Sentences with phrase «gunfire which»

We legged it together, somehow managing to avoid the hail of gunfire which followed and met us at every turn.
The sound of gunfire which breaks up the Christmas Truce in the Sainsbury's advert is an ominous moment.

Not exact matches

If Neller's September vision for HIMARs holds, and the Marine Corps starts adapting TTPs for launching naval gunfire on the fly — which the Anchorage test suggests it is — then Marines can expect to find themselves engaging targets while still rocking and bobbing at sea... long before they hit the beach or fast - rope into some poor schmuck's compound.
Scott also said Friday that he supported a ban on «bump stock» devices, which accelerate semiautomatic rifles» rate of gunfire and were used in last year's shooting in Las Vegas.
But the morale of Bolivia's army of Indian conscripts was low, and Paraguayans were better fitted to fight in the lowland swamps and jungles, in which many Bolivians died of disease and snakebite as well as gunfire.
The shooting, which resulted in 17 fatalities, was not an isolated incident — nonprofit organization Everytown for Gun Safety found that there were 160 incidences of gunfire on school campuses from 2013 - 15, with almost 50 percent taking place on college and university campuses.
But when news broke of a mass shooting in a Parkland, Florida, school — which killed 17 people and injured more than a dozen others — Brown said it shocked him: He graduated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 1999, and Aaron Feis, a football coach who died in the gunfire, was his classmate.
According to its spokesperson, Colonel Sani Kukasheka Usman, there was heavy exchange of gunfire in which the patrol killed 4 suspected Boko Haram terrorists, recovered 2 AK - 47 rifles, 4 various sizes of solar energy panels, several types of drugs and 5 motorcycles.
Whatever their merits as policy arguments, localism and empowerment do not offer a banner under which Labour could march towards the sound of electoral gunfire within the year.
A Turkish restaurant came under attack late on Sunday as heavy gunfire erupted in the capital of Burkina Faso, which has seen a surge in violence by armed groups over the past few years.
It will contain a $ 20 million annual increase in funding for security in major parks across the five boroughs and the expansion of a crime - fighting tool known as ShotSpotter, which uses sensors to detect gunfire, to cover 60 square miles across the city.
The ShotSpotter program, which relies on sound sensors placed in dangerous neighborhoods to alert authorities to possible gunfire, would also grow to cover more than 60 square miles — more than twice the area it now covers — at a total cost of $ 5.5 million.
But I know you have your very good reasons for being among the 98 percent of the population that shuns public transportation: • You can read, check email, send text messages, or catch a few winks while you're swerving into oncoming traffic and pedestrians • You have built - in motivation for stopping at Wendy's for celebration takeout, given that you haven't had to walk more than nine consecutive steps the entire day • You feel good about the copious burning of hydrocarbons, which is creating valuable new beachfront property • You get to trade hand gestures and occasional gunfire with fellow traffic jammers.
In a tweet Sunday morning, the Orlando Police Department applauded the tough fiber: «Pulse shooting: In hail of gunfire in which suspect was killed, OPD officer was hit.
A man grabs his girlfriend and uses her as a human shield against gunfire, which does not hit anyone.
This is Hollywood, so a happy ending is required — which we get, however illogically, with the requisite gunfire.
This time out, he's tasked with finding the daughter (Hannah Ware) of the scientist who helped create him, which will presumably unearth all kinds of twisty secrets while still leaving plenty of room for slow - motion gunfire and a possible sequel.
Anyway, I laughed back in the day and still laugh now when enemies just gingerly walk through the doors into gunfire, which is neat since there are so many at a time.
Editor / sound re-recording mixer Walter Murch brings some Apocalypse Now flair to the soundmix, presented here in crisp 5.1 Dolby Digital; most of Jarhead is relatively quiet, which was perhaps the rationale for leaving off a DTS option, but one does note the slightest timidity in the explosions and gunfire and wonder if the audio is living up to its potential.
Five brief clips have been released from director Zack Snyder's «Sucker Punch», which features an onslaught of gunfire, explosions, slo - mo fights and supernatural creatures.
My biggest gripe; I found the gunfire SFX to be on the weak side which hurt the overall impact of the violence.
There's a visceral forcefulness to his staging that does much to enliven what are rather standard - issue conflicts, highlighted by a prolonged single - take (seemingly enhanced by CG trickery) down a city street in which his camera maneuvers in and out of gunfire, twirling around to provide 360 - degree views of the carnage.
In the end, the political confusions of Salles's movie, which seem all of a piece with the political confusions of that era, sit small beside its achievement as a document of an incendiary time when hope, along with the stench of tear gas and gunfire, was in the air.
With being a movie filled with gunfire and explosions, it's safe to say that the DTS HD Master Audio track here is a thunderous one at that, which has a fantastic surround mix which really immerses you right into the movie.
With only brief, mild language and a couple of sexual innuendos, this film's biggest concern for parents will be the action violence, which consists mostly of large explosions, airborne missiles and gunfire exchanges.
It was the 12th school shooting this year in which people were injured or killed by gunfire.
But the simple cover system, which allows you to take time aiming, combined with the need for stealth, as a soggy tank top doesn't do much in terms of shielding against gunfire, actively deters the run and gun approach.
Ignoring the gunfire and steadily weaving through the myriad of beasts lurking in the darkness I make my way to the final clue which reveals the location of my quarry; a giant arachnid that's far too realistic for my liking.
There are fairly standard things like body - armour up to things like Bionic Ear's which lets you pinpoint gunfire and the sound of footsteps.
The effectiveness of each cover point can easily be determined by a shield icon, with a full icon determining strong cover, whilst a half icon means any soldier placed in that cover is more likely to be found by the gunfire of their enemies, whilst a yellow shield means that the soldier is being flanked, which certainly isn't a pleasant situation to be in for any of your squad.
The rest of the audio effects have been reworked to provide more dynamic range and add more weight to the sounds of explosions and gunfire, with the satisfying click of your weapon reloading even being filtered through the Dualshock 4 controller, which is a nice touch.
By the end of the second act, the only time I'd ever use cover was to reload or to allow my health to regenerate while my Time Shield (which blocks all incoming gunfire) was recharging.
For starters, Duke has a recharging shield, of which after taking damage takes an age to recharge, which in turn has a profound effect on the flow of combat, requiring you to hide behind objects to evade enemy gunfire, giving it the time to recharge.
THQ Nordic announced today that it would be working alongside Gunfire Games which is largely made up of ex Vigil employees who worked on earlier iterations of Darksiders.
«The new VR title from Gunfire Games From Other Suns, was described to me as the 3D (and VR) version of Subet Games» 2012 title FTL, which had you manage a spaceship as it endured events such as alien invasions and constant maintenance on its spacefaring trip.
The game is being developed alongside Gunfire Games, which makes up a large part of the original Darksiders team.
He also praised the special visual indicators for the mobile version, which allow you to pick out where enemy gunfire and footsteps are coming from, even if you don't have headphones in.
In addition to gunfire, characters can do a spin attack with a quick recharge, which is extremely useful when taking the fully - destructible environments to task.
It is, in short, what we expect from a Call of Duty set - piece — a cacophonous opera of destruction and gunfire, through which the player is closely guided by a computer - controlled superior (in this case, someone called Sandman).
The sheer volume of enemies found through each level ensures bullets are constantly flying everywhere, whilst the environment themself will be blasting to pieces throughout all of the gunfire too (you can actually earn a dash attack by quickly killing enemies that'll allow you to smash through walls, which always proves effective when trying to surprise your enemies).
Everything in Mirror's Edge came to a grinding halt whenever I had to engage the enemy, and whether it was attempting to disarm an armed foe (which I never could do) or dodge a spray of gunfire while frantically searching for the exit, having to stop and fight dragged the game down each and every time.
Jack can freeze enemies in «time bubbles», which he can then shower in gunfire.
Two works included in the exhibition attract particular attention — Henry Taylor's painting of Philando Castille, who was killed in his car by police gunfire; and a painting of Emmett Till by Dana Schutz, a white artist, which provoked protests and an international dialogue about who has the right to depict black bodies.
The starting point for this exhibition is a horrifying video posted on YouTube in which a man is recording gunfire in Syria on his cell phone when he spots a sniper, who promptly shoots him.
Recently though, it was discovered that he had been attacked with gunfire, and local ranchers are once again to blame.Brazil's Indian Affairs department, FUNAI, has oversight of the land, which it protects for the lone tribesman — dubbed the «Man of the Hole» — to use.
Bump stocks, which are used to accelerate gunfire on semi-automatic weapons, should also be banned or subjected to heightened regulation.
Their statistic has come into question by some new organizations including The Washington Post, which say that the number has been «inflated» by including shootings and gunfire on school grounds that, for instance, did not include attacks on students.
I was a fan of the Superhuman Hearing setting, which creates a clackety, treble - heavy sound that brought footsteps and gunfire front and center, while Footstep Focus was distractingly bass - heavy.
The in - game dialogue can be heard clearly over the forceful thumping of gunfire and explosions, which receive plenty of low - end response through the headset.
The Ultra also includes a night listening mode which compresses the dynamic range of the sound to ensure there are no unexpected loud elements of your viewing, such as gunfire or explosions in action films, which would disturb the neighbours if you're watching late at night.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z