Information om | Engelska ordet GRIMACING


GRIMACING

Antal bokstäver

9

Är palindrom

Nej

24
AC
ACI
CI
CIN
GR
GRI

2

2

587
AC
ACG
ACI
ACM


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Exempel på hur man kan använda GRIMACING i en mening

  • Additional deductions are applied to gymnasts unable to maintain a neutral head position during holds, a neutral face (not grimacing), or grunting.
  • Tardive dyskinesia (TD) is an iatrogenic disorder that results in involuntary repetitive body movements, which may include grimacing, sticking out the tongue or smacking the lips, which occurs following treatment with medication.
  • Neurological symptoms include facial grimacing, involuntary writhing, and repetitive movements of the arms and legs similar to those seen in Huntington's disease.
  • The entrance to the churchyard is spanned by a decorative arch of Coade stone, a ceramic material manufactured in Lambeth, London, which is in Gothic horror style, with representations of boars, dragons, frogs, grimacing cherubs, owls, shrouded figures and squirrels, while the tops of the towers are surrounded by elephants' heads.
  • Automatic mental functioning suggests that among universal human indicators of hostility are the grinding or gnashing of teeth, the clenching and shaking of fists, and grimacing.
  • In 1710, Permoser returned to Dresden to collaborate with the architect Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann on the Zwinger palace, built 1710–28 for Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony, where he provided full-blown Roman Baroque sculptural details; for the Wallpavillon he provided six of the twelve festive, flexing, grimacing atlantes for which he is most remembered.
  • On the trumeau is a statue of Christ giving a blessing whilst holding a globe and treading on a grimacing demon.
  • " Some contemporary critics took a sterner view; in an 1885 article, the critic Thomas Heyward praised Planché ("fanciful and elegant") and Gilbert ("witty, never vulgar"), but wrote of the genre as a whole, "the flashy, 'leggy', burlesque, with its 'slangy' songs, loutish 'breakdowns', vulgar jests, paltry puns and witless grimacing at all that is graceful and poetic is simply odious.
  • In one episode of children's show TMi, featuring an interview with Matt Di Angelo (Deano Wicks) and Belinda Owusu (Libby Fox), host Mark Rhodes dressed up as Pauline Fowler, clutching a stuffed toy dog and grimacing at the camera, for a game.
  • Once outside, Hessler pauses and looks back, struggling against belief and then, grimacing demonically, slinks off into the night as a storm begins.
  • The heavy tum-tum of the basses throbbed obscurely against the rhythms of Spohr and Berlioz all the evening, like a toothache through a troubled dream; and occasionally, during a pianissimo, or in one of Lady Hallé's eloquent pauses, the cornet would burst into vulgar melody in a remote key, and set us all flinching, squirming, shuddering, and grimacing hideously.
  • Indications of dystonic spasms include platysma spasms, mouth corner retractions, tongue dyskinesia, bruxism, lip pursing or sucking, facial grimacing, and nasal contractions.
  • Marc's Gilles was followed in quick succession at the fairs by Gilles of other actors and acrobats: the tumblers Benville and Drouin, in the same year as Marc's debut; Crespin, called Gilles le Boiteux (Gilles the Gimp), "a performer of 'grace and lightness' despite the infirmity of his body", in 1701; Nicolas Maillot, "one of the best Gilles to appear at the Foire", in 1702; and Génois, a grimacing rope-dancer in wooden clogs, in 1711.
  • The beats are ridiculously infectious and even though the song is meant to be lightheaded, tongue-in-cheek and full of sexual innuendo, the lyrics are so inane: "I'm not like the sluts in this town/They make me blah in my mouth," it's hard to get through it without grimacing.
  • Examples of signals would be tapping, gesturing, or holding cards a certain way, or the player winking or grimacing at their partner.
  • Catatonia is defined as the presence of at least three of the following twelve traits: catalepsy, waxy flexibility, posturing, grimacing, mutism, negativism, stupor, mannerism, stereotypy, echolalia, echopraxia, and agitation.
  • Furthermore, the grimacing indicates that buprenorphine is fully efficacious at recommended doses against early postoperative pain, but carprofen and ketoprofen are efficacious only at doses much higher than currently recommended: acetaminophen is not efficacious.
  • The final photographs depict Cassils in an almost primal state, sweating, grimacing, and flying through the air as they pummel clay blocks, placing an emphasis on the physicality of their gender non-conforming and transmasculine body.
  • To diagnose catatonic depression, it requires the presence of 3 of the following 12 clinical signs, which includes stupor (impaired responsiveness indicated by a lack of movement and speech), catalepsy (a lack of response to external stimuli due to muscular rigidity), waxy flexibility (resistance to repositioning after being moved), mutism (being unable or unwilling to speak), negativism (resistance to suggestions or instructions), posturing (holding an abnormal position for an extended period), mannerisms (involve an unusual, exaggerated, or peculiar way of performing a normal action like movement or speech), stereotypies (these behaviors include repetitive, non-goal-directed movements and speech, disrupting normal functioning), psychomotor agitation (increased movement, restlessness, and irritability coupled with enhanced responsiveness to internal and external stimuli), grimacing (making a facial expression of pain), echolalia (mimicking another person's speech) and echopraxia (mimicking another person's movements or behaviors for no reason).
  • From the grimacing of actors towards the camera to the constant curtsies and gesticulations of conjurers in magic films, this cinema flaunts its visibility and accepts to sacrifice the apparent autonomy of the fictional universe if it allows it to solicit the spectator's attention.


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