St. Joseph has notes of violets, rose, bacon and a brambly backbone that makes your mouth water. |
|
The Miraculin binds to the sweet receptor in your mouth and makes sour, or acidic foods taste incredibly sweet. |
|
Another previous incident had caused calyx's mouth to bleed, calyx said, although Julie said she never saw any blood. |
|
Abed filled his mouth with a piece of the baklava, I needed to get our conversation going. |
|
The Nozzle-man opens the mouth of the hose, releasing its stream while the Backup-man braces the weight. |
|
You'd put a scarf across your nose and mouth and when you breathed through it, it would get all white with frost. |
|
Many benthic copepods eat organic detritus or the bacteria that grow in it, and their mouth parts are adapted for scraping and biting. |
|
The nose of the turtle has two external openings and connects to the roof of the mouth through internal openings. |
|
The limestone islands of Flat Holm and Steep Holm are prominent in views across the mouth of the Severn Estuary. |
|
It then closes its jaws and pushes the water back out of its mouth through its baleen, which allows the water to leave while trapping the prey. |
|
Each plate is made of keratin that frays out into fine hairs on the ends inside the mouth near the tongue. |
|
Pleated grooves in the whale's mouth allow the creature to easily drain the water initially taken in, filtering out the prey. |
|
Windsurfing takes place around the island, particularly to its west coast and around the mouth of Walney Channel. |
|
It is situated immediately to the north of Talacre in Flintshire, at the mouth of the Dee estuary. |
|
There is evidence of mining in Caiston Glen, with the mouth of a level opening about halfway up the beck. |
|
The mouth of the capsule is usually ringed by a set of teeth called peristome. |
|
The mouth of the valley is located at Skelwith Bridge, which lies about two miles west of the town of Ambleside. |
|
When suckling, the mother actively splashes milk into the mouth of the calf, using the muscles of her mammary glands, as the calf has no lips. |
|
Workington is a town, civil parish and port at the mouth of the River Derwent on the west coast of Cumbria, England. |
|
After 842, when the Vikings set up a permanent base at the mouth of the Loire river, they could strike as far as northern Spain. |
|
|
The village is strategically placed at the junction of the rivers Kent and Gowan, at the mouth of the Kentmere Valley. |
|
In the mouth region, it is therefore necessary to permanently remove gravel by dredging. |
|
The town of Ulverstone in Tasmania, Australia is named after Ulverston and is similarly built at the mouth of a Leven River. |
|
Noordhinder Bank is a shoal in the southern part of the North Sea, between Antwerp and the mouth of the Thames. |
|
The current mouth of the Yellow River is located at Kenli County, Shandong. |
|
While he took the longer route by way of Wisbech, he sent his baggage train along the causeway and ford across the mouth of the Wellstream. |
|
Contrary to custom and against the wishes of the Church, many corpses were loaded onto barges and buried at sea beyond the mouth of the Tagus. |
|
Whose breath of mouth divine, Of old from the deep gulf outbrought me, And who all beautiful outwrought me. |
|
It was built at the Stowage, a site to the west of the mouth of Deptford Creek once used by the East India Company. |
|
Back Central is an urban area south of downtown, toward the mouth of River Meadow Brook. |
|
Proceeding from the mouth the estuary inland, there are initially beach sands at the margin, thence shingle beach and mudflats. |
|
Newburyport once had a fishing fleet that operated from Georges Bank to the mouth of the Merrimack River. |
|
They use their throat pleats to expand the mouth to take in huge gulps of water. |
|
The city is situated at the mouth of the Providence River at the head of Narragansett Bay. |
|
In September 1619, he found the entrance to Hudson Bay and spent the winter near the mouth of the Churchill River. |
|
These companies are based on three large chemical sites around the mouth of the River Tees at Wilton, Billingham and Seal Sands. |
|
In South China, farmers reclaimed paddy fields by enclosing an area with a stone wall on the sea shore near a river mouth or river delta. |
|
The envelope, though, hadn't been sealed properly and he lifted it to his mouth to re-lick the gummed edge. |
|
In 292 Constantius defeated the Franks who had settled at the mouth of the Rhine. |
|
Meeting at the mouth of Quiberon Bay on 21 November, the two fleets closed in on each other. |
|
|
Deliberately, and with a peculiar quivering smile, that seemed to overspread her whole body, she put her mouth on his. |
|
Boulogne is at the mouth of the Liane river, which meanders through a valley between hills. |
|
Cholera vaccines that are given by mouth provide reasonable protection for about six months. |
|
On 20 May, the Germans captured Abbeville at the mouth of the Somme River, cutting off the Allied troops in Northern France and Belgium. |
|
On 20 May, the Germans had captured Abbeville at the mouth of the Somme and cut off the main Allied armies in the north. |
|
It is located on the Channel coast, north of Rouen at the mouth of the Arques river and lies east of the mouth of the river Scie. |
|
Dieppe has a ferry port with direct services to the English town of Newhaven, situated at the mouth of the River Ouse in East Sussex. |
|
Caen is served by the small port of Ouistreham, lying at the mouth of the Caen Canal where it meets the English Channel. |
|
The Mormugao harbour on the mouth of the River Zuari is one of the best natural harbours in South Asia. |
|
The trill of her purr echoed inside his mouth when he kissed her again. Clutching at his shirt, her fingers traveled the muscles in his back. |
|
New Munster consisted of the South Island and the southern portion of the North Island, up to the mouth of the Patea River. |
|
The parallel running through that mouth also passes through Celtica and is Pytheas' base line. |
|
He groaned loud with his mouth open. Then he wet himself. And then he rolled over on to his puku. |
|
These are large accumulations of sediment transported from the continent to places in front of the mouth of the river. |
|
Microbats use their larynx to create ultrasound, and emit the sound through their mouth and sometimes their nose. |
|
He then sailed down the Amur River to its mouth and then north along the Okhotsk coast, returning to Yakutsk three years later. |
|
In 1648 Semyon Dezhnev reached the mouth of the Anadyr after being shipwrecked on the coast. |
|
Vowel height is named for the vertical position of the tongue relative to either the roof of the mouth or the aperture of the jaw. |
|
The old skin breaks near the mouth and the snake wriggles out, aided by rubbing against rough surfaces. |
|
The head is broad with a wide mouth below the terminal snout which has two small nostrils. |
|
|
At the mouth of the River Clyde there has been a significant issue of oxygen depletion in the water column. |
|
Whilst she was being repaired in the mouth of the Endeavour River Cook observed the tides over a period of seven weeks. |
|
Albans in 1213, based on high water occurring 48 minutes later each day, and three hours earlier at the Thames mouth than upriver at London. |
|
The remaining 25 men wandered in unknown country for 10 weeks until they came to the mouth of the Anadyr. |
|
There are many islands at the mouth of the Kolyma before it meets the East Siberian sea. |
|
At this age the content of the larval yolk sac has been used, the mouth and digestive channel have developed, and it requires feeding. |
|
It blocks the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River, creating the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, the world's largest estuary. |
|
Instead, while Columbus's ships sheltered at the mouth of the Rio Jaina, the first Spanish treasure fleet sailed into the hurricane. |
|
Instead, while Columbus's ships sheltered at the mouth of the Jaina River, the first Spanish treasure fleet sailed into the hurricane. |
|
The gulper eel uses its mouth like a net by opening its large mouth and swimming at its prey. |
|
At the mouth of the canals, salinity fell to almost zero, which was probably why most of the oysters died. |
|
After the thaw he built a boat, sailed west along the coast and wintered at the mouth of the Gizhiga River. |
|
The port of Bayonne is located at the mouth of the Adour, downstream of the city. |
|
By 1639 they reached the Pacific 65 miles southeast at the mouth of the Ulya River. |
|
After passing the mouth of another southern tributary, the Olyokma, the banks again became rocky. |
|
It has a secure harbour at the mouth of Banten River that provides a navigable passage for light craft into the island's interior. |
|
The Periwinkle is a great binder, staying bleeding both at mouth and nose if some of the leaves be chewed. |
|
The town is named for its location at the mouth of the small River Western Yar. |
|
He chose instead the island of Manhattan at the mouth of the river explored by Hudson, at that time called the North River. |
|
Also, when the crocodile's mouth is closed, the large fourth tooth in the lower jaw fits into a constriction in the upper jaw. |
|
|
Crocodiles have a palatal flap, a rigid tissue at the back of the mouth that blocks the entry of water. |
|
Ellis Island is located just south of the river's mouth in New York Harbor. |
|
Stella whistles pervily, and I race to get away before I start shooting my mouth off. |
|
New Amsterdam was founded at the mouth of the Hudson River, and would later become known as New York City. |
|
The Morris Canal, carrying anthracite and freight from Pennsylvania through New Jersey to its terminus at the mouth of the Hudson in Jersey City. |
|
They sailed westward into the Bay and reached the mouth of Hampton Roads, stopping at a location now known as Old Point Comfort. |
|
However, he did not notice the entrances to Chesapeake Bay or the mouth of the Delaware River. |
|
Near the mouth of the Saint John River, where it passes through the city of Saint John, is the famous Reversing Falls. |
|
On his arrival at the Amazon, he was to build two towns, one just inside the mouth of the river. |
|
According to the Treaty of Tordesillas, the majority of the Amazon River should belong to Spain, but the mouth should be ruled by Portugal. |
|
It is located on the banks of the Moche River, near its mouth at the Pacific Ocean, in the Moche Valley. |
|
He arrived at the mouth of the River May on June 22, 1564, sailed up it a few miles, and founded Fort Caroline. |
|
Infection with smallpox is focused in small blood vessels of the skin and in the mouth and throat before disseminating. |
|
In 292 Constantius, the father of Constantine I defeated the Franks who had settled at the mouth of the Rhine. |
|
At the northern part of the mouth stands Namlea, the largest town of the island. |
|
The muscles about the mouth exhibited puckering movements and occasional pursings and poutings of the lips. |
|
The expedition reached the mouth of the Amazon on 24 August 1542, demonstrating the practical navigability of the Great River. |
|
The coastal area between Port Elizabeth and the Fish River mouth is known as the Sunshine Coast. |
|
Abraham Ortelius in his world map of 1564 labels as Manicongo the city at the mouth of the river. |
|
After the treaty, the Hudson Bay Company rebuilt York Factory as a brick star fort at the mouth of the nearby Hayes River, its present location. |
|
|
Cadamosto mentions interacting with another lord, Guumimensa, whose dominion was closer to the mouth of the river. |
|
In 1506, he took the island of Socotra in the mouth of the Red Sea and, in 1507, Ormuz in the Persian Gulf. |
|
Inhalation begins at the mouth and the nostrils located at the front of the beak. |
|
They followed the coast westward, until they reached the mouth of the Mississippi River near to Galveston Island. |
|
Depending on the severity and the type of infection, the antibiotic may be given by mouth or by injection, or may be applied topically. |
|
In the 840s, Pepin II called in the Vikings to aid him against Charles and they settled at the mouth of the Garonne as they did by the Loire. |
|
The Romans were quite interested in adding them to the empire, and to that end built a fort, Amisia, at the mouth of the Ems. |
|
These large lamps have thin sides and a deep pinch, which flattens the mouth and makes it protrude outward. |
|
Early in this period the pinch is shallow, while later on it becomes more prominent and the mouth protrudes from the lamp's body. |
|
A fish hook or fishhook is a device for catching fish either by impaling them in the mouth or, more rarely, by snagging the body of the fish. |
|
Symptoms can include irritable bowel, diarrhea, mouth and throat ulcerations, nausea, breathing difficulties, and, in rare cases, anaphylaxis. |
|
Mixing garlic with milk in the mouth before swallowing reduced the odor better than drinking milk afterward. |
|
The ball hit him in the mouth and knocked out one of his teeth. |
|
He clapped his hand over his mouth when he realized what he had said. |
|
Acanthocephalans are dioecious pseudocoelomate worms remarkably adapted to a parasitic lifestyle in that there is no mouth or digestive system. |
|
Each year, fishers catch a fill of crappie, large mouth and white bass, catfish, and bream. |
|
He glanced up into Richard's eyes, his own wide with wonder, his mouth hanging agape. |
|
Outland Sports also has reduced the size of their pump-action yelper and put a mouthpiece on it to make a mouth yelper. |
|
Joe shook his head in awe, eyes agog and mouth hanging open as mine once must have hung for the tales of the north woods' legendary denizens. |
|
To force the action, Stu opened up with his mouth yelper, and I answered with the glass friction call. |
|
|
The pond rippled to our left, and there was a cottonmouth water moccasin, its wide-open mouth only a few feet from our ankles. |
|
The man who has gone around the cocktail circuit pounding cheerios to the end of time did not come in here and open his mouth once on the Bill. |
|
Meg gazed desperately across the room to where Monty was guffawing with mirth and stuffing into his mouth a cheeselet. |
|
It also advised them to cover their nose and mouth with a disposable tissue and dispose the used tissues immediately in wastebasket. |
|
Upon the opening of his mouth he drops his breakfast, which the fox presently chopped up. |
|
Bhattarai with a pillow before stuffing a washcloth in his mouth and filling his nostrils with paper towels to stop him from breathing. |
|
His mouth had been struck or kicked. The lips were severely contused, reddened. |
|
He bit into a corncob, and Chisom watched him munch with his mouth open, his jaws working the corn like a mini grinding machine. |
|
For thy mouth uttereth thine iniquity, and thou choosest the tongue of the crafty. |
|
The tiny mouth is uttering the most satisfied of crowings, and her eyes have that pure, soft expression never seen except in baby eyes. |
|
Simply slide your finger along the neck to select the level of pitch and then squeeze the mouth to add the vibrato effect or the wah-wah sound. |
|
His mouth moved down from her breasts, lapping cuntward at the same instant her hand exerted pressure to push him in that direction. |
|
He's drawn Dwayne as a cave-man. A really derpy, ugly caveman, with a sloping forehead, a drooling mouth and Dwayne's buzz cut. |
|
Remove the pan and slice cookies into bars or squares, depending on the mouth size of your dog-child. |
|
But he turned red and began foaming at the mouth as tutor Pauline Wintle slapped his back. |
|
To possession here any fly erighting, Then, without more words by mouth or enditing. |
|
He looked at the stout bellying occupant of the other chair, his mouth open, his snores reverberant. |
|
With a few bold strokes of the pen he had rendered a titan with its streamlined body, immense mouth in front, and betentacled fins at the rear. |
|
Their contents would have made the weariest Fletcherite drool at the mouth and forget his number of chews. |
|
Then she floofs out her blonde curls artlessly and opens her mouth wide, checking her teeth for spinach. |
|
|
In the airport, holiday lovers kiss, mouth forevers, the usual argot betrays you. Desire makes love dull. |
|
Those names that the schools forged, and put into the mouth of scholars, could never get admittance into common use. |
|
I have seen, too, a frog-like beast with protruding green eyes, which is simply a gaping mouth with a huge stomach behind it. |
|
A glutard's mouth would water just looking at pictures of sweets they could actually eat. |
|
It grasshops over the grass and bounds skyward. A matron crams a fresh stick of gum into her mouth and chews her words up with it. |
|
The waxen pallor of her face was almost spiritual in its ivorylike purity though her rosebud mouth was a genuine Cupid's bow, Greekly perfect. |
|
What kind of gutter language is that? I ought to wash your mouth out with soap. |
|
He plucked a hash brown from her chest and popped it in her mouth before slurping several more into his mouth. |
|
After the entire table burst into laughter, she playfully bipped the man in the mouth and followed it with a kiss. |
|
The Act of Union of 1536 formed a linear border stretching from the mouth of the Dee to the mouth of the Wye. |
|
The wide mouth was folded tight together, the heavy-lidded eyes were firmly shut as though she defied the world to disturb her rest. |
|
He sailed down the Amur and finally discovered the mouth of that great river from land. |
|
A small group led by Dezhnyov reached the mouth of the Anadyr River and sailed up it in 1649, having built new boats from the wreckage. |
|
From 1964 to 1969 four great oil refineries were erected at the mouth of the Tees, two by Phillips Petroleum and one each by ICI and Shell. |
|
He was born with a silver spoon in his mouth and probably never had to work a day in his life. |
|
An alternative explanation might be a sailing from the mouth of the Rhine to Richborough, which would be east to west. |
|
Deep belly or abdominal breathing through the mouth is what activates the Parasympathetic. |
|
Words just spill out of her mouth too quickly and she has to backtrack. |
|
Influenced by the Gulf Stream, coastal weather is subject to hurricanes, most pronouncedly near the mouth of Chesapeake Bay. |
|
The first man was white, 6ft, and wore a dark balaclava with lighter stitching around the eye and mouth holes. |
|
|
It happened on one o' dem zip-a-dee-doo-dah days. Now that's the kind of day when you can't open your mouth without a song jump right out of it. |
|
The fatwa goes on to explain the rule of using mouth fresheners such as small atomizers during the day in Ramadan. |
|
Charles has failed to follow the example of his mother, the queen, who has heroically kept her mouth shut for more than 50 years. |
|
He thought that he could get him a regular salary if he would come to Packingtown and do as he was told, and keep his mouth shut. |
|
By 1071 he had started the building of Chepstow Castle, the first castle in Britain built of stone, near the mouth of the Wye. |
|
Historically, there was a tidal bore on the Gulf of California in Mexico at the mouth of the Colorado River. |
|
Seven leagues above the mouth of the river we meet with two other passes, as large as the middle one by which we entered. |
|
This causes grooves on their throat to expand, increasing the amount of water the mouth can store. |
|
Zachary Black jumps out from behind a bush. My heart leapfrogs up my throat, climbs out of my mouth and scarpers down the street. |
|
Some volunteers might opt to stay on in Zambia by other means, but the General election had left a sour taste in my mouth and I was ready to go. |
|
Coated with black crumbs and custard, the zac streaked out of his mouth like a dum-dum and ricocheted off a tureen. |
|
I don't remember why I was in such a yackety mood. My mouth was obviously going much faster than my brain's ability to keep up! |
|
It was floating a foot under the surface. The eyes were holes. The mouth was a slit cavern of darkness. The hair willowed around the scalp. |
|
She considered him. A fiery droplet in the wick of her mouth considered him. |
|
With one hand he gently disclosed the lips of that luscious mouth of nature. |
|
An unusually large aphthous ulcer or it could be an early sign of mouth cancer. |
|
In 1796 a bridge he designed was erected over the mouth of the Wear River at Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England. |
|
She had a low forehead, a dull grey eye, a vast pendulous nose, a huge mouth full of uneven teeth and a chin and jawbone qui n'en finissent pas. |
|
He had a mayorly appearance, but he spoke as if his mouth was full of oatmeal mush. |
|
A mouth guard is important to protect the teeth and gums from injury, and to cushion the jaw, resulting in a decreased chance of knockout. |
|
|
As early as 841, a Viking fleet appeared at the mouth of the Seine, the principal route by which they entered the kingdom. |
|
In those grave, whiteless eyes and sad small mouth live the eternal sorrows and joys and the whole destiny of man. |
|
He was sufficiently strong however to knock out two teeth from the mouth of his captor. |
|
I popped a minipretzel into my mouth and tried to move my legs. Wishful thinking. With my tray table down, they were wedged in from every angle. |
|
It's good that I wasn't a wereporcupine, or his mouth would be full of quills. |
|
They set their mouth against the heavens, and their tongue walketh through the earth. |
|
On 1 May, a Gurkha parachute battalion was dropped on Elephant Point, and cleared Japanese rearguards from the mouth of the Yangon River. |
|
I toothbrushed the stale rum stink from my mouth and stared at myself in the cabinet mirror. |
|
Pipefishes are slender and elongate, with a syringelike mouth and body encased in dermal plates arranged in series of rings. |
|
The Humber Forts were built in the mouth of the river for the First World War. |
|
All rivers discharging into The Wash and the North Sea between King's Lynn and Cleethorpes at the mouth of The Humber. |
|
All rivers entering the North Sea between Spurn Point at the mouth of the Humber and Redcar, Cleveland. |
|
An addition 200 berths for leisure boats are located near the mouth of the River Tawe. |
|
Now he was a sturdy, straw haired man of thirty with a rather hard mouth and a supercilious manner. |
|
She held her mouth slitted open in anguish so that in Inman's mind it resembled the sputcheon to a sword scabbard. |
|
The next major inlet is Cork Harbour, at the mouth of the River Lee, in which Great Island is situated. |
|
Every coffeehouse has some particular statesman belonging to it, who is the mouth of the street where he lives. |
|
She herself or one of the other crofter women of the townland would sing to us the mouth music. |
|
Doesn't matter, you'd have your lips on it and I'd tell everyone how you tried to mouth rape me. |
|
When an exhausted sucker is hauled to the top of The Wall, usually its muckling circle of a mouth goes into a frenzied sucking spasm. |
|
|
However, the narrator reveals to the reader that these disputed verses were actually from the mouth of the Archangel Gabriel. |
|
Some rivers generate brackish water by having their river mouth in the ocean. |
|
The Czech Republic is known worldwide for its individually made, mouth blown and decorated Bohemian glass. |
|
The Port of Inverness is located at the mouth of the River Ness and has four quays and receives over 300 vessels a year. |
|
In 1406, the Mackays defeated the Clan MacLeod of Lewis at the Battle of Tuiteam Tarbhach on the north bank near the mouth of the Tutim Burn. |
|
Spirant consonants are those in which the mouth passage is simply narrowed without any actual contact. |
|
He, by playing too often at the mouth of death, has been snapped by it at last. |
|
She slooshes her mouth out, spits residue into a flower-pot behind a screen. |
|
The Pentland Firth has its eastern mouth at the Moray Firth's northern boundary. |
|
The fragment was stuffed into the mouth of an earthenware pot containing almost 2,000 Roman coins. |
|
The following exercises help combat sibilance, plosives, lazy tongue, and mouth problems. |
|
After the foot and mouth outbreak in the late 1960s the animal market was moved out of the town centre. |
|
Hilbre Island, part of Wirral, straddles the mouth of the estuary at this point. |
|
George Jessel... is still shooting his mouth off as though nothing mattered except his own gift for wise-cracks. |
|
The mouth of the River Seiont is in the town, creating a natural harbour where it flows into the Menai Strait. |
|
These figures place Celtica around the mouth of the Loire river, an emporium for the trading of British tin. |
|
The Nile delta is composed of sediment that was washed down and deposited at the mouth of the river. |
|
From the mouth and lower course of the Don, its range passes into the steppe region of western and middle Ciscaucasia. |
|
It has anatomical adaptations for filter feeding, such as a greatly enlarged mouth and highly developed gill rakers. |
|
As there is a dangerous sand bar at the mouth of the harbor, these lights serve as useful guides, and also as sea lights. |
|
|
Small hands flailed, the downy head turned from one side to another and suddenly the rosepetal mouth opened and Emily let out a wail. |
|
He tells of a home video showing a rod flying into the open mouth of a girl singing at a wedding. |
|
Opposite Exmouth on the west shore is the village of Dawlish Warren with its sand spit extending across the mouth of the estuary. |
|
This generates the water pressure required to expand its mouth and engulf and filter a huge amount of water and fish. |
|
A smart lyric in the mouth of a stick-figure is a theatrical Nothingburger. |
|
Heading west, the coast is an expanse of alluvial deposits stretching to the mouth of Glamorgan's most well known river, the River Taff. |
|
Merthyr needed a coastal export point for its iron and Cardiff was the obvious choice being at the mouth of the River Taff. |
|
He had buried his mouth in Ada's nuque, when she stiffened and raised a warning finger. |
|
Teignmouth is linked to Shaldon, the village on the opposite bank, by a passenger ferry at the river mouth and by a road bridge further upstream. |
|
Gwion then placed his thumb in his mouth to soothe his burns resulting in Gwion's enlightenment. |
|
The narrow mouth of the Dart is protected by two fortified castles, Dartmouth Castle and Kingswear Castle. |
|
At the mouth of the estuary is the natural gas sweetening plant at Point of Ayr on the site of the former colliery. |
|
At its head is the city and port of Belfast, which sits at the mouth of the River Lagan. |
|
At the mouth of the lough are several small rock and shingle islands which are breeding areas for terns that feed in its shallow waters. |
|
At the mouth of the lough are several small rock and shingle islands which are of importance to terns. |
|
At the mouth of the river, it separates the communities of Dartmouth and Kingswear. |
|
Islands of sand can appear and then disappear over the course of a few weeks, particularly at the mouth of the harbour. |
|
Proximal ambulacral pairs can be partially separated, forming a buccal slit, an expansion of the mouth frame. |
|
Ten Tors was cancelled in 2001 due to the foot and mouth epidemic, but went ahead the next year. |
|
The mouth lies in the centre of the oral surface in regular urchins, or towards one end in irregular urchins. |
|
|
Instead, the mouth is surrounded by cilia that pull strings of mucus containing food particles towards a series of grooves around the mouth. |
|
With no true brain, the neural center is a large nerve ring encircling the mouth just inside the lantern. |
|
The lantern, where present, surrounds both the mouth cavity and the pharynx. |
|
He had intelligence that the consular army was camped at the mouth of the Rhone. |
|
Hence ctenophores usually swim in the direction in which the mouth is eating, unlike jellyfish. |
|
On 24 August 1553, Chancellor cast anchor near the mouth of the Dvina River and was met by local Russians. |
|
By AD 1100, a minor settlement had appeared on the mouth of the Neglinnaya River. |
|
There are eight rows of combs that run from near the mouth to the opposite end, and are spaced evenly round the body. |
|
They smell by using their forked tongues to collect airborne particles, then passing them to the vomeronasal organ or Jacobson's organ in the mouth for examination. |
|
He'd decided to take her because she was the best looking armpiece of all, and as long as she kept her mouth shut, he'd be the envy of every man there. |
|
His fat body shook like a balatron, as if his soul, biting for anger at a mouth inadequately circumferential, desired in vain to fret a passage through it. |
|
He cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted to the bow guard. |
|
If the slightly agape mouth is closed prior to mouth opening, this is termed the preparatory phase and is more common in suction-feeding bony fishes than elasmobranchs. |
|
In the last frame, he throws back his head and wails, his mouth agape. |
|
The mouth is a transverse slit, which shows no teeth, nor any jaws properly so called, and therefore affords an apparent support to the agnathous theory of the Ostracodermi. |
|
The Trent is noted for a tidal phenomenon called the Eagre or Aiger. a species of bore like that which occurs on an enormous scale at the mouth of the Amazon. |
|
He got another candy bar out of the refrigerator and ripped the wrapper and threw it on the floor. He was sick of candy bars, his mouth full of sugary slop. |
|
And I'll have a headache in a few minutes because Mickey, who has a big mouth to begin with, always breaks out in a bad case of cell yell when he's on a phone. |
|
Make sure to chew thoroughly, and don't talk with your mouth full! |
|
The persistence of the Past is one of those tragicomic blessings which each new age denies, coming cocksure on to the stage to mouth its claim to a perfect novelty. |
|
|
I taste blood in my mouth while a Japanese gentleman in plastic snowshoes and a colorful Cosby sweater snaps photos of a landscape leveled by forest fires a decade ago. |
|
He picked a single crunchy up in his mouth and munched it consideringly. |
|
He almost fell on top of her, his mouth dabblingly seeking hers. |
|
I'm not handsome in the classical sense. The eyes droop, the mouth is crooked, the teeth aren't straight, the voice sounds like a Mafioso pallbearer, but somehow it all works. |
|
Estrildids and ploceids are clearly different in courtship posture, clutch size, egg coloration, pattern in mouth of the young, and mode of begging of the young. |
|
The wire is threaded on a long suitably curved needle, extrance is made through the vestibule of the mouth medially to the zygoma and out on the face at an appropriate point. |
|
The smoke of Falk's tug hove in sight, far away at the mouth of the river. |
|
Speak again, she hurred, making mouth movements with her paws. |
|
Further north, in rural Lithuania, a folk clarinet has a cylindrical tube closed at the top, with idioglot reed taken in the player's mouth for its entire length. |
|
The victorious fleet was then caught unawares when attempting to leave the River Stour, and was attacked by a Danish force at the mouth of the river. |
|
In the one recorded naval engagement in 896, Alfred's new fleet of nine ships intercepted six Viking ships in the mouth of an unidentified river along the south of England. |
|
In January 1858 a combined British and French fleet bombarded and occupied Canton, and landed troops at the mouth of the Hai River in northern China. |
|
With her left hand on her right jug, she put her mouth to her other tit. |
|
In November he became seriously deranged, sometimes speaking for many hours without pause, causing him to foam at the mouth and making his voice hoarse. |
|
Connolly himself proved the complete pragmatist and it lies ill in his mouth to rail against lack of creativity when his influence has contributed to it. |
|
She had even white teeth and a mouth that needed no lipsticking. |
|
A leering eye and locken brows, And large Mongolian mouth and nose. |
|
Fleet bases included such ports as Ravenna, Arles, Aquilea, Misenum and the mouth of the Somme River in the West and Alexandria and Rhodes in the East. |
|
Viking invaders arrived at the mouth of the river Seine in 911, at a time when Franks were fighting on horseback and Frankish lords were building castles. |
|
Belfast is at the western end of Belfast Lough and at the mouth of the River Lagan giving it the ideal location for the shipbuilding industry that once made it famous. |
|
|
These hunting groups had no success until Admiral Graf Spee was caught off the mouth of the River Plate between Argentina and Uruguay by an inferior British force. |
|
The Japanese successfully attacked over the Kawkareik Pass, and captured the port of Moulmein at the mouth of the Salween River after overcoming stiff resistance. |
|
The line links the mouth of the River Tees between Redcar and Hartlepool in the north east of England with the mouth of the River Exe in Devon in the south west. |
|
Other imaginary lines can be drawn, for similar purposes, between the Severn Estuary and the Wash, and between the Severn and the mouth of the River Trent. |
|
At the mouth of the River Usk, the Sims Metal Management plant hosts the world's largest industrial shredder for scrap metal with access by road, rail and sea. |
|
Dublin Bay is the next sizeable inlet, while the eastern coast of Ireland is mostly uniform until Wexford Harbour at the mouth of the River Slaney. |
|
The French planned to invade the British Isles during 1759 by accumulating troops near the mouth of the Loire and concentrating their Brest and Toulon fleets. |
|
By mouth in doses of 2 to 3 grains, combined with neuroleptic drugs, it has enabled us to bring about a certain number of improvements in chronic schizophrenics. |
|
It is near the mouth of the River Nith into the Solway Firth. |
|
There was a shipyard at the mouth of almost every river in New England. |
|
The Romans built Leucarum, a rectangular or trapezoidal fort at the mouth of the River Loughor, in the late 1st century AD to house a regiment of Roman auxiliary troops. |
|
In 1194, with the aid of his cousins Gruffudd ap Cynan and Maredudd ap Cynan, he defeated Dafydd at the Battle of Aberconwy at the mouth of the River Conwy. |
|
When Chicago was founded in 1837, most of the early building was around the mouth of the Chicago River, as can be seen on a map of the city's original 58 blocks. |
|
One individual spent a month near the mouth of the Amazon River. |
|
It is known that populations in the mouth of the Indus River migrate to the sea from April through October to feed on the annual spawning of prawns. |
|
They swim with their mouth wide open and their percula fully expanded. |
|
Lunge feeding is an extreme feeding method, where the whale accelerates from below the bait ball to a high velocity and then opens its mouth to a large gape angle. |
|
His first battle was at the mouth of the river which is called Glein. |
|
Dublin is in the province of Leinster on Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and bordered to the South by the Wicklow Mountains. |
|
An army of 7,000 foot soldiers and 2,000 cavalry camped north of the town and sent a detachment to capture Rosslare fort at the mouth of the harbour. |
|