Later, taking responsibility for Egypt's resounding defeat, Nasser bursts into tears along with his army chief, an old comrade whom he soon has arrested.
12.
He got carried away at point guard on occasion, failing to check the shot clock before driving wildly to the basket _ a stunt that nearly had Van Gundy in tears along the sideline.
13.
Picking up their instruments as a result of the 1976 Radio 1 in September 1979 which featured " Living Doll ", " Deep End Dance ", " Tunnels " and " Tear Along ".
14.
In the days before the Internet, most Consumer Credit Counseling Service visitors would talk out financial woes face-to-face with a counselor, shifting through overdue bills and, maybe, shedding a tear along the way.
15.
I unfolded it and studied it so many times _ tracing the routes of the early Everesters, trying to deduce where Mallory and Irvine vanished above the North Col, plotting fantasy journeys of my own _ that it eventually began to tear along the folds.
16.
The objective in the surgical management of aortic dissection is to resect ( remove ) the most severely damaged segments of the aorta and to obliterate the entry of blood into the false lumen ( both at the initial intimal tear and any secondary tears along the vessel ).
17.
Daniel Feinberg of " The Hollywood Reporter " said, " " O . J . : Made in America " is a provocative, intelligent and thorough documentary that tears along at an impressive clip given its length, with tragedy around every corner.
18.
With his suspenders at half-mast above his white fencing knickers and red stars dripping like tears along the left sleeve of his jersey, Bayer, New York City's finest foil prodigy and the team's youngest athlete, projected a team-sized air of bereavement.
19.
Several vase paintings in the show depict runners in action, among them a black-figured amphora from about 540 B . C . showing three bearded, powerfully thighed nude sprinters, arms held high, dashing for the finish line . ( Competitors were on their own, there being no such thing as team sports . ) Another, dated about 480 B . C ., has three younger men almost neck-and-neck, their hair flying and limbs pumping madly as they tear along.
20.
The critic for " The New York Times Book Review " ( 11 June 1922 ) was also impressed : " It is safe to assert that unless the reader peers into the last chapter or so of the tale, he will not know who this secret adversary is until the author chooses to reveal him . " The review gave something of a backhanded compliment when it said that Christie " gives a sense of plausibility to the most preposterous situations and developments . " Nevertheless it conceded that Miss Christie has a clever prattling style that shifts easily into amusing dialogue and so aids the pleasure of the reader as he tears along with Tommy and Tuppence on the trail of the mysterious Mr . Brown.