(1) Investigative reports indicated "horseplay" and questionable emergency medical team care.
(2) The majority of the accidents occurred during horseplay or while the children were running or fighting.
(3) Circumstances surrounding the injuries included sports (36%), fights (20%), self-inflicted injuries (13%), suicide attempts (9%), incidents related to vocational studies (8%), and horseplay (3%).
Skylarking
Definition:
(n.) The act of running about the rigging of a vessel in sport; hence, frolicking; scuffing; sporting; carousing.
Example Sentences:
(1) We were excited and looking forward to having a field behind with cow parsley and skylarks.
(2) I once saw a merlin above Burgh Castle spiral in a relentless tight corkscrew as it pursued a skylark that steepled until it was only a dust mote.
(3) The skylark’s summer song is reduced in winter to spits of rage, each broken chirrup rendered to human ears as “get lost!” or something far ruder.
(4) Common bird species such as sparrow and skylark facing decline in Europe Read more The report will embolden campaigners opposed to plans by the European Commission to review two key pieces of environmental legislation - the birds and habitats directives.
(5) The skylark is not the only bird whose sound has influenced generations of poets, writers and composers.
(6) But when future generations download the recordings, and listen to skylarks and nightingales, cuckoos and turtle doves, will they feel a twinge of sadness that these species are no longer with us?
(7) "The fans here are rabid," wrote a user called Skylark .
(8) It seemed as though the fields were shedding skylarks.
(9) As the skylarks fly away, I become aware of a rapid movement along the tideline.
(10) Click here to watch skylark song video Poets and composers have long been mesmerised by the skylark's song, including Shelley, whose Ode to a Skylark opens with the unforgettable pronouncement: " Hail to thee, blithe spirit!
(11) Skylarks are smallish, brown birds with a perky crest and streaky plumage.
(12) Species with larger brain areas that were capable of producing a higher repertoire of syllables included the common blackbird (108 syllables) and the Eurasian skylark (341 syllables).
(13) After several months padding along under those great blue skies, with skylarks apparently forever overhead, came the great test: six weeks alone across the Gobi desert with just my three camels – no phone, no contact with the outside world, no one to know even if I was still alive.
(14) David Adam on the decline of Britain's skylarks and other bird species Read more Two skylarks among a flock of six had begun a chase-my-tail routine over a field of winter wheat.
(15) Science has demonstrated that each skylark needs to find the equivalent of 200 grains of wheat a day to survive cold weather, but here they were apparently frittering away their energy.
(16) Numbers of skylark and ortolan bunting, a songbird illegally hunted and eaten whole in France, have fallen by around half.
(17) Yet no matter how fast and adroitly it jinked and weaved, the pursuing bird held to its tail, maintaining a two-skylark-length distance between them, never closing, never lagging, seeming content with matching every turn of its harried opponent.
(18) The EU State of Nature report, seen by the Guardian, paints a picture of dramatic decline among once common avian species such as the skylark and turtle dove mainly as a result of agricultural pressures, and also warns that ecosystems are struggling to cope with the impact of human activity.
(19) For us, a winter’s day may not have the exhilaration of the skylark’s steepling song flight, but we still thrill to vignettes from this glorious show-off.
(20) In their short lives skylarks had seen it all before, the frequent transformations of their landscapes.