Quiver Sentence Examples

quiver
  • He seemed to quiver at the suggestion.

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  • He felt it in the quiver of her hand­shake and saw it in the empty look in her eyes.

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  • Princess Mary read the paper, and her face began to quiver with stifled sobs.

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  • Dean asked, trying to control the quiver in his voice.

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  • Everything I touched seemed to quiver with life.

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  • Every muscle of Telyanin's pale, terrified face began to quiver, his eyes still shifted from side to side but with a downward look not rising to Rostov's face, and his sobs were audible.

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  • The standard quiver can be upgraded in the large tent in Southwest Hyrule Castle Town.

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  • I rode a fiery hunter--I can feel the impatient toss of his head now and the quiver that ran through him at the first roar of the cannon.

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  • The site also will set you up with a "quiver" that contains the top three best-guesses for you.

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  • Lydia pressed her body against him so tightly he could feel her quiver with each tiny step.

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  • The following upgrades will assist you in obtaining the bomb bags and quiver upgrades available in the game.

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  • Beat the first level of the STAR game to get the big quiver, which can hold up to 60 arrows.

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  • Beat the second level of the STAR game to acquire the giant quiver, which holds up to 100 arrows.

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  • The Prince of the Believers has spread before him the arrows of his quiver, and has tried every one of them by biting its wood.

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  • Chiron himself is shown carrying the quiver of arrows, one of which is shown piercing his hoof, which is raised in pain.

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  • He pointed his fingers, his cheeks flushed and he seemed to quiver with emotion.

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  • You may find that as you get close to the time when you have completely fatigued your arm muscles that they may begin to quiver.

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  • Dean poured the coffee while Cynthia Byrne rubbed her hands on her skirt as if to smooth out the nervous quiver she couldn't seem to shake.

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  • A sword pressed against his side opposite a quiver of arrows fletched with swan feathers.

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  • He glared at me as I went by him, and I made the house quiver with the slamming of my door.

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  • He then sent for his bow, quiver, arrows, shield and sword, and arrayed himself in martial style, so that, as the Sikh chronicler states, his splendour shone like the sun.

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  • Plans would be hatched buy my first quiver tip rod, seat box or whatever was flavor of the week.

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  • That's right, all the doubters and anti-DS trolls can now quiver in fear.

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  • Warp somewhere else, turn human, and you will have infinite bomb arrows from the "Lent Bomb Bag" and a glitched quiver.

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  • His belongings, found piled up near the mine, seem to have included a combined bow-case and quiver and a sword sheath, each covered with plates of gold of Greek work, three swords with gold hafts, a hone with gold mounting, a whip, many other gold plates and a heap of arrow-heads.

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  • The quiver tip section is ideal for feeder fishing on big rivers and will handle feeders of 3oz plus.

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  • With her left hand she holds a stag, while drawing an arrow from the quiver on her shoulder with the right.

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  • The oldest known coins are the electrum coins of the earlier Mermnads (Madden, Coins of the Jews, pp. 19-21), stamped on one side with a lion's head or the figure of a king with bow and quiver; these were replaced by Croesus with a coinage of pure gold and silver.

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  • In the central chamber lay the skeleton of the ancient chief, with his sword, his spear, his bow and a quiver full of arrows.

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  • Thus we feel it in its motion as wind, and observe the dynamical effects of this motion in the quiver of the leaf or the motion of a sailing ship. It offers resistance to the passage of bodies through it, destroying their motion and transforming their energy - as is betrayed to our hearing in the whiz of the rifle bullet, to our sight in the flash of the meteor.

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  • Sixpenny illustrated magazines commenced with Good Words (1860) and the Quiver (1861), both religious in tendency.

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  • The Greek Artemis was usually represented as a huntress with bow and quiver, or torch in her hand, in face very like Apollo, her drapery flowing to her feet, or, more frequently, girt high for speed.

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