Association football club in Welling, England.
1Manners are the performance; the causes are the wings and the machinery.
2There is certainly no shortage of great material waiting in the wings!
3Waves of current move along the outflung appendages often called the wings.
4Lost the wings, of course; couldn't have much of a life, otherwise.
5NEURATION.-Thearrangement of the veins or nervures in the wings of insects.
6Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig stood in the wings, shaking in every limb.
7He stopped in the wings, stage left, his booted feet spread slightly.
8Such was the racket no one noticed the sound of the wings.
9After that the days flew by on the wings of the wind.
10But the Emperor was awaiting the development of events on the wings.
11Henderson stood in the wings, unseen by the audience, and looked on.
12There it was, lying in the wings and getting in everybody's way.
13Forward and backward control the angle of the wings, anxious Leonardo explained.
14Having explored one of the wings, they returned to the central hall.
15He pulled the wings off insects to practice his fine motor skills.
16And the wings of one were joined to the wings of another.
Translations for the wings