- the
sinew is a
garrotte used to
break the victim's neck. However,
Robert Connolly, a
lecturer in
physical anthropology,
suggests that the
sinew may have...
- beef,
taken from the animal's
upper thigh or shoulder, the fat and the
sinews being removed.
Before drying, the meat is
treated with
white wine and seasonings...
- man who was so
shrunk by
illness that the
muscles were worn down and
remained in a
state like thin membrane, in such a way that the
sinews instead of merging...
-
transfers weight from his left side to his right, the
whole movement of fat and
sinew is smoother, more
physiologically correct". All of the
dinosaurs used servo...
- York:
Oxford University Press. Burk, Kathleen. Britain,
America and the
sinews of war, 1914-1918 (1985)
online free
Great Britain.
Ministry of Munitions...
- The Rise and Fall of the
Great Powers (1987) p. 81, 119 John Brewer, The
sinews of power: war, money, and the
English state, 1688–1783 (1990) p. 91 Curtis...
- men. In one instance, main
character Temmie Oakes says, "...You saw the
sinews rippling beneath the
cheap stuff of
their sweaty shirts. Far, far too heady...
- an inch and a half to two
inches wide:
these are
backed very
neatly with
sinew, and painted. The
arrows are
upwards of
thirty inches long; some of them...
- of
European Economic History. 32 (2): 363–388.; Brewer, John (1990). The
Sinews of Power: War,
Money and the
English State, 1688–1783.; Kennedy, Paul (1989)...