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
I knew I would vomit soon, didn't know why I hadn't already.
2
For a long while he thought he might vomit or pass out.
3
Some seemed to sing their speech; some almost to vomit it up.
4
That said, the policeman's severed hand almost made me vomit a little.
5
You make me feel as if I might vomit at any moment.
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
She knew she was going to puke, she just didn't know when.
2
I'd rather puke my way up the coast on a cargo schooner!
3
Soon it was assuring me that my story was puke, worthless cockshit.
4
The first time he bent over to puke, I intended to pounce.
5
Believe me, they will be happier than if you puke on them.
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
Or rather you shouldn't, unless you have a strong desire to barf.
2
I was in back, lurching and bouncing and trying not to barf.
3
Whatever the reason, I was happy to stow my unused barf bag.
4
Though he had his bag at the ready, some barf had escaped.
5
I threw the keys and the barf bag onto the kitchen table.
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
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.
5
I want you to besick when you think of my name.
Ús de throw up en anglès
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.
6
The campaign trail can throwup all kinds of problems for politicians.
7
I tried to throwup the sash, but it would not budge.
8
There were times when I was tempted to throwup the sponge.
9
Evidently he had been afraid that I would throwup the sponge.
10
Dash me if I can stand it: I'll throwup the billet.
11
We have't' throwup our hands when it comes to the brain's flexibility.
12
He had never seen anyone throwup that violently or that often.
13
I hurried back to the store, resolved to throwup my position.
14
Some of these throwup fire and ashes, and are called volcanoes.
15
Automatically they seemed to obey her command to throwup their hands.
16
These rhizomes appear exactly like roots, but occasionally throwup green shoots.