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bellowed and from
" It was not surprising to hear the gentlemen from New York defend the Communist enclave ," Rankin bellowed, saying that he wanted it known that the American people are not in sympathy " with that Nigger Communist and that bunch of Reds who went up there.
He called the baritone solo about the wealth of Babylon ( section 3 above ) " the shopping list " and at a Hoffnung festival concert, he conducted a large choir and orchestra in " an excerpt from Belshazzar's Feast ": Walton raised his baton, and the chorus bellowed the single word " slain " ( from section 7 ).
Angered by these comments, Rankin bellowed, " It was not surprising to hear the gentlemen from New York defend the Communist enclave.
Hundreds of noises came out of the night ; everywhere the wounded wailed, each in his own language ; artillerymen and coachmen yelled at their exhausted horses and bellowed scores of curses each time they became stuck, which happened all the time ; wheels and weapons rattled, soldiers bellowed ; all staggered from tiredness and hunger.

bellowed and away
Samuels said the creature bellowed at him, then ran away.

bellowed and at
Her catchphrase was bellowed at the voting studio audience: " Press your buttons ...
The ground is known famously for being particularly long and narrow as opposed to many other grounds, with deep squarish pockets, and for the wild wind which bellowed over the ground, particularly at the Geelong Road end of the ground.

bellowed and .
He bellowed to the retreating back directly in front of him.
He showed his gleaming tusks of teeth and bellowed incoherently, his brass earrings jangling discordantly as he shook and trembled in ecstasy.
`` Seems to me last time I was here the grate bellowed out smoke as it might have been preparing us for hell ''.
Musmanno bellowed to his Italian crewmen.
He bellowed orders and watched the alert response of some of his men and watched, too, the way a dozen or more turned their heads questioningly toward the shackled figure as though for further instruction.
She bellowed triumphantly.
ANb's Frozen Corpse Stuffed with Dope has been described as " the Paul's Boutique of grindcore ", by Village Voice critic Phil Freeman, for its " hyper-referential, impossibly dense barrage of samples, blast beats, answering machine messages, and incomprehensibly bellowed rants.
Athena drove the spear into Ares ' body, and he bellowed in pain and fled to Mt.
He kept his grip on my hand and turned around and bellowed to his group of chatting friends, " Guess who I've got here.
' he bellowed.
Troublemakers in rowdy groups shouted and bellowed, and police attempted to identify and remove the ringleaders.
Herrmann, equally incensed, bellowed, " Look, Hitch, you can't outjump your own shadow.
" It was the pre-game show that got ' em ," bellowed Dizzy Dean by way of self congratulation.
In a provocative fashion, eyes glaring with anger, he bellowed " " I am the stepfather of the emperor.
Usually circumferential or helical reinforcement rings are applied to maintain these corrugated or bellowed structures under internal pressure.
Ward ’ s cousin, Dragging Canoe, wanted to ally with the British against the settlers but the Cherokees ’ bellowed woman was trying to support them.
There is a place for orcs to dwell … here !," he bellowed, and his spear pierced the mountains, opening a mighty rift and chasms.
Some excited fan in the stands bellowed, ' Hold your horses, the elephants are coming ,' and out stamped this Alabama varsity.

from and nearly
If, as Reid says, `` nearly all his poetry was produced when he was not taking opium '', there may be some reason to doubt that he was under its influence in the period from 1896 to 1900 when he was writing the poems to Katie King and making plans for another book of verse.
They emerged as interchangeable cogs in a faulty but formidable machine: shaved nearly naked, hair queued, greatcoated, jackbooted, and best of all -- in the opinion of the British professional, Major Semple-Lisle -- `` their minds are not estranged from the paths of obedience by those smatterings of knowledge which only serve to lead to insubordination and mutiny ''.
But it seems that pressures against him are coming from somewhere -- in the first place from China, but perhaps also from that `` China Lobby '' which, I was assured in Moscow nearly two years ago, exists on the quiet inside the party.
In final separation from them, in the railroad terminal across the river from New York, I would nearly cry.
The night after reading her letter about her surgeon uncle -- it must have been late in September -- I had a vision of myself returned in ragged uniform from The Front, nearly dying, my head bandaged and blooded, and Jessica bending over me, the power of her love bringing me back to life.
The Symposium, which was jointly sponsored by the American Institute of Physics, the Instrument Society of America, and the National Bureau of Standards, attracted nearly one thousand registrants, including many from abroad.
I look for TV sales and production to be approximately equal at 5.7 million sets for the year, but I look for some decline in radios from the high rate in 1961 to more nearly the 1959 level of 15.0 - 15.5 million sets.
At one astronomical unit from the sun ( the Earth's distance ) the dust orbits are probably nearly circular.
Hans Schweizer had one that increased from 19-1/2 inches to 5 feet 3 inches in five years, and J. J. Quelch records a growth of from less than 4 feet to nearly 10 in about six years.
Likewise, Kant formulated the nebular hypothesis, according to which the solar system was evolved from a rotating mass of incandescent gas, nearly a half century before its scientific value was made plain by Laplace in his Systeme Du Monde.
The effect is that the platform returns from an off-level position at a rapid rate until it is nearly level, at which point the platform is controlled by a proportional servo with low enough frequency response so that the noise has little effect on the leveling process.
Charles Thiot, a splendid Georgia soldier, differed from most of his comrades in the ranks in that he was the owner of a large plantation, well-educated, and nearly fifty years of age.
Among individual dealers questioned in nearly a score of states, two out of three report their sales since August 1 show sizable gains from a year earlier, with the increases ranging from 5% to 50%.
On this day the wind had switched 180-degrees from the northwest to the southeast, and nearly every shot on the course was different from the previous few days.
In point of fact, the race-drivers one knows are nearly always intelligent, healthy technicians who differ from other technicians only in the depth of the passion they feel for the work by which they live.
The German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche has been said to have taken nearly all of his political philosophy from Aristotle.
There are two suspension bridges over the Bosphorus, both its Asian and European banks rise steeply from the water and form a succession of cliffs, coves, and nearly landlocked bays.
Since in practice it is not worth contrasting a zero probability with one that is nearly indistinguishable from zero, he prefers to categorize himself as a " de facto atheist ".
The axioms are referred to as " 4 + 1 " because for nearly two millennia the fifth ( parallel ) postulate (" through a point outside a line there is exactly one parallel ") was suspected of being derivable from the first four.

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