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30 Sentences With "draw breath"

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

And as long as I draw breath, none ever will.
No reason to get up in the morning, or even draw breath.
Perhaps there is no need to remind readers that whales must routinely breach the ocean's surface to draw breath.
Because as long as we're privileged to draw breath, life is a grace and none of us know what's around the bend.
Similarly, a fantasy squad that's been eliminated has no business meddling in the doings of those of us who still draw breath.
He started fighting to draw breath, and called his wife Angela and their 12-year-old daughter Aerin, who were grocery shopping at a nearby Kroger.
"And even that small number still have the opportunity, as long as they draw breath, to live up to the example of John McCain," she continued.
All the while, Mr. Lichtenstein hardly seemed to pause to draw breath, and those who dealt with him knew he was a man with a mission.
The audience knows it is witnessing something special: Not in a long while have I encountered a crowd so attentive that it seemed hardly to draw breath.
" I also recall the words Plato attributed to Socrates during his trial: "As long as I draw breath and am able, I shall not cease to practice philosophy.
But my father never cared what they thought and even that small number still have the opportunity, as long as they draw breath, to live up to the example of John McCain.
"The OPEC deal has given us a chance to stop and draw breath," said Zotov, adding that INK was using the time "to touch up the paint here, do some repairs there".
To ensure the future of music, Congress must pass the Living Artists Act, which will guarantee a 25 percent set-aside in performance venues and online subscription service play for artists who still draw breath.
All the don't-give-no-fucks fellas who still draw breath in Westeros are in this Game of Thrones version of Ocean's Eleven, and we pray to the gods old and new that they devote episode 6 to this possessed posse.
"As long as we're privileged to draw breath, life is a grace and none of us know what's around the bend," Steenburgen, 93, told Clinton, according to an essay the Book Club actress wrote for #StillWithHer by former White House photographer Barbara Kinney.
It's precisely this conflict that makes Wolowiec's work so compelling: its outward tranquility and clean, classic forms are translucent shells masking an intense and constant struggle: to draw breath; to form words; to hear and understand; to bend language to mean what it should.
A few have resented that fire for the light it cast upon them, for the truth it revealed about their character, but my father never cared what they thought and even that small number still have the opportunity as long as they draw breath to live up to the example of John McCain.
A few have resented that fire for that light it cast upon them, for the truth it revealed about their character, but my father never cared what they thought, and even that small number still have the opportunity as long as they draw breath to live up to the example of John McCain.
It's a place of modern miracles, where babies whose lungs are too small to draw breath are made to breathe, their tissues forcibly inflated and deflated by tubes connected to machines; where parents burn quietly while they watch each new heartbeat register on the glowing screen above their baby's incubator, unable to look away, in a slow immolation that can last for days or weeks or months.
The extent to which Americans have struggled to love soccer due to its chaotic, freeform nature, its attritional, low-scoring routes to victory, defeat or parity has often been overstated, but while the tide seems to slowly be turning amid a sea of stats-crazed Yanks getting into the game, it's still difficult to escape the feeling that its popularity would increase relative to other American sports if only it could be a little more cinematic—if it were something that took place in short, scripted bursts, and had a more obvious plot line than any that could be offered up by 22 players relentlessly shifting in and out of position with very little downtime to analyze and draw breath in between.
Draw Breath is the third album released by The Nels Cline Singers in 2007. It featured both abrasive musical textures and gentler compositions such as "Caved-In Heart Blues" and "The Angel of Angels," the latter of which The New York Times called one of the prettiest works of Nels Cline's career. The New York Times, June 24, 2007.
Owen promises to help Parker face his fear of death, but Parker suffers another heart attack. Unable to draw breath himself, Owen cannot perform CPR, and Parker dies. Tosh tells Owen that energy levels of "the Pulse" have increased off the scale and the device may explode with nothing to prevent it. Owen holds the object, telling the team he’ll try to absorb its energy.
Testing out his new concoction, he discovered that he could cause the native brown-spotted horned toad (or lizard) to fall asleep and become temporarily unconscious. Out of curiosity, he cut open a toad to take a closer look at the internal organs. He recorded everything that happened, noting that the heart continued beating and the lungs continued to draw breath. Afterwards, he carefully closed the wound with supplies from his mother's sewing kit.
This is because of the female's oestrous cycle; as with most large mammals, male hippo spermatozoa is active year-round. Studies of hippos in Zambia and South Africa also showed evidence of births occurring at the start of the wet season. After becoming pregnant, a female hippo will typically not begin ovulation again for 17 months. Preserved hippopotamus fetus Mating occurs in the water, with the female submerged for most of the encounter, her head emerging periodically to draw breath.
Boyd did not order an assault until the middle of the afternoon. On the American right, the 21st U.S. Infantry under Colonel Eleazer Wheelock Ripley advanced and drove the British skirmish line back through the woods, for almost a mile. Here they paused to draw breath, and were joined by the 12th and 13th U.S. Infantry from Coles' brigade. (Where Swartwout's other two regiments were at this point is unclear). Ripley and Coles resumed their advance along the edge of the woods, but were startled to see a line of redcoats (the 2nd/89th, on Morrison's left flank) rise up out of concealment and open fire.
Bowling primarily from over the wicket, his accuracy, changes of pace, and movement in both directions, coupled with a leg stump line to a packed leg-side field, made scoring off him difficult. He achieved his success in a manner not dissimilar to Derek Underwood a generation later. His accuracy and stamina allowed Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller, one of Australia's finest fast bowling pairs of all time, to draw breath between short and incisive bursts of pace and swing. Standing 6 feet 2 inches (187 cm), he was particularly effective on sticky wickets, reducing his speed to slow medium pace and using a repertoire of off cutters, inswingers, outswingers and leg breaks.
Socrates says that his wisdom is in being aware that he is ignorant on this, and other topics. ;Precedence of authority Regarding a citizen's obedience to authority, Socrates says that a lawful authority, either human or divine, should always be obeyed. In a conflict of obedience to such authorities, he thinks that obeying divine authority supersedes obeying human authority: "Gentlemen, I am your grateful and devoted servant, but I owe a greater obedience to the [Delphic] god than to you; and, as long as I draw breath and have my faculties, I shall never stop practising philosophy"(29d). As a spokesman for the Oracle at Delphi, he is to spur the Athenians to greater awareness of ethics and moral conduct and always shall question and argue.
Torture of the English by the Dutch according to the English account Agents of the Dutch East India Company used a precursor to waterboarding during the Amboyna massacre of English prisoners, which took place on the island of Amboyna in the Molucca Islands in 1623. At that time, it consisted of wrapping cloth around the victim's head, after which the torturers "poured the water softly upon his head until the cloth was full, up to the mouth and nostrils, and somewhat higher, so that he could not draw breath but he must suck in all the water". In one case, the torturer applied water three or four times successively until the victim's "body was swollen twice or thrice as big as before, his cheeks like great bladders, and his eyes staring and strutting out beyond his forehead".
Unable to draw breath, individuals in a crowd can also be crushed while standing. Journalistic misuse of the term "stampede", says Edwin Galea of the University of Greenwich, is the result of "pure ignorance and laziness ... it gives the impression that it was a mindless crowd only caring about themselves, and they were prepared to crush people." In reality, individuals are directly crushed by others nearby who have no choice, and those who can choose are too distant from the epicenter to be aware of what is happening. Among causes of fatal crushes, sometimes described as "crazes", is when a large crowd is trying to get toward something; typically occurring when members at the back of a large crowd continue pushing forward not knowing that those at the front are being crushed, or because of something that forces them to move.
Then they bound a cloth about his neck and face so > close, that little or no water could go by. That done, they poured the water > softly upon his head until the cloth was full, up to the mouth and nostrils, > and somewhat higher; so that he could not draw breath, but he must with all > suck in the water: which being still continued to be poured in softly, > forced all his inward parts, come out of his nose, ears, eyes, and often as > it were stifling and choking him, at length took away his breath, and > brought him to a swoon or fainting. Then they took him quickly down, and > made him vomit up the water. Being a little recovered, they trussed him up > again, and poured water as before, taking him down as soon as he seemed to > be stifled.

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