Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

16 Sentences With "stooping down"

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

"Whoa," my friend Karen says, stooping down to pick up a bag in the hot spring.
She paused briefly, stooping down to rest her cheek on the coffin, then patted it gently.
A park ranger on Saturday found the man, Andrew Schneck, stooping down near the statue of a Confederate lieutenant in Hermann Park.
But JVC is finally stooping down to serve the masses with a more traditional DLP-based 43K HDR projector at a (relatively) affordable $2,499 price point.
As Burke spoke, the camera slowly panned up Johnson's body—a disconcerting red carpet practice that became slightly notorious after Cate Blanchett criticized it at the 2014 Oscars, stooping down to meet E!
And he pointed to the grisette, who was now stooping down by the side of the workgirl.
Owen followed him within the hut, and stooping down to the fire, lighted a piece of bogwood to enable him to see.
Sewayiah Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Mississippi. Sewayiah is a name derived from the Choctaw language purported to mean "deer bending down, deer stooping down". Variant names are "Chewah Creek" and "Line Creek".
Sun, Y. H., Huang, Y. K., Tsai, W. H., Hong, S. Y., & Chen, C. C. (2009). Breeding-season diet of the mountain hawk-eagle in southern Taiwan. Journal of Raptor Research, 43(2), 159-164. Typically, the mountain hawk-eagle tends to still-hunt from a concealed perch in foliage, stooping down to take prey.
Gabriel is seen clad in pink and gold with multi-coloured wings stooping down with his gaze fixed on Mary. He is seen with his arms bent at the elbow with his hands crossed over his chest gesturing to Mary. Mary is depicted as sweet and innocent, yet taken aback by Gabriel's arrival. Her innocence and virginity is represented by the 'Hortus Conclusus' seen through the fence and the window in the background.
One man jumped on his back and choked him; another beat him with a brick. Wilson walked on as unperturbed as he could, stooping down to pick up his hat. While the students entered the school building, Wilson was hit over the head with a brick, and then was beaten more as he walked to his car. One of the people he hired at the Tri- State Defender was Dorothy Butler Gilliam.
In British-ruled India, Sembattayan, a naive and illiterate villager, is the sole breadwinner of his family in Vandicholai. He makes a living by selling betel leaves, covering fast distances by foot. His mother gets him married to Nandhini, an educated and modern woman from a neighbouring village. The villagers are surprised that Sembattayan has such a wife and start suspecting her character for stooping down to the level of marrying Sembattayan, who is a complete mismatch for her.
On the beach, a young woman enters a bathing box to change from her bathing costume to her street clothes. A young dandy, attempting to flirt with the woman, stops at a seaside restaurant near the bathing box to write her an amorous note. The woman, seeing him writing, quickly changes places with her husband in a neighboring bathing box. The dandy, stooping down to slip his note under the door, is taken by surprise when the husband pours a pitcher of water on him.
A mountain hawk-eagle stooping down among the trees in Uttarakhand. Mountain hawk-eagles are well adapted to living in forests. As is the case for all Nisaetus species, their physical form and flight style is typical of forest-dwelling raptors in general and is often found to be roughly comparable to the features of true hawks or Accipiters in particular larger species such as the occasionally sympatric Northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis). Like most other forest raptors, mountain hawk-eagles (and Nisaetus species in general) have a long tail, short broad wings and relatively long but powerful legs, all of which impart greater maneuverability and quicker strike times in denser wooded hunting grounds than other raptorial body plans.
The following news item from the Geelong Advertiser of 10 July 1849 shows the attitude of scepticism towards gold finds that were being brought into towns like Geelong during the pre-goldrush period: > GOLD.-A specimen of this valuable mineral was brought into town yesterday, > having been picked up in a locality near the Wardy-yallock River. Of the > identity of the metal there can be no mistake; but whether it was really > taken from the spot indicated, or intended merely as a hoax or perhaps a > swindle, it is quite impossible, at the present moment, to say. The piece > exhibited, is of very small size; but, of course, as in all such instances, > the lucky finder can obtain tons from the same spot by the simple mode of > stooping down and picking it up.
3.) Although many modern accounts situate the event in the 1890s, it seems certain that, on the (1925) account of Gerald Brosnan, a former Geelong (VFA) team- mate or Rankin, it happened during the time that Brosnan was playing for Fitzroy (viz., 1900-1909), that it happened at the Brunswick Street Oval, that it took place on an extremely wet day (the playing conditions on the Brunswick Street Oval were notoriously bad on wet days due to the slush and mud that ran from one end of the ground to the other), and that Jim D'Helin was the umpire: ::By the way, Ted was instrumental in having the clause regarding wet day bouncing inserted in the rules. Playing against us at Fitzroy on a very wet day, when it was impossible to bounce the ball, Ted conceived the brilliant idea of running 10 yards, stooping down and touching the ground with the ball, and going on. He got only the first 10 yards, however, for [James Otto] Jimmy D'Helin, who, I think, was the umpire, free-kicked him, though undoubtedly he was wrong in doing so.

No results under this filter, show 16 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.