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"underfoot" Definitions
  1. under your feet; on the ground where you are walking

296 Sentences With "underfoot"

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

Wore eyeglasses you wanted to grind underfoot like a butterfly.
The rocks underfoot were slick, and I barked my shin.
Democrats don't want to grind the rights of Republicans underfoot.
They spoke as Ms. Mitchell's two young children played underfoot.
Much better than keeping it underfoot or on my lap.
But excavation of the strata of history buried underfoot is critical.
It was brown and soft underfoot as Nick walked on it.
The unirrigated grass contracts, crackles underfoot and dots with bindii prickle.
Guides remind you to watch your step as gravel crunches underfoot.
Another shows them looking around the hotel, the green carpet underfoot.
In one untraveled corner, grit from construction dust still scraped underfoot.
Squibb Park Bridge in Brooklyn, designed to bounce underfoot, has been demolished.
Pablo offered no response, letting the gesture fall to the tile underfoot.
The grass underfoot doesn't feel like the grass in your front yard.
Legos once were so plentiful they lurked painfully underfoot in my house.
And therein, perhaps, lies the spirit of the untamed, anarchic beauty underfoot.
The ground crackles hollowly underfoot and emits the hiss of bubbling liquid.
Russia Dispatch LAKE BAIKAL, Russia — The ice rumbled and then shook underfoot.
But the ice was getting softer, giving way underfoot in an unnerving fashion.
Wild licorice, fireweed, hawkweed, bastard toadflax and littleleaf pussytoes created a carpet underfoot.
She changed a light bulb as Whishaw looked around, the floor creaking underfoot.
I stepped towards them — my feet crunching in the sand that was suddenly underfoot.
Curiosity can see Martian mountains in the distance with a craggy, rocky surface underfoot.
Kay, meanwhile, finds a sweet spot between bass-heavy R&B and trap underfoot.
He knew that revolutions were fragile things, quick to flight but hollow-boned underfoot.
The loudest sound was the soil: the dry brush, dirt and grass crunches underfoot.
A cliff made of ice creaks underfoot, threatening to give way at any moment.
At Dixon Place, the whole theater is covered in butcher paper, which crinkles underfoot.
Even after death, they pester commuters when their carcasses crunch underfoot on city sidewalks.
Those warm hues, that satisfying crunch underfoot— it's all just a few weeks away.
Patches of a late snow are underfoot and behind him nothing but gray sky.
But in a city that is perpetually rebuilding itself, who controls the remnants buried underfoot?
The bounce underfoot was part of the appeal when the bridge opened in March 2013.
The past is underfoot; the odors of yesterday have come to rest on the ground.
He's constantly underfoot in the kitchen no matter how often we tell him to sit.
"Wore eyeglasses you wanted to grind underfoot like a butterfly," as his friend Turner notes.
You see the huge red sun sinking into the cornfields; you feel the dew underfoot.
"Underground, underfoot and underpowered" became its tagline, with every broadcast sponsored by a different beer.
" At the embassy itself, he found that "broken glass and bits of masonry crunched underfoot.
As broken glass crunched underfoot, Hogg's imagination was at work in concert with her memory.
However, this presumes that there isn't some electoral realignment underfoot, and I think that that's foolish.
I am disappointed in the lack of crunch underfoot, but this has still been quite pleasant.
Cat kibble crunched underfoot, and the oven was open, pushing blazing heat into the cramped space.
They look a bit like the little ones that are always underfoot in Star Wars movies.
Along with the soft blue stuff underfoot, BMW has installed swanky, modern furniture throughout the cabin.
There is literally an attention deficit underfoot, and brands have to work harder to counter that.
Nearby deforestation and gold mining shifted sediment in the region, making the ground less stable underfoot.
There was a pristine wall-to-wall, lightly patterned beige carpet underfoot and crown molding above.
Strolling the grounds, the crunch of wood chips underfoot, Ms. Walls gazed at her plump hydrangeas.
As we walk across the lawn, which bounces pleasantly underfoot, Alesch bends down to pet it.
In fact, only on a rubber mat tucked inside a vestibule does the address appear, underfoot.
"The rights of victims were effectively trampled underfoot, and left to the whims of individuals," he added.
When made right, the filaments of dough—called rziza—crackle in your mouth like pine needles underfoot.
The dusty earth underfoot rises in small clouds as if conjured from its slumber on her command.
Dried grass crackled underfoot as they began a walk that could take them up to 12 miles.
In this part of the world, when the swans are on, everyone knows something's underfoot in Moscow.
It is also heartening that this is not the only bi-partisan effort underfoot tackling climate change.
And yet, 17 years later, as the rivalry resumes in Melbourne, the surface underfoot is grass. Oversight?
And the G-7 leader has done it all from home, with his three young kids underfoot.
Plastic flute shards crack underfoot as people pour out toward Flushing Avenue, log-jammed with honking Ubers.
"Oh, that's the N train," Mr. Hawthorne, 71, tells guests as the busy subway line rumbles underfoot.
A town square with linoleum underfoot, not grass, and fluorescent lighting above, not a Norman Rockwell sky.
It's all slow cooker and roasting and things you can do with a lot of little kids underfoot.
Staggering heights and underfoot views of a swirling modern, high rise city produce feelings of trepidation and exhilaration.
The creature is tortured and trampled underfoot as the crush freak imagines themselves orgasmically exploding under the pressure.
At first, you're introduced to the concept in a nice, safe way, with a big beefy platform underfoot.
My father had hold of my wrist and hurried me along so that the stones rolled underfoot. ♦
Underfoot, overhead and all around, life here pervades every nook and cranny and seeps into my very soul.
The cricket is as likely to bounce into danger underfoot as it is to leap away toward safety.
Nabi Nasseri, who owns Art Underfoot, an antique rug gallery, said he had never worked with Mr. Manafort.
Workers were careful not to step on any cable stretched across the frozen ground, lest it shatter underfoot.
A framed and deposed empress leaps from buildings—and through time—in a world that's constantly shifting underfoot.
In clear plexiglass cages, designed to be stepped upon, they peer up underfoot in an exhibition exploring phobia.
A mile away, the Fisk Quarry Preserve is part of the reef formation, and fossils are everywhere underfoot.
Regardless of how Haring's underfoot shapes and figures came into being, Carroll has since polyurethaned them twice for preservation.
The spirit of 1989 has not been trampled underfoot by Russia's Vladimir Putin and China's Xi Jinping, after all.
A few years ago, the space was filthy, slick with fish guts and rotting produce underfoot, stall owners said.
Whether intentional on Mr. Abloh's part, it was hard to ignore the symbolism he presented of nature trampled underfoot.
Benches made from thick planks of wood lined the shop's walls and the mud-packed floor was cool underfoot.
The animals cluster together when grazing, which makes them exceptionally hard to tally, especially when little lambs are underfoot.
The ground cracks underfoot, and near-boiling pools of acidic water bubble between odd formations of rocks and minerals.
The rugs will be on view for five months, laid out underfoot at the chapel, starting on Oct. 7.
It's not that you want to tell the story from the perspective of sort of people who were underfoot.
These cute floral juttis are no match for the branches crackling underfoot; my stylish dhoti pants are a briar magnet.
That is where fiction excels, and no one chronicles that feeling of the world moving underfoot better than Junichiro Tanizaki.
Summer, probably, because you can hear the chirps of crickets and frogs and feel a thick blanket of astroturf underfoot.
It was hard going because of the roots underfoot, but we safely emerged into fields of long-leaved cardamom plants.
The prick of a nail underfoot is a warning that protects you from a deep, dirty wound—and maybe tetanus.
A swamp underfoot, a fog of cooking fires hanging in the air and clasping at your throat as you breathe.
If you're standing still, you're definitely screwed—so you join in the fray and hope to not get trampled underfoot.
In Elliott Carter's Piano Concerto , written three decades later, the soloist is all but trampled underfoot by a rampaging orchestra.
Former President Barack Obama could seem removed, ever mindful of the minefields underfoot for a black politician emitting fury. Mrs.
Any signs of distress involving these bonds — a rare occurrence — means bigger problems could be underfoot for the financial system.
NORILSK, Russia — On a screen, the California sun beams through the palm fronds and the Walk of Fame gleams underfoot.
The room has atmosphere to spare, with lacy dark wood trellis work and Portuguese tile on the walls and underfoot.
The rescuers were wearing protective gear to shield them from toxic volcanic gases, as well as from the ash underfoot.
He keeps time with a hand drum and sings under a spotlight that reveals only him and the green grass underfoot.
Once-lush lawns now crunch underfoot; fields that formerly grew alfalfa, a thirsty crop, now lie fallow in the Central Valley.
Some have called underfoot monuments disrespectful, with the Munich city government, at the behest of the Jewish community, barring them altogether.
If you owned so much, you could afford to trample it underfoot in a grand gesture, turning everything into a game.
The bridge closed two days after opening in 2000 because it began to sway underfoot, and Arup worked on the repairs.
But with growing secularism and returning expatriates, the number of dogs in his practice tripled, a trend he saw reflected underfoot.
As our reviewer, Harriet Lane, wrote: "You see the huge red sun sinking into the cornfields; you feel the dew underfoot."
You see this in a large charcoal painting study by Rivera of the firebrand revolutionary Emiliano Zapata trampling an enemy underfoot.
Game of Thrones' erstwhile Arya Underfoot proved to be the key to the entire fight — and she'll live to tell the tale.
Its designer, Ted Zoli — the winner of a MacArthur "genius" grant in 2009 — intended it to bounce underfoot as people walked along.
The bridge closed two days after it opened in 2000, because it began to sway underfoot, and Arup worked on the repairs.
The chief justice noted that when children "fall on the playground or tumble from the equipment", pea gravel underfoot "can be unforgiving".
One thing is for certain in this tumultuous time: Major social change is underfoot, and women are at the forefront of it.
Over the last year or two, it's sure felt like a seismic shift's been underfoot in the way tech…Read more Read
The heat is ever more intense, he said, and the parched grass crunching underfoot so sparse it is hardly even noticeable anymore.
Critical Shopper The floor of Em Pty Gallery in SoHo, the first outpost of Off-White in the United States, crunches underfoot.
The dining room is plain-spoken, with scuffed tile underfoot and only a handful of tables, and desserts almost outnumber savory dishes.
Under LA, a program organized by the Huntington-USC Institute on California & the West, explores the life of the metropolis located underfoot.
It was a Tuesday afternoon, and convivial locals were drinking pints of St. Austell's Tribute, a popular regional ale, their dogs underfoot.
Personal bests seem irrelevant when there's so much to look out and think about, from the ground underfoot to the weather overhead.
She lifted her feet at a rapid clip, giving the appearance of sprinting in place as the ropes zipped underfoot and overhead.
The coffin stood on display in front of his uncle's house, as food vendors plied their offerings nearby and children skipped underfoot.
They are left to freeze overnight, then trampled underfoot to remove water and skin, and dried in intense sunlight during the day.
Politically correct bureaucrats in federal agencies have been treating religious freedom as an afterthought at best, and trampling it underfoot at worst.
On the one hand, complex formalism conveys gravity, but then is betrayed by an inability to resist slipping a banana peel underfoot.
Asking a few hundred million people to step aside, so that workmen can tend to an invisible problem underfoot, will never be easy.
Bear lumbers through life heedless of his impact; Pinch shrinks, unable to escape the giant's shadow, hoping only to avoid being trampled underfoot.
"Bushy Park is not exactly easy underfoot in some places, which left the eyes looking like he'd been at the sherry," he added.
The point is that when debate gets closed down and nuance gets tramped underfoot and empathy gets battered to death we all lose.
In the midst of his flurried activity, I often feared I was underfoot: a hindrance who needed instruction, rather than a helping hand.
And the unfortunate simulated-wood laminate flooring sounded cheap underfoot and undermined the sense of a five-star hotel in a historic building.
She could be our Dada candidate, a one-person campaign: anarchic, border-breaching, outshouting the loudest shouter, putting patriarchy where it belongs, underfoot.
The landscape of mixed martial arts was shifting underfoot and Frye was making use of the weapons he could as he found them.
"We like the look of it: It's modern, but not too shiny or glitzy," Ms. Akuginow said, adding that it's also comfortable underfoot.
Ms. Cassens's father, Ed Hughes, 63, named every bird that fluttered overhead and distinguished for us the native from the invasive grasses underfoot.
The smattering of slimy husks is a common sight underfoot in the fall, when the Lapides offer wine grapes shipped in from California.
Yoon writes with precision and understatement, maybe the only way you can render a world in which bombs loom overhead and lurk underfoot.
Abou came to view himself as a big brother to the boy, who was often underfoot begging for piggyback rides to the market.
The arrival of one SUV sees soldiers rip out some police-style emergency siren lights from the car's front grill, crushing them underfoot.
It feels and sounds differently, too — the crunch of hearty beach grasses underfoot, the thud of a ball hopping across hard-packed sand.
When Frost describes the land in "The Quest of the Purple-Fringed," he notes "the chill of the meadow underfoot" despite the sun overhead.
It made the earth, that seemed so solid, Main Street, that seemed so well- paved, a kind of vast jelly, quivering and dividing underfoot.
The first shot is a typical Instagram modeling photo, and the second shows that Ford is actually in pajama pants with a dog underfoot.
That probably means some of you taller, larger folks won't be able to use a pair of the $40 Jetts without them breaking underfoot.
Along a pedestrian bridge connecting Terminal A with a parking garage, an aerial view of the Sacramento River spreads out underfoot for 150 feet.
A man who has been crushed underfoot by the elite, dragged down by equality-demanding feminists and climbed over by upstart nonwhite and immigrant masses.
Consequently, a movement has been underfoot for years to abandon the current account practice around loan guarantees and instead use something called fair value accounting.
Poor rains meant the results were mixed but nevertheless, "if there wasn't this project, we would die," Hitasoa said as withered maize stalks crunched underfoot.
But if you think those plastic building units are forever underfoot in your home, imagine 4.66 million of them in 65,303 square feet of space.
A viewer like me, who watches only movies on TCM and occasional animal shows on National Geographic, with no little grandchildren running underfoot, is lost.
Wool tends to be more expensive than most plant-based materials, but it is stain resistant, softer underfoot and durable enough to last for centuries.
Dora the Explorer and Daniel Tiger might seem like the perfect babysitters for toddlers, preschoolers and young grade schoolers, who may be running wild underfoot.
The outer gate looked intact, he recalled, but as they walked deeper into the corridors, they could hear the sound of broken glass crunching underfoot.
Near the airfield, shards of metal crack underfoot as two military personnel take measurements of the gaping crater left behind by one of the missiles.
My boots slipped and slid underfoot as I made my way past a man talking loudly on a cellphone in what I think was Bengali.
One day, she said, she found herself taking a toy away from a boy who was playing with it in class, and then smashing it underfoot.
Already, there are two clinical trials using CRISPR in humans underfoot in China, and a US trial is slated to begin sometime in the next year.
At one point in the chaos, Allen was nearly trampled underfoot, but he said a police officer helped him get up and out of the way.
While women still don't receive equal pay, the new research suggests that change could be underfoot with how we typically view traditionally male and female qualities.
And she considers the land's sumptuous beauty deceptive, for she is certain that death lingers underfoot, the deaths of slaves who tilled and built the land.
Her eyes welled up behind Ray-Bans as she scooped up a handful of ripe, sweet nuts that had been crunching underfoot on the walk over.
CASTEL GIORGIO, ITALY — Fausto Carotenuto, the owner of a spiritual wellness and yoga center in Umbria, the ancient Etruscan heartland of Italy, senses bad energy underfoot.
Mr. Rorandelli, a Rome-based photographer who specializes in global social and environmental issues, was struck by how the locals dealt with the deadly reality underfoot.
On occasion, the federal government of the United States has also had to intervene to safeguard the rights of minority groups who have been trampled underfoot.
At the same time, he also finds it frightening to become emotionally hardened like ice underfoot in the northeastern regions that made up China's Rust Belt.
In another scene Rike drags bottles out of storage, in readiness to deliver them to the fishing boat —subsequently, the misplaced water is an obstruction, rolling underfoot.
Something sinister slithers underfoot, a crumbling authoritarianism, employing increasingly repressive measures to hold back the same chaos it's unleashed, something that's already leaving bodies in the streets.
He wanted the pedestrian bridge to bounce slightly underfoot as it zigged and zagged from Squibb Park, at Columbia Heights and Middagh Street, down toward the park.
Each shift in the light coaxed rainbows from the bog pools, transforming the ground underfoot from a rotting cabbage stew to a sumptuous carpet, luxuriant and kaleidoscopic.
Now that kitchens — once teeming with color and pattern — have gone neutral, some are using rugs to add visual punch, not to mention softness and warmth underfoot.
Underfoot was soft, powdery snow — 19603 inches in Central Park, which broke a 30-year-old snow record for the date, according to the National Weather Service.
She remembers where the floor's radiant heat pipes created patchworks of warm and cool underfoot, and how to slither outdoors unseen through slit windows at ground level.
Being made of paper, however, the work was not to be long-lived after its Saturday reveal, with most of it destroyed underfoot by visitors to the work.
So fire crew members work in line, hacking at the hardened ground, chopping down trees, sawing off brushes and yanking out roots hidden underfoot to clear the land.
Stiff underfoot and designed to reduce vibration throughout, it's designed to be the ride of choice for tackling big lines, both on the hill or in the backcountry.
Poisoning risks also lurk underfoot in some city areas, where past industrial or vehicle emissions, trash incineration, and runoff from buildings with old paint have tainted the soil.
But Woods, whose last major championship was 10 years ago, is not buoyed on the eve of this championship just by the firm condition of the grass underfoot.
Driven by the dangers of the trade war, many foreign companies with stakes in China — those ants underfoot — have started shifting production away from China to Southeast Asia.
The lack of wind and softness underfoot left the 6,697-yard course all but defenseless and allowed Wie to use her high-flying lofted woods to great effect.
A set of steel signs installed in the gallery's courtyard suggest a Native American claim to that world, or part of it, namely the New York land underfoot.
Beyond it we hear the constant thud of artillery and mortars, a sound "like soda cans crushed underfoot" and a sinister whine of car alarms accidentally set off.
Waking up at dawn, I caught the breathtaking sunrise and, after a quick breakfast, popped on my skis and sailed out the door as fresh powder whispered underfoot.
Aluminum frames make these snowshoes light—around 35 ounces each—and steel crampons underfoot make them tough enough to stomp over gravel and boulders without losing their edge.
Retailers are marking down TVs of all sorts, including 4K Ultra HD TVs and Roku Smart TVs, so you can see every blade of grass that'll be trampled underfoot.
"If you even approach the refrigerator in our home she's right there underfoot to (loudly) encourage you to pull out some cheese or other snack for her," she says.
This features make them excellent for hiking and white-water rafting since you need something cushioned enough to keep you from feeling the acute pressure of jagged rocks underfoot.
"Security personnel, who are friendly to me, warned me that plans were underfoot to eliminate me once arrested and taken to a police station," Mnangagwa said in a Nov.
On Thanksgiving, that number swelled to more than 20—it's a wonder the family shih tzu, hilariously named Mink because she resembled a mink stole, was not trampled underfoot.
The soft sandstone of the staircases crumbles underfoot, so that the very act of climbing them is at least in part a guilty pleasure — though no longer very dangerous.
"Sometimes decks and stone patios get really hot," Mr. Klausing said, and having rugs underfoot can keep you from feeling like you're walking on a bed of burning coals.
Writing with her first reader literally underfoot, Ogawa's narrator struggles to complete her manuscript — a novel-within-the-novel about a captive typist — even as her inner resources deteriorate.
Writing with her first reader literally underfoot, Ogawa's narrator struggles to complete her manuscript — a novel-within-the-novel about a captive typist — even as her inner resources deteriorate.
The works do consist of fabric woven into these delirious hybrids between updated design, traditional forms and a fine art aesthetic that ensures they will never be used underfoot.
There was a milk cow, a few horses, a couple of pigs, and chickens: white laying hens, some in a chalet-shaped coop and some skittering underfoot between the trees.
Inside the house, kids were everywhere, seemingly as much underfoot as the chickens were: Richard, Mary, and the twins (Peter and Paul); Steve, Ronnie, and Mike; Christopher, Christine, and Lisa.
The apartment is so small that it's impossible to not be underfoot, so our Saturday ritual is to get breakfast at our favorite coffee shop while she works her magic.
For someone like Roup, who's on her feet dancing all day, it makes sense to wear a shoe like the GEL-Kayano because it has more substance underfoot, he says.
The decor is rustic in a way befitting heartfelt Mediterranean food — think roughly hewn wooden benches and gravel underfoot — and eminently more romantic than the view from the road suggests.
There are plans underfoot to mount a large-scale attack on the disparate impact tool's application in other civil rights areas, including education, employment, health, environmental justice, transportation and policing.
Instead of considering skyward expansion, Under LA, a program organized by the Huntington-USC Institute on California & the West, looks underground to explore the life of the metropolis located underfoot.
Inside, it was hardly a charming space — sparsely decorated with worn beige tiles underfoot and large fluorescent lights overhead, along with a large inflatable Spiderman doll hanging from the ceiling.
In a room on the ground floor, the words "look up" are painted underfoot, tilting visitors' heads back to take in the ceiling, with an image of the swirling cosmos.
The brick-and-mortar home has always held an ambivalent power for women: For centuries, it has been a place where we're either sheltered or relegated, in charge or underfoot.
Having failed to find the Saxon treasure that we know was buried under the farm they scanned in Season 1, they're now failing to find another medieval artifact that's directly underfoot.
"Security personnel, who are friendly to me, warned me that plans were underfoot to eliminate me once arrested and taken to a police station," Mnangagwa said in a November 221 statement.
But after covering the recent New York Toy Fair with a pair of Dr. Scholl's custom inserts underfoot, I'm sold on the idea of splurging a bit to treat my feet.
It documents a 2003 performance in which four pairs of pit bulls faced each other on treadmills, running at each other but stuck in place by harnesses and the treadmills underfoot.
The Luxury Cotton Hotel-Spa Tub-Shower Bath Mat Set is made from completely natural cotton that feels great underfoot and adds a touch of classic style to your home décor.
The family's two shiba inus were underfoot, the coffee table was decorated with back issues of astronomy and archaeology magazines and the whole place smelled faintly but persistently of maple syrup.
Question: What are some solutions for living with a pet in a small space without having their stuff (litter box, toys, food dishes, etc.) constantly underfoot — or worse, stinking up the place?
For several years, hundreds of heroin addicts lived beneath the bridges, on river banks carpeted with used needles that crunched underfoot — as hollow as the countless grant proposals that never produced solutions.
I enjoy other people's children enough, but sometimes I just want to have a glass of wine at a bar with my buddy and not have to worry about a toddler underfoot.
Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism who would take the work of generations and trample it underfoot on behalf of a populism as heedless and crude as the Donald himself.
Very few hotels in Key West, or anywhere in South Florida, feature wall-to-wall, wavy-patterned threads underfoot, but all 96 rooms at the two-acre Marker Waterfront Resort include carpeting.
Many watched aghast as Ms. Husar, a single mother who had been a victim of domestic violence for decades, was trampled underfoot by a phalanx of camera operators and anonymous party operatives.
Some might also think of birdsong and insects, or summon thoughts of thick foliage in the understory, the crunch of leaves or pine needles underfoot, or overgrown trails meandering into the thicket.
There is a spacious ground floor and a mezzanine, with the main floor darkly decorated with black tiles underfoot, black painted wood trim and charcoal gray fabric; the upstairs has exposed brick.
I got a solid start, building up enough speed to match that of the wave, but the wave somehow ran under me and then broke underfoot, and I pitch-poled down the face.
So are the sounds of the Amazon rain forest, the shriek of birds, the crackle of leaves underfoot, the chatter of children, the whine of mosquitoes and the roar of a Cessna plane.
The farm is remote and sylvan, with horses grazing alongside the winding drive, dogs underfoot and a menagerie of colorful birds in the greenhouse sharing a glass wall with the open dining area.
Outside, it was still very hot, but the tent was air-conditioned, and there was soft grass underfoot, partly covered with throw rugs; in the winter months, polo is played on the turf.
The troubled 450-foot Squibb Park Bridge, a pedestrian shortcut from Brooklyn Heights to Brooklyn Bridge Park, was designed to mimic the light, airy trail bridges found in state parks, bouncing slightly underfoot.
The slate blue ice and white snow merge seamlessly into the sky so that when you leave the shoreline, with brittle tiles of ice cracking underfoot, it feels like stepping into a cloud.
Our Gabrielle Hamilton makes a powerful argument for cooking a pork shoulder on an outdoor grill this weekend, even if — and perhaps especially if — the glass is at zero and there's snow underfoot.
Lower-frequency airwaves: These aren't typically seen as useful for 5G, but as such signals carry far and help with rural coverage, there are still some efforts underfoot to apply them to the race.
Yet scientists have discovered that just as a big holiday sale can quickly crush the wisdom of a human crowd underfoot, so can a microbial village be infected with mass stupidity, to devastating effect.
A rug need not be the star of the show — it's often better if it isn't, but when aiming for cozy, look for materials that feel good underfoot and invite you into the room.
The tires easily adjust pressure for different types of terrain underfoot such as ice or sand – and when it hits water they transform into a sort of raft, allowing the tiny tank to automatically float.
"Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism who would take the work of generations and trample it underfoot on behalf of a populism as heedless and crude as The Donald himself," the editorial said.
"A little less conversation, a little more action please/All this aggravation ain't satisfactioning me" He sang it again and again and again and as he sang we began to feel the earth tremor underfoot.
In just one weekend, more than 66,000 tourists looking to take the perfect shot for Instagram flooded the town, causing gridlock and standstill traffic in the streets, crushing poppies underfoot, and fainting in the heat.
Hagenauer's sculpture of Anthony, carved with virtuosic dexterity in the round from a walnut log, displays subject matter that is congruent with the earliest legends of Anthony — the saint struggling with a single demon underfoot.
Yes, the fire is less than blazing and a few of the cushions are threadbare, but the chairs are covered in a cheerful green, the rug looks soft underfoot and the lamps cast a warm glow.
The death of David Bowie began the year with an alarming sense of something shifting underfoot, but there is no sign of crumbling or even cracks in the rock monument Mr. Frey built with Don Henley.
But no matter how many spotted lanternflies they crush underfoot, they cannot seem to keep the hordes of the invasive insect from flapping in their faces, sucking nutrients from valuable vineyards and lurking in their nightmares.
Jenny George's exquisitely spare meditation never allows us to stray from the harsh realities of rural subsistence; the livestock's wintry snorts may recall the warm breath of just-baked bread, but cold muck still tugs underfoot.
On New Zealand's Volcano, Knee-Deep Ash and Boiling Water Underfoot: The team that recovered bodies from White Island went "to the depths of their endurance and past it," said the colonel who oversaw the mission.
Feeling sand crunch underfoot while in something like Alejandro González Iñárritu's installation piece Carne y Arena is one thing, as is reaching out to touch a virtual railing only to have your hand find a physical counterpart.
The vegetation zones in Volcanoes change depending on the altitude, and the varying topography — an intermingling of lush green, massive redwoods, slender mountain bamboo trees, red mud underfoot and streams — made the hike all the more scenic.
But for the Swiss workers who make the elevator parts, their uncertain future might feel as dizzying as the 24-metre drop underfoot as Swiss industry accelerates job cuts to mitigate the impact of the galloping franc.
He has a rare ability to make slow songs majestic rather than tedious; his rock dirges can open like chasms underfoot, accompanied onstage (as they have been through the years) by up-to-the-minute video technology.
And, before you congratulate Thiel for bringing down a pesky media property staffed by bright young things, remember: while he's not the first titan to crush an ant underfoot, his cruel precedent is dangerous to us all.
At the immaculately orchestrated soiree-cum-fashion show at her store-front-style loft in TriBeCa last night, guests sampled Malpeque oysters, deviled quail eggs and elderflower cocktails, narrowly dodging Bobbin, the designer's terrier, who frisked underfoot.
Together, Dave Devine's guitar, Chris Thomas's bass, Melvin Butler's tenor saxophone and (very faintly on this track) Myron Walden's bass clarinet make a sound like damp wood underfoot, welcoming your step on a trail you've long known.
Racks of the new collection crammed the room; underfoot, dozens of full-page photos littered the floor — snapshots of the endless iterations of hair, makeup and outfits Risso and his team had cycled through during the day.
Evans, 25, bent under the pressures of adulthood while trying to keep up with her 2-year-old son Kaiser, who kept running underfoot of Eason and his friends as they attempted to move heavy pieces of furniture.
"Present Tense" opens as a light folk reflection pushed by shakers and floor toms underfoot, but midway through, drummer Phil Selway kicks up a shuffle indebted to the work of Afrobeat pioneer Tony Allen, and suddenly it swings.
One of the most beautiful things about being in Grand Staircase is that, out in the deep middle of it, with all of prehistory underfoot and twelve-billion-year-old starlight overhead, the world feels enduring and eternal.
In the dense thicket of the internet lies a verdant patch of grass where dappled sunbeams peek through the leaves, resting fawns doze about, a troop of woodland mushrooms grows underfoot, and a brook faintly burbles in the distance.
GOP bans National Review from debate "Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism who would take the work of generations and trample it underfoot on behalf of a populism as heedless and crude as The Donald himself," the editorial states.
We could be teaching poor machines about art or poetry or what fresh grass feels like underfoot after too long living in the city, but no, they get to solve a Rubik's Cube and don't even feel good about it.
Beloved of crime lords and doofuses alike, Keanu the kitten shows up early, padding underfoot through one of those artfully staged drug labs — armed guards, white powder, ominous lighting — that's soon lit up with the sights and sounds of heavy artillery.
Among draining mats — grids of wood or other materials that are designed not to absorb but to let water flow through — Wirecutter likes the bamboo mat from ToiletTree because it feels smoother and more solid underfoot than its closest competitors.
Wandering through Todi's emptied piazza during the dinner hour, the silence has a certain volume; I feel freshly aware of my feet on the planet under the demarcated sky, the passing clouds overhead, the exclamation marks of the columns' shadows underfoot.
When Mills was busy elsewhere, Spheros were often skidding and skipping and rolling underfoot—a toy is a toy—but she is a talented teacher, and when she got down on the floor to review their coding the students focussed.
The innovation is a new 60-volt battery and power system called Flexvolt that's able to power some of the largest tools you'll find on a construction site or in a workshop, reducing the number of cords/tripping hazards that are lurking underfoot.
Photo: John Shearer (Getty)Over the last year or two, it's sure felt like a seismic shift's been underfoot in the way tech employees think about labor conditions and work—or, at least, in the way the media portrays them doing so.
We had to brace ourselves against the steep pitch, mind the loose grit underfoot and take care not to be distracted: The domes and swales of bright vanilla rock, a faint scatter of distant pines and junipers, a dark weight of azure sky.
Another Rosie sprang from Norman Rockwell, whose Saturday Evening Post cover of May 29, 21942, depicts a muscular woman in overalls (the name Rosie can be seen on her lunchbox), with a rivet gun on her lap and "Mein Kampf" crushed gleefully underfoot.
Today, high-end apartments are more likely to have white oak underfoot — particularly European or French white oak from trees that, yes, grow in France — though it's probably not solid oak but rather an engineered product with the wood veneer on top.
"On the space boot, the rubber traction, the float foam, and the stabilizing foam that sits above the float foam are identical to the Floatride Run, so the feel underfoot will feel very similar," Dan Hobson, vice president of innovation at Reebok, told Digital Trends.
I hear "Chiba Nights" and see myself out on the town with my friends, strutting down the street and feeling on top of the world; a few songs later, I hear "Halyards" and see myself saying goodbye, walking through a park alone with leaves underfoot.
This closeness between Beijing and Islamabad, coupled with a deepening skepticism in Washington over the wisdom of its own relationship with Pakistan, has pushed India and the United States closer to each other, overcoming decades of mutual suspicion as the regional dynamics change underfoot.
"I think Donald Trump is so extreme that we like to believe that these extreme incidents of sexism and discrimination are, like, isolated to him," Marty Berger, a sophomore, said as he left an exam on a spectacular fall afternoon, yellow leaves crunching underfoot.
Norman Rockwell drew his version of Rosie for the cover of the May 29, 1943, issue of The Saturday Evening Post — a grimy-faced, muscular woman in denim overalls, work goggles perched on her forehead and a copy of Hitler's Mein Kampf trampled underfoot.
A poorly chosen paint color you would rather forget, an uncomfortable rug underfoot and the glare of streetlights outside are just some of the problems that can conspire to create a room you would rather avoid — the opposite of an ideal environment for deep sleep.
"Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism who would take the work of generations and trample it underfoot on behalf of a populism as heedless and crude as The Donald himself," reads an editorial accompanying the essays in the issue, according to the newspaper.
Mango seeds crunch underfoot as we walk past rows of blue agave, cacti, mango, and lime trees to the barrel room, where the inimitable guitar licks of Carlos Santana—Hermosillo's friend and business partner, who was born here in Jalisco state—drift over the sound-system.
By the end, when the gods ascend into Valhalla, it felt like the actors were leaving behind all the creaking machinery and harnesses, walking out of our hall filled with coughing viewers and creaking girders, and into their hall whose heavenly floors presumably don't creak underfoot.
The director seems to have gone back to the kind of twitchy and sarcastic filmmaking that made Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch hits, painting ancient King Arthur as a cheeky common ruffian, and pitting him against incumbent rulers keen to see him squashed underfoot.
He then photographed that underfoot image and printed it just as it was, showcasing America the beautiful through smatters and tatters of grass and dirt, as if the soles of our shoes had risen up to insist they were as essential to viewing as the view itself.
Also energizing Midtown is Turnstyle, a year-old food hall inside the Columbus Circle subway station at the neighborhood's edge; tiny restaurants like Bolivian Llama Party, with empanada-like pastries, and Blossom du Jour, with vegan fast-food, serve their dishes there while trains rumble underfoot.
I fear this will be the Democrats' fate in 2020; they will console themselves for having retained their "purity" while all of the values we Democrats hold dear will be trampled underfoot, not just for four years, but for decades to come because of Trumpism's victory.
Underfoot in the exhibition's main room is a gallery-length map of salsa's global sources, traced back to rhythms and dances from Cuba, Puerto Rico, Spain, Togo and Ghana, and connected to the jazz and R&B that would give salsa its New York City brawniness.
That legacy in a word is progressivism: seeded by socialist immigrants from Germany and Scandinavia, nourished by liberal icons like Robert La Follette and Russ Feingold, and sheltered by institutions like the proudly lefty University of Wisconsin at Madison, with a campus where granola crunched underfoot like fall leaves.
When closed simultaneously (each unit has its own controls), the matte metallic outer surface creates a neutral if mannered geometry that blends with the area's sober palette; when open, the panels extend from the individual 800- to 1,180-square-foot units to form balconies underfoot and canopies overhead.
" In 1979, he was one of the commanders of Operation Storm-333 to overthrow Afghanistan's potentially anti-Soviet president, Hafizullah Amin, which he described in his memoirs in dramatic and occasionally gruesome detail: The carpets of Amin's Tajbeg Palace, he wrote, were "steeped in blood and sloshed underfoot.
I'm a relative newcomer to the well-trodden area of manhole appreciation, which has propelled publications like Diana Stuart's 2003 Designs Underfoot: The Art of Manhole Covers in New York City, and Bob Jessen's 2004 New York Lids: A Field Guide to New York City's Coal Hole Covers.
Here are highlights from National Review's editorial and excerpts from 10 of the participants in the latest issue: Editorial: Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism who would take the work of generations and trample it underfoot in behalf of a populism as heedless and crude as the Donald himself.
As I worked, I fell into an almost meditative state, admiring the bright flash of a ladybug moving across a green leaf, the soft violet of clustered pinot meunier grapes, the faint striated pattern of vineyard rows running toward the village below, the crumble underfoot of the region's cherished chalky soil.
Physics goes completely out the window whenever Johnson gets involved in the action — he has an uncanny ability to be underfoot when half the city is raining down in steaming chunks around him, and yet escape unscathed — but when only the monsters are onscreen, Rampage presents a relatively convincing and immersive illusion.
As the Arab Spring uprisings have been trampled underfoot by resurgent dictators or devolved into brutal civil wars, Istanbul has emerged as the region's capital for many of the Arab politicians, activists, rebels and journalists who tried to push history in a different direction in the countries where they were born — and stalled.
"The River" is a fiction addition to the New Landscape writing of Robert Macfarlane and Rebecca Solnit, prose so vivid and engaging that a city-dwelling reviewer can feel the clammy cold of a fog over a river or the heat of subterranean tree roots burning underfoot in the aftermath of a fire.
I am too lucky to be offended — to have child care my earnings alone can't always cover, to work from home in a sweatshirt that says "I love cats," to procrastinate on paid work with housework, to cook dinner before the children are underfoot, to have a choice about all of these things.
Yet none of his paintings had prepared me for the hallucinatory strangeness of the real thing: a place that inverts geological time, where the ground underfoot is younger than the orphaned church spires rising above it, where a mountain — an immovable part of any ordinary landscape — is only a few decades old.
The lengthy vignette in the middle, where Macklemore pantomimes a conversation with a white mom who stops him for an autograph before trashing hip-hop culture at large and praising him as One of the Good Ones as someone plunks out a variation on "Chopsticks" on piano underfoot, makes for a somewhat forbidding listen.
If you won't be in Madrid anytime soon to see it for yourself, the retailer announced that more store openings and renovations are underfoot, per WWD: Its Paris Opéra location will once again be up and running on Friday, and new flagships in Japan, Qatar, and India are expected to be unveiled later this year.
But instead of offering a short burst of terror followed by the prospect of a quick escape, this immersive, sensorially complex movie evokes the terrifying disorientation and loneliness of migration: the eerie sounds of sand crunching underfoot; the surreal sights of jugs of water left by well-wishers; fragments of voices heard over radio transmissions.
" In 19683, the Times reported that a protest of the A.K.P. by hundreds of thousands of Turkish secularists was motivated in part by a "fear" of the life styles of their more religious compatriots—by "snobbish" complaints that "religious Turks were uneducated and poor" and that "their pesky prayer rugs got underfoot in hospital halls.
In the six-minute "Can't Let It Go," Makonnen takes the first half out to razz unoriginal rappers behind a thick coat of reverb before the Based God slides in on a smooth flow musing about what it's like to hear your ideas make it on the radio without you, the production swaying woozily underfoot throughout.
The bilingual speakers with us took turns patiently translating the tour guide's observations of the lush tree foliage and the variety of canonical ferns: everything from epiphytes — which knit their way around trees, cascading from trunks and dripping from branches — to magenta, filmy ferns growing underfoot, their leaves so translucent I could see my palm through them.
In the photographic essay book Life at the Edge of Sight: A Photographic Exploration of the Microbial World (Harvard University Press), released in September, Kolter and his co-author, Scott Chimileski, a research fellow and imaging specialist in his lab, offer an appreciation of microorganisms that is both scientific and artistic, and that gives a glimpse of the cellular wonders that are literally underfoot.
The sense of a great flight—of crops put to the torch, of a ruined and shaken hinterland—is only heightened by trains booming underfoot, by the bleeping Klaxons of reversing box trucks, by the disorderly shoving of food carts between the stopped cars, and, above all, by the strangely focusless expressions worn by the oncoming commuters, who are seemingly devoid of ordinary consciousness.
Those features include a heat-recovery ventilation system that provides fresh air while recycling heat; a hydronic radiant-heating system that adds warmth underfoot and gets a boost from a roof-mounted, solar hot-water system; a large photovoltaic rooftop array that generates nearly as much electricity as the house consumes; and a Savant automation system that allows the couple to monitor energy capture and use.
In "The Library for the Birds of New York/ The Library for the Birds of Massachusetts" (2016/2017), there's a lovely titillation to being in an (ornate) cage, watching birds treat the things that we see as sacred (books) the way they normally treat the things they surely see as sacred (trees), knowing, while dodging bird shit, that both sacred things, along with the fragrant wood shavings underfoot, all come from the same place.
Jimmy would have some trouble remaining on the surface of the Earth as he grew larger … as Jimmy grows to a mass greater than 500 tons he would start to crush the rocks underfoot and, not too long afterwards, the Earth would not be able to support the pressure he was exerting, causing him to sink into the interior with nothing to stop him from traveling all the way to the center.
Not only has she managed not to get her ankle-length extensions shut in a door or trampled underfoot and had her lip sync rendition of "It's All Coming Back to Me" officially endorsed by Celine Dion, but most importantly she just smashed a music industry record: 76 of her songs have hit the Billboard Hot 100 list, which means she officially surpasses Aretha Franklin as the woman with the most Top 100 hits of all time.
In the kitchen, you frequently feel a distinct crunching sensation from the debris underfoot; the stairs are virtually impassable with the possessions that have accumulated there, the books and clothes and toys, the violins and satchels and soccer shoes, all precipitously stacked as if in a vertical lost property office; the children's rooms are so neglected they have acquired a kind of wilderness beauty, like untouched landscapes where over time the processes of growth and decay have created their own organic forms.
In "Leviathan," from his 1956 collection, "Green With Beasts," Mr. Merwin evokes the epic verse of old through his strategic use of alliteration, the central organizing principle of Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse poetry: The hulk of him is like hills heaving Dark, yet as crags of drift-ice, crowns cracking in thunder, Like land's self by night black-looming, surf churning and trailing Along his shores' rushing, shoal-water boding About the dark of his jaws; and who should moor at his edge And fare on afoot would find gates of no gardens, But the hill of dark underfoot diving, Closing overhead, the cold deep, and drowning.
Gouldian finch, Australia Red bishop, Africa Canary, Canary Islands Blue-headed sunbird, Africa Bourkes, Australia White wagtail, Europe Paradise tanager, South America White-throated bee eater, Africa Purple honeycreeper, South America Australian finch, Australia Dark-eyed white starling, Europe, Asia, Africa, northern Australia and tropical Pacific Islands Red canary, Canary Islands Bearded reedling, Europe and Asia Forbes parrot finch, Indonesia Lazuli bunting, North America Gouldian finch, Australia Red bishop, Africa Canary, Canary Islands Blue-headed sunbird, Africa Bourkes, Australia White wagtail, Europe Paradise tanager, South America White-throated bee eater, Africa Purple honeycreeper, South America Australian finch, Australia Dark-eyed white starling, Europe, Asia, Africa, northern Australia and tropical Pacific Islands Red canary, Canary Islands Bearded reedling, Europe and Asia Forbes parrot finch, Indonesia Lazuli bunting, North America If you live in a city, your idea of a bird probably begins and ends with pigeons, or perhaps sparrows—ubiquitous gray or brown birds that are constantly underfoot or flitting about.

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