Usa "wooly" in una frase
wooly frasi di esempio
wooly
1. She had to admit the thing did not look mechanical, it looked like a huge black man with massive arms and shoulders and short wooly hair
2. Into this he put a wooly jumper, spare socks and underwear, an extra shirt and a pair of shorts and a sleeping bag
3. She felt his wooly shoulders brush against her
4. It was like the wild, wooly West
5. is every splay footed, hump backed, thick lipped, flat nosed, wooly headed, ebon colored Negro
6. wooly clothes in the midst of a snowy terrain were stationed on
7. First the white wooly hair was torn away
8. There was an elephant-type with long wooly green fur and ten ivory horns sticking out from its face
9. Wild and wooly, hair disheveled and hung over
10. Hairs on the face of the Eastern Wooly Lemur have little
11. What he’d really hoped for was a nice big wooly mammoth
12. But, no matter how much ground he covered, he hadn’t come across a wooly mammoth
13. the sense in that? A short haired mammoth with a wooly tail? But this was no mammoth
14. Trolls, as they lumbered across the icy plains, had stood out awfully clearly to the great wooly mammoths
15. The innocent pink sweater had been replaced with a dark blue wooly one
16. and armpits from wearing the wooly Santa Clause suit
17. incense, wooly hats and “Free Tibet” ringtones
18. “Yeah, but you’ve got to quit fighting with the history teacher over what color a wooly mammoth is or how long claws are on a T-rex
19. Her mind said bull, but her gut said wooly mammoth
20. But once we left Africa: and became nomads: we hunted the European Bison, and the Wooly Mammoth, and the Mastodons into extinction
21. The huge Mastodons and Wooly Mammoths they hunted and killed during the many Ice Ages is a proven anthropological fact
22. Mr Clare, who had volunteered to help; then Tess, Marian, Izz Huett, and Retty; then Bill Lewell, Jonathan, and the married dairywomen— Beck Knibbs, with her wooly black hair and rolling eyes; and flaxen Frances, consumptive from the winter damps of the water-meads—who lived in their respective cottages