(1) In the last pictures made public of his time in captivity, over three years ago, Bergdahl looks scrawny and uncertain in brown Afghan shirt and trousers, standing beside an insurgent commander before he is blindfolded and led away.
(2) In the first film, he wasn't that hot: long hair, bit scrawny, at least a foot shorter than all the other men in Forks.
(3) Art critics since Freud's first shows in the 1940s have had difficulties situating his achievement; the common solution has been to apply adjectives to the painted subjects in a way that reflects little more than personal taste, the writers telling readers whether the person portrayed was bored or intimidated, scrawny or obese, the paint slathered, crumbly or miraculously plastic.
(4) A scrawny black dog wanders into the road, sizes up his human visitors and scampers back into the woods.
(5) Headline writers dubbed him “the face of protest” – a scrawny Hong Kong student who led tens of thousands of demonstrators out onto the streets in a historic challenge to Beijing.
(6) 'They're kind of like punks,' Clark says of the scrawny kids from Compton, 'with the tight jeans and painted shoes.
(7) Scrawny coyotes, living on blue-bellied lizards and rodents, glare with yellow suspicious eyes at passing cars, and black vultures with scaly red heads and resentful glares scatter up from feasts of roadkill.
(8) The nation that was pleading for an italian defeat just six days ago is now pinning its scrawny hopes on an Italian victory: anything other than that outcome today will confirm England's elimination before the group stage has even ended.
(9) Like many of the great old-time comedians ( Ken Dodd or Tommy Cooper , say), Carr has got a comical face; gappy teeth, big specs, scrawny hair, bewildered expression.
(10) The day of the Vivaldi concert has arrived and the children stroll into the Friary – scrawny, scally, mischievous – and scratch out a square dance with gusto on their violins and what seem to be hugely outsized cellos.
(11) At the top was a scrawny oak with a creviced scar – part of the mouse-sized Bechstein’s main roost.
(12) The boy is described as anything but menacing – rather, as withdrawn, antisocial, even "meek", according to an official at his high school, who explained that Adam was only assigned a psychologist because a scrawny, cringing loner might be tormented by peers.
(13) He was too scrawny and shortsighted to become a footballer, but he was a promising actor, and his schoolmates voted him Most Popular Boy of his year.
(14) And it is a lot more than George Osborne's scrawny £1 valuation of the cost of separation.
(15) Taking on one of cinema's most high-profile roles might be a daunting prospect, but his has not quite been a rise from nowhere: 2010 has already been a stellar year for Garfield, whose star has gone supernova with a series of roles that must leave well-established British TV peers like John Simm, David Tennant and Ben Whishaw cursing the scrawny twentysomething.
(16) Some are scrawny creatures, rib cages pressing against flea-bitten skin, tumours flapping as they nose through rubbish carts.
(17) It worked: they won the league as all their scrawny, tuckered-out rivals faltered along the closing stretch.
(18) Back on the side of a road half an hour’s drive outside of Caynabo, Nuur Mohamed says he has been reduced to begging for food in the town and trying to catch scrawny dik-dik antelope by night.