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"perspired" Antonyms

19 Sentences With "perspired"

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

But I perspired on them so much that the metal inside was totally rusted and started to smell.
If, in the presence of others, a woman grew red and perspired heavily, then she was a witch. . . .
I haven't perspired on it enough to test its sweat resistance or fumbled it to see how tough it is.
Nixon lost that debate, and the election, according to some reports, because he perspired during the broadcast, while Kennedy looked cool and collected.
We've looked at putting clothing that's already perspired on and has an odor into an airlock and exposing it to the vacuum of space.
Since cashmere is odor resistant, I wore it several times before washing — I've even perspired in it — and found it to be odor-free.
Hours before the show, dozens of wrestlers, many of whom were just there to network, perspired in the empty gym, chatting and thumbing at their phones.
It might seem silly to focus so much on footwear, but those Wallabies—and the bit of sweat he perspired onstage—revealed more about Ive than anything he said.
Trump's face perspired as he lashed out at critics after a stressful week during which his former lawyer Michael Cohen accused the president in congressional testimony of breaking the law.
But at the same time, during an actual hot flash induced by the hot suit, the exercisers perspired less and showed a lower rise in skin temperature than the control group.
The contestants rolled up their sleeves and took to their plates of hot dogs on the stage, lining up their cups of water in a strategic array, as thousands of perspired onlookers watched with anticipation.
At the time of Asr Salaah, although the pain had decreased, weakness did not permit him to attend salah in the Haram. Thus, he performed Asr Salaah at home behind Moulvi Sayyid Ahmad. Despite his weakness, he stood and performed his salah. His weakness increased and, instead of feeling feverish, he started to feel cold and perspired.
He perspired so much that…a miniature lake (formed) around the slab.”Utica Observer, August 20, 1917, p. 2 He died in 1936 in the city of his birth, aged 58. Early in the 21st century, the photographic archives of the Chicago Daily News were posted online. Although his teammates’ photographs were easily identified, the image of Pounds remained unidentified, or occasionally misidentified as Doc Adkins, for at least a decade.
He was helped by the rest of the costume crew who used hairdryers to hasten the process. Steve Binder claimed that Presley's outfit needed cleaning not just because he perspired, but because he had ejaculated while performing. For the 8 pm show, individual rubber mats were placed at the feet of Presley and the band. During the first show, the producers were concerned about the effects of the toe tapping on the recordings.
Haruo Nakajima perspired inside the suit so much that the Yagi brothers had to dry out the cotton lining every morning and sometimes re-line the interior of the suit and repair damages. The typhoon waves were created by stagehands who overturned barrels of water into a water tank where the miniature Odo Island shoreline was built. Multiple composition shots were used for the Odo Island scenes. Most of the Odo Island scenes were filmed near rice fields.
Swami Akhandananda (1864–1937), whose original name was Gangadhar Ghatak, had met Paramahamsadev at Bosepara when he was just 13 years old. Later he introduced him to Swami Vivekananda. As a boy he performed strict spiritual disciplines, bathing four times a day in the Ganges, he cooked his own vegetarian food and practiced so much pranayama (breathing exercise) that his body perspired and shook. He also practiced kumbhaka (retaining the breath) by diving in the Ganges and holding a stone.
The King remained in bed, in his nightshirt and a short wig. The Grand Chamberlain of France or, in his absence, the Chief Gentleman of the Bedchamber presented holy water to the king from a vase that stood at the head of the bed and the king's morning clothes were laid out. First, the Master of the Bedchamber and the First Servant, both high nobles, pulled the king's nightshirt over his head, one grasping each sleeve. The Grand Chamberlain presented the day shirt which, according to Saint-Simon, had been shaken out and sometimes changed, because the king perspired freely.
Brandwein was known as much for his colorful personality as for his musical talent, sometimes playing with a neon sign, reading "Naftule Brandwein Orchestra", around his neck, and with his back facing the audience, to conceal his fingering tricks. He also wore plugged-in Christmas lights as part of his costume on several occasions, which once shorted out when he perspired too much, almost electrocuting him. His wild style incorporated the many strands of Eastern European Jewish music which was influenced by Greek, Turkish, Hungarian and Gypsy music. His warm and lively playing style would constantly jump up and down the scale and express itself in trills, slides and other ornamentation; he is often contrasted to the other famous klezmer clarinettist of his time, Dave Tarras, who had a different style of sound and phrasing.
Goodman, p.36 The architect was Walter Emden, whose surviving London theatres are the Duke of York's, and (in collaboration) the Garrick and Royal Court theatres. Old and New London described the theatre thus: The "sunlight" referred to above was a glass roof giving the auditorium natural light, day and night, and allowing ventilation at all times: in an age of gas lighting, the latter would have been a marked advantage.Goodman, p. 36 By contrast, at the adjoining Opera Comique audiences "perspired and gasped."Bond, Chapter 4 The rebuilt theatre came under a succession of managements through the 1870s, with few successes. For a season of opéra bouffe in 1871, for which "Royal" was added to the theatre's name, standards were not high enough to attract the public,"Globe Theatre", The Era, 30 April 1871, p.

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