
(9) He could only squirm in the stands as Robbie Keane lofted the clearest chance of the game into the face of Mark Schwarzer, who also foiled Kuyt and Torres. (8) President Andrzej Duda and Beata Szydło, the prime minister, take their orders from him and squirm for his approval.
(7) makes me squirm and it makes my pants ride up so my socks are showing and my shoes fall off and I can't get the food up to my mouth when I want to.". (6) But it squirms about conceding them to people it does not approve of. (5) The Spurs were missing simple shots but insidiously squirmed their way back into the game, with James returning to Earth and Leonard in fine shooting form. (4) If the thought of eating fermented cabbage makes you squirm, then perhaps you're not ready for it – but plenty of others are. (3) And yet for all his anti-establishment credentials, Mr Galloway is as practised as any of his New Labour enemies at squirming away from awkward questions. (2) He cut in and provided a pass for Sneijder, whose shot squirmed wide off Rodríguez he then clipped a ball in that just evaded Sneijder and soon after that he appealed for another penalty. (1) The talk coming from senior Tories – at least some of whom have the grace to squirm when questioned on this topic – suggesting that it's all terribly complicated, that it was a long time ago and that even SS members were, in some ways, themselves victims, is uncomfortably close to the kind of prattle we used to hear from those we called Holocaust revisionists. i.) To twist about briskly with contor/ions like an eel or a worm to wriggle to writhe.
(11) Search hard, and phalluses appear among the squiggles (though American critics sometimes confused them with carrots or rockets), and in 1961 the juicy Ferragosto paintings recreated the mid-August holiday with lurid colours and brown scatological smears, applied once again with the left hand: Roland Barthes aptly described them as gestures of "dirtying", "deranging the morality of the body".(10) A commissioned mural is better – then you don’t get all the tagging.” Tagging is the tradition of writing your graffiti name everywhere, usually just a quick, illegible squiggle.
#BEEBEEP VS SQUIGGLE SERIES#
(9) Piketty's figures show a clear upward trend to inequality in the UK since the 70s the FT's preferred official data dissolves into a series of squiggles that show nothing conclusive. (8) He told the court: “The envelope says ‘Ozzie’, with some hearts and a squiggle, and then it says on the front of the card: ‘Roses are red, violets are blue’. (7) When architect Frank Gehry unveiled his plans for a museum shaped like a massive glass cloud in the heart of Paris it looked little more than a few squiggles on a piece of paper. (6) The art has a black squiggle spray-painted over it, the work of an apparent Banksy hater who, according to Goya, was stopped mid-defacement by a group of men who tackled him. (5) Thanks to the Mr Squiggles employed at PricewaterhouseCoopers and the work of some industrious journalists, the public now knows what an international tax “minimisation” scheme looks like. (4) The 27-year-old accused said: "The envelope says 'Ozzie', with some hearts and a squiggle, and then it says on the front of the card: 'Roses are red, violets are blue'. (3) Among hipster witch-house acts, the nomenclatural trend is for unicode symbols, all squiggles and shapes names such as GL▲SS †33†H and †‡† which aren't just hard to find on MySpace, they're almost impossible to type. (2) Put simply it’s, “What the actual fuck?” “I don’t even think you are human!” cries one listener, flabbergasted by Broke Up and its squiggling rave synths, which sound as if they’re gasping for life. (1) But the question of what writers owe their families is as old as the squiggles on papyrus in Tutankhamun’s tomb. i.) To shake and wash a fluid about in the mouth with the lips closed.