Sentences with phrase «began rustling»

In the minds of some Trojans boosters, Carroll hit I - 5 north toward Washington just as the storm began rustling the palms of Southern California.
To some Trojans boosters, Carroll left just as the storm began rustling the palms of Southern California.
Pret began rustling up its greener approach to food on the go two years ago, after the company's chief executive Clive Schlee noticed that customers increasingly aware of the health and environmental impact of their diets were snapping up the meat free food on offer.

Not exact matches

As a warm midday breeze rustled the trees below, the figures began to move in unison.
I consider those afternoons spent beneath the rustling birch trees, sprayed by the fountain, and begin to consider the new towers going up with something other than dread.
When one begins to turn a deaf ear to the crisp rustle of turning pages.
At the beginning Fluffy was scared of every rustle and noise he was crawling around the house, was afraid of quick motion and darkness.
The perfect Bali experience begins at Lima Puri Villas in Bali, a symphony of a luxurious hideaway set against the backdrop of puffy, white rolling clouds and serene rustling rice paddy fields only seconds away from the sandy ocean beaches, the best cuisines and bustling nightlife.
Luxury Accommodations Luxury Accommodations The perfect Bali experience begins at Lima Puri Villas in Bali, a symphony of a luxurious hideaway set against the backdrop of puffy, white rolling clouds and serene rustling rice paddy fields only seconds away from the sandy ocean beaches, the best cuisines and bustling nightlife.
It was a great silence, unlike any I have encountered on Earth, so vast and deep that I began to hear my own body: my heart beating, my blood vessels pulsing, even the rustle of my muscles moving over each other seemed audible.»
In Shannon Te Ao's installation «With the sun aglow, I have my pensive moods», commissioned for the Edinburgh Art Festival, the New Zealand artist begins to intone a 19th - century lament for a Māori princess afflicted by leprosy (a disease which arrived with white colonial settlers), his heavy voice flecked by drones and the rustling of foliage.
By presenting us with another way of looking at what should be matter - of - fact meteorological vernacular, phrases like «Wind felt on face; leaves rustle, vanes begin to move» begin to resonate like haiku.
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