.
  • Spectator opens up to more vivid colour and patterns, with a strong emphasis on a streamlined look with a variety of coat/skirt ensembles and textured suitings.
  • Edinburgh Rugby claim an average of 3,500 spectators for games this season, a fourfold increase from the previous year when they were known as the Edinburgh Reivers.
  • He will entertain spectators and add a bit more quality to our batting.
  • From rowing lake and canoe rapids to velodrome and swimming pool, the cheers of frenzied spectators have been spine-tingling. The Sun
  • [146] Johnson's observations on Addison's writings may be well applied to those of Cicero, who would have been eminently successful in short miscellaneous essays, like those of the Spectator, had the manners of the age allowed it. Historical Sketches, Volume I (of 3) The Turks in Their Relation to Europe; Marcus Tullius Cicero; Apollonius of Tyana; Primitive Christianity
  • This form of spectatorship contrasts sharply with the interactive performances found in rural villages where most of these maskers normally appear.
  • Yet the realist vision shifts to the phantasmagoric, as spectator and spectacle undergo carnivalesque reversals and interpenetration, in their darkest and most violent manifestations.
  • Spectators standing in the pit or seated on hard benches in the gallery are visible in the daylight and there is a constant feeling of motion that animates the geometries of the theatre's space.
  • Working on that invariable response, and the number of cricket fans in the country, there must have been three to four million spectators there that amazing day.
  • -- But I had the impression that the author of the Spectator was afflicted with a dropsy, or some such inflated malady, to which persons of sedentary and bibacious habits are liable. The Poet at the Breakfast-Table
  • There was something additionally disturbing about her for a male spectator. Times, Sunday Times
  • During the American Revolutionary War it was not uncommon for spectators to watch some of the major battles.
  • Nevertheless, the average dogshow is thronged with spectators. Bruce
  • There are a few interested spectators in the stands, and some reporters and TV cameras.
  • The society bills its guide as a ‘must-read for all armchair supporters’ and claims that even the most over-enthusiastic spectator should not need to be stretchered off mid-match.
  • The RFU has requested spectators not to bring large bags or rucksacks and advised them to arrive earlier than usual to allow for the enhanced checks. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was a psychologist rather than a philosopher, and his interest and zest in life, in the relationships of simple people, the intermingling of personal emotions and happy comradeships, kept him from ever forming cynical or merely spectatorial views of humanity. Ionica
  • (Being a spectator is a felony in 20 states, a misdemeanor in 28, and legal only in Georgia and Hawaii.) Jamie Frevele: Bones Takes on Dogfighting. We All Should.
  • Knots of spectators were there to cheer me on aggressively, and by 10 miles I had caught Peter.
  • The rest of us are reduced to passive spectators rather than active political agents. Times, Sunday Times
  • We need fewer professional spectators and more teenage yachtswomen, aviators, mountaineers, risk-takers in every field. Times, Sunday Times
  • Spectators may be moved to laugh or cry, but they know that the actor is playing a role in an imaginary world that is not their actual world; it lies on the other side of an unbridgeable gap.
  • Then Dave Boone and Wally made a stand that roused the perspiring spectators to something like enthusiasm, for Mr. Boone was a mighty "slogger," and Wally had a neat and graceful style that sent the Cunjee supporters into the seventh heaven. Mates at Billabong
  • Few spectators in the stands remained for the last inning, disgusted with such a one-sided score.
  • A large crowd of spectators attended and thoroughly enjoyed horses and riders being put through their paces.
  • The six-penny spectators, or "groundlings," stood in the yard, or pit, which had neither floor nor roof. Brief History of English and American Literature
  • Soon she was being paid 3,000 Brazilian reals a month to entertain spectators by ball-juggling during half-time.
  • Club colours and banners bristled from every corner as bunting and flags adorned the spectators and the ground alike.
  • More than 200 bands from across the planet gathered for the event, which saw a crowd of over 32,000 spectators.
  • Lillak sprinted around the track with undisguised joy, arms upraised like a footballer, as the spectators went mad.
  • Will spectators be able to afford multiple games at the same ground in a short space of time? Times, Sunday Times
  • The Abbé Vincent, after sprinkling all the spectators with holy water, presented the paten to the wife of the king's pantler, Jordan, that she might kiss it. Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No 3, September 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy
  • A spectator threw the ball back to the players.
  • Most interventions by an umpire detract from the spectacle and hence are unwelcome to players and spectators.
  • Spanish horse should; he trotted, he loped, he paced, and went single-foot, greatly to the admiration of the three spectators. Southern Stories Retold from St. Nicholas
  • It makes a good spectator sport, has glamour and razzmatazz. Times, Sunday Times
  • Cf. Spectator, No. 454: "I went afterwards to Robin's, and saw people who had dined with me at the fivepenny ordinary just before, give bills for the value of large estates. The Journal to Stella
  • It is worth spelling out what spectators hope for when they pay top dollar for elite sport. Times, Sunday Times
  • A regimental musician who had become detached from his unit, he followed in the wake of the attack as a spectator.
  • Designer Li Xinggang once said the bowl shape would help spectators focus on the bottom center of the container, and integrate people and the structure as a whole.
  • He is out to remove the spectator from his normal or appropriate perceptual field, and in doing so to infect him with his own personal doubts.
  • She was well able to estimate the distance, and could appreciate such a feat of oarsmanship, and, entirely forgetting her pain and that she was alone, she turned round as if to a crowd of spectators, and pointing at the boats she said, with sparkling eyes, Garman and Worse A Norwegian Novel
  • The pair's faces were beamed on to a giant heart-shaped screen by a roving camera which flashes up live pictures of spectators. The Sun
  • Yet another one of Gordon Brown's 'octet' - the eight advisers named in The Spectator three years ago - is moving on. Departures and arrivals on Downing Street
  • We need to make sure what the spectators are watching, they understand. Times, Sunday Times
  • In Selmer, Tenn., a dragster went out of control and smashed into spectators during a fundraising festival in June 2007, killing six people and injuring 22. California Off-Road Race Crash: Truck Plows Into Crowd, Kills 8, Injures 12
  • The event promises to enthral the fraternity of adventure freaks, spectators and participants.
  • Don't get sidetracked by the issues or the spectators. Times, Sunday Times
  • For the spectators, he was more of a curiosity than anything. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has constructed a pandaemonium in an upper story of his museum, in which he has congregated all the images of horror that his fertile fancy could devise; dwarfs that by machinery grow into giants before the eyes of the spectator; imps of ebony with eyes of flame; monstrous reptiles devouring youth and beauty; lakes of fire, and mountains of ice; in short, wax, paint and springs have done wonders. Domestic Manners of the Americans
  • On Sunday you had almost 80,000 spectators packing one of the best stadiums in Europe with an atmosphere unequalled at any sporting event in these islands.
  • The six-penny spectators, or "groundlings," stood in the yard or pit, which had neither floor nor roof. From Chaucer to Tennyson
  • A similar incident took place at the 2000 German Grand Prix at Hockenheim when a spectator wandered around the course and crossed the track in front of oncoming cars.
  • Large numbers of chub and barbel are also on view in Tadcaster where fish spotting from the road-bridge in the centre of town seems to be a popular spectator sport at present.
  • Inside I found a free CD, a room full of wine-sipping spectators, a soundboard ready for play, and a selection of Indian foods catered by a local restaurant.
  • Spectators were asked to leave items not required during their trip, including picnic hampers and bags, outside.
  • There were gasps of horror from the spectators as he fell off the tightrope.
  • The ball glanced on a bounce off the foot of a spectator and back down toward the fairway.
  • In the mid-1800s, they roved the streets of St. John's, sometimes attacking spectators or fighting with rival bands.
  • About 4,600 paying spectators will watch the races from the fort while tens of thousands more will line the stone pier and the beach free. Times, Sunday Times
  • The most popular spectator and participant sports are soccer and volleyball.
  • The spectator observes a certain space and has the capacity to report on what their eyes see.
  • But for every annoying and unsupportive spectator, there are ones that can completely turn your race around and inspire you to keep running.
  • The spectator hit with the most murk is the next diver. Molly Baker: Parenting Lessons from 'Phineas and Ferb'
  • Tapper's breasts so perfectly resemble those of a young woman of 18 to 19 that even the male genitals which are also perfect do not fully remove the impression that the spectator is looking on a female. Amputations, acid gargles and ammonia rubs: Royal Navy surgeons' 1793-1880 journals revealed
  • Its sides were wild, abrupt, and precipitous, and partially covered with copse-wood, as was the little brawling stream which ran through it, and of which the eye of the spectator could only catch occasional glimpses from among the hazel, dogberry, and white thorn, with which it was here and there covered. The Black Baronet; or, The Chronicles Of Ballytrain The Works of William Carleton, Volume One
  • On 23 June, the restored airliner was rolled out to an admiring crowd of spectators.
  • The Olympic Stadium will hold up to 80,[Sentencedict]000 spectators.
  • It'll be a good game for the spectators. The Sun
  • The penchant for booing by baseball spectators probably reached its lowest level of uncouthness in 1985 when the first-place Toronto Blue Jays met the second-place Yankees in the opener of a crucial four-game series at Yankee Stadium.
  • So was the atmosphere in the National Stadium on April 22, with gun-toting and decidedly edgy cops and soldiers just about outnumbering the spectators.
  • The dancers no longer performed for the spectatorial look but rather, engaged with the crowd in immediate exchange.
  • He takes a protective but also frankly spectatorial interest in the lives of his tenants, following their dramas with the fascination of a soap opera addict.
  • I am contented with my fortunes, spectator e longinquo, and love Neptunum procul a terra spectare furentem: he is ambitious, and not satisfied with his: but what [3944] gets he by it? to have all his life laid open, his reproaches seen: not one of a thousand but he hath done more worthy of dispraise and animadversion than commendation; no better means to help this than to be private. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Henman has no similar device, and his wobbles, of which there were some, brought a collective intake of breath from the 14,000 spectators on Centre Court.
  • The potential for serious injury is high, says the report, and the racing of horses and sulkies near the Rising Sun, on Long Marton Road, at more than 30 mph, with several hundred spectators, gives the most grave concerns.
  • Or they make up their own dives on the spot, sometimes while in midair -- improvisation that frequently leads to the kind of painful bellyflop that causes spectators to groan with a combination of sympathy and mirth
  • The aquatic centre will be converted for public use, with 2,500 spectator seats left in the complex. Times, Sunday Times
  • Last year a record number of 20,000 spectators enjoyed the show and this year's ‘Green is Clean’ theme promises an even better event.
  • About 75 spectators crowded the courtroom of U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III for the start of the nonjury trial. Dover News carnival. - The Panda's Thumb
  • But the toro was too quick, and with his left cornupeta caught the The Spaniard 27 banderillero in the seat of the pants, lending him an additional impulse that carried him clear over the tablas, landing him uninjured in the tendidas, where he looked up in surprise to find himself seated among the spectators, who applauded loudly. Mexico
  • Only slight murmuring could be heard from the spectators.
  • The act is expertly crafted to take spectators on a rollercoaster ride of fear and awe. Smithsonian Mag
  • Improbably, the result was worth it: The titivated Jumbo was so lifelike that he looked ready to charge at spectators—and, presumably, he still would, had his artificial hide not caught fire and burned him to a crisp in 1972. Wildlife Without Life
  • Motor rallying Three spectators were killed when a car taking part in a local rally plunged into the crowd in central Serbia yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some of the wreckage caused by the explosion fell amid the crowd of spectators.
  • Then, once spectators have negotiated the crowd management arrangements, which the building accommodates somewhat clumsily, they will enter a space that can only be described as stonking, a room big enough for more than 17,500 people. Olympics Aquatic Centre – review
  • The camera circled, showing a cluster of spectators who had been roped off as soon as the police and firefighters arrived, probably with the media at their heels.
  • Under the watchful eyes of the police, hustlers and scalpers worked the new spectators relentlessly in the hopes of getting rid of tickets for the game before they were stuck with them.
  • The Vice Dean reminded us of a significance of a comments of Enobarbus as a shrewd as good as mostly sarcastic spectator of this adore affair: an researcher both detered by his master's debility in agreeable to Cleopatra's charming energy as good as fascinated himself by a Egyptian queen's witchery. Philadelphia Reflections: Shakspere Society of Philadelphia
  • The spectators have scurried for cover. Times, Sunday Times
  • With five minutes to go and the seconds out, the ring was held by a flotilla of spectator boats almost 800 strong. Times, Sunday Times
  • Spectators were totally focused on the ebb and flow, but came away with nothing except the feeling that they'd seen something new and untamable.
  • Amid a spray of spilt drinks and nibbles, much cheering, dancing and backslapping, the unruly crowd vented their delirium in the manner of Indian cricket spectators, setting alight their match programs and letting off fireworks.
  • The most popular colours are red, black, green, blue and white. Yellow is never worn, even by spectators as it is considered to be unlucky and toreros are highly superstitious.
  • the spectators applauded the performance
  • The distinction between residents and spectators was obvious, we were the ones tottering around the old railroad wearing indecent heels. The Sun
  • Poetry can't compete well with movies, videos, computer interaction, talking novels geared to a voyeuristic spectatorship that may render page readers obsolete.
  • More and more Russians spectators are attending Finland's musical events.
  • It is a spectacular in every sense, both for the many spectators and for the participating athletes.
  • Yes, the Spectator is careering up the information super-bridleway and this ceremony is being vodcast live on www. spectator.co.uk to fans of British politics all over the globe. John Rentoul today puts Trevor Kavanagh and myself in the...
  • He rarely seems to get flustered and is clearly popular with players and spectators alike. Times, Sunday Times
  • Reports say that thousands of eager spectators are descending on the town in anticipation of the event.
  • A popular interpretation of Quantum Mechanics called "decoherence" is one interpretation where a conscious mind is not an essential component to physics but is a passive spectator. Another Look
  • However, the biggest difference from other sports events was that there were few spectators, except for numerous uniformed police officers.
  • We need to move from being spectators to being participants in the raw, infiltrating presence of God that He may indwell our lives in a substantial way. FROM THE CROSS TO PENTECOST
  • That goes for the thousands of spectators who helped make it a day to remember. Times, Sunday Times
  • Spectators of a car race in Brazil on Sunday were t aken off guard when the bleacher they were sitting in collapsed. Brazil Bleacher Collapse VIDEO: More Than 100 Hurt In Parana
  • The 1991 World Cup generated unprecedented interest in rugby union and planted the sport firmly in the top league of spectator sports.
  • If this is the case, there can be no simple and unproblematic identification on the part of the spectator, male or female, with Mulvey's ‘ideal ego’ on the screen.
  • The Minster was packed with 800 spectators, who watched a candlelit procession of more than 100 Viking guards, Bloodaxe's Viking Queen, and her ladies-in-waiting.
  • Several hundred spectators — shirtless men in sunglasses, women in bikinis — looked on as the competitors, some 50 in all, took turns trying to impress a panel of judges. Munich’s Malibu
  • The show grounds were a bustle of activity, horses, riders, spectators, staff members, trainers, worried parents and other people, running around in a flurried way.
  • There is absolutely no evidence at all that spectators want longer cricket matches. Quite the reverse.
  • There was a great cheer from the spectators.
  • Inevitably, during a lull in what turned out to be a rather one-sided contest, the assembled spectators created their own entertainment.
  • The umpire, supported by the third, TV, umpire, correctly gave him ‘out’, but 90,000 spectators disagreed and proceeded to riot until the game was stopped.
  • In fact my little boy is shouting so loud for me that the race commentator mentioned him a few times, and is getting lots of laughs out of the spectators.
  • Few spectators, however, will be tooting horns after each goal.
  • All that is required is a distance of 10 yards or so that is secure from people getting in the line of fire, a safe backstop, and eye protection for the shooter and spectators.
  • A result of the Taylor recommendations following the Hillsborough disaster was that football stadia should provide seating for all spectators.
  • Delusion, if delusion be admitted, has no certain limitation; if the spectator can be once persuaded, that his old acquaintance are Alexander and Caesar, that a room illuminated with candles is the plain of Pharsalia, or the bank of Granicus, he is in a state of elevation above the reach of reason, or of truth, and from the heights of empyrean poetry, may despise the circumscriptions of terrestrial nature. Preface to Shakespeare
  • In breathless silence the little group of spectators watched his movements, and when, with sharply exhaled breath, he planted a crashing "facer" straight from the shoulder squarely upon the leathern disk they sprang eagerly forward to note the result. The Copper Princess A Story of Lake Superior Mines
  • Changes in the domed stadium, which will seat 20,000 spectators for the MLS team in its lower bowl, will be based along those found at the home venue of Eintracht Frankfurt of the German Bundesliga .
  • Thirty thousand spectators watched the final game.
  • a few spectators standing about
  • The grandstand's terracing now provides more space for spectators to view the racing.
  • The biting flies, from the saltmarsh that abuts the Seaview Marriott course, often make life miserable for players and spectators alike.
  • In all likelihood, though, the films of the Indian dancers elicited a far more complex spectatorial response than that suggested in these two contemporary accounts.
  • The trip to Lublin has decentered the American from his role as spectator into the role of participant in the multi-voiced dialogue of the journey.
  • The habitual spectators at the School of Medicine, the College of France, and the Faculty of Sciences, know how experiments are made on the living flesh, how muscles are divided and cut, the nerves wrenched or dilacerated, the bones broken or methodically opened with gouge, mallet, saw, and pincers. An Ethical Problem Or, Sidelights upon Scientific Experimentation on Man and Animals
  • Fast-forward to today, as streaming brings in another revolution in the ease of spectatorship. Times, Sunday Times
  • Clotilde, who was very expert at this sort of architecture, was obliged to remain with the children, whilst Marian and O'Brian walked on, for standing spectator is cold work in a March wind. Zoe: The History of Two Lives
  • They have become playgrounds for a generation of super-rich rather than a mass spectator sport. Times, Sunday Times
  • Eight teams piloted their dirigibles (a task significantly more difficult than it may seem), while a crowd of spectators cheered them on.
  • After being destroyed by fire, it was reconstructed in A.D. 200 and had a capacity for 250,000 spectators.
  • As part of the celebration, a formation of fighter jets roared across the sky to the delight of thousands of cheering spectators. Times, Sunday Times
  • She appeared amongst her companions, and vanished from them, with a degree of rapidity which was inconceivable and hedges, treillage, or such like obstructions, were surmounted by her in a manner which the most vigilant eye could not detect; for, after being observed on the side of the barrier at one instant, in another she was beheld close beside the spectator. Anne of Geierstein
  • Jim Murphy, HMG's Europe Minster, a peddlar of the particularly psittacine mantra about the constitutional concept being abandoned, has written a defence of the EU Constitution here for the Spectator. Archive 2007-09-16
  • And it wasn't only the pageant that drew oohs and aahs from the spectators.
  • The general roles will encompass a wide range of tasks from distributing uniforms and checking tickets to assisting spectators and competitors with directions. Times, Sunday Times
  • Spectators can be a problem for some horses, and I often find that some horses do better with blinders on (the kind that you see on racehorses).
  • Most of the spectators were gathered watching his game, and I was glad that they could not see the dilemma I was in.
  • That is the difference between the passive spectator and the active participant he wants us to become. Times, Sunday Times
  • Shorn of so much of the theatricalism of ordinary stage performances, there was reality and charm about this that warmed the spectators into frequent bursts of spontaneous enthusiasm which were as draughts of elixir to the players. Seven Miles to Arden
  • During a pretrial hearing last month, Abdulmutallab muttered "Osama's alive" to some spectators as he was brought into the courtroom and mumbled "jihad" when the judge used the phrase "al Qaeda" as she read the charges against him. Reuters: Press Release
  • I also, though much against my inclination, shall decamp; for he might perhaps consider me as an adviser, caballer, confidante, or at least a troublesome spectator. Tales and Novels — Volume 08
  • Life is not a spectator sport.
  • So railways affected most mass spectatorship of sport only to a limited extent in the Victorian era.
  • Italy will face Brazil this afternoon before a crowd of 100,000 spectators.
  • The three-tier stadium design resulted from a specific requirement that spectators be closer to the field.
  • Perhaps, accustomed as he was to hearing such queries and taunts by the driver, the conductor remained a mute spectator.
  • —The second deadly air show crash in 24 hours has left one pilot dead in West Virginia and prompted the National Transportation Safety Board to dispatch an investigator to the site where an aerobatic demonstration plane plunged into a runway and exploded as spectators looked on. One Killed in West Virginia Air Show Crash
  • The case was livened up one day in early July when an elderly spectator inadvertently wandered into the jury box when trying to find his seat, leading one of the prosecuting councils to joke that "The 13th juryman is on the Bench I always understood. Archive 2009-02-01
  • Instead of spectators huddling under umbrellas they were more likely to need parasols.
  • Among the spectators was Khamzat Dzhabrailov, 54, a former Soviet middleweight boxing champion who used to spar with Kadyrov when the latter was a teenage pugilist, said: "The Brazilians are afraid to play strongly because Ramzan will break their necks if they win. For football fans in Grozny, it's just like watching Brazil. No, really
  • The spectators could wander at will, stand or sit on the floor, observ any group from any angle or distance, or look through them to a group beyond, or to the hills, bay, bridges, islands, sailboats, sky and skyline. What Merce Cunningham Assembled at an Old Ford Plant
  • For uninterested spectators scattered about the arena, they are also a distraction from tennis that does not consistently enthral at this Cincinnati Masters, an old tournament admirably spruced up and repackaged to make a fit with the run-in to the US Open. Andy Murray snuffs out recovery by Jérémy Chardy to win in Cincinnati
  • But it is the quality of his goals as much as the quantity that leaves spectators awestruck. Times, Sunday Times
  • The side Kenkenes approached sloped sharply from the dromos toward the river, and the rearmost spectators had small opportunity to behold the pageant. The Yoke A Romance of the Days when the Lord Redeemed the Children of Israel from the Bondage of Egypt
  • We want a clean game and the spectators deserve that. The Sun
  • Thousands of spectators gazed up at the sky to witness the beginning of the winter solstice. The Sun
  • To make the race more exciting for spectators, each of the top 10 seeded swimmers sported a different colored cap.
  • But there it was again in the faces of the cameleers and the spectators.
  • Unhappily the 15,000 spectators on the first day of the August spectacular only caught a glimpse of them.
  • How long can we remain as informed spectators on the sideline watching such tragedy unfold before our eyes?
  • At Wasps, the players of both sides happily mingled with spectators in the spring sunshine. Times, Sunday Times
  • The world is being reshaped and we have to be more than fretting spectators. Times, Sunday Times
  • The big difference between this and all the other Highland Games is that spectators get to participate - meek office-types, and even their husbands, can toss the caber with the big boys.
  • I cannot convey any idea of how distasteful the thing was to me; of how I shrank from the unpleasant conspicuousness of walking down a street lined with spectators. Aleta Dey
  • Bourriaud considers the relational form of artwork as social "interstice," a place to learn to inhabit the world in a better way, where art "tightens the space of relations" between spectators so that art becomes a glue of social relations. Monica Westin: Art in the Time of Midterms: Museum as Democracy and the MCA's New Show
  • A few incredulous spectators watched as Paterson, ranked 23rd in the world, beat the champion.
  • With bear-baiting, the bear is chained to a pole and the spectators are locked in the Bear Garden ostensibly for their own protection.
  • And just like anything else associated with takedowns and half nelsons, it walks the thin line between spectator sport and high camp.
  • She was a spectator, a spectator watching her life break apart before her eyes.
  • interested spectators
  • Spectators were ranged along the whole route of the procession.
  • Spectators have a chance to watch the race from two locations - along the beach or following the race in motor boats.
  • But a spectator can hold only so much in memory and is unlikely to retain more than the first three rounds; the succeeding material begins to blur.
  • The tribulations of the wanigan were as the salt of life to the spectators. The Blazed Trail
  • The illegal bouts, in carpeted 16-by-16-foot pits surrounded by four-foot walls, are staged in hidden venues, usually with no more than a few dozen spectators allowed. Mjh's blog — 2007 — August
  • It is anyone's guess how many spectators will take an interest and even become fans of the sport.
  • Lastly, this commandment conveys the obligation to dissent from, and reject, every superstition and every error, requiring us to preserve pure and intemerate the adoration due to the Supreme Being, who, in this sense, is represented in this text as jealously watching over human actions, and a not indifferent spectator of good or evil; therefore a sure punisher of the guilty, and an eternal remunerator of him who faithfully adheres to His law. A Guide for the Religious Instruction of Jewish Youth
  • Spectators benefit from a newly-installed grandstand and large screen.
  • I hope that all the spectators this weekend feel what I feel when I see the mighty warbirds flying high.
  • At the hippodrome on the city's edge, thousands of cheering and whistling spectators watched about 50 riders, many in red-and-black traditional robes, compete furiously at buzkashi.
  • Abdulmutallab, who muttered "Osama's alive" to some spectators as he was brought into the courtroom, mumbled "jihad" when Judge Edmunds used the name "al Qaeda" as she read the charges against him to the jury. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • After Sandwich it was just as if you'd gone deaf - no spectator noise, only four people watching!
  • These traces of identity pass by the spectator in ephemeral moments, reflected, refracted, and distorted, as in a funnyhouse mirror.
  • The spectators were amazed that anybody could tame a lion.

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