(1) Crucially, according to IBM whizz David Gondek, Watson has the ability to learn, and so engineers have been feeding it with tens of thousands of books' worth of information.
(2) The rough spot where protesters say shots were fired from Rice recalled in a telephone interview that he “heard gunshots go off and felt a bullet whizz by my head,” prompting him to take cover from the direction of the shots by hiding behind a car, while facing the police line.
(3) Those Lords resisting an elected chamber had better prove their vaunted independence by kicking up an almighty stink at being denied any voice in the main cuts legislation whizzing through Westminster.
(4) The charity said it wanted to roll back the trend whereby councils made cuts in frontline services to balance squeezed budgets – and the care industry, which employs a million workers, sent staff whizzing between the homes of vulnerable people's houses in shifts as short as 15 minutes.
(5) While shopping centres, stations, airports and many other places are generally private land, whizzing around on a hoverboard requires the permission of the landowner.
(6) The Bay Area UASI helped to fund Urban Shield this year, and the DHS even has its own stall in the vendors’ show where it is showing off the latest whizz-bang tools created by its science and technology directorate.
(7) Volleys of bullets from the rebels' Kalashnikovs whizzed mostly towards army positions, but some flew down the boulevard and prompted those who had crept too close to throw themselves against walls and to the floor.
(8) A PR whizz, Palikot looks to have eaten away at support for the post-communist Democratic Left Alliance (SLD), which won only about 8.2% of the vote.
(9) Ruth Joseph and Sarah Nathan, Cardiff, veggischmooze.blogspot.com Makes 10 blintzes 200g plain flour A pinch of salt 50g butter or margarine, melted 25ml olive oil 400ml milk 2 organic free-range eggs A little oil, to fry Icing sugar and sour cream, to serve For the filling 300g soft cheese 15g vanilla sugar Grated zest of ½ lemon 1-2 tbsp lemon juice, to taste Pinch of salt 50g chopped raisins or dried fruit (optional) Icing sugar and sour cream to serve 1 Put all the pancake ingredients apart from the oil and filling in a food processor and whizz.
(10) "Month on month, we are losing whizzes who'll basically say, 'I'm sorry, I am going to take three times the salary and the car and whatever else.'"
(11) Well, that's the nature of the medium; as it whizzes past the eyes it seems very relevant but the malady of reality TV stars is that their shelf life expires, like dog years, by the power of seven.
(12) But a whizz around the BBC website reveals a story posted just five days before the Panorama broadcast, explaining the possibilities of tourism to North Korea.
(13) He believes that the private ownership of Global, headed by former Capital whizz kid Ashley Tabor and backed by money from the Irish racing magnates JP McManus and John Magnier, will allow more space for clarity of thought.
(14) It whizzed just wide, as did a thunderous 25-yard drive from Cissé two minutes later.
(15) Toure has a shot from distance that whizzes past the post.
(16) "Mountain bikes whizzing in and out of trees, jumping ramps above horses' heads, around an established sunken horse track, is an accident waiting to happen."
(17) The two men crossed two more streets with bullets whizzing around them before they met up with the rest of their men, a dozen soldiers who were taking cover from a regime tank.
(18) Despite the diversity of his career, a common thread throughout all his films, from the gleeful highs of Top Gun, Beverly Hills Cop II, True Romance, The Last Boy Scout and Crimson Tide, to the deadening lows of his first film The Hunger, Revenge and Domino (Keira Knightley plays a bounty hunter – let us speak no more about it), is the whizz-bang-chop-cut style.
(19) One witness, Ibrahim Ghaleb Mohammad al-Sawary, the son of one of the factory directors, told the investigation he heard “whizzing followed by a very loud explosion”.
(20) They chanted “Hands up, don’t shoot!” as shoppers whizzed past in search of heavily-discounted TVs and vacuum cleaners.
Wuther
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) • The Film weekly podcast saw host Jason Solomons talk to ... Bruce Robinson (director of Withnail & I) about his new film The Rum Diary ... Errol Morris (director of The Thin Blue Line) about Tabloid - his documentary on Joyce McKinney and the "Manacled Morman" case ... and Guardian film critic Xan Brooks (director of people to decent movies), who helped Jason review Arthur Christmas , The Awakening and Andrea Arnold's Wuthering Heights .
(2) 1Wuthering Heights Her wild eyes, flailing limbs and high-pitched vocals instantly made her ripe for parody , but it was the sheer emotional force of Wuthering Heights that made Kate Bush’s debut single a smash.
(3) Wuthering Heights is also about many other things besides that relationship.
(4) But this has always been the fate of Wuthering Heights.
(5) He'd been watching Wuthering Heights and he said 'You're a bit like Heathcliff.
(6) A canny follow-up to Wuthering Heights, it showcased a softer side to her voice and banished any lingering suspicions that this strange woman might be a one-hit oddity.
(7) I have only one question to ask the 2,000 readers who, according to a new poll for UKTV Drama, have just voted Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights the greatest love story of all time.
(8) Moreover, what would happen to small-scale, high-impact films such as Shame , Wuthering Heights , The Deep Blue Sea and We Need to Talk About Kevin ; all low-budget, "difficult" films that required a "cultural" imperative to get off the ground?
(9) Wuthering Heights forsakes Arnold's beloved housing estates altogether – though even the most forbidding of these would resemble Paris in springtime next to the rain-lashed moors near the Pennine Way where Arnold filmed her adaptation.
(10) Wuthering Heights is pretty much my most treasured novel, astonishing with every reading.
(11) Gone was the wide-eyed, shrill-voiced ingenue of Wuthering Heights.
(12) But the two most influential culprits of the modern era are Hollywood and the Bronte industry, which in their separate but related ways have conspired to belittle Wuthering Heights and to reduce Emily Bronte to someone barely connected to the real world.
(13) Her younger sister, Emily Brontë, wrote Wuthering Heights.
(14) STV had not always lost out when it had passed up the chance to screen new ITV drama, Hain said: the seven-year-old Daniela Nardini drama Sirens recently did better in Scotland than Wuthering Heights had across the rest of the UK.
(15) Just 1,236 answered a question on Pride and Prejudice, a mere 285 tackled Far from the Madding Crowd, and only 187 braved Wuthering Heights.
(16) Sober Charlotte (Jane Eyre) Bronte not crazy Emily (Wuthering Heights) Bronte.
(17) His first wake-up call to dance, at the age of 13, was watching a friend act out Bush's Wuthering Heights .
(18) During a 35-year recording career Bush has travelled from the theatrical teen prodigy of Wuthering Heights to 80s pagan-pop goddess to a more wistful chronicler of the power of the elements.
(19) The production wasn't undiluted hardship: there were raucous weekend shindigs, says Arnold, who hired a Kate Bush impersonator to sing Wuthering Heights for the wrap party.
(20) The effect, though, has always been the same - to make Wuthering Heights something less than the book actually is.