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How To Use Toolshed In A Sentence

  • He had locked it, and since the key was lost, Ashley had to carry the bike all the way into the toolshed behind the garage.
  • Before I knew it I had stolen downstairs and out of the house, to a toolshed we had across the yard that I used to hide in sometimes when I was little.
  • After looking over the last details of the toolsheds and henneries we were riding home under the over-arching elms down Bran Lane. Andivius Hedulio Adventures of a Roman Nobleman in the Days of the Empire
  • He lovingly converted what was an old toolshed into a jewel of a workplace for his wife, who is a commercial artist.
  • They left the truck and took the can of kerosene over to an outside workbench next to the toolshed. VAPOR TRAIL
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  • The vandals used an ax from the temple toolshed to smash a statue of Avalokitesvara.
  • Tucked in a bazaar along a grimy street in Gorband, Mahmed Daud keeps a shop about the size of a toolshed.
  • The elderly man, burdened by a back injury, heart disease, vascular problems, and dementia, was leaning on his garden shovel, using it as a second cane as he walked slowly toward his toolshed.
  • He went back towards the toolshed, but suddenly, quite close to him, he heard the noise of a hoe-scr-r-ritch, scratch, scratch, scritch.
  • I use all the wood from behind my house to work on my toolshed, but I can't figure out how to turn the logs into plywood.
  • As I sit here at Jonny's PC, I can gaze out of his leaded window past his toolshed across his lush garden watching the wind bellow against the trees as the rain pours down.
  • They left the truck and took the can of kerosene over to an outside workbench next to the toolshed. VAPOR TRAIL
  • A small rickety-looking building might have been a toolshed and another was probably a barn: larger than the house with big doors hanging ajar.
  • I discovered this 1998 article about a teenager who tried to build a nuclear reactor in his toolshed.
  • From the toolshed on the knolly backland of his farm, Gareth Brewster could see across the dark lumpy hills to the town's business center. In Other Worlds
  • The toolshed is in the back
  • There is a small toolshed adjacent to the parking lot, behind which are an array of feeders.
  • I thought I'd remove it and, taking a hammer from the toolshed, lightly tapped the offending projection.
  • Mowers and strimmers are available at the toolshed situated at the town park entrance to the old graveyard.
  • Tucked in a bazaar along a grimy street, he keeps a shop about the size of a toolshed.
  • A salvaged two-holer outhouse makes the perfect toolshed.
  • I didn't know my way around very well, and was rummaging through the toolshed one morning looking for a shovel.
  • Double French doors provide light and spacious entry to a studio, which once a toolshed.
  • I got out some rope, the shortest piece in the toolshed.
  • Any number of homemade traps and snares were primed at any one time, carefully crafted in his toolshed with top-quality materials, and placed with due care by spirit level and theodolite in the garden for maximum bloodletting.
  • So you stop what you're doing and dash back to the garage or toolshed to find it.
  • Gunmen also torched a van parked in the courtyard, as well as a large toolshed.
  • In addition there is a toolshed, glasshouse, a tarmac tennis court and a walled garden.
  • A salvaged two-holer outhouse makes the perfect toolshed.
  • And hide every eyesore in sight - a rusty toolshed, a dog kennel, the neighbor's dying juniper hedge.
  • Angela used to fight with her parents and sneak smokes in the toolshed behind her house.
  • Outside, the railed front garden is laid in lawn with a driveway, while the back garden faces south-west and includes a boiler house, toolshed and outside toilet.
  • Too softhearted to give it the heave-ho, I put it out of sight behind a toolshed.
  • In the title piece of Steven Millhauser's collection of new and selected stories, "We Others" Knopf, 387 pages, $27.95 , the "we" refers to phantoms who infiltrate picket-fenced suburbia—becoming "the companions of lawn mowers in toolsheds, of gas grills beside tarp-covered woodpiles"—and who try in vain to join the lives of the people who live there. Of Bouquets, Suburbs and 'Urth'

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