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15 Sentences With "catches something"

How to use catches something in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "catches something" and check conjugation/comparative form for "catches something". Mastering all the usages of "catches something" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And then the next minute, CLUNK — the hoover catches something in the floor.
She catches something, and soon her body is covered in goo and she's puking black ooze.
Then one of them catches something – something so big that it drags the entire boat with it.
Every time she catches something new, she has it follow her just to see what it looks like.
Sharing was, and is, a "vital strategy" for hunter-gatherers to get fed in return when someone else catches something.
"My child is at risk from being injured from a vaccine and your child is potentially at risk if my son catches something," she said.
And in the middle of the pan, the camera catches something else in the corner — a mirror, reflecting back the portion of the video we've just seen.
Jasmina Metwaly's video diptych "Tahrir Square: Cut Skin"/ "Metro Vent" (21980), catches something of the abstract powerful swoosh of mass movement, as does Henri Michaux's "Sans titre" ("Untitled," 21990).
That overstates the former's virtue but it catches something of the latter's boozy tartuffery.
He's out fishing with a naturalist. He was there for the sake of science, and the author for the sake of friendship and curiosity.Stages on Life's Way, Hong p. 189. He catches something wrapped in "oil cloth" and finds a box with the papers of this section of the book inside, much like the Greeks kept hope in a box this box contained guilt.
When it catches something, it carries it to the nearest tree or bush, pins it down with its foot, and kills and eats the prey. This species has also been seen using its beak to tear apart rotten wood and inspecting cattle dung in the search for food. It may also land on the backs of cattle to search for parasites. It can also chase flying insects, which it does on foot, abruptly changing direction and taking flying leaps after its prey.
Crucially, though, it fails to tell us anything we didn't already know." Anthony Quinn of The Independent said thought "The director James Erskine catches something of the mood ("Nessun Dorma" is in there too), but offers nothing in the way of perspective or second thoughts." Philip French of The Observer said, "The film is strictly for nostalgists and students of visual and verbal clichés." Phil of De Semlyen of Empire rated the film 2/5 and called it "Nostalgic viewing for fans that offers up too little by way of fresh insights.
She offers compassion for the abductor, and says that all little boys, including the abductor when he was one, deserve a happy childhood. She tells him she's sorry if he did not have one, that she does not see him as an ugly, dirty old man, and that she hopes that if he ever goes fishing and catches something he cooks it for Jacob. She writes that she and her family are looking for answers, that only he can answer them, and that she wants to know what became of Jacob after the kidnapping. The letter generated some tips, but nothing substantial.
Skull of C. isolomus now a synonym of C. aguti In 1882, Edward Cope described a fragmentary skull from the Lower Permian of Texas collected by W. F. Cummins at Coffee Creek as Ectocynodon aguti. The name had then been revised several times by different paleontologists as more genera were discovered. In 1911, paleontologist Ermine Cowles Case revised the recently discovered species. He decided to refer P. (Ectodynodon) aguti, P. aduncus, and P. isolomus to Captorhinus, and established a new family, Captorhinidae.Fox 1996 Named by Cope from the Latin word, “captor,” meaning “one who catches something,” and the Greek word, “rhino,” meaning, “of the nose.” This is based on the theory that the characteristically curved premaxilla of Captorhinus may have been used to catch prey.
"While watching this obstinate quest for the perfect gesture, I realized that I was living what I had always been expecting : a circus instant".Paul de Cordon, Instants de Cirque, Chêne 1977 Instants de Cirque is the title of Cordon's most famous book and the concept he described as key to his circus images. This "instant" has some similarity with the "decisive moment" evoked by Henri Cartier-Bresson; it is the opposite of luck or accident, but rather a tiny fragment of time when the photographer’s eye catches something that other eyes do not. One of Cordon’s famous pictures, "Three zebras", shot at the Amsterdam Zoo in 1957 and published all around the world,LIFE, March 16, 1962 is an example of something common that suddenly becomes unique.

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