1.
His jaw clenched as he snapped a branch off a dead quibreak limb
2.
This doesn't prevent him from going steady with the daughter of the family, but their happiness won't last: While she is in the garden, she bumps her head against a tree branch; she falls down on the ground and some mutated plants swallow her up; when they vomit her she is no longer what she was: she looks like a gigantic snail-like monster, a living horror
3.
Son stayed perched on a branch hidden by
4.
the leaves of the tree rustling and he dropped from the branch just in time to
5.
the branch toward the ground, he flipped himself over in mid-air to land on
6.
The end of each branch had a large tuft of leaves and a circlet of bright blue flowers
7.
One stick had a strong branch curving out on each side, from which she had run a string to a nub on the main stick
8.
Come to think of it, the archwood trees looked a little like giant ferns also, even though the fronds did branch extensively, giving them a look that was also something like a willow
9.
It was a fantail nyobba, she saw that as she slowly approached the branch it pretended it was part of
10.
He almost lost his grip on the branch root he was holding
11.
The branch is giving way
12.
’ I replied, accepting his tacit olive branch gratefully
13.
On a branch, puffed up against the cold,
14.
Another branch of the human race
15.
’ He said, acknowledging the olive branch
16.
This branch of the river was about a third of a mile wide here, the plots on the far side were visible, the ships passing by were close enough to shout to each other and moving so slow upstream with the barely perceptible tide that it was hardly worth the effort to sail at all
17.
Thereafter, the bank opened a branch in the haveli
18.
The ball went past me and hit the branch manager's office window
19.
civilisation after another charred and burned on the branch
20.
passing out on the mattresses in the branch manager's room on the first floor
21.
and I ran into the branch manager's office and shut the door
22.
group had reached the branch manager's office door
23.
Mama sat on the branch manager's table and looked at us
24.
has led to the creation of a new branch of medicine
25.
“Ours is a dead branch, because Thera did explode in real life, no more souls revived on the island, but we have had significant immigration, like me, so that the archipelago has four and a half million residents in the 2341ad echo, the most recent
26.
Once we were in the great days of our past, we found the branch of the future where Thera never exploded and the mainlanders adopted our culture rather than stole it
27.
Now people from all over the afterlife journey back to the Bronze Age and then forward on the branch of time that holds modern Atlantis, the temple of the Goddess and the seat of all learning
28.
Yellelle told her this was the low point in the history of the branch of history where Atlantis was never destroyed
29.
On this branch of history the modern day Atlantis looked more like China, with hundred story buildings along the shore and great hanger bridges and even venerable motorway bridges spanning between islands
30.
This branch of history was the same except that Atlantis was still one of the world’s major cities in spite of its small population
31.
products or services within that same niche, or branch out into other niche
32.
32Now learn a parable of the fig tree; when his branch is yet tender, and putted forth
33.
32Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When his branch is yet tender, and putted forth
34.
He managed to swim towards the shore and grab hold of a sturdy branch
35.
He dared not move in case the branch dumped him back in to the depths
36.
He made a last ditch dash for freedom, trying to hoist himself onto the thicker part of the branch
37.
The splitting branch howled in protest
38.
Resting from its work, the bird sat on a branch and chattered to her, its head on one side as though trying to work something out – she found herself smiling at it
39.
through bush and branch, trying to find the path that
40.
Mechanics was going to take a big leap when their course stone for the 101st came out because photovoltaics and data handing were both in the Mechanics branch
41.
Releasing the branch he recoiled and ran
42.
The branch was quickly sucked down into the mire
43.
In another a fallen tree branch had
44.
He plunged into the chop of that lake like a diver doing a belly flop from a high branch of a tree
45.
Much to his relief, it really was a tree branch,
46.
seemingly of its own accord, the branch was
47.
another branch wrapped itself around his
48.
staring back at him, and then the branch
49.
” Said Matt, carelessly tearing a tree branch off and tossing it aside
50.
A dove with an olive branch in his beak flew by indifferently
51.
She put the lantern back on it’s hook, the stub of what had once been a small branch in the house trunk flanking the chimney
52.
who instructed the courier to take it to their branch in
53.
Cinderella thanked him, went to her mother's grave, and planted the branch on it, and she wept so much that her tears fell upon it and watered it
54.
For a time, Galimoto simply sat on his branch and was silent
55.
Rabbit: "Was this branch in the hole?" asked the rabbit
56.
The young man and the hare pulled the branch out
57.
They rode that to the southern end of the Eastern Slope, then walked down Gense Spiral and reached a streetcar that ran out of the mountain thru the Eastern Breech and out onto a route where streetcar, cargo and foot traffic converged into a great avenue that leapt out of the mountain on a fanciful crystal bridge thirty five stories above the inner branch of the Imoneea river
58.
The great stocks employed in every branch of trade, and the number of rich competitors, generally reduce the rate of profit in the former below what it is in the latter
59.
On the far side it crossed the outer branch of the Imoneea on a much lower bridge, but still high enough for great ships to pass under
60.
In every different branch, the oppression of the poor must establish the monopoly of the rich, who, by engrossing the whole trade to themselves, will be able to make very large profits
61.
In a country which had acquired its full complement of riches, where, in every particular branch of business, there was the greatest quantity of stock that could be employed in it, as the ordinary rate of clear profit would be very small, so the usual market rate of interest which could be afforded out of it would be so low as to render it impossible for any but the very wealthiest people to live upon the interest of their money
62.
turned a corner, there before me was a branch of my bank
63.
by any one regular, established, and well-known branch of business, but in consequence of a
64.
one regular, established, or well-known branch of business
65.
“Now learn this parable from the fig tree: When its branch has
66.
that of stock likewise; the quantity of stock which can be employed in any branch of business
67.
With only a ten inch dagger and Solo Ki's blackened branch of wood, there was little they could do to gain access into the buildings' interiors
68.
A short branch whipped out from the hedge and struck him across the chest
69.
They found a hollow with a semblance of a branch and fern roof, Sam lowered his old bicycle to the ground and rolled in under the leaning branches
70.
onto a large branch and floated with it towards the bridge
71.
Luckily, the signature of his dark power was enough – the wall before him collapsed in a pool of black sludge, revealing a clear pathway to a massive branch that seemed to span the heavens
72.
The only thing sprouting from his head was a thick, throbbing black branch
73.
But Imorbis simply stepped aside, grinning as the behemoth ambled off the branch of the Dead Tree
74.
As their thoughts, however, are commonly exercised rather about the interest of their own particular branch of business
75.
The interest of the dealers, however, in any particular branch of trade or manufactures, is always in some respects different from, and even opposite to, that of the public
76.
But the number of workmen in every branch of business generally increases with the division of labour in that branch; or rather it is the increase of their number which enables them to class and subdivide themselves in this manner
77.
In the second, I have endeavoured to explain the nature and operation of money, considered as a particular branch of the general stock of the society
78.
in the same branch of trade, the Edinburgh merchant can, without imprudence,
79.
Over and above the expenses which are common to every branch of trade, such as the expense of house-rent, the wages of servants, clerks, accountants, etc
80.
In general, if any branch of trade, or any division of labour, be advantageous to the public, the freer and more general the competition, it will always be the more so
81.
under the tree, put forth a branch up to the
82.
Animals weren't afraid of us here; a deer grazed in the far parts of the field near the foliage of the forest, while a falcon watched from a nearby branch
83.
As I started my walk back home, a branch snapped behind me
84.
Instead of a staff, he carried a thick branch
85.
He stood guard with his alder branch until the last ewe passed, went outside to join them, then rolled the The Maiden’s Odyssey
86.
When the produce of any particular branch of industry exceeds what the demand of the country requires, the surplus must be sent abroad, and exchanged for something for which there is a demand at home
87.
The consideration of his own private profit is the sole motive which determines the owner of any capital to employ it either in agriculture, in manufactures, or in some particular branch of the wholesale or retail trade
88.
” He snapped his fingers and a large tree branch fell next to Ash
89.
Tears fell from Willow’s eyes, while she took in Ash and the enormous branch beside him
90.
But it must seem extraordinary, that the sovereigns of all the different countries of Europe should have exchanged in this manner for a rent certain, never more to be augmented, that branch of their revenue, which was, perhaps, of all others, the most likely to be improved by the natural course of things, without either expense or attention of their own ; and that they should, besides, have in this manner voluntarily erected a sort of independent republics in the heart of their own dominions
91.
A rotted branch may to be removed or
92.
Thus, without needing to shift his body and thereby creating noise that might warn his potential meal down below, he can have a look “around,” literally, while doing his “I’m-a-harmless-statue” imitation up on the branch of one of his favorite trees
93.
By means of it, the narrowness of the home market does not hinder the division of labour in any particular branch of art or manufacture from being carried to the highest perfection
94.
son from a lesser branch of Ithaca’s ancient nobility
95.
But every branch of trade in which the merchant can sell his goods for a price which replaces to him, with the ordinary profits of stock, the whole capital employed in preparing and sending them to market, can be carried on without a bounty
96.
Every such branch is evidently upon a level with all the other branches of trade which are carried on without bounties, and cannot, therefore, require one more than they
97.
For instance, you might have missed a snake lying quietly on a branch by an apple
98.
Zen (Zen in Japan, Ch’an in China) is another branch of Buddhism that eschews theory and ritual, and holds to the original teaching of the Buddha
99.
But, by lessening the competition of capitals in that branch of trade, it necessarily raised the rate of profit in that branch
1.
surrounded the green and then branched out into four directions
2.
“I live just up over there at Chazzi’s place,” she said, pointing up a lane that branched off at a diagonal just a little ways from where they stood
3.
From there she branched in to the areas she knew the most about, Sales, bookkeeping, employee record keeping, tax records, and balancing the two sides with the middle
4.
Our conversation continued, but it branched off into why we were chosen; why God selected us to carry these special children
5.
In the center of the hall, there was a staircase, which branched off into corridors leading to every floor and finally to every apartment
6.
It seemed to have been wrenched from where it had branched, tearing a piece of trunk off with it, making a flattish surface at its base
7.
Near Chalco, one branch heads north to the cities along the eastern shore of the lake, near Tulyehualco; there was a branch that crossed a causeway over the lake and led to Culhuacan, Iztapalapa and Tenochtitlan; then, near Tlapan, it branched north along the western shore of the lake and south into the mountains toward Cuauhnahuac
8.
purple sang merrily in the pine trees that branched chaotically
9.
The new corridor branched off in several directions, with no markings of any kind that Maggie could see to indicate where they would lead
10.
"What are the methods of using a subroutine in a program and then returning to the routine form which you branched?"
11.
above which will have to be branched into to
12.
pipe to be branched into with your poly tee
13.
the house by way of a tee joint branched into a
14.
I would guess that they started with a seed, and the first thing they grew from it was a great root that grew horizontally, under the lines that marked the walls until it’s ends had joined, then it branched out in all directions for stability, and the trunks grew straight up from the main root
15.
Then the path branched and the right side track led towards the river
16.
corridor that branched off in two directions, bright lights and flashing letters indicating separate
17.
branched chain amino acids – the very ones that exercise physiologists have
18.
My thoughts branched and flowed and branched again and connected like rivers
19.
He paused, half minded to turn back to where the corridor had first branched
20.
It took about ten minutes for Jane to walk down the lane to the path that branched off it towards the beach
21.
Both Joey and the predator tussled on the branched, rolling and falling off the edge
22.
Hank noticed many other short hallways, with vault-like doors at the end of each, branched off of the hallway they followed
23.
He came to the end of the main tunnel and the tunnel branched into two separate tunnels
24.
Pausing in the clearing that was only slightly lighter than the rest of the area, Feltus noticed the path branched out in three directions, all dark and equally overgrown, then wondered if the architect of this place had intentionally arranged the plots in the shape of a cross with this regal monument at the center, as if crucified for some unknown reason
25.
of the human race branched off
26.
came to the junction before Sittingbourne where the Sheppey line branched off to the North
27.
It had an arm that branched off from the ear piece to an old style microphone boom that typically hovered in front of the mouth, but could be bent away
28.
They were in a smaller corridor that branched into three offices, one of which was the auxiliary control room
29.
More roads branched off to similar buildings
30.
Rosevelt, the Melbourne, the Firebrand, the Saratoga, the Bellerophon, the Kyushu, the Princeton, the Bonestell, the Tolstoy, the Chekov, the Gage, the Yamaguchi… He had to force himself to stop the count, because with each ship named a tree branched off in his mind delineating the names of the dead
31.
At the moment the doctor said, “You have AIDS”, another probable reality branched off in which the doctor said, “You don’t have AIDS”
32.
At the point where the footpath branched off for Sotzil they stopped and looked at one another in the moonlight
33.
They branched off to the left, following a line of stones which led off into
34.
Ahead the path branched apart in different directions
35.
The path again branched out in two opposite
36.
Candle branched to seven is one? Number six the rebellious number against seven has no mention in O
37.
He was at the front of their formation and they branched out behind him; the mass of birds took the shape of an arrowhead
38.
And the last few years, we’ve branched into urban renewal and revitalization
39.
Evolution: a branched tree of chance when survival is only equal opportunity
40.
“Can you not choose another?” It branched into stems absent of fruit
41.
They branched out from the vertical face and poked up on ledges
42.
There was a picture of the magnificently branched coral on the dive shop wall
43.
Over time, Buddhism has branched out into many different schools of
44.
He couldn’t go back the way he’d come, because when he’d realized it was the wrong tunnel, he turned around and discovered that this tunnel branched out in three different directions
45.
He counted off the overhead grates, as Plax had told him, and after four he turned left where the channel branched, and after two more came to his target
46.
“Need I remind you that not all of our race is bad? Commander Tio was kicked out of our kingdom and branched off on his own
47.
’ I led the way into the mazed catacombs, sneaking by many open rooms, then made a right turn that branched off into a huge hall
48.
" I led the way into the mazed catacombs, sneaking by many room openings, then made a right turn that branched off into a huge hall
49.
Two goons, who looked more like musclebound apes, scanned the bar and branched off
50.
Itackled more fundamental aspects of the Internet, and then branched out intocurrent national and
51.
They branched off from the back fence down the party fence to the houses, both sets on one fence
52.
martial arts have evolved, branched and morphed into a myriad of
53.
We haven't really branched out into other topics yet
54.
trees, where the lower limbs of two massive evergreens branched
55.
He entered his father"s jewelry business and branched out into diamond
56.
Climbing the branched stairs when reaching the tree, she
57.
Surprised to see part of the branched wall had converted itself into a bed,
58.
he climbed the branched stairs of his guide’s abode, drained from the episode
59.
Strolling through branched tunnels felt
60.
Bane gasping at the size and complex designs of both the branched stairs and the
61.
Making his way through the labyrinth of branched corridors, Brandor reached the
62.
But in total contrast to these examples of ‘non-evolution’, humans have branched off from specific primates as a result of the particular design and order of their genetic DNA
63.
There is arguably enough proof to profess that humans have evolved and branched off from the animal species, from mammals, from the Great Apes, from a distinct and separate linage of common ancestor of the Chimpanzee between 4 and 6 million years ago, into what and who humans are today
64.
Discoveries of fossils indicate that human species branched off from a common ancestor with the Ape
65.
We can understand this when we observe humans having branched off from the ape family, when yet there has been no significant changes or evolutionary characteristics within chimpanzees over millions of years
66.
Homo-erectus and homo-sapiens have definitively branched off from the species of the ape family as a unique species in their own right
67.
Human beings have definitively branched off and evolved from the ape family over millions of years, whilst chimpanzees have remained unchanged
68.
I had branched off for about thirty yards when I noticed that behind me on the far
69.
Two other hallways branched off from this one
70.
Michael's wings branched at the insult
71.
Great rents and splits branched out in the solid walls, like crystallisation; stupefied birds wheeled about and dropped into the furnace; four fierce figures trudged away, East, West, North, and South, along the night-enshrouded roads, guided by the beacon they had lighted, towards their next destination
72.
Evening came, they set out from the village, and after about half a league two roads branched off, one leading to Don Quixote's village, the other the road Don Alvaro was to follow
73.
It was obviously a highway, for other runs branched off it in all directions
74.
Whether on this account, or from absent-mindedness, or from sleepiness, she did not perceive that they had long ago passed the point at which the lane to Trantridge branched from the highway, and that her conductor had not taken the Trantridge track
75.
He would get three or four jumps out on a cost-benefit tree, a single choice having branched into eight, or sixteen, and then, partway into examining those, would throw up his hands and go with his gut
76.
On this morning, having long since branched out from the Tribeca Grand, we were meeting at one of our other regular spots: Morandi, an Italian bistro in the West Village
77.
Looking ahead they could see only tree-trunks of innumerable sizes and shapes: straight or bent, twisted, leaning, squat or slender, smooth or gnarled and branched; and all the stems were green or grey with moss and slimy, shaggy growths
78.
Starting as the leading maker of pressure cookers, it had branched out into various other household and electric appliances
79.
“I’ll be operating in the lounge,” Sampson said as we branched off in the lobby
80.
Every few steps other lofty and still narrower crevices branched from it on either hand—for McDougal's cave was but a vast labyrinth of crooked aisles that ran into each other and out again and led nowhere
81.
They wound this way and that, far down into the secret depths of the cave, made another mark, and branched off in search of novelties to tell the upper world about
82.
The master private key can be branched into sub-master keys, which can be further branched into sub-submaster keys and so on
83.
There was a grass-grown track descending the forest aisle between hoar and knotty shafts and under branched arches
84.
When a part has been developed in an extraordinary manner in any one species, compared with the other species of the same genus, we may conclude that this part has undergone an extraordinary amount of modification since the period when the several species branched off from the common progenitor of the genus
85.
Or to state the case in another manner: the points in which all the species of a genus resemble each other, and in which they differ from allied genera, are called generic characters; and these characters may be attributed to inheritance from a common progenitor, for it can rarely have happened that natural selection will have modified several distinct species, fitted to more or less widely different habits, in exactly the same manner: and as these so-called generic characters have been inherited from before the period when the several species first branched off from their common progenitor, and subsequently have not varied or come to differ in any degree, or only in a slight degree, it is not probable that they should vary at the present day
86.
On the other hand, the points in which species differ from other species of the same genus are called specific characters; and as these specific characters have varied and come to differ since the period when the species branched off from a common progenitor, it is probable that they should still often be in some degree variable—at least more variable than those parts of the organisation which have for a very long period remained constant
87.
Specific characters—that is, the characters which have come to differ since the several species of the same genus branched off from a common parent—are more variable than generic characters, or those which have long been inherited, and have not differed within this same period
88.
Every one knows how the horns of stags become more and more branched, and the plumes of some birds become more finely developed, as they grow older
89.
There is no more difficulty in understanding how the branched spines of some ancient Echinoderm, which served as a defence, became developed through natural selection into tridactyle pedicellariae, than in understanding the development of the pincers of crustaceans, through slight, serviceable modifications in the ultimate and penultimate segments of a limb, which was at first used solely for locomotion
90.
Therefore, we must suppose either that all Rodents, including the bizcacha, branched off from some ancient Marsupial, which will naturally have been more or less intermediate in character with respect to all existing Marsupials; or that both Rodents and Marsupials branched off from a common progenitor, and that both groups have since undergone much modification in divergent directions
91.
On the ordinary view of each species having been independently created, why should specific characters, or those by which the species of the same genus differ from each other, be more variable than the generic characters in which they all agree? Why, for instance, should the colour of a flower be more likely to vary in any one species of a genus, if the other species possess differently coloured flowers, than if all possessed the same coloured flowers? If species are only well-marked varieties, of which the characters have become in a high degree permanent, we can understand this fact; for they have already varied since they branched off from a common progenitor in certain characters, by which they have come to be specifically distinct from each other; therefore these same characters would be more likely again to vary than the generic characters which have been inherited without change for an immense period
92.
It is inexplicable on the theory of creation why a part developed in a very unusual manner in one species alone of a genus, and therefore, as we may naturally infer, of great importance to that species, should be eminently liable to variation; but, on our view, this part has undergone, since the several species branched off from a common progenitor, an unusual amount of variability and modification, and therefore we might expect the part generally to be still variable
93.
” Then, wanting to find out where the path which branched off from the one he was on led to and who was the owner of the herd, he called to the boy
94.
Leaves lanceolate, broad at base, acute, decurrent, somewhat scabrous above, tomentose beneath; stem leafy branched spreading, about three feet high
1.
Those who don’t, well… already you are seeing the rise of different branches of religions, a smattering of what we currently call “cults
2.
The branches of the houses above echoed with lumins and charrasspas singing in the noontime sun
3.
The top of the hedgerow is a mess of shattered branches – the hedging machine has been along here
4.
It is a twelve foot tree with a decent ‘apron’ of branches … yes, it looks really good
5.
Son approached a tree with many branches and leaves
6.
The road ends at a big plaza on the edge of downtown called Kivara Shig, the low side of this plaza has only six stories of stone or ceramic, the top branches of the other side are thirty stories above it
7.
Because I think that I am a secondary beneficiary of the Gospel instead of the primary, I will never boast against the natural branches (or root) lest I be cut off (Romans 11:18-20)
8.
This city had a dozen of these optical relays in the upper branches of it's jungle
9.
She parked the probe in the upper branches of a tree far above where humans could climb, and where it could catch the fringes of a beam from one small globe far down the hill
10.
Here I sit, watching nothing but wind in branches
11.
We can safely land at least a dozen probes in the upper branches of that jungle like the one we have back in the town of Bostok
12.
It had branches that always divided in two and did so no more than three times
13.
A family of lorisaurs murmured in the branches above, and the distant shriek of a small dactyl could be heard far back the way they had come
14.
There were lorisaurs in the branches now
15.
She was almost out from under these overhanging branches when she began to see the flashes of motion above
16.
Of an evening, when the mists hag in the bare black branches,
17.
Those upper flowers were a blue and purple topping to the orange, red and maroon of the larorlie blooms in the lower branches
18.
There were probably ten more houses in the village altogether, spread out around it and above some others up in the branches
19.
The shrubs and bushes are similarly smitten, the fruits shrivelled on the branches
20.
Instead of thick green leaves hanging from its branches, the ancient oak was covered in the large, round twig balls that made up a great city of rooks
21.
Our pace quickened for the final thrust and so we raced, slipping and sliding through scattered sun-bleached tree bark, fragments of branches and odd pieces of driftwood that littered the stony ground until we were close enough to resist it no longer
22.
It warps thru at least two more dimensions and closes back on itself in layers of common time, as well as branches in time at key events in human history
23.
hanging from its branches, the ancient oak was covered in the
24.
Carefully concealed in the uppermost branches he bided his time
25.
herbs, and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches
26.
trimming the branches of a hawthorn bush, trying to wrestle it back
27.
dried twigs and a rustle of leaves, the branches
28.
They got one that was serviceable but none too fancy or high in the branches, for an iron and a half a week
29.
Pushing through the last branches, he came to a
30.
There were short shrubby bushes bordering the cliff edge overgrowing the path in places, fingers of branches reaching across the gravel
31.
Rising on tiptoe and leaning over as far as she could without catching her jacket on the branches, she peered down at the shore below her
32.
brambles, the branches of the trees overhead adding to the effect of a
33.
He couldn’t see her, the brush of branches and roots effectively blocking his view of the top of the cliff
34.
the branches and gently pulled it out of the way
35.
trousers and the low-hanging branches, and he stifled several yelps as
36.
‘The the ground’s been pretty thoroughly trampled and these branches have been broken – as though someone stood on them
37.
Magpies chatter in the branches of short stubby trees, swivelling greedy eyes on fresh road kill, waiting for the two men to pass, waiting impatiently for the hop, skip and intermittent flutter of fresh meat served on cold tarmacadam
38.
Stones and dead tree branches flew up
39.
It was overhanging branches near the bank, he would have gone aground without them
40.
Are there any plants worth keeping there? A few extra hardy shrubs are starting to show signs of spring – the hydrangea has big, swollen buds on the bare branches and the forsythia is giving it all it’s got with long flowing branches covered in bright yellow flowers
41.
photographs of tree branches
42.
The valley of Yoonbarla was steep enough that she could see the fields behind Larneh and Eknar’s houses thru the branches
43.
forest, which now nothing more than bare sticks and branches
44.
bald head—a green image that looked like the wild branches of a thorn bush
45.
This house was completely grown out of trained trees, not the straight kind with horizontal branches, but a supple, arching kind that could be trained to grow enormously fat and then hollowed out
46.
In the little valley a few miles away were clearings, and in the center of those, other trees had arching branches and long sprays of leaves swaying in the breeze
47.
He climbed, rather than walked over huge roots and dead trunks, falling into drops under overgrown piles of dead branches and sliding on the dead leaves and damp rocks
48.
“Let’s use these branches as oars,” Andrew said, and the others did so
49.
“Looks like you’re going to have to string up to the branches of that house,” Nobron told him
50.
This side of it was the Lappranile, all grown of framework, lots of window, and room-sized glass balls in the upper branches
51.
the cloudless sky as the branches of the tree above blew
52.
“It’s one of those hollow trees, I’m up in the branches on a third floor
53.
of the weaker branches up near the top of the vineyard
54.
Its camera was fixed on one of those stone tables except when the branches swayed from someone leaning on the tree
55.
satin sheets that had vine branches interwoven every so often with red roses
56.
The Stinking Toe Tree has ‘big fat toe’ branches and edible fruit that that leaves a foul lingering smell!
57.
distance from their starting point increased the webbing of leaves and branches
58.
A troupe of Golden Tightplumes streamed by, flowing easily thru the branches and vines of the rail on their four pair of prehensile legs
59.
She enjoyed the feel of the weather around here, here among these branches
60.
Leaves of green filled the trees, then they blossomed, fruit budding on their branches
61.
The bridge had two spans, each seven hundred fifty feet long and hundreds of feet above the upper branches of the city that now carpeted the valley floor below
62.
Now that the valley was in shadow it was dim enough down there that many lanterns were lit and the atriums twinkled thru the branches and bridges below
63.
She climbed as nimbly as a squirrel into the branches, and the prince did not know where she had gone
64.
It was a globe high in the upper branches, at least forty stories above the flats that surrounded them only a few blocks away
65.
"Oh," Whimly looked up into the tree branches
66.
As one, every bird in the forest took to the air, snapping branches as they fled skyward
67.
A large fragment of the Rikandra bubble had lodged in the archwood's wild upper branches against the wall of the Thweighnmonkt
68.
removing the branches that are not
69.
the true branches produce the fruit they
70.
The branches of the flesh will only produce the
71.
The wages of labour have been continually increasing during the same period, and, in the greater part of the different branches of trade and
72.
The trade of Holland, it has been pretended by some people, is decaying, and it may perhaps be true that some particular branches of it are so; but these symptoms seem to indicate sufficiently that there is no general decay
73.
The acquisition of new territory, or of new branches of trade, may sometimes raise the profits of stock, and with them the interest of money, even in a country which is fast advancing in the acquisition of riches
74.
The stock of the country, not being sufficient for the whole accession of business which such acquisitions present to the different people among whom it is divided, is applied to those particular branches only which afford the greatest profit
75.
So great an accession of new business to be carried on by the old stock, must necessarily have diminished the quantity employed in a great number of particular branches, in which the competition being less, the profits must have been greater
76.
In a country, too, where, though the rich, or the owners of large capitals, enjoy a good deal of security, the poor, or the owners of small capitals, enjoy scarce any, but are liable, under the pretence of justice, to be pillaged and plundered at any time by the inferior mandarins, the quantity of stock employed in all the different branches of business transacted within it, can never be equal to what the nature and extent of that business might admit
77.
branches of trade, cannot arise from the different degrees of trust reposed in the traders
78.
utilized all the branches of the military
79.
Careful planning brought all the branches of military together, and not only that, there
80.
than in the foreign trade, and in some branches of foreign trade than in others ; in the trade to
81.
In what is gained upon the first of those branches of commerce,
82.
inferior branches of country labour require much more skill and experience than the greater
83.
Israel is an olive tree, and we are wild olive branches grafted into that olive tree, so the Church is also an olive tree
84.
But if some of the branches were broken off, and you, being a
85.
do not be arrogant toward the branches; but if you are arrogant, remember that it is not you who supports the root, but the root supports you
86.
You will say then, "Branches were broken off so that I might be grafted in
87.
branches, and in truth we are grafted into them, not they into us
88.
Strange and exotic birds strutted down the pathways or perched within the branches, filling the trio's ears with a clamor of melodies
89.
The majority of its limbs ended in splinters, but even these fractured branches were thicker than the largest trees Brice had ever seen -- even those of the Brentwood, where the elves lived among the branches
90.
twigs and branches of the forest
91.
They had all planked in the bottoms of their area pretty carefully and sawed off any branches anywhere within reach
92.
Branches wafted toward him, although the air was still, snapping like breaking bones as they uncoiled to grasp at him, then withering away the moment they brushed his aura of white light
93.
They had then cut off all branches between two and three inches thick, sharpened both ends and dug in a forest of spikes around the walls and the gate
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tree, and a snake watching, coiled in its branches
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Branches swaying, groaning, moving with a life of their own
96.
"The relay's just a dead twig forty feet up in the small branches of a tree outside
97.
They found a hollow with a semblance of a branch and fern roof, Sam lowered his old bicycle to the ground and rolled in under the leaning branches
98.
Alana realized it was the tree; the branches were moving to protect him – or fight at his side
1.
Some of these looked like gigantic branching ferns, some like fountains of green spray, softly frozen
2.
efforts, branching out to neighboring cities and creating a website devoted totally
3.
With every beat of her heart the veins expanded, branching out further along the surface of her skin
4.
This branching genealogical tree he began to develop was derived from a process he called natural selection
5.
‘Certainly: branching out to other parts of the quantum superposition state could have caused a disruption in the eradication
6.
And slowly but surely the cracks around the airlock door were spreading and branching, like a windscreen breaking in slow motion
7.
Then, with rough trails cut branching from the road through the trees to the edge of the wood, several columns could have emerged simultaneously in the valley, formed line, and charged the hill with small loss, ready to face the enemy's main position
8.
Light filtered down from the clerestory windows above, and only then came the ceiling, divided into coffers which were painted in a variety of mythological and biblical themes and hung with sixteen vast and branching chandeliers
9.
"Basically, instructions for computer programs consist of five types, input/output, arithmetic, logic such as comparison and tests for status, branching for conditions, and transfer operations
10.
But that one life began to splinter—to evolve by branching out into many species
11.
after branching it in to the cold line feeding the
12.
He peered up ahead as he suddenly remembered what Ulun had told him about the branching of the river that he could expect somewhere about a half-day’s journey ahead of them
13.
Ulun had told him about the branching of the river that he could expect somewhere about a
14.
angles, a few threads of blood branching out along the dark rock,
15.
But the thought of branching time-streams or whatever—of a great number of alternate Earl Gepharts running off each in his own direction, none of them knowing what the others were doing—that purely seemed crazy
16.
Its branching and ultimate feedback
17.
The branching tunnels formed a labyrinthine network of caverns whose full reaches were memorized by only the eldest of pale, goblin navigators
18.
Unfortunately, what the map on my wall hadn"t shown were the side tracks that kept branching off
19.
and green, with more crimson leaves branching off at several points
20.
Some thought it was some kind of alien intelligence, most suspected it was Earth branching out
21.
Everything looked different today: the people, buildings, the sidewalks marred with cracks branching in countless directions
22.
As he got several hundred yards inward, he saw two forks of the cave branching off in opposite directions
23.
As a way of sustained growth and as a means of making big in the end, she advocated branching out Sneha Travels to all the major cities
24.
On the second floor there was a corridor branching off to the rest of the floor on the left and a small portion on the right
25.
too or the validation may be required before branching to another page or
26.
thousand, and was now branching out in areas like Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, and as far south as
27.
These formerly regulated companies have increased their collective risk by branching out
28.
It looked like it was branching out as it was joined by patches of
29.
Last, branching out of Timeline ‘B’, is Timeline ‘C’, created when someone tried to kill me in 1941 ‘B’
30.
“If I’d only done that …” is actually reviewing all her decisions (branching points into other probable realities) which led up to this reality
31.
She would have turned heads even if she wasn’t Deltan, wearing that old style Vulcan dress that fell mid thigh level, and had thin straps holding it to her shoulders, branching out to cover her chest but leaving much of her back exposed,
32.
It now consisted of a center hub, with five arms branching off
33.
If I looked south to where we had come from, I could see the wide river getting smaller and smaller until it finally disappeared into the jungle and when I looked north I could see the river branching off into other smaller rivers that threaded through the green river delta toward the great blue water
34.
branching chasms to his right
35.
He retraced his steps and took the second branching chasm nearly to the road,
36.
consider branching out with a newsletter or email campaign to make
37.
Nowadays a maze consists of thousands of deadly, twisting corridors branching out like brain synapses from a spherical centre
38.
In many types of problems, branch and bound is faster than branching, due to the use of a breadth-first search instead of a depth-first search
39.
” then in twain and twain and twain again, exponentially branching without end into people linked together forging a chain shackling Eartheart to each purchase
40.
The cure of one leads us into another disease; the cause could be the branching off the disease or the side effect of the medicines, we take to cure ourselves
41.
then they started branching out, and then came the
42.
This article showcases a well-established author branching from his traditional means of publishing
43.
Branching to the right the tunnel travelled on but the light faded gradually meter by meter and the children could see that ten paces into it the tunnel was in darkness
44.
branching so that five (5) heads are equally divided on either side
45.
The gravel road seemed to wind around a small lake and had several dirt roads branching off from it
46.
There were several side roads branching off to various villages around the Cosmodrome an Kurt watched carefully for the sign pointing to the town of Nestiary
47.
Branching supports stretched from post to post, with thick, warped
48.
Anthropologists believe that the different races of humankind arose from a single parental population branching from a common ancestor that dispersed from Africa about 80,000 years ago, having then, become rapidly differentiated through the concentration of gene pools that we observe in today's diverse races
49.
warren of other passages branching off from the main tunnel
50.
The moment passed, and Eric's mind struggled to categorize the insight of the previous instant: he saw himself as a collection of systems - the blood flowing in his veins, the bones of his skeleton, the muscles upon them, nerves branching out
51.
He now came to a road branching in four directions, and immediately he was reminded of those cross-roads where knights-errant used to stop to consider which road they should take
52.
A world primal again, vistas of glory incessant and branching,
53.
always these, and more, branching forth into numberless branches,
54.
It was straight, the walls, solid, with no hallways branching off
55.
In silence Mole rowed steadily, and soon they came to a point where the river divided, a long backwater branching off to one side
56.
A stone-flagged passage, with the kitchens branching away from it, led by a wooden staircase directly to the first floor of the house
57.
For a charming week we wandered up the Valley of the Rhone, and then, branching off at Leuk, we made our way over the Gemmi Pass, still deep in snow, and so, by way of Interlaken, to Meiringen
58.
The fuse burned steadily, branching away from the initial ignition point so that a small, sputtering line of smoke moved towards each of the wagon sections
59.
What! Eighteen of them all in a row, some short, some deep, some branching, same as we saw them
60.
Tries to memorize the pale lines of scalp branching through his hair
61.
All about them as they lay hung the darkness, hollow and immense, and they were oppressed by the loneliness and vastness of the dolven halls and endlessly branching stairs and passages
62.
whose boughs upheld the roof with a branching tracery of stone
63.
At the bottom, upon a low pedestal carved like a branching tree, stood a basin of silver
64.
There long the golden leaves have grown upon the branching years,
65.
'Do not follow me yet!' He ran quickly to the right, away from the main trail; for he had seen footprints that went that way, branching off from the others, the marks of small unshod feet
66.
paved with stones of many hues; branching runes and strange devices intertwined beneath their feet
67.
They had ridden for some four hours from the branching of the roads when they drew near to the Fords
68.
It will not be long before we reach the branching roads
69.
amid their branching hair
70.
We passed through two more security checkpoints, then proceeded down a long tubular corridor with lots of smaller corridors branching off of it, each lined with numbered doors spaced just a few feet apart
71.
branching tree configuration of, 212
72.
Dean had deserted the Grange, but it was impossible to delay her at such a crisis, so I turned away and made my exit, rambling leisurely along, with the glow of a sinking sun behind, and the mild glory of a rising moon in front—one fading, and the other brightening—as I quitted the park, and climbed the stony by-road branching off to Mr
73.
Brilliant of face, delicate of profile, with eyes of a deep blue, heavy lids, feet arched and small, wrists and ankles admirably formed, a white skin which, here and there allowed the azure branching of the veins to be seen, joy, a cheek that was young and fresh, the robust throat of the Juno of AEgina, a strong and supple nape of the neck, shoulders modelled as though by Coustou, with a voluptuous dimple in the middle, visible through the muslin; a gayety cooled by dreaminess; sculptural and exquisite—such was Fantine; and beneath these feminine adornments and these ribbons one could divine a statue, and in that statue a soul
74.
3m (2-4ft), branching, with purple-streaked stems, a hollow-chambered rootstock, small 2-3 lobed, toothed leaflets and clusters of tiny white flowers, always found by water
75.
Slipping quietly through this opening I discovered a maze of winding corridors, branching and turning in every direction
76.
The branching and diverging dotted lines of unequal lengths proceeding from (A), may represent its varying offspring
77.
We shall, when we come to our chapter on geology, have to refer again to this subject, and I think we shall then see that the diagram throws light on the affinities of extinct beings, which, though generally belonging to the same orders, families, or genera, with those now living, yet are often, in some degree, intermediate in character between existing groups; and we can understand this fact, for the extinct species lived at various remote epochs when the branching lines of descent had diverged less
78.
Within the same large group, the later and more highly perfected sub-groups, from branching out and seizing on many new places in the polity of nature, will constantly tend to supplant and destroy the earlier and less improved sub-groups
79.
In certain genera of star-fishes, "the very combinations needed to show that the pedicellariae are only modified branching spines" may be found
80.
If then there be some degree of truth in these remarks, we have no right to expect to find, in our geological formations, an infinite number of those fine transitional forms, which, on our theory, have connected all the past and present species of the same group into one long and branching chain of life
81.
This gradual increase in number of the species of a group is strictly conformable with the theory; for the species of the same genus, and the genera of the same family, can increase only slowly and progressively; the process of modification and the production of a number of allied forms necessarily being a slow and gradual process, one species first giving rise to two or three varieties, these being slowly converted into species, which in their turn produce by equally slow steps other varieties and species, and so on, like the branching of a great tree from a single stem, till the group becomes large
82.
It is, for instance, an astonishing fact that a delicate branching coralline, studded with polypi, and attached to a submarine rock, should produce, first by budding and then by transverse division, a host of huge floating jelly-fishes; and that these should produce eggs, from which are hatched swimming animalcules, which attach themselves to rocks and become developed into branching corallines; and so on in an endless cycle