skyscraper

skyscraper


    Choose language
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget

    Use "writhes" in a sentence

    writhes example sentences

    writhes


    1. Next moment, he puts his finger in the dog's vagina and the animal writhes accordingly for a few seconds, while Alexander is looking at us with a mockingly


    2. writhes into panic once more – the same panic that they’d felt


    3. She writhes, soft snores, and rolls over to face you


    4. What little remains standing writhes in poverty and despondence


    5. 'Press then the head of the dragon that writhes across the lid


    6. It twitches, writhes, itches and generally plays havoc with my guts


    7. Marcus’ body comes to a stop several yards away as he screams out, “Aaaaah!” He tightly holds himself as he writhes on the floor in agony and screams out, “Aaaah!” He starts to cry hard! He screams as he painfully turns his body over!


    8. He drops the RoboBoxes as he writhes in pain


    9. fade to black as he writhes in pain


    10. The afflicted spirit of this ill-hearted one writhes with great pain, as if it had been shocked with violent electricity

    11. He howls into the night and writhes on the ground as arms and legs form once more


    12. Every plant, even the smaller ones, curls and writhes to the green surface, twining itself round its stronger and taller brethren in the effort


    13. ” He pinches me hard, and my body writhes convulsively against his front


    14. It might be said that agony writhes


    15. This modern European world of ours, apparently so sure of itself, so bold, so decided, and within so preyed upon by terror and despair, is exactly in the situation of a newly born animal: it writhes, it cries aloud, it is perplexed, it knows not what to do; it feels that its former source of nourishment is withdrawn, but it knows not where to seek for another


    16. The giant pachyderm writhes his serpent-like trunk in air and plunges forward open-mouthed, trumpeting with pain from the keen claws of the tigers hanging on his flanks


    17. But this obligation is increased, and is less doubtful when any of the sovereign rights of a nation are infringed, as in gross and reiterated insults to the national flag, habitual violations of the personal liberty of its subjects, invasion of its territories, and the like; these are assaults upon its independence, and there is no room left for an inquiry into the fitness of resistance; it may indeed be supposed to change from a question of expediency to an act of necessity; it is a struggle for self-preservation; the nation acts upon a principle which is inherent in the meanest insect, and of which inanimate matter is not divested; the worm, when trodden on, writhes in resistance as well as anguish, and the reaction of inanimate matter seems to be the repulsive act of self-preservation


    Show more examples