"What seems to have happened is that somebody engaged the train, knocked the brakes off and pulled the throttle and got off the engine, " he said.
12.
These children _ all ages, mostly boys _ have been diagnosed with Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder, a complex neurological impairment that takes the brakes off brains and derails concentration.
13.
He pledged to work for more flexibility in the labor market to fight unemployment, telling lawmakers : " We need to take the hand brake off the Italian economy ."
14.
"They're ( the Reserve Bank ) maintaining that they're not easing monetary policy but, to your average man-in-the-street, it would appear as if the Reserve Bank's taking the brakes off, " he said.
15.
He gave the impression that he could score fast if he were to take the brake off but in each innings . . . he played for the side rather than himself ."
16.
Now research by a team of U . S . and British scientists suggests one key to that recovery is genes that take the brakes off the body's front-line immune defense, so-called natural killer cells.
17.
Later systems replace the automatic air brake with an electrical wire ( in the UK, at least, known as a " round the train wire " ) that has to be kept energized to keep the brakes off.
18.
Automatic brakes on the other hand use the air or vacuum pressure to hold the brakes off against a reservoir carried on each vehicle, which applies the brakes if pressure / vacuum is lost in the train pipe.
19.
Glennie stressed that Ipilimumab works by taking the brakes off part of the immune system called T cells, while our compound revs up the T cells it is like giving them a caffeine hit . ".
20.
Call me an old stick-in-the-mud but Blackthorn is a sod, because it's so long and brittle it can brake off under the skin and a'stitch in time save nine'.-- talk ) 20 : 02, 29 June 2012 ( UTC)