The faster runners who have trained hard to lower a personal best are frequently contemptuous of the sloggers who get in their way en route to their own slower life-enhancing experiences.
12.
Some of his early television roles included minor roles in various programmes such as " Elidor ", " Children's Ward " and " Sloggers ".
13.
More than once he had hard words with higher authorities when he thought insufficient attention was being paid to the safety and comfort of the foot sloggers, who were bearing the brunt of the fight.
14.
After that, it was a matter of holding out to enable Richardson to reach his memorable milestone, and Steven Jack, a noted slogger, curbed himself in scoring just seven runs off 32 balls.
15.
Batting largely in the lower middle order, he was renowned for fast scoring, but Jephson wrote that " he was essentially a scientific " hitter " not a " slogger " ".
16.
Summoned back to earth by the Senate roll-call buzzer, John Glenn talked of his political career as an adventure of a different order, one where gravity can dictate the slogger's pace and navigation is not often by the stars.
17.
In cricket, "'pinch hitter "'or "'slogger "'is the usual term for a batsman ( not a dismissed, it is generally considered unwise for a top-order batsman to attempt this.
18.
Campbell had methods all of his own, rough and ready by precise standards but very effective for all that . . . . He has so far avoided text-book dogmas, and he has it in him to become a fine slogger.
19.
UEF files include standardised chunks to store the major portions of an Acorn Electron or BBC Micro's state : main, shadow and expansion bus memory, the CPU and the WD1770 floppy drive controller; also the Electron ULA and the Slogger Master RAM Board, a common Electron add-on.
20.
An earlier gang known as the Cheapside Sloggers had appeared in the 1870s, and the term " Sloggers " ( i . e ., " fighters " ) had already become an eponym for street gangs when the Peaky Blinders emerged at the end of the century in Adderley Street, in the sartorial style, unlike earlier gangs.