Despite a shoot-to-kill policy on the border, thousands still leave each month.
2
No further details were immediately available, including the time of the shoot-down.
3
This optical arms race presents a problem for makers of point-and-shoot cameras.
4
That is, the defender may shoot to kill; the offender may not.
5
Monstrous creatures writhe about the crags; the men shoot some of them.
1
Many believe we may be welcoming the young sprout sooner than expected.
2
Something like, 'Gosh, Belle, I hope you made your famous brussels-sprout dish.'
3
The campanile has a round top and flowers sprout from the masonry.
4
Some, like the chestnut and poplar, sprout profusely; others sprout very little.
5
Then, before the sun began its long journey away, they would sprout.
1
Not that any given spud is ever such a paragon of form.
2
Tom made the spud synthesiser for recent play The Potato Stamp Megalomaniac.
3
Borr Drilling Frigg has a spud can diameter of approximately 60 feet.
4
The dredger cuts by swinging on a center spud 16 in.
5
Doesn't do a thing nowadays but dig in the garden with a spud.
1
Their problems began to bourgeon immediately after they left New Jersey and went to Kedzie's old apartment for further debate as to their future lodgings.
2
Sharp surprise and a palpable fear bourgeoned upon the Captain's face.
3
The FAO received about half of the emergency funding it requested last year, Bourgeon said.
4
They have bourgeoned, but they have not blossomed.
5
For the tulips have not bourgeoned yet.
1
If Councillors detrain, demons pullulate about their feet, eating the echoes of their steps.
2
There is no fear that the professors who pullulate all over the Baltic Plain will overcome the Latins in logic.
3
A thousand schemes, a thousand possibilities sprang to life in his pullulating brain.
4
Records attesting to his death were pullulating like insect eggs and verifying each other beyond all contention.
5
On the roadbed there is a man whose front pullulates with scrawny arms, each from a corpse or an amputation.
1
Beneath their crowns and handkerchiefs burgeonedforth plaits of false hair decorated with coral and silver ornaments.
Ús de germinates en anglès
1
You're right about boredom -that's when daydreams happen and creativity germinates.
2
Who grows most of the Chinese chestnuts, germinates most of the seed?
3
Evil thoughts make evil blood, and in evil blood disease germinates and flourishes.
4
The grain once ground into flour springs and germinates no more.
5
The carpogonium germinates forthwith, drawing its nourishment almost wholly from the parent plant.
6
And enough seed germinates and comes up from such close planting.
7
There, in the deep recesses of the man, it germinates.
8
The buried truth germinates and breaks through to the light.
9
The small grain of foundation for complaint germinates, till it becomes a whole crop.
10
Straightway the multiform creation germinates forth, and all beings live.
11
There are some friendships where the intercourse is only the seed which absence duly germinates.
12
The seed germinates, and grows, till it brings forth thirty, sixty, or a hundred fold.
13
The smut spore germinates and produces first a stage of the smut plant in the soil.
14
As soon as it germinates move it to a bright place (greenhouse or porch).
15
The zygospore thus formed germinates after a long period and forms a new filament of cells.
16
Parsley, like celery seed, germinates slowly, and is sometimes about a month in making its appearance.