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"wrenched" Synonyms
jerked heaved hove pulled yanked thrust thrusted tugged twisted agitated hauled moved drug dragged lugged towed wrested tweaked twitched flipped ripped tore teared torn forced grabbed plucked pluckt seized snatched peeled prised pried wrang wrung wringed strained ricked sprained cricked turned dislocated injured racked stretched straught damaged distorted hurt contorted dislodged put out of joint extorted coerced exacted screwed squeezed elicited bled milked extracted extraught gouged pinched put screws to fleeced nabbed captured bagged got gat gotten snared nailed took taken hooked netted collared snagged grasped trapped landed warped deformed misshaped bent bended buckled convoluted curved detorted knotted squinched tortured writhed wrothe writhen gnarled pained distressed afflicted caused discomfort caused pain to winded wound weaved wove woven meandered zigzagged looped snaked wormed corkscrewed curled spiraled(US) spiralled(UK) swerved annoyed harmed crippled bruised impaired maimed mangled molested scathed traumatised(UK) traumatized(US) wrecked abused blemished crushed marred mutilated exerted overworked overwrought exhausted extended overtaxed tired burdened drove drave driven druv encumbered overburdened overexerted overextended overreached distended elongated lengthened expanded tautened tightened drew out drawn out frayed ragged tattered threadbare split ruptured fractured snapped shredded tatty severed rent broken cut lacerated slit burst destroyed misshapen awry crumpled pretzeled out of shape bent out of shape malformed disfigured wry shapeless More

202 Sentences With "wrenched"

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

Okada's knee gets wrenched, over and over, and you gasp.
So now I am being wrenched diachronically across historical timelines.
Her jockey wrenched the reins to keep her from falling.
I wrenched my arm free and indicated I was a journalist.
Each wet, slippery log offered another chance for a wrenched ankle.
A look at how the stone is wrenched from the earth.
I want all expectations wrenched out of Amazon's stock before it reports.
A particle pair that straddles the event horizon will be wrenched apart.
If I wrenched my hand away, I knew the snake would bite.
The dancers coiled together in clusters and then wrenched apart and scattered.
Here's a look at how the stone is wrenched from the earth.
Empty cabinets, their doors clearly wrenched off, are visible through twisted steel bars.
Several giggled as they wrenched off the masks, while others gasped for air.
A clearly disgruntled Francis wrenched himself free by slapping down at her arm.
Unlike the larger lipomas I'd seen wrenched out of people, mine seemed smoother, denser.
But you don't need to know Nakesha personally to be wrenched by this article.
I wrenched my head, bit his lips and tongue, wheezed and gasped for air.
As she spoke, her voice was wrenched with emotion and interrupted by steadying deep breaths.
Ultimately, over the course of several days last week, I wrenched myself back to normality.
It wrenched my heart right open — and showed off Lena Dunham's creation at its best.
In Vox, we see a possible universe in which words are wrenched from mouths, too.
At least with this episode, we're prepared to have our guts wrenched and hearts broken.
He claimed a small avalanche wrenched the camera away, and his altimeter watch had broken.
The abrupt gesture appeared to cause him pain and Francis swiftly wrenched his hand free.
That's what the museum was finally: time rearranged, wrenched until it fit, and then organized discreetly.
Her small role as Emily in the Academy Award-winning film was brief, but wrenched hearts.
But Trump's inflammatory comments don't need to be wrenched out of context to make them offensive.
Beijing has wrenched all the levers of a centrally planned economy to wage war on smog.
They'd wrenched it open and closed, studied the curve of the bills, read endlessly about its history.
She lunges towards her infant, who has been wrenched out of her hands by a Catholic priest.
Instead, a country that was once seen as an exporter of security is now being wrenched apart.
George E. Pataki, a Republican, wrenched concessions from lawmakers during a special session before approving a raise.
Day and night are in disarray, animals are freaking out, and corpses are wrenched back to life.
Faces wrenched in agony or brightened by joy or locked in an expression of virtuous, unflappable conviction.
Hazard, set in the mountains of eastern Kentucky, is a once bustling town with its guts wrenched out.
And some, like the many animals wrenched from their habitats or left stranded by receding tides, were alive.
Harsh and unforgiving sounds, wrenched from cold and unfeeling computer code, a mirror for a world that feels similarly.
Firstly the upper and lower jaws are wrenched apart in a move straight from the Saw films torture manual.
There's no click-your-fingers-for-lightning bullshit here, magic is wrenched into the world with care and concentration.
He needs to have his unfortunate two-and-half-year sojourn at Glendale beaten and wrenched out of him.
Just because you wrenched someone's arm until you heard connective tissue tear doesn't mean you can't be gracious afterward.
After a moment there was a jolt, and the passengers who were standing were all wrenched to one side.
He addressed it because a question had been posed only to have his answer "deliberately wrenched out of context."
It's poised to be wrenched away from activists and turned into an excuse to buy an expensive bath oil.
Fighting raged until troops backing the officially-recognized government wrenched Aden from Houthi control in July of that year.
Official showcaseWhat: With so many international artists traveling to the festival, the recent travel bans have wrenched many's travel plans.
Her husband had wrenched his back the night before and was in so much pain he was in bed, vomiting.
Henry, whose well-being is supposedly everyone's chief concern, is pulled back and forth, his life wrenched out of sync.
I wrenched my mind away from questions of morality and integrity and refocused it on my next morsel: a drumstick.
But when your world is abruptly wrenched from its moorings, even your most reliable possessions can go rogue on you.
Buckled into a brown dress, hair wrenched into a bun, his "Trunch" was shrill-voiced, broad-shouldered and twinkle-toed.
He—or his hand, as his mind's executive—wrenched figurative sculpture from millennia of tradition and sent it tumbling into modernity.
When Charles-Donatien approached her, she gave him a quick once-over, then wrenched open the back doors of her vehicle.
In the form now institutionalized in HHS's Division of Conscience and Religious Freedom, civil rights have been wrenched from this tradition.
Windows were exploding, walls were collapsing, roofs were carried away into the sky, enormous trees were being wrenched from the ground.
At first blush, Sanders 220 looks and sounds quite a bit like the candidate who monkey-wrenched Hillary's campaign in 22016.
Americans go abroad to study and to work, but also to discover who we are when wrenched from our usual context.
During production, Ms. Theron bruised her ribs, wrenched her knee and clenched her jaw so tightly that she cracked two teeth.
Back then, we all knew people who had been beaten or killed or wrenched from their partners' sides when they got sick.
At other times, he had wrenched the knife from the hand of a soldier who had tried to kill him with it.
Tata on Thursday wrenched Mistry out of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), 73 percent controlled by the group and the conglomerate's star performer.
In the husks of dead buildings, copper pipes were ripped from the walls, the flashing stripped from roofs, banisters wrenched from stairs.
Now, read the article, "Wrenched From Scandal to Success, Trump Looks Ahead, and Over His Shoulder," and answer the following questions: 1.
The women I interviewed have cracked their kneecaps, fractured their feet, torn their rotator cuffs, developed early arthritis and wrenched their backs.
The court soundly rejected novel and implausible arguments that would have wrenched the constitutional allocation of powers loose from its long-fixed moorings.
She was shocked out of her self-possession, her ankle wrenched painfully, the hem of her pink coat dragging in the dirty slush.
But in the finished image, Mr. Chermayeff has wrenched the "U" from its moorings, leaving two jagged stumps where the letter once was.
Baswedan and Uno are backed by the main opposition party Gerindra, which has now wrenched control of the capital away from Widodo's ruling party.
The first is that marriage decisions are being wrenched out of the hands of parents and relatives and made by the young people themselves.
" Or as she waits for an email from a guy she hooked up with, the day feels "like a can being slowly wrenched open.
Nuh sat with Christina on her lap and was breast-feeding her when one of the militants came up and wrenched the girl away.
In service of the bottom line of these universities, these young men have wrenched shoulders, twisted knees, broken ribs, and ripped ligaments and tendons.
"I thought we were kind of wrenched out of, what was, from my point of view, an exciting journey to go on," he said.
A subsequent confrontation between some of them and Murray grew physical enough that the professor with him sought medical treatment for a wrenched neck.
Those idyllic visits back in the 1990s had some cruel goodbyes—getting in the car, wrenched and ready to cry, putting on our armor again.
They wrenched the teeth and their extensive bridgework from the mouth, placed them in the secondhand jewelry box and entrusted the macabre package to Rzhevskaya.
Matteo Salvini, leader of the nationalist Northern League, has wrenched his party rightwards, turning it into an Italian reflection of Marine Le Pen's National Front.
This is especially the case if one attempts to take stock of global realities in all their violence-wrenched contexts from either near or abroad.
If Bake Off were the only British institution to be cruelly wrenched away from us this year, we'd probably be able to deal with it.
In June 2628, the left leaning president of Honduras was wrenched from his home by military troops and bundled onto a plane to Costa Rica.
When they found one, they hammered long metal crosses six feet into the ground, then wrenched them out to sniff for the smell of decay.
It transformed them from destroyers to creators — or at least to recyclers — and wrenched the dream of a final theory in a strange, new direction.
The children themselves are described as angels, wrenched from the world too soon, leaving behind a heavy burden for those who loved them to bear.
If I run anywhere, I feel like the dude who gets his heart wrenched out of its cavity in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
When at last I wrenched myself away from the spectacle, it was with a deeper sense of the place and time I was trying to evoke.
Their families were wrenched apart in a business deal, however, and now they're stuck in a feud much like the one seen in Romeo and Juliet.
" Prepare to die, Game of Thrones characters Tonight on HBO's "Game of Thrones," Gene Seymour warned, "we're prepared to have our guts wrenched and hearts broken.
Among them, I saw one that was different: a man being pulled out of the water alive, gasping, eyes wide, face wrenched in panic and disbelief.
There was nothing new in Trump's mockery — neither his targets nor his language was fresh — but he had wrenched the media's attention in his direction anyway.
I worry for my database of thoughts, that I will forever reflect my time spent here, regurgitating the poisonous thoughts of sad ruins and wrenched metal.
Chopping down a sapling means first flaking a stone into an adz, then hammering the adz into the trunk until the tree can be wrenched down.
An eternal half hour passed before I wrenched my wrists out of the cuffs, threw on my shirt and pants and climbed out the bedroom window barefoot.
Thankfully, before I left for New York, my diabolical plan was wrenched out of my subconscious, and he calmly suggested that maybe it wasn't a good idea.
It also meant the end of forced family separation, in which children were wrenched away from their parents for the profit and convenience of the slaveholding authorities.
This foundation's inaugural show presents more than a dozen paintings, works on paper and photographs by Wool, the painter who wrenched abstraction into the No Wave era.
But as he began to write poetry, in childhood , he wrenched himself into the existence that would separate him from his family even as he honored them.
A man rammed her with his car, got out, wrenched her from her bike, beat her severely, pulled her into his vehicle, and bound and blindfolded her.
A man rammed her with his car, got out, wrenched her from her bike, beat her severely, pulled her into his vehicle, and bound and blindfolded her.
The scope of destruction was massive, the exact kind you might expect when a year's worth of rainfall is wrenched from the clouds in just a few days.
The church — in particular the evangelical Pentecostal church — drew them into its fold and wrenched them, prayer service by prayer service, from the tenacious grip of the gangs.
President Donald Trump has wrenched the United States out of the Paris Climate Agreement, and in other ways has brought us that much closer to catastrophic climate change.
And "Capernaum," a sprawling tale wrenched from real life, goes beyond the conventions of documentary or realism into a mode of representation that doesn't quite have a name.
AB-EXERS IN LOVE Partners in life and art, Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner wrenched New York into the first rank of modern art capitals in the 1940s.
When I get to the end of a book I like to put it down and feel absolutely wrenched by what I've read, to be in a different world.
Look at these headlines as many outlets castigated President Trump for his harsh language during a meeting on sanctuary cities but his words were wrenched out (ph) of context.
The more public opinion wrenched "Ted Bundy" out of the category of "human," the more determined he was to paint himself as someone educated, intelligent, and respected: an attorney.
The gruesome attack wrenched the customers of the Holey Artisan Bakery from a world of curiosity, tolerance and cultural exchange and thrust them into the world of global terrorism.
When I get to the end of a book I like to put it down and feel absolutely wrenched by what I've read, to be in a different world.
Now, there are well-meaning people in the movie that are very heart-wrenched about the loss of these magnificent creatures, and they do what they have to do.
Yet after its 2010 album, "The Suburbs," deservedly won the Grammy Award as Album of the Year, Arcade Fire wrenched its music away from rock with "Reflektor" in 2013.
In fact, astronomers don't know how the spectacle that greets our eyes every night when the sun goes down or the lights go out wrenched itself into luminous existence.
Then, as several people trained their phone cameras on Dao, one of the officers wrenched the man from his seat and dragged him down the center aisle of the plane.
And when pairs of phonons arise near the sonic horizon of a sonic black hole, they should get wrenched apart and rendered permanent, producing the sonic analogue of Hawking radiation.
Trevor Lawrence tried to scramble on first down and while he got 1 yard, he paid for it by being wrenched awkwardly to the ground by his shoulders and head.
Isa, Grif, Daz and Tiny have two things in common: They are African-American and they were wrenched out of their young lives before they even knew what was happening.
He loved Baltimore, but was wrenched out of it when he was fifteen and sent a year later to be "broken" in the backwoods by a cruel overseer named Edward Covey.
The foundation's inaugural show, "Maybe Maybe Not," presents more than a dozen paintings, works on paper and photographs by Christopher Wool, the painter who wrenched abstraction into the No Wave era.
It describes an organic response to political and social revolution, and the quite sensible fear that the shared common life of a people has been wrenched out of its cherished patterns.
Near the end of the race, a spectator reached out from the sidewalk to give me a high five and instead caught my hand and wrenched me back by the shoulder.
An unnamed 13-year-old girl is wrenched from the people she assumed were her parents and deposited with a group of unfriendly strangers who, she is told, are her birth family.
The discussion of money changing hands, wrenched out of context in CMP's initial, highly edited video, related to the costs of preserving and transferring the tissue, not payment for the tissue itself.
Scriptures typically evolved flexibly to promote compassion, empathy and magnanimity — so it is particularly sad when today they are cherry-picked by ideologues, wrenched from context, to justify rigid and pusillanimous dogma.
There is hope that they can find a way to start again in Jamaica, to slowly build a new home after being wrenched from the only one they had in the world.
Moby-Dick isn't only a predator, he's pocked and battered from an eternity of battle: "Harpoons lie all twisted and wrenched in him," Ahab says to his Pequod crew at one point.
It was during that eclipse that the British astronomer Arthur Eddington ascertained that the light rays from distant stars had been wrenched off their paths by the gravitational field of the sun.
I realized then with gratitude how my mother and the women of her generation had wrenched the doors of prejudice open, to let in the light for those of us who followed.
Dramatic images and videos posted to social media appeared to show students huddled in classrooms, gaping holes torn in highways, and buildings wrenched apart following the earthquake that hit at 8:29 a.m.
In one cartoon (pictured, top), a chimney-sweep coated in soot has his teeth wrenched out in order for them to be transplanted into the mouths of the wealthy; children observe with glee.
By contrast, then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's infamous comment—"We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it"—was wrenched from context in grotesquely dishonest fashion.
Downed tree branches and signs blocked roads, the wind wrenched some roofs and siding off houses, and bridges connecting barrier islands to the mainland were closed to traffic because of the dangerous crosswinds.
From the loathsome lusus naturae of behemoth horror series to the sprawling cosmopolis of complex management simulators, video games often feature wrenched contortions of the natural world as core tenets in environmental design.
Rarely has a material so inclined to stay put been wrenched so insistently out of place and carried so far from its source; every centimeter of its movement has had to be earned.
The Washington Post reported that Marco Antonio Muñoz, a 39-year-old who is also from Honduras, killed himself in a padded cell after his 3-year-old was wrenched from his arms.
Historical fiction rather than a tale wrenched from recent headlines, his desolate testimony hints that the flow of the dispossessed has, like the perpetual chaos of Afghanistan, become a fixed feature of the world.
His face was scarved against the dust with gaps only for eyes and for ancient wired earbuds, but he gave them a friendly nod before he wrenched the door open and motioned them through.
Even if Trump loses to Hillary Clinton, he will have wrenched the terms of the debate away from party elders like Reince Preibus, the RNC chairman, and Romney, who denounced Trump but couldn't stop him.
Kaurit and Udumäe grew up in the same Estonian village where they were drawn into a culture of kids that rode and wrenched on old Soviet-era Riga mopeds that were notoriously prone to breakdowns.
The hat fanatic who gets watery eyes and a wrenched face every time he sings a vowel is a lot to take on his own, but the pair's vocals balanced each other out pretty well.
The programme, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents (DAPA), sought to protect "hard-working people who have become integrated members of American society" and to keep families from being wrenched apart.
Kenneth Mapp of the United States Virgin Islands on a Navy amphibious assault ship offshore, the residents of the island of St. Croix were busy putting together lives and neighborhoods wrenched apart by Hurricane Maria.
In a match a year later, when the Australian scrum-half Ken Catchpole lay trapped in a pile of players, Meads wrenched one of his legs with such force that the injuries ended Catchpole's career.
Yet Ms McInerney takes the story deeper, skilfully setting a funeral pyre "for that Ireland": the Ireland of children wrenched from their mothers and ruled by the "Holy Trinity: the priests, the nuns and the neighbours".
Arriving the next day in Cape Town, I was quickly wrenched back to reality: All over the airport were signs urging people to save water, and everywhere on my drive home was brown and tinder dry.
The back door is lying on the pantry floor, wrenched from its hinges, and if he's not careless he can walk right through the door frame without getting splinters caught on the sleeve of his jacket.
The United States didn't enter WWI — the "war to end all war" — until conflict had been raging for years, but it wrenched America out of its traditional isolationism and marked its ascendance as a world power.
Scottish voters would back independence and they want another referendum in the next two years, a poll published on Monday showed, indicating that the United Kingdom could be wrenched apart shortly after it leaves the European Union.
Noor put her back into it and the box door slurped and wrenched open, emitting vape fog and the blare of talk broadcast, some politicast, the deep voice like marching boots frothing out over the Alabama roadway.
LONDON, June 27 (Reuters) - Japan on Thursday publicly cautioned the two candidates vying to replace Prime Minister Theresa May that Japanese investment could leave if they wrenched Britain out of the European Union without a divorce deal.
The allure is obvious — when I beheld the majestic link that leaps gracefully across two cliffs wrenched apart by the Neretva River, the number of selfie sticks seemed not nearly high enough for a sight so ethereal.
He is a pacific soul, and the irony that has tolled through the trilogy is that, though averse to conflict, he keeps being wrenched into it, either by more truculent apes or by the dumbness of man.
Our romantic entanglement (with tongues) was cut short by our love story's first antagonist, Mr Fraser, the geography teacher who wrenched us apart and banished us to opposite ends of the gym to await our fates (detention).
Now upon arriving in the United States, they have been wrenched from their families and placed into detention centers to be supervised by adults who know nothing about their personal or medical histories and bear them no kinship.
Congress should not stand by as, for example, mothers who are entitled to protection under the law — who present themselves at the border, seeking asylum because of persecution in their own country – are wrenched apart from their children.
LONDON (Reuters) - Scottish voters would back independence and they want another referendum in the next two years, a poll published on Monday showed, indicating that the United Kingdom could be wrenched apart shortly after it leaves the European Union.
SEOUL (Reuters) - About 90 families from North and South Korea wept and embraced on Monday as the neighbors held their first reunion events in three years for relatives wrenched apart by the Korean War for more than six decades.
In spite of the death of most of humanity, and a few grueling scenes involving wrenched-open bellies or brainpans, this is really more a PG-13 movie than an R. In Chicago, filmgoers can catch it at Cinepocalypse.
He gets to the ball in whatever the midair equivalent of a stumble is, his limbs all wrenched, but he gets to it, and so gets the Cavaliers' sharper operators one more possession than they would otherwise have had.
On Saturday night, at the Royal Opera House, Ms. Osipova gave a riveting account of a tortured soul in this section, her body wrenched into strange shapes, her eyes blank and wide as figures from the past filtered by.
They have to drum up suburban candidates who reflect their districts, Emanuel says, noting that they wrenched back control of Congress by recruiting a football player in North Carolina, an Iraq veteran in Pennsylvania and a sheriff in Indiana.
"The Affair" wrenched itself away from just about every previous story line in its Season 3 finale on Sunday, reaching a state of suspended narrative animation from which just about anything is possible for an already promised Season 4.
That tinker-toy-and-rubber-band style, all wrenched limbs and squeaky feints and steep jumpers, is still fundamentally not all that possible to defend against, and Carlisle leverages the attention it attracts into driving lanes and corner threes.
"The bartender ran towards me with a yell, wrenched my hatchet out of my hand and shot off his pistol toward the ceiling; he then ran out of the back door, and I got another hatchet," Nation recalled in her autobiography.
The Sun and the Sunday Times backed Brexit while The Times came out for "Remain" in a vote that split Britain, forced the resignation of its prime minister, wrenched apart the ruling Conservatives and opposition Labour, and caused market turmoil.
Having publicly come out as anti-tortoise, it's beyond me why anyone would pay money for these animals — but even I disapprove of tortoises being cruelly wrenched from their homes and transported around covered in tinfoil like an old burrito.
According to an indictment released by the chief prosecutor in the county of Csongrad in southern Hungary, however, she did not make contact with Mr. Mohsen and he fell as he "wrenched himself out from the grip" of a police officer.
PARIS — President Emmanuel Macron asked French citizens on Tuesday night to come together in the aftermath of the calamitous fire at Notre-Dame Cathedral and to move beyond the divisions that have wrenched the country during months of violent street protests.
If the play nonetheless feels like a case study wrenched from Ms. Raine's own experience — her actual baby featured in the opening scene of "Consent" last year — that may be because of the challenge inherent in transmuting personal experience into art.
Trotter's is but one of the book's many voices, and his letters and transcripts form only a single strand; they are braided together with verse and drawings, lists and testimonials, all wrenched out of the historical record, one way or another.
Unlike the music she released a couple of years later on Easter, where she embraced a more accessible sound, Horses is an unearthly and bewildering creation that feels as though it's been wrenched from the most shadowy crevices of her mind.
But what makes that comment so quintessentially Kobe is not that he scored 47 that night, or that the Lakers won, or even that he had at this point wrenched full control of the offense and his own substitution pattern from his coach.
Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump has wrenched the United States back to the brink of a constitutional showdown after a weekend of rage culminated in his demand for an investigation into claims that the Obama administration inserted a spy in his 2016 campaign.
Good luck trying to put together a coherent account, even now, of how many families were wrenched apart after crossing the southern border, where the children were sent, and who was responsible for the human rights catastrophe that unfolded in plain view.
But after her parents die in quick succession (in separate, gravely dramatic incidents) she marries Ewan Tavendale (Kevin Guthrie), a young farmhand, and settles down with him on her family's property, until they're wrenched apart by his military service in the war.
But capsule portraits of the dead help unlock our stalled emotions: When Raulff recounts the historian Reinhart Koselleck's wartime experience of witnessing a horse galloping with half its head blown away, a vision of "fatal despair," the reader is wrenched out of any possible complacency.
If I just put one foot in front of the other, I could move toward an education and countless books, to having my heart wrenched by rejection, to having it restored as I fell in love, to hiking mountains and to holding precious things.
From "The Double Dream of Spring"; reprinted with permission from Ecco Press "Street Musicians" (1977) One died, and the soul was wrenched outOf the other in life, who, walking the streetsWrapped in an identity like a coat, sees on and onThe same corners, volumetrics, shadowsUnder trees.
On the wall opposite the entrance is Mark Bradford's "My Grandmother Felt the Color" (2016), a painting of splotchy and mostly subdued hues whose surface has been scored by some sharp utensil so much so it feels like it wasn't so much painted as wrenched into being.
Sarah wrecked her marriage for a giddy, idiotic affair with a woman; Josh took up with Rabbi Raquel (the wonderfully heimische Kathryn Hahn); and Ali wrenched her sexuality into new shapes, lit up by the idea that gender might be a playground rather than a prison.
Mr. Eisendrath's group, ST Acquisition Holdings, effectively wrenched the paper away from Tronc and its chairman, Michael W. Ferro Jr. Tronc, which also publishes The Los Angeles Times and The Baltimore Sun, announced in May that it had entered into a nonbinding agreement to buy Wrapports.
Rather than making a fair-minded effort to review investigators' work, he's constantly tried to use whatever he can find — often wrenched out of context or misleadingly spun, as in his infamous "Nunes memo" — to attack the Justice Department and try to discredit Mueller's investigation of Trump.
As the regime wrenched itself from Kiev's control and consolidated its grip on power, it constructed an entirely new media scene with pro-rebel radio stations, television shows, news agencies, a "state-run" newspaper and an official media center, used to host press conferences and scrutinize journalists for accreditation.
Public outrage over millions of documents leaked from a boutique Panamanian law firm — now known as the Panama Papers — wrenched attention away from wars and humanitarian crises, as harsh new light was shed on the elaborate ways wealthy people hide money in secretive shell companies and offshore tax shelters.
I'm always drawn back to the thought of that young man who dropped out of school in eighth grade to work in the coal mines, only to be wrenched from that dark hole and flung far across the planet, strapping and with a head full of curly hair.
The year's most promising pure pop album is from a painstakingly detail-oriented, emotionally wrenched, melodically ambitious soul and funk savant who's just now, a couple of years into his run in the limelight, learning how to squeeze the most arresting of sentiments from the rawest of arrangements.
" ON HIS STYLE OF COMMUNICATIONS: "Occasionally some plaster comes off the ceiling as a result of a phrase I may have used, or indeed as result of how that phrase has been wrenched out of context and interpreted by those who wish for reasons of their own to caricature my views.
The events that followed are as infamous for Angle's right shoulder getting wrenched to the verge of breaking as they are for forming the backstory of a fight that never happened, all because a rookie nearly submitted the near-invincible Angle and rewrote the script beneath the reality of the evening.
"Occasionally some plaster comes off the ceiling as a result of a phrase I may have used, or indeed as a result of how that phrase has been wrenched out of context and interpreted by those who wish for reasons of their own to caricature my views," he said on Wednesday.
But as the country underwent rapid industrialization after the Civil War, Americans were wrenched all around the country from smaller communities, where the practice of town-hall self-government had been practicable, and thrust into the "wage-slavery" of the factory system, forced to live in large, crowded, anonymous, poverty-stricken cities.
Moments later caterwauling erupted, and the event collapsed into a night of turned backs, shouted chants, pounding fists and one wrenched neck — belonging to a professor who was supposed to have provided a counterpoint to Mr. Murray's remarks, and to lead the Q. and A., but instead was attacked while leaving with him.
And so later that day, Trump stepped before the cameras and, in an unusually formal statement, wrenched back control of the narrative: "Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what the hell is going on," he said.
Previous versions of the film focused on the human in the story, John Thornton, when, in fact, the 1903 novel by Jack London portrayed Buck as the main character as he was wrenched from domestic comforts in California to be sold as a sled dog in northwestern Canada during the gold rush of the 1890s.
This persona, combined with his work — monumental public photography projects often made in parts of the world wrenched by political strife or made inaccessible by military conflict — has lent JR the aura of an empathetic Houdini, magicking himself into unkind places and performing the dual trick of not getting killed while stirring warm feelings.
There were fictional museums with very real, beautifully rendered objects to be placed in the structure that has yet to be, environments created with bamboo, mud, or wrenched steel, caverns in which light and sound immersed me in narrative, and a sound installation that evoked a story of prisoners enclosed in the dark even I was within that work.
But hers is a reversal of Laye's script in many ways: Rather than a foolish white protagonist entering the African context, Leigh's protagonists would seem to be Black Africans (and their descendants) wrenched, through violence and slavery, into a white world, with a focus on both the imagined and real lives and culture they left behind.
My girls, like countless of the world's children, have been wrenched from routines and friends, the architecture of their lives dismantled and replaced with a return to the orbit of parents who themselves can't say what's coming, our ability to comfort muted and undermined by the speeding train of the virus and the whirlwind of devastating news.
House Democrats, urged on by immigration rights groups, had pushed hard, hoping to leverage White House fears of another damaging shutdown into a softening of the president's hard-line immigration policies that they say have torn apart families, wrenched productive workers from the communities they have lived in for years and infused a heartlessness into official American immigration policy.
Wrenched out of a world that, despite her misery in it, was still the only world she really understood—the only game she knew the rules to, even if it was one she could never win—Selina doesn't know how to function as a regular person, greeting her ex-husband (who is also her current lover) as if he's an anonymous caucus-goer.
Whether the tools are fingers, a knife, or scissors, the viewer can practically hear the wet crunch of a crawfish head wrenched from its body, the crackling pop of a melon pulled in two, or the sounds of a knife navigating the shifting terrain of a green bell pepper, from its hard skin to its soft interior that will spew seeds when torn.
The Last Guardian is steeped in sadness and solitude because you form a strange bond with the most unlikely of mythological curios deep within this dark recess, and that bond is strained, wrenched into arrest, torn apart, sewn together again, and ultimately smashed into smithereens so fine they dissipate into thin air, still existing but never to be seen again.
Visionary scientific minds, including the theoretical physicists Stephen Hawking and Kip Thorne, have devoted entire books to unpacking the hallucinatory scenarios thought to be induced by black holes' gravitational forces—imagine the bottom of your body violently wrenched away from the top, physically stretching you like a Looney Tunes character, a scenario that Thorne's Black Holes and Time Warps paints in stomach-churning detail.
Remember why Palhares ended up on fight cards in Poland and Italy in the first place: the Nevada Athletic Commission suspended him from competition for two years, and since other stateside athletic commissions honor the punishments handed down by their counterparts, that meant he was effectively barred from competing in the U.S. The last straw was when he wrenched Jake Shields's shoulder for too long when he defended his WSOF title back in August 2015.
In the novel, you're treated to this passage: ...I was so spellbound that I wrenched myself free from his touch, because a moment longer I would have slackened like one of those tiny wooden toys whose gimp-legged body collapses as soon as the mainsprings are touched...It never occurred to me that what had totally panicked me when he touched me was exactly what startles virgins on being touched for the first time by the person they desire: he stirs nerves in them they never knew existed and that produce far, far more disturbing pleasures than they are used to on their own.

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