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How To Use Trawl In A Sentence

  • The site aims to find you the best real-time prices on airfares by trawling 35 airlines and travel websites.
  • And there is plenty of food here-both the trawls and acoustic surveys have revealed an abundant supply of myctophid lanternfish, the most common prey eaten by large Humboldt squid in these waters in other years. Scientific American
  • A reduction in the days that vessels can spend at sea means trawlers fish harder near their home ports. Times, Sunday Times
  • So, no need to trawl the high street! The Sun
  • That's one of the main Spanish trawler Tuesday, and a self-proclaimed pirate said the hostage-takers were paid $3.3 million in ransom. WN.com - Articles related to EU navy arrests 13 pirates off Oman
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  • The genetic trawl will not be looking for physical characteristics, such as colouring or height, but at particular genes that were thought to be common in Vikings.
  • So, no need to trawl the high street! The Sun
  • It got caught in a trawler's nets and died. Times, Sunday Times
  • The bridge can be a little confusing when conditions deteriorate, as it is draped in trawl net, but a diver can see and swim inside many parts of it.
  • The tech giant will trawl anonymous confidential data to spot people at risk of kidney disease, blood poisoning and organ failure. The Sun
  • They no longer have to trawl streets at random with their equipment to find vulnerable homes; they can now purchase software that can identify such households remotely. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is visited by Pat, the black-market scally with retribution on his mind for the loss of the trawling father he never met.
  • Fish biologists descend in bathyspheres and submarines to the deepest oceanic canyon, and trawlers scrape up odd saltwater nematodes and mollusks from the bottom sediments.
  • In an Oct. 13 meeting with Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, Obama said: ` ` Tell Raúl police Saturday detained 28 members of a far-right party who tried to disrupt an event held by a rival far-right tanker Monday farther out at sea than any previous assault, suggesting that pirate capabilities are growing as they increase intellectual Francisco Ayala, seen in this March 9, 2006 file photo during an interview with The Associated Press, in Spanish trawler Tuesday, and a self-proclaimed pirate said the hostage-takers were paid $3.3 million in ransom. WN.com - Articles related to Spanish PM vows sweeping reforms to boost economy
  • Bottom trawling (scraping large nets across the seabed) kills coral, stirs up sediment causing pollutants to migrate into seaweed and other fish feed, and scoops up large amounts of by-catch -- other sealife, like turtles and dolphins unintentionally caught and wasted. Cathy Erway: The Pescatore's Dilemma
  • I trawled through bookshops, I searched for the perfect cup of coffee, I bought records by Ella Fitzgerald from the second hand record shop on the way to the Grafton Centre.
  • The freezer trawler could trawl down to 500m off the rough West coast.
  • We are taking the situation seriously and we are taking a trawl through all our permits.
  • A Pentrevah girl got herself in trouble with a young trawlerman and they eloped to the States. A Girl Possessed
  • Campaigners say foreign fishermen who use two trawlers to tow a giant net are to blame and want the method banned. The Sun
  • Too much Affordably Good Design made me want to go straight to a novelty shop in Devizes to buy a toby jug of a grinning trawlerman's head sporting a yellow sou'wester.
  • Trawlermen in pursuit of these and other groundfish like pollock and haddock drag steel weights and rollers as well as nets behind their boats, devastating huge areas of the sea floor as they go.
  • It must feel like that for the town's footballers as they make their own painful trawl around Britain. Times, Sunday Times
  • Amid the discomforts of his passage the author reflects on or trawls his past, his sorrows and betrayals, his experience as a wartime evacuee.
  • We have had gentlefolks down from London about it, men who argue and palaver, and wear high hats and are said to have long bills, and there is talk of a Government cutter to protect us, towed by red tape, and the trawlers are to cast their nets farther asea. Without Prejudice
  • Trawlermen must throw everything they catch back into the sea. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most importantly, he is also a very competent member of a trawler's crew, capable of gutting the fish fast enough to keep the packers happy.
  • The bulk of the domestic shrimp catch is harvested by trawlers in the Gulf of Mexico.
  • After trawling web car ads he found it on eBay. The Sun
  • A quick trawl through the newspapers yielded five suitable job adverts.
  • More supposed fuel for the anti-commercial fishing fire is the idea that fishing with trawls and dredges changes the bottom, and that such changes are not acceptable.
  • The old trawler's toilets were so filthy that we could not use them.
  • After his death, I trawled through all of his speeches I could locate, from his maiden speech at Westminster to the verbatim report of proceedings at Holyrood.
  • We'd spent the night on an old trawler bobbing around in the estuary of the river.
  • Last year, 35 trawlers shrimped off Crescent City, but this year the number has increased to 60 boats.
  • I felt a little uncharitable: maybe they were just honest but hard-up Grimsby trawlermen, reduced to hawking their catch on the streets.
  • Our brilliant researchers trawl the deep, dark recesses of news from across the globe. The Sun
  • The committee's unprecedented trawl through the secret world of British intelligence makes devastating reading for Blair.
  • He wore the look and rolling gait of a man trawling for trouble. Times, Sunday Times
  • So this evening hasn't been entirely productive - but four hours trawling the web has allowed me to gain good product knowledge and find solutions that will cost me £160 less than I had budgeted.
  • The Bagnatos are a seventh generation fishing family who've been trawling the waters off Sydney for the past 50 years.
  • This, incidentally, suggests we have a trawl within a trawl, as it is not part of the usual business of Transport Police to operate as ticket inspectors.
  • The genetic trawl will not be looking for physical characteristics, such as colouring or height, but at particular genes that were thought to be common in Vikings.
  • She spent the morning in the library, trawling for information for her project.
  • To do the latter exercise meant that the court itself had had to trawl through a large amount of documents in the file. Times, Sunday Times
  • Will I get in trouble for trawling the streets of Torquay with a can of Stella in my hand?
  • Murdoch flies into London later this week on a scheduled visit at a time of turmoil for Britain's best-selling newspaper, with journalists on the title angry at News Corp's powerful management and standards committee MSC, whose reconstruction and trawl of the company's email archive produced the evidence that led to the arrests. News Corp may face US inquiry after Sun arrests at News International
  • According to the BBC, trawlerman Benito Estevez fished the camera out with five holiday pictures intact on its SD card, off the west coast of Europe. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • With the Australians in charge the trawler and the chase ship then turned to re-cross the Indian Ocean.
  • Other chapters in this informative book cover the drift-net; trawling in the west coast of Scotland lochs; the Scottish east coast fishers in the days of sail; steam drifters and more recent fishing methods.
  • It will also trawl social networking sites for information on voters' habits and preferences. Times, Sunday Times
  • It would not be a “vessel restricted in her ability to maneuver” as those are vessels which are restricted due to specialized operations, such as trawling or dredging. Waldo Jaquith - M’ville: Goode’s got nothin’ to do with it…kind of.
  • When I say "growling," by the way, I mean literally growling, his years as a bona fide seadog -- Norwegian trawler? Neurosurgical Intervention For Beginners
  • But it's wildly unlikely that the police would score any direct hits from speculative trawls through the archive footage.
  • For his research, Mr Shaw trawled through the minutes of more than 600 meetings, many beautifully hand-written in old Woolworths jotters.
  • Life as a Grimsby trawlerman has never been easy, but the rewards were still there 100 years ago.
  • Fleets of mainly Spanish and Panamanian trawlers fish for deep-sea species such as the orange roughy and the round-nosed grenadier which are popular among consumers on the continent.
  • The pre-sea trawler course teaches participants how to mend nets, do repairs, and other basic skills required for work on deep-sea factory-freezer trawlers.
  • The crew continued to trawl for whitefish long after many others abandoned the traditional catch and diversified into shellfish.
  • Inside the museum, all manner of detailed models, from submarines, steamboats and trawlers to battleships, tugs and cobles, competed for best model in the various classes.
  • Doom abounds but the trawl for positives has to begin somewhere.
  • The four-man crew on board the fishing trawler.
  • The crew of the trawler had abandoned ship and the vessel was listing badly.
  • I have trawled the web and not found anything sufficiently stylish. Times, Sunday Times
  • Anyone wondering how consumers behave in a recession need simply trawl the tabloids for inspiration.
  • Crew members contacted Shetland coastguards to alert them and the trawler's sister vessel, the MFV Falcon was called to assist.
  • A big rescue operation has been launched for a trawler missing in the English Channel.
  • That generation of alumni now commands a pool of funds that schools and universities are trawling with increasing skill. Times, Sunday Times
  • A big rescue operation has been launched for a trawler missing in the English Channel.
  • They pick up fish that have been thrown overboard from trawlers, and will catch fish themselves when necessary. Times, Sunday Times
  • I trawled through the accounts for the last three years to see where it had gone and found a host of different funds, all with balances.
  • We did a wide trawl to find the right person to play the part.
  • In the ensuing sea chase, the trawler collided with another French fishing boat, tried to ram HMS Alderney, and eventually hit the warship while cutting across her bows.
  • The police are trawling through their files for similar cases.
  • There’s little evidence they are interested in trawling the blogosphere to find weight loss technqiues or tales of plucky kiddies beating the odds. Why RSS will never “break through” « Squash
  • The measures included a ban on trawling in pairs in the spawning season and monthly limits for commercial fishermen. Times, Sunday Times
  • A strong warning has been sent to men who trawl Rochdale's streets for sex after four were caught kerb-crawling in what the police described as a ‘name and shame’ operation.
  • She has spent long hours trawling the streets of Dumbarton to collect signatures for a petition, and she helped to organise a public meeting, opposing the health board proposals, which was attended by 300 people.
  • For his research, Mr Shaw trawled through the minutes of more than 600 meetings, many beautifully hand-written in old Woolworths jotters.
  • Why bother trawling charity shops when your friends are much more likely to have things you like? Times, Sunday Times
  • You need to trawl through a lot of data to get results that are valid.
  • After the helicopter refuelled for a second time, the crew finally airlifted the injured man at 9am as the trawler was en route to Castletownbere.
  • Trawlermen talk of the excitement and freedom of the sea. Times, Sunday Times
  • Local fishing vessels trawling in Waterford Estuary have recently landed some pieces of timber which eventually attracted the attention of archaeologists.
  • Shrimp boats can trawl continuously for hours at a time.
  • Most of the larger boats use single trawls while the smaller inshore vessels often fish by dropping creels in what supporters describe as a truly sustainable fishery.
  • It came, instead, on a fishing trawler plying its trade in the unforgiving waters off the west coast.
  • Shift work and unsocial hours leave a fair bit of time to trawl the Web, and to add one's own five penn'orth to the blogosphere. Another One Bites The Dust
  • Meanwhile, on the subject of superstition, I'm working on a novella which involves a lady from Sheffield having visions of angels, so I've been trawling about on the net for current angelology and my goodness, it's a rum go.
  • We did a wide trawl to find the right person to play the part.
  • Northeast Utilities Environmental Laboratory staff list it among fishes they have trawled in Long Island Sound.
  • On the morning of 11 February 1944, off the Norwegian coast, Stubborn sighted a convoy of seven ships escorted by four trawlers, a whaler and an aircraft.
  • They proceeded to fly at ridiculous and dangerous speeds around moored yachts and trawlers in their powerboats and jet skis and not a single lifejacket among them and no sign of anyone being around to stop them.
  • His final show features a trawl through the archives to relive his favourite moments from all of his shows. The Sun
  • He spent months on Nova Scotia fishing trawlers and tells of being hit by a piece of machinery and scrabbling around for missing teeth. Times, Sunday Times
  • The boat was an old trawler, something more for fisherman than pleasure cruising.
  • Data trackers will find better sources if they discover bogus information in their data trawls.
  • 40 years ago a fishermen trawling the waters off the coast of Madagascar pulled up a strange specimen in their nets.
  • It paddles along the surface for thirty seconds, then dives to trawl the muddy bottom for worms and aquatic insects.
  • Oil-clothes, heavy under-clothing, hip boots of red rubber, white, doughnut-shaped woolen "nippers" for pulling trawls, and various other articles for convenience and comfort were added to their outfits. Jim Spurling, Fisherman or Making Good
  • Using Broadway as her centre, she trawled back and forth from the high Twenties, through the Thirties and into the Forties. CHAMELEON
  • With thirty-nine epsiodes and two Christmas specials to trawl through, that's a lot of television for even the most attentive of viewers in these time-poor days.
  • It will also trawl social networking sites for information on voters' habits and preferences. Times, Sunday Times
  • My slowpoke trawler, the Sea Cow, was equipped with a portable scuba compressor.
  • We did a wide trawl to find the right person to play the part.
  • Better yet, a trawl through catalogues specialising in vintage SF yields plenty of examples of his work from the 1940s and 50s, the last, frantic, days of the true pulps, when stories had to jostle for the reader's attention, and the printed word competed with TV and the movies. Writers on Writing: Credentials
  • She spent the morning in the library, trawling for information for her project.
  • We also know that many species are caught in phenomenally large numbers by fishing them, typically as by-catch from longline fishing worldwide, but also from trawls and gill net, than any other kinds of fishery.
  • They've started doing some trawls as they approached the sea mounts, so yesterday they ran a net at 1.3 kilometres deep in an area of open ocean that was 3.6 kilometres deep.
  • If my trawl is indicative, net cruisers must grow mighty frustrated.
  • Coastal fishing communities had been protesting the invasion of their fishing grounds by the trawlers.
  • The following vessels steamed into a group of trawlers which had not been told of the evening's movements.
  • If you charter a boat in Miami, you can pick and choose among spacious trawlers, luxurious motor yachts, or swift catamarans.
  • The trawler rolled wildly in the heavy swell.
  • Level with the anchor winch, the entire side of the hull is sharply stoved in and ripped open where the Polish trawler Snardy ploughed into the side of the lightship on 16 August 1967.
  • He grew up in poverty, the son of a trawlerman in a home with no running water. Times, Sunday Times
  • Stowed away aboard trawlers and ferries, animal travellers have descended upon the islands for many years.
  • Plucked from the depths of the ocean, grabbed by the gloved hand of a trawlerman, examined with a beady eye and then chucked over a shoulder back into the sea.
  • Instead of trawling the web or visiting multiple galleries, head to art fairs where you can browse different galleries under one roof. Times, Sunday Times
  • When I dived the Borgny, an old trawl net was draped round the stern along the seabed.
  • More people are trawling the net this way. The Sun
  • Conservative MP for South East Cornwall Sheryll Murray, whose trawlerman husband died at sea, wanted reassurances that no coastguard co-ordination centres would close before the new system works. BBC News - Home
  • On September 25 signals from the seamount ceased when a transmission cable that carried the signals to land was cut by a deep-sea trawler.
  • Many police trawls did not turn up sufficient evidence to satisfy the burden of proof.
  • And on this side of the Atlantic bizarre and beautiful fields of glass sponges have been trawled to oblivion.
  • It must feel like that for the town's footballers as they make their own painful trawl around Britain. Times, Sunday Times
  • A British trawler was fishing some miles away from the incident when it dragged up the chest in its nets. Times, Sunday Times
  • The first wreck is believed to be a coastal trader or auxiliary minesweeper, while the second may be a fishing vessel or trawler that sunk in the area in 1981.
  • The newspaper had trawled its files for photos of the new minister.
  • Some women love to trawl the high street on the off chance that something might catch their eye. Times, Sunday Times
  • Suddenly something went wrong with her steering, and she veered sharply into the path of one of the convoy's escort trawlers.
  • The prawn trawler skipper dashed to the harbour where he keeps his boat.
  • Fishermen in their trawlers draw close to the straw vessels and throw candy, fruit, and other treats to the children.
  • And after all the thirsty work of trawling the streets for entertainment or acquisitions you can always drop into one of the town's many pubs which really come into their own at this time of year.
  • However, the Danish industrial boats trawl for small fish, which are mashed up and made into fish meal.
  • The trawler was fishing off the coast of Iceland.
  • At the meeting it emerged that French trawlermen and netters, who usually set nets in one place and return to retrieve them, had an unwritten agreement to avoid fishing together in an ‘imaginary box’ around 30 miles long.
  • It is believed the group trawls the internet targeting websites where the registration has lapsed.
  • These sites are more than trawls for information, given that they can be updated when needs be.
  • They are two young sub lieutenants, not out of their teens who have been placed in charge of these trawlers to take them to the Dardanelles.
  • There’s little evidence [average consumers] are interested in trawling the blogosphere to find weight loss technqiues or tales of plucky kiddies beating the odds. “Most people are morons” « Squash
  • During the early years these were sailing smacks, but the yard was at the forefront of the development of steam trawlers and came to specialise in long-range trawlers for the Hull distant water fleet.
  • Shellfish is a sustainable fishery and the trawlermen saw that, called it a day and are reaping the rewards.
  • I've discovered and love Reblochon, Roquefort and Cantal (these are in no particular order) in my Parisian market trawls.
  • Hundreds of men who found work on mackerel boats after they lost their trawler jobs were deemed ineligible, because they were said to be not as badly affected as those who abandoned the sea and found work inshore.
  • Our brilliant researchers trawl the deep, dark recesses of news from across the globe. The Sun
  • He said at any given time there were up to 2,000 people on ferries, pleasure boats, trawlers and cargo ships off the South East coast and the helicopter service was vital.
  • He said: ‘It is appalling that while we are expected to accept a ban on trawling for white fish we have to sit back and watch crews from other countries catch white fish just to be turned into feed for animals.’
  • We'll be trawling for fish and plankton. Tuning the Rig: A Journey to the Arctic
  • I've swum with crocodiles, followed the migration of the wildebeest and lived on a fishing trawler for two weeks. Times, Sunday Times
  • See trawl board anneau do coulisse du type ouvrant anillas que se pueden abrir otter trawl chalut panneaux arte de arrastre de puertas outrigger tangon tangn, botaln overhand knot noeud simple nudo llano Chapter 5
  • The four-man crew on board the fishing trawler.
  • In this case, many point their fingers at the shrimp trawler that operates off the coast, a trawler that doesn't want to stop fishing when the candlefish pass through.
  • There are no big surprises on this record, no sudden forays into electronica or hip hop, no eclectic trawls through different styles and genres.
  • What Triesman suffered was a fishing expedition, in which Jacobs was the trawlerman, the ubiquitous Max Clifford the dockside salesman and the Mail on Sunday the wholesaler. Whose interests are being served by this squalid tale of entrapment?
  • In May 1990, the National Academy of Sciences estimated that as many as 55,000 sea turtles annually drown in American shrimp nets not equipped with turtle excluder device that allow turtles to escape the trawl net.
  • The sites he has trawled make my stomach churn. The Sun
  • Fishing techniques such as trawling, in which nets are dragged along the bottom of the ocean, are highly destructive to all kinds of benthic (bottom-dwelling) life. Economics of fisheries
  • Once there, they fanned out in two-man dories to set trawls, longlines studded with multiple baited hooks, for cod and halibut.
  • Trawling bothers ecologists who aver that it ruins the ocean-floor habitat of many fish species.
  • A high number of trawlers breach fishing regulations but few are arrested. Times, Sunday Times
  • A source said last night: 'He said he was trawling the streets until he found one he fancied. The Sun
  • A big rescue operation has been launched for a trawler missing in the English Channel.
  • South Africa made history in 1938 when a coelacanth was found in a trawl net in the East London harbour.
  • At the end of his dive, woe betide any luckless invertebrate in the path of his trawl net.
  • The area - biologically rich, and home to various shallow and deepwater marine species such as hake, kingklip, monkfish, rock lobster and tune - faces serious threats from trawling and mining activities.
  • The nets used to trawl the bottom of the sea for fish have openings as wide as the length of a rugby field and three storeys high.
  • They have flown to La Coruna in northern Spain to examine the trawler Celestial Dawn, which underwent an extensive refit in Devon after the Trident sinking in which seven men died.
  • Most importantly, he is also a very competent member of a trawler's crew, capable of gutting the fish fast enough to keep the packers happy.
  • Seven battleships, six cruisers and several torpedo boats steamed among the trawlers.
  • 'A very large amount of the deep sea is under threat from bottom trawling, which is one of the most destructive forms of fishing. Home | Mail Online
  • The most sophisticated fish auction in Europe has finally opened in Hull, revolutionising the lives of trawlermen, processors and merchants and reigniting the port as a major player in the international fish trade.
  • The industry was in its heyday - stacks of fish back to back the length of the quay, off a long line of trawlers newly returned from the far North.
  • The next year was a trawl through the sport 's underbelly. Times, Sunday Times
  • Every year he trawls through the letters and gets visits from people who have fallen on hard circumstances.
  • (of trawl) (de chalut) (de arte de arrastre) groundrope bourrelet telinga de promos Chapter 5
  • Our new measures must include better technical standards, including bigger mesh sizes to prevent juvenile fish being trawled up and discarded.
  • And 20-odd years of experience earned in the contracts field and trawling the trade fairs and factories of Italy, Germany and Spain has given the couple plenty of time to suss out what works and what wears well.
  • Yes, Kerry Packer has convinced all the execrable sleazeballs of the world to put on coloured uniforms and and trawl for their countries.
  • The trawler had sailed from the port of Zeebrugge.
  • Surely Oxford should trawl those bog-standard comps for bright pupils.
  • Fishermen now use deep-sea trawlers and sophisticated fishing equipment, while sampans (small boats) ferry people between various points on the coastline along Victoria Harbour.
  • A quick trawl through the newspapers yielded five suitable job adverts.
  • The two men would almost certainly be regrouping on the trawler for a last, determined stand. ALASTAIR MCLEAN'S 'NIGHT WATCH'
  • They use beam and otter trawls or fine filament nylon driftnets, a form of gear used in the open ocean, suspended in the water by floats like a curtain.
  • Trawl through the specialist brokers' websites, and you will catch islomania yourself. Times, Sunday Times
  • Whereas a trawl net has to be fairly solid because it's being dragged through the water behind a large vessel, so they tend to be quite distinctive.
  • You get close to the rhythms and idiosyncrasies of politicians, trawlermen, doctors, divas, victims, rogues. Times, Sunday Times
  • They had seen him trawling and therefore knew that there were fish.
  • When they heard that he worked on a trawler they opened the bottle and poured a teaspoonful into a beaker adding hot water.
  • The most effective immediate assistance Canada could give in this war would be to build, equip and man a thousand "tinpot" trawlers and minesweepers and put them to work on our own eastern and western approaches and on the eastern and western approaches to the British Isles. War With the Blinds Down
  • We did a wide trawl to find the right person to play the part.
  • I couldn't be bothered trawling through the remaining farrago of lazy-minded tripe that our milk-toothed boy has served up for the public to peruse.
  • Recently, he's been in New Orleans recording a new album —which he calls a "folky, Americana record, but more intricate"—and will be there repeatedly for the shooting of HBO's "Treme," in which he plays a music manager trawling for talent. Sondheim, Shakespeare and Rock 'n' Roll
  • In the 1990s, when increasingly stringent regulations to protect the fisheries were being imposed, tempers among trawlermen who felt their livelihoods threatened often became frayed, leading to high-profile confrontations.
  • HMS Cumberland has sent back dramatic pictures of a mission to help an Icelandic trawler which was being battered by a Force 10 storm.
  • The tech giant will trawl anonymous confidential data to spot people at risk of kidney disease, blood poisoning and organ failure. The Sun
  • For decades, the coral formations and their marine life have been literally devastated by crude dynamite fishing techniques and trawling.
  • The wreck is very heavily netted, with trawl nets wrapped closely around her.
  • Under those circumstances, the pirates, who have now learned how to operate far out to sea using mother ships such as seagoing trawlers carrying speedboats for attacks, look set for a lot more plunder. Earth News, Earth Science, Energy Technology, Environment News

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