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"Yet be mindful, she came a long and twining road to seek thee first."
Simon and the others talked quietly for a long while, hushed by the strange twining music more than their situation.
In their place was a solid wall of tree roots, great twining masses of them.
Jake chased shadows down a narrow, twining street.
It is an annual or perennial, herbaceous, twining vine growing to 1-3 m tall.
Its twining vine stems can grow as much as a foot a day and may reach a length of more than 60 feet.
Down a narrow, twining street.
When the woman places one of her thighs across the thigh of her lover, it is called the "twining position."
Balor was still clumsily trying to scramble to his feet, but the twining roots held him firmly.
Their stems are thread-like or wiry and, like most twining species, they twine clockwise round the host as seen from the source of growth.
The erect species can get 15-40 cm tall, the semi-erect one about 30-60 cm and the twining forms 60-200 cm long.
In Example 49, the melody not only illustrates the 'twining ropes of twisted vine', but also intensifies the poem's sense of uncanny desolation at nightfall:
Drosera neesii, the jewel rainbow is an erect or twining perennial tuberous species in the carnivorous plant genus Drosera.
The "clasping position" is used in "low congress," and in the "lowest congress," together with the "pressing position," the "twining position", and the "mare's position."
This twining vine produces lovely heart-shaped or lobed foliage, but later in the season it begins to send out what look like tightly furled umbrellas that get longer each day.
Gelsemium sempervirens is a twining vine in the family Gelsemiaceae, native to warm temperate and tropical America from Guatemala north to the Southeastern United States.
Like bindweed and some other members of the Convolvulaceae, Cynanchum laeve is a twining vine with heart-shaped leaves common in roadsides, fence rows, fields, and disturbed areas.
At the site of the tomb, Dragosani laid the doped animal in a hollow between twining roots, tethered it to the bole of a tree and tossed the sack over it for warmth.
It differs from the closely related Smilacaceae only in that Rhipogonaceae is a twining vine that lacks tendrils, its seeds contain starch, the flowers are hermaphroditic, and the five sided anthers are longer than the filaments.
The very purity and warmth of the water alarmed me; I grew fearful that I might somehow forget it was not air in fact and lose myself as I had once been lost among the dark and twining roots of the pale blue nenuphars.