As my taxi halted at a red light in the darkened, deserted city centre one night, I feared my own story was about to veer towards pessimistic. |
|
The convolutions in the plotlines veer back and forth between intriguing and confusing. |
|
Staying on course is even more difficult because gamers must also veer to collect power-ups and rings. |
|
He adduces several wartime and postwar writers who veer away from addressing the German civilians' dreadful suffering. |
|
Too many times, we see a critic veer off the page to ream an author for the facts of his or her life. |
|
The suspects first shot the car's left front tire, causing the vehicle to veer and hit a cigarette stall. |
|
In terms of my favorite songs of theirs, I immediately veer towards their loungey stuff. |
|
In a test drive on simulated ice, the system did not allow the driver to veer off-course and spin the car. |
|
A sight of a scrumptious slice of cake or temptation-laced chocolate is enough to veer away the most enthusiastic fitness freak. |
|
No. Strays isn't mentalist enough to veer off in that kind of direction, it's all too tight. |
|
If your summers veer towards the torrid, a soft coat low e with a lower SHGC may be a more sensible strategy. |
|
I had tried to veer away from footie in the last few weeks as the season had taken its toll on me and I was a bit shagged out. |
|
Supermarket trolleys are well-known for their irritating tendency to veer from the straight and narrow, apparently at their own whim. |
|
The jokes occasionally veer into hackier than hack territory but any piece with giant robots and mobster lobsters from Las Vegas is okay by me. |
|
But here, every time I'd get up to planing speed, the boat would invariably veer off course and stall. |
|
During changeable weather, the temperature can veer from sub-Mediterranean to Siberian. |
|
Around the 30 minute mark on the nose, we veer off into ibogaine as addiction cure. |
|
I'm leaving the subject broad, hoping we can veer off down all kinds of different paths, figuratively and literally. |
|
I veer into the middle lane again, car swerving wildly, and draw a second deep breath. |
|
Katrina stubbornly refused to veer off and wimp out like all New Orleanians distractedly assumed she would. |
|
|
Performances, unfailingly good, veer gingerly over the top but don't trade the characters' waggishness for their humanity. |
|
The director stays fairly conventional, reining things in when he could veer off into wonderfully absurdist territory. |
|
Adjusting his grip on the controls, he began to veer away from the colony, lest he be detected by their radar. |
|
Those in search of ancient history veer more towards Paphos on the west coast to view the wonderful mosaics. |
|
In thinking about ethical justice, we veer between the notions of forgiveness and retribution. |
|
Peering from behind my hands, I watch as the horses fall, or throw their rider, or watch as loose, riderless horses veer across the track. |
|
The technology industries began to veer to a crash and unemployment rocketed. |
|
The driver jammed his feet on the brakes, causing the car to veer sideways and shudder into a stop before crashing into a nearby telephone pole. |
|
I just don't know if I should veer off this path for a while, maybe backtrack a bit and see if I can't find out what I've forgotten to do. |
|
The vibes veer off into a countermelody and the bass enters shortly thereafter. |
|
We veer away towards the subway, through the bloated families and the preening mermaids and mermen. |
|
One of the cars had to veer sharply back behind the tractor while the third car pulled in front of the tractor. |
|
An inquest heard his glasses had probably misted up, causing him to veer into a tree stump. |
|
Sometimes this kind of food can veer into blandness, but in the proper hands it's an education in primary flavors. |
|
The Government seems to veer between absurd nannying half the time then throwing the rule book away the rest. |
|
But at the launch an on-board computer cut the rocket's engines when a first-stage rocket failed, causing it to veer off course. |
|
He would shout things out excitedly, or suddenly veer off the subject, or even run forward and violently shake a bored student. |
|
Her opinions, too, arguably veer from the eminently sensible to the inexplicable. |
|
The veer offensive requires the quarterback to make the decision to run or hand off the ball even faster. |
|
The authors then veer away from the visuality they take as their main subject, however, and begin instead to focus on women's songs. |
|
|
Enables vehicles to functionally veer in a certain direction, stop, and re-enter traffic at bus stops and petrol stations without any problems. |
|
You have to want to veer from the beaten path to pursue a scientific research career. |
|
The chimères were later to veer dangerously out of control and ultimately be largely responsible for Aristide's downfall. |
|
There was no evidence of a malfunction that would cause the aircraft to veer on landing. |
|
At the same time, the spinning motion of the ball does not cause it immediately to veer to the left. |
|
One can veer off the main paths into gorgeous, overgrown woodland areas. |
|
Urban Outfitters has a track record of putting out products that veer into attention-grabbing, supposedly edgy territory. |
|
Althoff's paintings are eerily beautiful, displaying delicate mastery of line, color and form, while their subjects veer toward the strange and macabre. |
|
The is one of those unusual, off-kilter ensemble films, featuring a diverse group of characters who veer off in different directions as they head down the same highway. |
|
Vocally they veer between manic and mannered, at times verging on hysterical operatics, while their rigid riffs resemble uncoordinated robots trying to play disco. |
|
Some track barometric trends and sound an alarm at a preset elevation to prevent you from zipping past the point where you should veer left along a ridgeline. |
|
It may simply amplify the frustration when some well-phrased thought or argument is passed over, or when the conversation does indeed veer off topic. |
|
They veer away from discussion, change the subject, or even ask openly if we can stop talking about whatever-it-is because it makes them too uncomfortable. |
|
The woman allegedly decided to hit her brakes suddenly and veer toward an exit, losing Tirico. |
|
The actors create a relaxed chemistry together as they veer between the solidarity of the three musketeers and the dimwitted fumbling of the three stooges. |
|
These will absorb an awful lot of chafe, and if they do chafe though, veer just a little more line and a new piece of hose will be in the chock to take the chafe. |
|
And yet Cinco de Mayo can veer so, so quickly into Cinco de Weirdly Racist Douchebaggery. |
|
Some immigrants veer off the traditional career path and head out in new directions, into places they might never have dreamed of when they were growing up in India. |
|
They drink too much beer and plow into trees or veer into traffic as they swat at their kids. |
|
Tuesday evening, the wind should veer north-west, letting him make a beeline for the finish. |
|
|
This allowed the tug-barge unit to veer off course, causing damage to shore property and the tug-barge unit to eventually run aground. |
|
The lyrics veer between poetic symbolism and naked political urgency. |
|
I would not want us to veer off in an abstract fashion into a debate on whether the death penalty is completely bad or not. |
|
On his normal delivery round on one rainy evening he was unlucky enough to veer off the road. |
|
Shunned in school, unable to function, many of them veer off into a life of crime or conduct disorders. |
|
It is important for us not to veer off into initiatives that have nothing to do with dealing with the people who are committing these crimes. |
|
They ensure that the participants enter into a discussion that does not get out of hand or veer off course. |
|
When your stroke decelerates, the club will twist more when miss-hit and the ball will veer off-line immediately. |
|
We know that workers who veer off the path of traditional, full-time, permanent employment face increased economic insecurity. |
|
The path passes the Arrapaitz spring, drops to Larrarte hill and a little later, we veer off to the left towards the Otegi homestead. |
|
We veer off the track to our camp just before the last section of the pass. |
|
After a week of tiresome northerly currents, they finally began to veer off to the west again. |
|
The bottom back legs of my 7-month-old mastiff veer off towards the outside. |
|
This presses on the dog's left forepaw causing the dog to veer to the left. |
|
He tends to veer off the path, introducing subjects with a charming quirkiness and dropping breadcrumbs of local knowledge along the way. |
|
Thus every day, on my blog, these strangers show up, just to shoot the breeze, flirt, kvetch, veer off topic and, most of all, pay zero attention to what I have written. |
|
She was said to be capable of enticing even the most experienced ship captain to veer from his course and meet an untimely end. |
|
The technique, known as galvanic vestibular stimulation, unbalances a person so that they automatically veer left or right in an attempt to rebalance themselves. |
|
Since the start of 2014, these streams have begun to veer into each other and collide. |
|
The ship did not veer from the course steered nor was an angle of heel detected. |
|
|
With the aircraft slowing, the rudder became less effective and the aircraft began to veer to the right. |
|
Several different call notes have been observed and recorded and have been described as beer, veer, beeeaa and queep. |
|
An ordinary community which is hostile or friendly as passion or as interest may veer about. |
|
The left veer off the runway could not be duplicated in the simulator. |
|
After the strong wind on the beam, which is set to continue until Monday lunchtime, the wind will gradually ease off and veer south to south-easterly. |
|
This is a season that could veer from historically brilliant, to histrionically disastrous. |
|
As with any course, it may veer at times toward the technical, and the American user may need to bone up on British terminology for note values: crotchet for quarter-note, quaver for eighth-note and the like. |
|
So you instinctively choose someone not just because of their policies, but because you think they'd veer off course in a direction you would find acceptable. |
|
Just how does she veer so effortlessly between her clones? |
|
It was only because of the fact that these facilities were located in strategic positions that many mariners were warned of the impending danger of the rocks and cliffs and consequently had the opportunity to veer clear. |
|
It may veer more toward love-I want to serve my family-or toward duty-I need to do what is expected-but always it shows commitment to the family group. |
|
However, we should not veer to the other extreme, namely to the disproportionate criminalisation of captain and crew, a subject which has been hotly debated. |
|
The response of architecture to industrialisation, in stark contrast to the other arts, was to veer towards historicism. |
|
What the Okies did to the Split-T was similar to what the veer would do to the Okie defense later on. |
|
They are interesting in that they veer strongly in the direction of daintiness and sweetness and, to this extent, look more northern than almost any other group of Italian sculpture before the early work of Lorenzo Ghiberti. |
|
The winds ahead of the cold front were from the southeast at 30 knots and were expected to veer to the northwest at 25 knots with the passage of the cold front. |
|
On this album Corneille also focused on the melodies, which are more funky and festive than on his two previous French-language albums, which veer from variety to soul. |
|
These brave women, undaunted by the plight of their homeland, women who dare to veer off the beaten path and claim their rightful place in society. |
|
If we dont involve the provinces in the broader policy issues of the federation, there is a serious risk that we will see federal finances veer off track again, this time in the provinces. |
|
Recent evidence suggests that citizens do not want the public service to veer from its role of guardian of the public interest, or, by implication, its focus on equity and due process. |
|
|
The currents began to veer off to the west early in the morning. |
|
When two vessels are meeting and there may be a risk of collision, each vessel shall veer to starboard so as to pass on the port side of the other. |
|
We need to work together to ensure all children have the opportunity to reach their full potential, even if they veer from the path briefly before they reach adulthood. |
|
Scientists think the seaquake off Norway on August 30 may have made the mammals veer off course. |
|
And because it would not be illegal for that pooch to kill, peradventure, a fox, it follows that if the hounds veer onto a real scent and make a kill, no law has been broken. |
|
In addition to poster paint, acrylics, yarn and glue, some students were motivated to veer into the world of papier-mache. |
|
And Mr Greenspan is saying that with increased transparency, the Fed needs to be more careful about the language it uses lest it give markets whiplash by appearing to veer from one fear to another. |
|
This Toronto group plays multitextured instrumentals that veer from clangy turbulence to pastoral, acoustic daydreams. |
|
If you keep looking back you will veer off course. |
|
Where exactly did the badminton players veer off into corruption? |
|
Conversations with Pink tend to veer off course. |
|
Or perhaps he meant all along to veer off course. |
|
When did linguistics veer off from people, society, the social? |
|
You've got your clock-watchers, an indoor breed that delight in detail and can veer towards the eccentric. |
|
My tastes veer towards the rockier end of the spectrum these days so my favourite band at the moment would be the Deftones, closely followed by Meshuggah. |
|
All are set in the present and the majority tackle the implications of the revolution indirectly, relying on decontextualized episodes that veer toward the nonfigurative. |
|