The effect of the sudden presence in the sick-room was most marked.
2
By personal contact of the sick with the well, especially in kissing.
3
The sick were healed in answer to his prayer of simple faith.
4
He took particular interest in the sick, crippled and poorly nourished children.
5
Many were sick; more were discontented; and all longed wearily for land.
1
The election result has cast doubt on popular support for that project.
2
Events surrounding CervicalCheck continue to cast a shadow over the health service.
3
Animal prints: we think they're best left to cast members of Eastenders.
4
The withdrawal agreement must give legal effect to that 'cast iron' guarantee.
5
Clive Fugill said Covid-19 cast doubt on whether that legacy could continue.
1
However, the new results show the house cat lineage is far older.
2
The only solution to the problem was to have the cat destroyed.
3
She could tell people a talking cat lived in the government house.
4
Ask Kathy Crawford what he did to her cat three years ago.
5
At home that evening it proved to be a great cat toy.
1
Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said refugees would undergo several security checks.
2
For reasons that soon became clear, Ralph took longer to warm up.
3
In 2000, for example, consumer advocate Ralph Nader ran as an independent.
4
Lands Minister Ralph Regenvanu said people need to get their homes rebuilt.
5
I don't know about the good part, but yes, Colonel Ralph Newlin.
1
By the middle of the afternoon the chuck wagon was in sight.
2
Later, he went to the chuck wagon and brought back some supper.
3
I liked the stone pile better than the chuck they gave us.
4
The end of the spindle should be threaded to receive a chuck.
5
Games of lesser importance included 26, faro, keno, the punchboard, and chuck-a-luck.
1
The citizens, however, are not convinced, and continue to hurl anti-Semitic insults.
2
There was no question how far the giants could hurl their boulders.
3
Some young migrants and refugees appeared to hurl rocks at the guards.
4
He determines to reach El Paso, and hurl the Texans on California.
5
Near and far-off, the limitless wings of the tempest hurl and go
1
Ask China, which has long recognised the value of a strategic purge.
2
The government also engaged in a major purge of the state media.
3
It took a long time to purge the water from his body.
4
When the purge ended, the numbers fell far short of those expected.
5
This weapon array is different than the others; designed to purge everything.
1
Allen said the leak would spew unchecked while the system is disconnected.
2
The kind of technicolour spew that would make even Luke Watson blush.
3
The thing is, the more negativity you spew, the worse you look.
4
I am the basest of creatures, I could even spew at myself?
5
The child's face twisted in terror and it began to spew fire.
1
The hum and the honk of a motor-car sounded in the street.
2
He heard the front door close and the honk of the horn.
3
After a minute or so I hear another honk, this one closer.
4
We found out why when we heard a horn honk behind us.
5
The warning honk had not given the Mistress time to turn out.
1
In places the yak trail led between steep banks of unstable rubble.
2
Its fur was long and wispy, like the fur of a yak.
3
Tell him we'd better dispense with the yak and get with it.
4
Even the ropes which sustain the tents are made of yak's wool.
5
You happily eat goat testicles, yak eyeballs, camel intestines and elephant dung.
1
Previously, the ships could disgorge thousands of people onto the beach daily.
2
Now, Rubra observed eleven wormhole termini blink open to disgorge the survivors.
3
William Bunning-Ford will now have to disgorge every stick of his estate.
4
What could it profit them to gather what they must straightway disgorge?
5
They would not have to disgorge the money they accumulated along the way.
1
Every time she looked at Bili's arm now, she wanted to retch.
2
I cough, gasp, gasp more, try to retch, remember how to breathe.
3
Immediately a sickly sweet odor spread out, causing the physician to retch.
4
The stench of vomit, alcohol and urine makes one want to retch.
5
She moved faster than Aislinn, and Seth stood trying not to retch.
1
Each night, well-fed individuals regurgitate packages of congealed blood for hungry roostmates.
2
In time José felt himself bursting; the liquid began to regurgitate.
3
Occasionally these small snakes will even regurgitate a termite after swallowing it whole.
4
About all I did was regurgitate what was in the manual.
5
As they approached this capital, Renaldo's grief seemed to regurgitate with redoubled violence.
1
If one word can perhaps symbolize the development of the Australian vocabulary, it could be chunder.
2
It still stank a bit of chunder, but that was a minor inconvenience compared to being horizontal.
3
As with most Australian slang, the original phrase got shortened over time, and watch out under became chunder -or so the story goes.
4
A few years ago Chunder Sen, the great scholar of India, died.
5
But I recognized Grish Chunder's point of view and sympathized with it.
1
And now and then an unmistakable upchuck bouquet would waft across his nostrils.
2
Ledford was trying not to upchuck his steak and eggs and chocolate cake.
3
Is our fierce vampire slayer gonna upchuck on the victims?
4
Has the in-helmet upchuck ever actually come to pass?
5
Shaky, sweaty and like she might upchuck any second.
1
And, even if there were, it would spue him and all who are like him out of its mouth.
2
To live, for me, Jane, is to stand on a crater-crust which may crack and spue fire any day.
3
Take care that the land spue not you out also as it spued out the nations that were before you.
4
So he threatens,-" Iwillspue thee out of my mouth," as a man's stomach loathes that which is nauseating.
5
Before his distorted vision rose the mocking face of Jim Weston, and a deep growling curse spued from his lips.
1
I'm going to pukeup everything because I'm such a pig.
2
The man who could look at a cat and make it pukeup hairballs.
3
Cate stayed in her seat, feeling like she might pukeup her tuna melt.
4
We know that Wildman could pukeup those things.
5
Spencer's gut churned so violently, she was afraid she might pukeup the Hawaiian feast.
1
With that said, you bringup a great point, which is oxygen.
2
I'll bringup the rear-in case it gets in position to attack.
3
Which was true, of course, and petty of me to bringup.
4
It's not always an easy thing to bringup or talk about.
5
They should also bringup any family history related to lipid disorders.
1
If you've spent a night " prayingtotheporcelaingod"-diarrhea ,vomiting ,chills ,headache-youcanprobably thank salmonella or norovirus for the experience.
1
That unhallowed booty created a factitious aristocracy, ever fearful that they might be called upon to regorge their sacrilegious spoil.
1
Every year the competition contrives to throwup something a little different.
2
He wanted to throwup his hat and shout in sheer joy.
3
A moment later he started and throwup his hands in surprise.
4
I throwup the chamber-window, to breathe the earliest breath of summer.
5
I think it was all fairly…well…it didn't throwup any major challenges.
1
And Bethany... if you feel the need to vomitup there.
2
Only in trying to help the victim vomitup the poison.
3
All the seawater that you drank made you vomitup a lot of those pills.
4
No one had seen him slip behind the trees to vomitup all those precious hamburgers.
5
The meats which thou hadst eaten, thou shalt vomitup: and shalt loose thy beautiful words.
1
I am sure you must besick of the sight of me.
2
I'd rather besick sometimes than afraid of being all the time.
3
He greeted the ladies with courtliness, and inquired mout anybody besick.
4
He must have known what it would mean to besick here.