Sentences with phrase «which lacerated»

Scourging meant being beaten with a whip impregnated with pieces of sharp metal, which lacerated the body.

Not exact matches

He finished by lacerating the «austerity driven by an outdated dogma» which was on offer from the opposition.
The episode of coitus interruptus that follows sets a wry pattern for all of Isabelle's interactions with her many suitors (played by Nicolas Duvauchelle, Bruno Podalydès and others), in which the thrill of initial interest soon gives way to hesitation, disappointment and lacerating self - critique.
The company has experience with Iannucci, having distributed the writer - director's lacerating 2009 political comedy In The Loop, which grossing nearly $ 192K in 8 locations in its opening weekend, averaging $ 23,983.
Hers came for playing a revenge - seeking mother in «Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,» Irish playwright Martin McDonagh's lacerating and controversial fable about a small town racked by grief and anger, which also won a supporting actor prize for Sam Rockwell as a racist police officer.
She has tried to lacerate the fetal membranes so that the amniotic fluid which surrounds the fetus will escape and it will be aborted.
A statue of the Madonna, which contains the final clue, lacerates Brunetti's knee.
These instruments can lacerate the soft gum tissue if the scaler slips or the patient moves, which is likely without sedation.
Taking care to be mindful of the surfaces your dog is walking over is important, however even when you're watchful it's still possible for your pooch to walk over glass or other sharp objects which could lacerate their paws or pads.
And Schnabel's lacerating Hope — which thematically works now as well as it did then — reflects a mordant awareness that American opulence belies the existential mess and submerged guilt suggested by paintings like Jean - Michel Basquiat's jangled LNAPRK and Keith Haring's untitled piece alongside it.
With a lacerating irony, they also examined the ways in which the mass media and art shape collective and individual identities.
The lacerated, broken, and battered body goes unnoticed in Colombia, where there is a simultaneous depiction and «normalization» of violence (which is normal and norm at the same time).
Perhaps it might be worth checking a few more of Delingpole's sources in «Killing the earth to Save It» which is described by News Corp. columnist Andrew Bolt on the back cover as «wonderful» with «devastating facts and lacerating anecdotes».
His injuries included a head injury, fractured facial bones, a punctured lung, multiple broken ribs, lacerated spleen, and shattered elbow and knee which required numerous surgeries.
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