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Some Related Sentences

One and foot
One foot in front of another, with at least one foot on the ground at any time.
One foot in front of another, with periods where both feet are off the ground.
: One foot upon a mountaintop.
* Sweeping – One foot or both feet of an opponent may be swept depending upon their position, balance and strength.
One of them is a charm to release warriors caught during battle, and the other one is a charm to heal a horse's sprained foot.
One horsepower is equivalent to 33, 000 foot-pounds per minute, or the power required to lift 550 pounds by one foot in one second, and is equivalent to about 746 watts.
One way to classify jumping is by the manner of foot transfer.
One story goes that Hassan al-Sabah set up a trick to make it appear as if he had decapitated one of his hashashins and the " dead " hashashin's head lay at the foot of his throne.
One of the air intakes of the 80 by 120 foot wind tunnel ( world's largest ), located at NASA Ames Research Center.
One of Williams ' aims, in experimenting with his " variable foot ", was to show the American ( opposed to European ) rhythm that he claimed was present in everyday American language.
This result is achieved by the custom manufacturer Marimba One by widening the resonators into an oval shape, with the lowest ones reaching nearly a foot in width, and doubling the tube up inside the lowest resonators.
One Chancellor has a long foot, another a short foot, a third an indifferent foot: ‘ tis the same thing in a Chancellor ’ s conscience .’
One famous paradox is that of the two monks, attributed to Dudeney, which consists of two similar shapes, one with and the other missing a foot.
One ounce per square foot is 1. 344 mils or 34 micrometres.
One shows Adam sitting between John the Baptist and a prophet at the foot of a tree.
One of today's Athens northern suburbs, Ekáli, an affluent and very exclusive residential community on the western foot of Mount Penteli, is called by that name.
One of the best-performing rigs per square foot of sail area and is fast for up-wind passages.
One of the first was the brick-story Federal-style Allen Glover house at the foot of Capitol street.
One of the worst traffic accidents in Connecticut history occurred at the intersection of US 44 and Route 10 at the foot of Avon Mountain.
One mine, with a 125 foot shaft, was located a short distance from the Rippey railroad station.
One day in 1869 he was standing at the edge of a dock, working on fixing the location where the bridge would be built, when his foot was crushed by an arriving ferry.
One derivation is that it derives from Old French patoier meaning " to gesticulate, handle clumsily, to paw ", from pate " paw ", from Low Franconian * patta " paw, sole of the foot " +-ois, a linguistic suffix similar to English-ish /- ese.

One and lifted
Charlton then lifted the League One trophy on 5 May 2012, having been in the top position since 15 September 2011, and after recording a 3 – 2 victory over Hartlepool United, recorded their highest ever league points score of 101, the highest in any professional European league that year.
One special step used during a galliard is lavolta, a step which involves an intimate, close hold between a couple, with the woman being lifted into the air and the couple turning 270 degrees, within one six-beat measure.
One dance for couples, a form of the galliard called lavolta, involved a rather intimate hold between the man and woman, with the woman being lifted into the air while the couple made a 3 / 4 turn.
One of Hadrian's attempts at extravagant remembrance failed, when the proposal to create a constellation of Antinous being lifted to heaven by an eagle ( the constellation Aquila ) failed of adoption.
One of the show's running gags involved Abbott perpetually nagging Costello to get a job to pay their rent, while Abbott barely lifted a finger in that direction.
Biographer Ezra Squier Tipple wrote: " If to speak with authority as the accredited messenger of God ; to have credentials which bear the seal of heaven ... if when he lifted the trumpet to his lips the Almighty blew the blast ; if to be conscious of an ever-present sense of God, God the Summoner, God the Anointing One, God the Judge, and to project it into speech which would make his hearers tremble, melt them with terror, and cause them to fall as dead men ; if to be and do all this would entitle a man to be called a great preacher, then Asbury was a great preacher.
" One of the banners was handheld and displayed across the train timetable and the other attached to bundles of balloons that lifted it up to the ceiling of the station's enormous main room.
One of the statues was lifted into place in 1409, but was found to be too small to be easily visible from the ground and was taken down ; both statues then languished in the workshop of the opera for several years.
One final time the ban was lifted, this time for ten days in early December 1961 to permit Lutuli and his wife to attend the Nobel Peace Prize ceremonies in Oslo, an award described by Die Transvaler as " an inexplicable pathological phenomenon ".
One is fighting and victorious, recalling the Greek goddess Athena: she has a bare breast, the Phrygian cap and a red corsage, and has an arm lifted in a gesture of rebellion.
One of the smaller New Georgia islands, Ranongga, was lifted three meters ( 10 ft .) out of the Pacific Ocean by the 2007 Solomon Islands earthquake, causing an expansion of its shoreline by up to 70 meters all around.
One school of thought believes the gap in the open front reduces the amount of urine that lands on the seat if it is not lifted, as most of the urine will land in the gap.
One house in Charlestown, Rhode Island was lifted and deposited across the street, where it stood, inhabited, until it was demolished in August 2011.
One of the birds reportedly clamped his shoulder with its claws, then lifted Lowe about two feet off the ground, carrying him some distance.
One boy lost his life when he was sucked out of the car he was riding in, and an entire family of five died when their house was lifted from its foundation, hurled over 200 yards, and slammed into a field.
One aspect of its method of construction was also novel ; the box sections were assembled on-shore, then floated out into position before being gradually lifted into place using powerful jacks.
One of the men was shot through both legs and Corporal Nash and a private ( David Hawkes ) ( who was himself severely wounded ) lifted the man up and they then carried him for a considerable distance, the captain covering the retreat of the party.
< nowiki >*</ nowiki > On original LP pressings of the album, the audio track of " White Shadow " ( which was the last song on Side One ) continued into the run-off groove, causing the track to play continuously until the tonearm was lifted from the record.
One of the fundamental thermodynamic equations is the description of thermodynamic work in analogy to mechanical work, or weight lifted through an elevation against gravity, as defined in 1824 by French physicist Sadi Carnot.
One of these was the addition of the following founding principle, which is lifted almost verbatim from Section 16 ( 1 ) of the Charter of Rights:
One last passenger special operated on the line in November of that year before the line was totally closed and the track later lifted.
One week later, however, the Film & Television Producers Guild lifted the ban.
One of them places it on a gurney and it's wheeled away to the room of Appolonia Francetti, who is then lifted onto the gurney.
The school was classed by the then Department of Public Works as a Sectional Type School, One ( 1 ) class room, lifted off the ground on stilts, with front entry steps leading up into a verandah running along three sides of the building ( 2. 44 m wide ) and a single doorway into a single classroom ( 6. 39 m long x 5. 49 m wide )..

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