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11 Sentences With "spread eagles"

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

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This element is a sequence of movements that must include free skating moves such as spirals, spread eagles, Ina Bauers, and other flowing moves with strong edges, connected with linking steps. It must include at least three different free skating moves.
Sonja Henie, 1936 Figure skating spins, along with jumps, spirals, and spread eagles were originally individual compulsory figures, sometimes special figures.Hines, p. 100 Unlike jumps, spins were a "graceful and appreciated"Hines, p. 103 part of figure skating throughout the 19th century.
A basic sit spin in a shoot-the-duck position Side-by-side shotgun spins Parallel spread eagles with the male on an inside edge and the female on an outside edge. ; S: The standard abbreviation for the Salchow jump. ; Salchow jump (S): An edge jump that takes off from the back inside edge. Named after Ulrich Salchow.
Moves in the field is a name given to elements of figure skating that emphasize basic skating skill and edge control. In the context of a competitive program, 'moves in the field' include spirals, spread eagles, Ina Bauers, hydroblading, and similar extended edge moves. In the United States, moves in the field also refers to skill tests consisting of progressively more difficult edge and step patterns. Similar concepts are called field moves in the United Kingdom and skating skills in Canada.
Hines (2006), p. 99 He stated, "As scales are the material by which musicians develop the facile technique required to perform major competitions, so compulsory figures were viewed as the material by which skaters develop the facile required for free-skating programs". Hines also stated that although compulsory figures and free skating are often considered as "totally different aspects of figure skating", historically they were not, and insisted that "spirals, spread eagles, jumps, and spins were originally individual figures".Hines (2006), p.
In 2006 the room was refurbished somewhat similarly to its appearance during the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt when the West Wing and current Cabinet Room were largely rebuilt following damages from a fire at the end of the Herbert Hoover administration. This includes Art Deco style wall sconces with spread eagles supporting internally lit globes. Three overhead Moderne style glass pendant lights were recreated from old photographs and a similar surviving example in a hallway between the Oval Office and Roosevelt Room. The room is painted an off-white color called deauville.
Aljona Savchenko and Robin Szolkowy (2005) from Germany perform a spiral Pair teams must perform one choreographic sequence during their free skating programs.Tech Panel, p. 6 According to the ISU, a choreographic sequence "consists of any kind of movements like steps, turns, spirals, arabesques, spread eagles, Ina Bauers, hydroblading, any jumps with maximum of 2 revolutions, spins, small lifts, etc." It begins at the first skating movement and ends when the team begins to prepare to execute the next element, unless the sequence is the last element performed during the program.
According to world champion and figure skating commentator Scott Hamilton, spins are often used "as breathing points or transitions to bigger things" Figure skating spins, along with jumps, spirals, and spread eagles were originally individual compulsory figures, sometimes special figures. Unlike jumps, spins were a "graceful and appreciated" part of figure skating throughout the 19th century. They advanced between World War I and World War II; by the late 1930s, all three basic spin positions were used. There are two types of spins, the forward spin and the backward spin.
Hines (2011), p. 131—132Kestnbaum, p. 91 In 1881, Spuren Auf Dem Eise ("Tracing on the Ice"), "a monumental publication describing the state of skating in Vienna",Hines (2011), p. 66 briefly mentioned jumps, describing three jumps in two pages.Hines (2011), p. 68 Jumping on skates was a part of the athletic side of free skating, and was considered inappropriate for female skaters.Kestnbaum, pp. 91—92 Hines stated that free skating movements such as spirals, spread eagles, spins, and jumps were originally individual compulsory figures, and sometimes special figures. For example, Austrian skater Axel Paulsen, whom Hines called "progressive",Hines (2011), p. 132 performed the first jump in competition, the Axel, which was named after him, at the first international competition in 1882, as a special figure.Hines (2006), p. 100 Jumps were also related to their corresponding figure; for example, the loop jump.
PC Zone described the game as being "so inexorably, mindbogglingly ignorant of how either real games or real sex works that it spread-eagles itself a fair way into the 'so-bad-it's good' category." The game was considered "oddly compelling" for its quality, which the reviewer compared to "all ten minutes of Michelle from Big Brother decked out in cheap purple underwear staring slackjawed into the camera on the midnight freeview on Television X." The reviewer felt that if the "Bouncin' Boobs Technology" was realistic, "then I've clearly been talking to the wrong kind of girls for the entirety of my life. (Or at least the more recent bits of my life, in which I've been talking to girls.)" Just Adventures Randy Sluganski felt that, although it did not compromise its adult content, Lula 3D had too many glitches and "mediocre" action sequences to be truly enjoyable. Total Video Games's critic Chris Leyton defined the game as "one of the worst titles in recent years".

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