How To Use Unsleeping In A Sentence
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Clinton's unsleeping critics attributed the confusion to a leadership vacuum, to the inability of a domestically oriented President to frame foreign policy issues forcefully.
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But any readers wishing to set to work on Goering's negligee should beware the unsleeping Mattel legal team, although the legal eagles did suffer a setback last August.
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The unsleeping African night is filled with sounds - the song of running water; the calls of nightjars; the strident music of the frogs.
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the unsleeping city
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Forming the first line of defence which separates the civilized world from utter chaos, the warriors and their allies keep an unsleeping eye on the passes, ever alert for any activity.
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But this does not mean that its unsleeping care is diminished in magnitude or influence.
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During the cold war, it was often said that the United States faced an unsleeping foe that was ‘godless’.
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Best of all, arguably, is the poem "Diagnosis", where long summer daylight over Scapa Flow brings together unsleeping gulls and an insomniac speaker, who must "keep watching waves/slosh to and fro over the dead ships", but who is actually seeing more than might be apparent:
Archive 2009-05-01
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He woke with the dawn, long before his schoolmates, and lay unsleeping while the aftermath of fear ebbed from his mind.
THE GREENSTONE GRAIL: THE SANGREAL TRILOGY ONE
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Laxman is telling politicians, bureaucrats, ministers and others that his common man is the unseen but unsleeping watchdog, telling the world at large of what is going on.
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He lay but opened a red eye unsleeping, deep and slowly breathing, slumberous but awake.
Nick Mamatas' Journal
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I know that in the back of the unsleeping part of your mind you were attracted to the heat of my body ’, I grinned.
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There would be no escape - he would rule from Urbs Caelis with an unsleeping guard.
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But, as a record of George Eliot's unrealized intention, I would rather like the anomalous punch-ladle to remain as a mark of her artistic, unsleeping, conscience.
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Then they could have earned the sort of unsleeping invigilation that has recently brought Marilyn Meiser, a 75-year-old retired Wisconsin schoolteacher, a fine of $1, 000 for taking a bicycling holiday in Cuba.