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79 Sentences With "whirred"

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

It whirred and clicked like the monitor at his bedside.
The M.R.I. machine whirred around me, noisy even through earplugs.
The circular doors whirred closed, and soon enough I was off.
An espresso machine whirred, drowning out a Mary J. Blige song.
Next to it whirred an identical machine, stirring an identical mixture.
The wheels flew over the pavement, and my body whirred through space.
My goggles clicked and whirred, trying to bring the darkness into focus.
A fan in the hospital basement room whirred loudly in the background.
"God is great!" some spectators yelled as the machine whirred to life.
Exposed pipes crisscrossed the walls while strange machines whirred in the background.
But as camera shutters whirred, Trump and Zelensky insisted nothing was untoward.
Inside, ceiling fans whirred above rows of cubbies packed with jagged glass bits.
All around her, the factory beeped and whirred, as if life continued as normal.
When a motorcycle whirred past, people on the streets immediately looked over their shoulders.
Along the ridge near the Pakistani border in the Kot district, drones constantly whirred above.
Riders towered awkwardly over pedestrians, standing stiffly with their feet together as they whirred along.
They spun and whirred, demonstrating just how well they could, I don't know, separate molecules?
When Reuters visited Kawai's operations, cotton spinning machines whirred and rattled in a cramped room.
Alice was backed only by her keyboard, which flickered and whirred from a comfortable distance.
"Please remain calm," said the Plateau State governor, Simon Bako Lalong, as a helicopter whirred overhead.
Almost immediately, a stick whirred through the air and struck the little girl in the ribs.
There was even a Tesla Model X making the climb, though it more whirred than screamed.
"I'm relieved that the new name was finally announced," he said as machines whirred in the background.
Switched on, Bina48 whirred to life, 32 motors animating its facial expressions behind a layer of frubber.
In another building, several 3-D printers whirred away, producing spare parts and prototypes of jewelry designs.
A hydraulic pump whirred, a lock clanged open, and a metal door about a foot thick swung open.
A bomb squad from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives showed up, and helicopters whirred overhead.
Construction sites also whirred to a stop, uncommon in a country where laborers often work around-the-clock.
Within hours of Trump firing Health and Human Services Secretary, Tom Price, the Washington speculation machine whirred into action.
And the punditry machines immediately whirred into gear to ask who would politically benefit the most from the tragedy.
Mr. Zuckerberg, stone-faced, whirred through technical fixes, said three people who attended or were briefed on the proceedings.
Many vegan recipes for creamy pasta imitate the richness of cheese with soaked nuts, especially cashews, whirred into cream.
Then, as armoured vehicles rolled into Harare and military helicopters whirred overhead, soldiers beat and shot those in the way.
People and goods crossing the 500km frontier were stopped for customs and identity checks, as British army helicopters whirred overhead.
Meanwhile, the Robocar and its four 135kW electric motors eventually whirred up the hill in about 1 minute and 16 seconds.
A massive industrial fan whirred in the corner, and a few stock tango posters hung, a little limply, on the walls.
As police helicopters whirred overhead, shoppers on Church Avenue and Dunhill Road mused about what this saga might mean for the future.
Anya closed the door, and the platform beneath my feet whirred and elevated me until my head was above the chamber's edge.
The SUV's lateral wheels seemed to jerk between the tunnel walls, creating a bumpy experience while the vehicle quietly whirred through the path.
"Labor is more scarce all the time," Velez said as several DSC-18s whirred behind him on the federation's test farm near Chinchina.
It was easy to use, and the way this giant Altoid whined and whirred as it analyzed my mouth air was weirdly endearing.
Some pick items out of pods brought to them by a robot; others pack items into empty pods, to be whirred away and stored.
Twenty minutes later, a wheeled, one-armed, chest-high robot whirred along and inspected the cup with the 3D cameras inside its flattened head.
The machine whirred as it gently adjusted its height, calculating a position that would allow its arms to move optimally inside the woman's abdomen.
As Mohamed's fingerprints were scanned, a standard part of his asylum application, a Europe-wide database whirred into action and his fate was sealed.
Trucks, buses, trains — anything that whirred by or made a noise wound up interrupting or drowning out the music I was trying to listen to.
The cars and pedestrians whirred by, and Mr. Antoine did what people in New York rarely do anymore: He stood on the street and watched.
It was not the one made by the Italian company Solari that whirred and clicked like the boards on television game shows in the 1960s.
A 35-millimeter film scanner whirred through black-and-white negatives in October, as Schmidt sat in a histology lab, inspecting a box full of swabs.
Wait until morning, then make something on the fly: whirred fruit and orange juice and yogurt for a smoothie to accompany a simple fried egg, for instance.
Next to the room where Shahida and Tayyaba sat, half a dozen computers whirred busily amid a snarl of wires—this was the cybercrime wing's forensics lab.
In the New York Times piece, the board got really frustrated when they were revealing the Russia problems, he whirred through solutions without discussing why it happened.
As Jean-Eric Vergne whirred across the finish line in Brooklyn last weekend, he did more than lock up the championship of the 2018-19 Formula E season.
In Monday's test flight, the device hovered upward about 200 meters and whirred for about five minutes over a windswept patch of sand astride the emirate's Gulf coast.
Chris Geere, the star of FXX's "You're the Worst" sat in a chair and pressed each of his hands into a blue metal brick as a camera whirred.
Helicopters whirred above the turbid, red-brown flood waters searching for people to ferry back to the port city of Beira, headquarters of the huge rescue operation in Mozambique.
At Mikey Dubb's Frozen Custard shop, the custard machines whirred idle, and at Eden Wok, a kosher Chinese restaurant, workers stood in a doorway, anxiously peering around for customers.
Now her models were picking up the darker undercurrent and spitting Love-isms — "Hooker-waitress, model-actress / Oh, just go nameless" — as a small battalion of sewing machines whirred below.
For as long as cameras whirred this surge of praise rolled round the room like a bureaucrats' Mexican wave, peaking with a testimonial from Reince Priebus, the White House chief of staff.
One afternoon, while a desk fan whirred near my cheek, I composed a long e-mail to my high-school English teacher, because I remembered him as handsome in a remote way.
As the copter's propellers whirred overhead, in the shade cast by the old church's bell tower below, musicians of all ages hummed together, hunched over modular synthesizers, MIDI controllers, effects pedals, gongs, and more.
"This is going to be one of the great gifts to the middle-income people of this country that they've ever gotten for Christmas," Trump told reporters as Marine One whirred in the background.
At the top of the mountain, the wheels of a motor coach rumbled over the gravel, and the biodiesel engine of the Cog Railway, which carts visitors up and down the mountain whirred constantly.
"There's been a real increase in complex attacks," the 33-year-old told Reuters on a rooftop overlooking the capital of Mogadishu, as drones swooped and whirred nearby during a four-day police training course.
"You have to practice everything, even flying in a straight line," said Olafur Jon Jonsson, a burly, 50-year-old Icelandic search and rescue volunteer, as his drone whirred to life and took off across the field.
Tony Dyson, the special-effects designer who built R2-D2, the squat robot sidekick that beeped and whirred its way through seven Star Wars films, died on Friday at his home on the Maltese island of Gozo.
Aguilar, who uses Lego pieces provided by a friend, proudly displayed a red-and-yellow, fully functional robotic arm built when he was 18, bending it in the elbow joint and flexing the grabber as the electric motor inside whirred.
She doesn't even bother describing her reaction to the ticker of contumely that's whirred above her head for most of her adult life, though she does write about how "incredibly uncomfortable" it was to be stalked on stage by Trump during the second presidential debate.
But on December 21, according to the Riverside Police Department, a noisy, small-fry drone, rigged to accommodate payloads of illegal drugs, whirred out of a backyard, crossed the street, flew over a block, and delivered a package to customers waiting in a nearby church parking lot.
Dozens of agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and county law enforcement officers — more than 50 by the count of officials in this Hasidic village about 50 miles northwest of Manhattan — converged on a four-story brick yeshiva here on Thursday, some armed with guns, others carrying crowbars, as helicopters whirred overhead.
Unlike some of its Marvel cousins whose action scenes look as if they've been shot through garbage disposals, whirred and jolted into existence, Ant-Man and the Wasp's sequences are all about controlled chaos — tiny things getting cosmically and comically large, or vice versa — and letting the physics of that dynamic, rather than a flurry of punches, tickle your brain.
He pinned a cutter to the bottom of the zone (or to a spot just below it—one advantage of having a pitcher like Kershaw back is getting the celebrity calls) against Gary Sanchez to end the fourth and, after waiting out the game's second rain delay, which was nearly 50 minutes long, he ended his outing in the fifth with a familiar bit: a slider that whirred under the swing of Austin Romine and a clenched-fist yell.
That same year, Tinguely went to New York and enlisted the help of Robert Breer and Billy Klüver (the latter a co-founder, with Fred Waldhauer, Robert Rauschenberg and Robert Whitman, of Experiments in Art and Technology six years later) in building his infamous, auto-destructive "Homage to New York" (21963), a massive assemblage of wheels, airplane parts, a piano, saws, and other junk that screeched and whirred in constant motion at the Museum of Modern Art.
Around 30 artistes performed them while nine cameras whirred from all directions to roll.
Printers Row Lit Fest is an annual book fair and literary festival held in Chicago, Illinois. The fair's literary "tableau . . . fills a downtown district where linotype machines and printing presses once whirred." The neighborhood was an early book making hub.
Blackstone demonstrated the efficacy of the device by sawing noisily through a piece of lumber. Then a female assistant was placed on the saw table in full view, as wide metal restraints were clamped upon her midsection. The blade whirred and appeared to pass through her body, as ripping sounds were heard, the woman shrieked, and particles were scattered by the whirring blade. When the blade stopped she, of course, rose unharmed.
The linotype clicked and clacked, whirred and vibrated. One by one, slugs of lead type were molded, a line at a time, six lines a minute, 360 an hour. A typical operator might set 10,000 words of newspaper copy each work shift. On September 7, 1915, Eugene Head died suddenly at the age of 48. Head had taken the struggling newspaper and built it into one of the most successful dailies in southern Wisconsin in less than 20 years.
A girl with red, curly hair explains that they are in Italy and will be turned into food by the Spaghetti Man. She shows off her curly twirls label and points out Timothy's lasagne one. Timothy gags at the thought of lasagne and attempts to start a revolt, jumping onto a table and yelling at the room full of children that they have been lied to and should leave, but in the doorway behind him stands a smug chef with a maniacal laugh smacking flour off his hands. That night, Venitian citizens slept as the abandoned factory chugged and whirred until sunrise as the black car left and re-entered through the open gates.
Ben Beaumont-Thomas of The Guardian described the song as "typically existentialist, Eeyoreish". Lars Gotrich of NPR called the song "an electric piano boogie whirred to life by strings, the recognizably Smiths-y guitar tone and DJ scratching". Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph wrote that the song "boasted a vintage Morrissey construction in its flowing, easygoing melody over an urgent rhythm section, although with a fresh energy to the arrangement", and "constructed around a fast, almost Baroque keyboard line and psychedelic rhythm guitar" compared with "the sparkling indie guitars of The Smiths". August Brown of Los Angeles Times opined that the song's "electric piano-driven riff is a bit of a departure from [Morrissey's] usual palette".

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