She approached her own logie
tiredly. When her hand was on the door, ready to enter and lie down for a while, that's when she saw the shadow of a man who was standing behind her.
That Blitstein pulls off this
tiredly self-reflexive conceit with relative panache is due in no small part to the scruffy grace of leads Justin Rice ("Mutual Appreciation") and indie fixture Brendon Sexton III.
It's a state of affairs Bishop James Cowan was
tiredly familiar with during his years as the diocese's executive officer.
"And the world's miracle ship
tiredly slid to her eternal rest, a moment of hushed silence then a new sound, the screams and stern cries of hundreds and hundreds of human beings struggling desperately in the icy waters.
"Adjacent to the Australian outpost a small building that was under construction has its right ceiling collapsed the gray concrete slumping down
tiredly onto the floor beneath.
No longer
tiredly envisaged by fictional time travellers, it figured as fascist nightmare: Orwell's 'boot stamping on a human face--forever'.
Merryvale Man turned the handicap hurdle into a procession from the second-last after sole challenger Spuradich flopped over it
tiredly before weakening.
They
tiredly return following the attack to finally deploy the ramp.
"Who cares?" she said
tiredly, leafing through a copy of Herizons while filing her teeth to points.
Tuff Torq has unveiled the first of what is eventually planned as a
tiredly of hydraulic products, a dual piston pump initially targeted toward zero-turn radius (ZTR) mowers.
A certain antagonism emerges between Saidian and avant-garde discourse, with the latter somewhat
tiredly insisting on its poetic and aesthetic rights NOT to narrate itself in universally comprehensible forms, and the former interpreting texts in order--if not to silence them by substituting the critique for the thing itself, the idea for the poem--at least to supplement them in a way that sometimes eclipses their avowed autonomy.
When she quietly and
tiredly refused, the driver got off the bus to get a policeman, who arrested her.