Sentences with phrase «dark cellar»

The phrase "dark cellar" refers to a storage space underground that is poorly lit or without any light. It often conveys a sense of gloominess, mystery, or hiding something. Full definition
This I could understand more if he'd been trying to play some strange system concocted with Franco Baldini in the deepest darkest cellars of the FA.
Why am I locked in a dark cellar surrounded by things that degrade and dehumanize me?
«Theology is never any help; it is searching in a dark cellar at midnight for a black cat that isn't there.
In the darkest cellars and the loneliest prisons of life, we will meet Him.
Everything took place in the silent incognito of concentration camps and dark cellars.
Later in sanctification, I realized how good it was for me to have been chastened by Christ since I saw the evil rotten roots that had been hidden in the dark cellar of my heart.
Then suddenly, the twist, as both Schumer and Hawn wake up to discover they've been kidnapped and imprisoned in a filthy, dark cellar and terrified for their lives.
Like prestigious wine kept in a dark cellar for a number of years, it will blow your mind with its original, unadulterated, qualities.
It's all piracy and dark cellars, convents and plots, murder and mystery....
Theology is never any help; it is searching in a dark cellar at midnight for a black cat that isn't there.
I feel like a cornered rat, scrambling up againstthe wall of a deep, dark cellar, breathing fast enough I could've runa mile.
Locked up in a dark cellar, the player only has a short time to figure out what has happened and how to escape from the clutches of a dangerous serial killer.
The sheer intensity of the light in the dark cellar makes it impossible to tell what, or who, lies behind the door.
Given a choice of words like Bush, Iraq, and evil, could I help mistaking a «multi-disciplinary room» and a dark cellar for a military prison?
In the Jorge Luis Borges story from 1945, «The Aleph,» we are told of a sphere, secreted in a dark cellar, in which all the spatial infinitude and plenitude of the world can be seen simultaneously, from every imaginable angle.
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