Sentences with phrase «then clambers»

In this industry, one of the greatest ironies is that after a week spent evaluating some of the finest vehicles on the planet, your average auto writer then clambers into a...
In this industry, one of the greatest ironies is that after a week spent evaluating some of the finest vehicles on the planet, your average auto writer then clambers into a scabrous, twenty - something pile, and then prays to the automotive gods that it actually starts.
I jemmy the cap off the passenger door handle and insert the spindly back - up key, then clamber in to fire up the car.
I then clamber round and hit the pilot a few times before throwing him to his doom.

Not exact matches

Aoife Heffron, spokeswoman for BoyleSports said: «Arsenal clambered back from the dead with 10 minutes to go in the Community Shield, securing a 1 - 1 draw then a 4 - 1 win on penalties to take the first piece of silverware of the season.
So for 18 months you have been able to safely leave a cup of coffee on the kitchen table while you feed your child, then one day you go to the sink, and she clambers up to pick up her doll.
It was then that he remembered he'd met Louis Armstrong in Cambridge, where they might just have been locked out of a hall and so had had to clamber over a wall to find their bedrooms.
Yin clambers up the rocks, scans the terrain, then turns to give us a thumbs - up.
Say you clamber into bed, prepared for a healthy seven or eight hours and then stare at the clock for four of them.
You might gain an inch here or lose one there, but when your six - foot - plus correspondent can find a comfortable driving position, ride comfortably behind that in the second row, and then easily clamber into the third row and sit without knees, toes or head scuffing anything, we can't argue that Durango is shy on space.
As we get deeper in to the gorge, we have to clamber over huge rocks every now and then.
There are no real paths here, it is a jungle in which you have to clamber over fallen trees every now and then.
Aside from the rather challenging but beautiful 24 kilometre Harkerville Coast trail to Sinclair and back to the Harkerville Forest Station that most people do as an overnight trail that traversing some pretty daunting indigenous forest and then along the shoreline for 4 kilometres with quite a bit of clambering and chain ladders to add spice to the route, there are other shorter trails in the beautiful Harkerville Forest.
Things start of well: a tap of the A button has you clambering up onto its neck before it then leaps into the air and gains height with a few sweeps of its huge wings.
The thrill you get from shooting out lights and clambering up pipes, then avoiding mines, cameras, and alarms before patiently hunting and incapacitating, foes is powerful.
The movement creates amazing scenarios that you want to tell people about, like the time you ran along a wall to clamber up to a rooftop only to leap off of that roof into a window across the street, where you caught some unsuspecting fool slipping and kicked him in his stupid face... and then you just kept running, trying to do it all again.
Imagine, then, the sheer rage when I failed at the last hurdle, trying in vein to clamber over a deceptively step air vent plonked mere metres before the finish line.
Then there's Clambering, the ability to leap over objects automatically.
The judge found the field in which the cow was placed was adequately secured but the cow escaped by «jumping or clambering» over the gate and then jumping over a 12 - foot cattle grid to get onto the road.
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