Sentences with phrase «also cowers»

If the dog also cowers, lowers her body, lays her ears flat, and licks her lips when greeting a new arrival, you can be sure she's telling the newcomer he's the pack leader.
He also cowers away from facing the most compelling philosophical and scientific arguments these people and others make.
I also cowered on the ground as my kids ventured into a literal tornado of bats swirling around.

Not exact matches

«Instead, what we see is a disturbing trend that suggests not just an attempt to criminalise the important work that journalists in Nigeria do, but also a drive to frighten and cower and stop this critical constitutionally mandated work through the aggressive use of the state security apparatus.
Mrs May was also accused of «cowering in the shade» of the publicity surrounding Saturday's wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
Also, Keira Knightley's cowering in the DKNY store.
It's also a frequent element of cinematographer Rachel Morrison's gritty compositions, the land often seeming to cower under brooding skies.
You might howl as Sin - Dee storms into a decrepit motel room full of prostitutes and cowering johns and drags Chester's little blonde thing, Dina (Mickey O'Hagan), out by her bleached hair — but you also worry she'll draw blood.
Lee Phelps has found his way into several TV movie - compilation specials thanks to his participation in two famous films of the early»30s: Phelps played the cowering speakeasy owner slapped around by Jimmy Cagney in The Public Enemy (1931), and also portrayed the waterfront waiter to whom Greta Garbo delivers her first talking - picture line («Gif me a viskey, baby... etc.») in Anna Christie (1930).
Taking over for Gary Ross, who directed last year's original «Hunger Games,» Lawrence keeps the action buzzing briskly while also providing a clearer and more daunting sense of the totalitarian regime that has kept the citizens of dystopian, futuristic Panem cowering in poverty and fear.
A disturbing sign concerning timid, abused, neglected or overly - trained animals is that while they may «respond» to their name, they also shiver, cower, flinch or urinate.
A change in attitude toward people and other pets — hiding, cowering, or aggression — is also common.
Other submissive body language will also be displayed such as cowering low, ears pinned back, turning their body sideways and avoiding eye contact, maybe even rolling over to expose their belly.
Previously abused dogs also tend to cower in corners and hide under objects in order to find a safe space.
Without an iron wall to cower behind, I also tend to take a licking from some bosses: the Pursuer, Lost Sinner, and Royal Rat Authority (toxic dogs!)
It also offers a new way to be impressive on the offense, with well - placed grenade throws being even more satisfying when it lands in a confined space next to a cowering worm!
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