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glowing and blood
R / Greenberg Associates created the film's optical effects, including the alien's ability to become invisible, its thermal vision point-of-view, its glowing blood, and the electrical spark effects.
Buffy dreams of the orange, green-eyed demon pouring blood down her throat, putting a scorpion on her stomach and sucking a glowing essence from her mouth.
Rieno gets Schiller to reveal that he is the descendant of the bloodline of Light ( Rieno himself has extremely Dark blood ), which is connected to the people of Light, who appear as glowing spirits and are very beautiful and elfin in appearance.
Mr Maltravers suddenly appears in the room, his index finger glowing and pointing at Mrs Maltravers ' hand, which is covered in his blood.

glowing and was
How titillating it was to go among people who did not know him as the composer, but who talked in the most glowing terms of the promise of the piece after having heard the first rehearsals.
The mass scale used in Table 5-1 was derived on the assumption that the motion of the glowing trail is related to the momentum transfer to the trail by the meteorite, permitting the calculation of the mass if the velocity is known ( Cook and Whipple, 1958 ).
Using this device, he confirmed that an invisible current flowed from the glowing filament through the vacuum to the metal plate, but only when the plate was connected to the positive supply.
He was glowing with health and had a fine appearance and handsome features.
It is also noted that Ailred wrote his Life of S. Ninian at a time when he was living under Scottish rule and had close connections both to Fergus of Galloway ( who would resurrect the Bishopric of Galloway ), and to the Scottish royal family, all of whom would have been pleased to have a manuscript with such a glowing description of a Galwegian and Scottish saint.
While the earlier inventors had produced electric lighting in laboratory conditions, dating back to a demonstration of a glowing wire by Alessandro Volta in 1800, Edison concentrated on commercial application, and was able to sell the concept to homes and businesses by mass-producing relatively long-lasting light bulbs and creating a complete system for the generation and distribution of electricity.
Waits's new emphasis on experimenting with various styles and instrumentation continued on 1985's Rain Dogs, a sprawling, 19-song collection which received glowing reviews ( the album was ranked # 21 on Rolling Stones list of the 100 greatest albums of the 1980s.
Sale's translation was a part of commentary and, in one of those notes, refers to an allegedly common form of torture and execution by " throwing into a glowing pit of fire, whence he had the opprobrious appellation of the Lord of the Pit.
In October 1817, a tubular, glowing apparition was claimed to have been seen in the Jewel House by the Keeper of the Crown Jewels, Edmund Lenthal Swifte.
" The common wisdom was that valves — which, like light bulbs, contained a hot glowing filament — could never be used satisfactorily in large numbers, for they were unreliable, and in a large installation too many would fail in too short a time ".
After the initial performances, Aldridge kept the play in the repertoire, and it was extremely successful at the box office and continued to be staged in England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales until at least 1857, when it received a glowing review from The Sunday Times on 26 April.
Astronomer Jean-Felix Picard observed that his barometer was glowing in the dark as he carried it.
This firebox was heated by radiant heat from the glowing coke, not just convection from the hot exhaust gas.
Western reporters observed that Hu's obituary was intentionally " glowing " in order to divert suspicion that the Party had mistreated him.
This glowing orange trail of gas, visible over the Indian Ocean with the brightness of a sixth-magnitude star for a few minutes, was photographed by Mstislav Gnevyshev at the Mountain Station of the Main Astronomical Observatory of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR near Kislovodsk.
: " Just as cold arose out of Niflheim, and all terrible things, so also all that looked toward Múspellheim became hot and glowing ; but Ginnungagap was as mild as windless air, and when the breath of heat met the rime, so that it melted and dripped, life was quickened from the yeast-drops, by the power of that which sent the heat, and became a man's form.
Chandra was born in the Ocean of Milk ( the gods were churning it for millennia in order to create immortal life ), and nearly blinded the gods with his bright, glowing body ( hence the name that means " illustrious ").
Although Brooks Atkinson thought the score was " hardly more than adequate ", he called Merman " as brassy as ever, glowing like a neon light whenever she steps on the stage.
The building was greeted with glowing praise from architecture critics.
It was described to be made of a cloud with red glowing eyes.
His map was circulated in Chicago, New York, and Boston, along with glowing descriptions of the city.
He was arguably the first Italian to paint landscapes with figures as movable pictures in their own frames with no devotional, allegorical, or historical purpose — and the first whose colours possessed that ardent, glowing, and melting intensity which was so soon to typify the work of all the Venetian School.
It was formally demonstrated on 13 October 1800, and the Bath Chronicle carried a glowing report 3 days later.

glowing and achieved
Born in Shoshoni, Fremont County, Wyoming, Jewell was a Broadway actress who achieved immediate success and glowing critical reviews in two productions, Up Pops the Devil ( 1930 ) and Blessed Event ( 1932 ).
Perhaps the most impressive of the ‘ firsts ’ achieved by the orchestra under D ’ Cruze was the 1997 performance of Stravinsky ’ s The Rite of Spring, reviewed in the Yorkshire Post in the following glowing terms.

glowing and by
In a glowing review for his " Consumer Guide " column published by The Village Voice, Robert Christgau wrote: " Before minstrelsy scholar Eric Lott gets too excited about having his title stolen.
It might be connected with " glowing coals ", or " fire ", but it could equally go back to, or be influenced by, the Latin name Brundisium of the city of Brindisi ( aes Brundusinum, meaning " copper of Brindisi ", is attested in Pliny ).
The towering Power and Light Building is influenced by the Art Deco style and contains a glowing sky beacon.
A “ Letter from an Officer of Marines at New South Wales, 16 November 1788 ”, published in the London newspaper, The World, 15 May 1789, reported the glowing description of the island and its prospects by Philip Gidley King, but also drew attention to the fatal defect of the lack of a safe port: “ The said Island lies near Port Jackson, and is nearly as large as the Isle of Wight.
Infrared or red radiation from a common household radiator or electric heater is an example of thermal radiation, as is the heat and light ( IR and visible EM waves ) emitted by a glowing incandescent light bulb.
It is traditionally characterised by being hand shaped rather than thrown ; fairly porous vessels, which result from low firing temperatures ; lead glazes ; and the removal of pieces from the kiln while still glowing hot.
In the 2005 series, the keys are also remotely linked to the TARDIS, capable of signalling its presence or impending arrival by heating up and glowing.
Clouds are pulled together by its wingbeats, the sound of thunder made by its wings clapping, sheet lightning the light flashing from its eyes when it blinks, and individual lightning bolts made by the glowing snakes that it carries around with it.
In 1901, Max Planck published an analysis that succeeded in reproducing the observed spectrum of light emitted by a glowing object.
NGC 6326, a planetary nebula with glowing wisps of outpouring gas that are lit up by a binary central star.
A piece of frail tenderness manages to cloak itself inside of her, even after having been demonized by Crosby, describing " a pathetic hint of frailty in a wonderful glowing man.
The sorcerers honor the fallen Toth by populating his funeral slab with eternally growing flowers and sealing off the section of Mount Korim with glowing quartz and crystal so that it may act as his tomb.
The high electrical fields generated inside a microwave often can be illustrated by placing a radiometer or neon glow-bulb inside the cooking chamber, creating glowing plasma inside the low-pressure bulb of the device.
Newsweek revealed in June 2001 that print ads for at least four movies released by Columbia Pictures, including A Knight's Tale and The Animal ( 2001 ), contained glowing comments from a film reviewer who did not exist.
According to Hua-yu Li, writing in Mao and the Economic Stalinization of China, 1948-1953 in 1953, Mao, misled by glowing reports in History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ( Bolshevik ): Short Course, authorized by Stalin of social and economic progress in the Soviet Union, abandoned the liberal economic programs of " New Democracy " and instituted the " general line for socialist transition ", a program to build socialism based on Soviet models.
Small guns were fired by priming powder poured down the touch hole ( or vent ) and ignited by glowing embers or a red-hot iron rod.

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