Sentences with phrase «planting your left foot»

Brown begins to lean forward, and Stallworth plants his left foot, drives and is at full speed.
And instead of planting his left foot with the last step and letting out a huge boot, he swivels his body and pops the ball into those 20 unguarded yards.
While planting your left foot on the ground, lift your right leg straight up (keeping your leg straight and toe towards the ground) as high as you can.
Cross your left leg over your right, planting your left foot firmly on the floor on your side and lying your head down on your right arm (a).
Evidently, as he planted his left foot to make a right turn, his foot slipped out from underneath him.

Not exact matches

The first of these plants has square stalks a foot high or somewhat more, set with many thick and fat leaves, not unlike those of a garden Nightshade, but narrower and sharper pointed, of a dark green color.
Plant two feet or upwards in height, more erect and less branched than other varieties, and much stained with purple at the intersection of the branches and at the insertion of the leaf - stems; leaves of medium size, or small, long, and sharply pointed; leaf - stems long, deep - green; flowers white, tipped with purple, about three - fourths of an inch in diameter; flower - stems long, purple.
We drove up and down the mountains and through the clouds at times, into incredibly dense rain forests with some plants bearing giant leaves measuring five or six feet in diameter.
Plant two feet and upwards in height, stocky and branching, the stem and branches often stained or clouded with purple; leaves large, on long stems, smaller, smoother, and less sharply pointed, than those of the Squash - pepper; flowers white, sometimes measuring - nearly an inch and a half in diameter.
Chile plants hate getting there feet too wet, particularly when there is not enough climatic heat to drive the process of transpiration (the evaporation of water from both the plant's leaf and the soil).
He had his right foot planted, not his left.
The demons took him and he's ran off, two - foot tackled a plant vase in flip - flops and then left.
Gareth Bale brilliantly broke the left side, and its pass to the middle greatly ollow Togo striker who is ahead of John Terry just planted the foot and scored his ninth goal this season's Premier League.
The exception added to the rule provides it is not considered a foul if the competitor aborts the approach and, in stopping, plants the pole and momentum causes his / her feet to leave the ground.
Go apple picking Jump in a pile of leaves Make some autumn art Collect colourful fall leaves Collect seeds from plants in the garden Plant bulbs for next spring Make a bird feeder Make leaf prints Make pumpkin playdough Create an Autumn poem Go looking for spider webs Make a nature table with your Autumn finds Bake an apple pie Carve your own pumpkin Make Autumn sun catchers Go on a bat watch at dusk Make toffee apples Set up a scavenger hunt Collect sycamore seeds Grab an umbrella and go singing in the rain Throw a Halloween party Make an autumn wreath for your door Make a bug hotel Listen to the sound of leaves crunching under your feet Collect conkers Collect pinecones Collect twigs Make hot chocolate Draw or paint some autumn still life Attend harvest festival Make apple crisps / chips Remember what you're thankful for Take pictures of all the different colours you can find in a woodland Make leaf rubbings Go stargazing Have an autumn picnic Look for a full moon Go trick or treating Try apple bobbing Make apple sauce Fly a kite Make a windsock Dry orange slices Roast pumpkin seeds Make Halloween biscuits Make a rain catcher Build an indoor fort Collect acorns Donate old woollens and coats to a charity Help clear leaves from the lawn
A 7 - foot plant with leaves striped in red and yellow anchors it all, and seems to point to a large stone cross sitting atop a mossy pedestal where the garden meets a quiet, narrow road.
The plant's trunk grows to 60 feet high and its leaves to more than 15 feet across.
Keep the right shin and left foot planted for support.
Take a wide step to the left, letting your left foot point diagonally away from you and keeping your right foot planted (b).
From Urdhva Hastasana, inhale, extend; exhale, step back with the left foot, lowering the knee to the floor, coming into Lizard Pose, planting both hands inside of the right foot.
Poison Control Campers, backpackers, and other outdoorsy types can steer clear of poison ivy, oak, and sumac by knowing how to identify each plant: Poison ivy typically has a woody, ropelike vine and three leaflets that turn green in the summer; poison oak shows off clusters of yellow berries and oaklike leaves (usually in clusters of three); and poison sumac is a rangy shrub that grows up to 15 feet tall, with seven to 13 smooth - edge leaflets.
Cross your right ankle in front of your left and plant both feet firmly on the ground.
How to: Start standing with your feet hip - width apart, your right foot on the glider and your left foot planted firmly on the floor (a).
Dong quai is a perennial plant that can reach up to six feet (2 m) tall, and has a sturdy, hollow stem that supports large green leaves.
Right foot on a glider and your left planted firmly on the floor (a).
With your right knee bent and your foot planted on the floor and left leg extended, place your left hand on the floor and sit up.
Find a secure location at least three feet off the ground and without leaves or plants directly in front of it.
When you land, drop down again and take two quick steps to the left, planting your right foot and kicking with your left foot.
It is a flowering plant with oval shaped leaves, tiny flowers and a sturdy stem which can grow as high as 24 feet!
Push off your planted foot and slowly roll over, resting your head on your left arm, keeping your arm vertical, turning your hips flat to the ground as you roll over.
Place your hands behind you for support and keep your feet firmly planted on the floor as you allow both knees to drift off to the left.
Stand straight with your right foot firmly planted on the ground and your left extended in front of you at hip level.
Step forward with your right foot, planting it a couple feet in front of your left foot.
Tomato plants can grow up to six feet (2 m) tall and half as wide, producing a vine - like stem with lobed, hairy leaves that wrap around other plants to support the weight of its fleshy fruit.
Bean plants have oval leaves and small white or pink flowers, and they can grow up to 12 feet (4 m) tall.
Start facing the back standing to the right side of the rower with your right foot planted firmly on the ground, weight in your heel, and the ball of the left foot planted on the seat of the rower.
Start facing the side standing at the end of the rower with your right foot planted firmly on the ground, weight in your heel, and the left foot planted on the seat of the rower.
At the end of the exhalation, step the right leg forward and plant it 4 feet directly in front of the left foot, with the heels aligned.
From here, sink down into your curtsey lunge: right foot stays planted on the ground and as you bend that right knee, reach your left foot behind it as far to the right as you can until the ball of the left foot is planted on the ground as well.
From here, push off your feet to jump up in the air, switching feet in mid-air and landing back in a lunge with left foot forward and right foot planted behind.
Once it is transported to the field, celery should be planted in rows leaving eight inches (20 cm) between each plant and two to three feet (60 - 90 cm) between each row.
The plant stands an average of five feet (1.5 m) tall on hollow stems and has fine, feathery leaves.
Start in a split - stance lunge: right foot in front, ball of left foot planted on the floor behind you.
From here, dive your torso forward in a bowing motion and plant the left hand on the ground next to your right foot.
Extend that leg back out, planting your foot and repeating on the left side.
Hover that right foot off the ground so that you're in a plank position with the left foot planted and the right knee in towards your chest.
I call this the Stagecoach (or Double Rope Simultaneous Waves), and it can be done with your feet firmly planted in the ground or you can explosively leave the ground, creating more force and impact for adaptation to occur.
-- Now use your planted foot to turn your body 90 degrees to the right and then drive your left knee into the floor while keeping the kettlebell pointing straight up.
From here, sink down into your curtsey lunge: right foot stays planted on the ground and as you bend that right knee, reach your left foot behind it as far to the right as you can, planting the ball of the foot down.
Step the right foot back to plank and then lower onto your right forearm (keep your left hand planted right where it is, bending into that left elbow so that you can lower).
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