His hand reached down -- only to feel -- but not so quickly as the white hand, which scooped up the coin trickily, with the skill of a prestidigitator. From Wordnik.com. [The Pagan Madonna] Reference
State Department officials say they are disturbed that these accounts are trickily out. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Sep 29, 2007] Reference
Got to devise a new A-story to replace one in a trickily twin-time narrative intended for a tie-in novel project. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2008-11-01] Reference
When the shoes arrived and she handed them to G6mez he noticed the exaggerated heels, trickily camouflaged, and began to laugh. From Wordnik.com. [Mexico]
As that benighted beauty, Alison Lohman plays her part straight and hard, never once cracking under the trickily toned narrative. From Wordnik.com. [Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat] Reference
In 1995 and 1996, we saw trickily worded anti-affirmative action initiatives introduced in 17 state legislatures, none of which were successful. From Wordnik.com. [From Gender Gap To Gender Gulf: Abortion, Affirmative Action, And The Radical Right] Reference
The opening line was vivid enough, then came a blank ending in a phrase that kept dancing trickily from spot to spot in her visual imagination of the page. From Wordnik.com. [Beatrice Leigh at College A Story for Girls] Reference
The champagne was bubbling trickily in the veins of the mercurial statesmen. From Wordnik.com. [Cabbages and Kings] Reference
Some of you will say I cheated with such a hard question, worded so trickily …. From Wordnik.com. [XYHD.tv] Reference
Even though I don't like these Penguins, this is trickily funny/funniously tricky. From Wordnik.com. [Yahoo! Sports - Top News] Reference
The prayer was long, intolerably and trickily eloquent and rhetorical, very self-conscious. From Wordnik.com. [A Tramp's Notebook] Reference
One who does business trickily; a person without professional honor: used chiefly of lawyers; as, pettifoggers and shysters. From Wordnik.com. [By Advice of Counsel] Reference
In fact, when Singh offered us more of a trickily sweet ball-shaped dessert called gulab jamun, a favourite in India, we begged him to stop. From Wordnik.com. [canada.com Top Stories] Reference
Third (and most trickily, because non-strict code is affected), attempts to access a function's caller when that caller is in strict mode will throw a. From Wordnik.com. [Planet Mozilla] Reference
How to do this honestly and fairly is our problem -- to do it dishonestly and trickily, to use suggestion to bring about conviction and action without. From Wordnik.com. [The Art of Public Speaking] Reference
But the light was poor, the pale shine of the aged moon blending trickily with the swaying shadows; Lanyard was unable to place him among the passengers. From Wordnik.com. [The False Faces Further Adventures from the History of the Lone Wolf] Reference
The lowness of her register, her ability to deftly hit the notes in a song as trickily structured as this one - Simon's right, Siobhan could surprise us all. From Wordnik.com. [RSSMicro Search - Top News on RSS Feeds] Reference
You can use the Windows Mobile calendar app with its trickily small icons if you prefer and sometimes despite HTC's efforts you simply can't avoid the weeny icons. From Wordnik.com. [The Register] Reference
This is still an appalling figure and warrants my use of the phrase "enforced exodus" - which a Prof Murphy trickily portrays as being the same as "ethnic cleansing". From Wordnik.com. [The Cedar Lounge Revolution] Reference
Cymbals Eat Guitars followed with labyrinthine slacker-rock that ebbed and flowed trickily, frontman Joseph D'Agostino saving his breath for the throat-shredding lyrics. From Wordnik.com. [All Stories | The New York Observer] Reference
That very narrow definition trickily takes away the non participation protection from pharmacists, since to "participate" only means to perform the duties of the attending. From Wordnik.com. [Catholic Exchange] Reference
"A shyster," said Mr. Tutt, reading from the Century Dictionary, "is defined as 'one who does business trickily; a person without professional honor; used chiefly of lawyers.'". From Wordnik.com. [By Advice of Counsel] Reference
Melbourne Victory are aiming for the goals to come as freely as the frequent flyer points, vowing not to shelve their attacking style in a trickily timed Asian Champions League opener on Tuesday night. From Wordnik.com. [The Age News Headlines] Reference
The third time the poet catches the orator trickily under the thigh, and fairly tears him to the ground; but at the fourth meeting the orator slips his arm in decisive grip about his opponent's wrist and with a might wrench upsets him. From Wordnik.com. [A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life] Reference
The champagne was bubbling trickily in the veins. From Wordnik.com. [Cabbages and Kings] Reference
Ledger plays a trickily mysterious stranger. From Wordnik.com. [WN.com - Articles related to John Cleese plans Fish musical] Reference
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