"It was beginning to roll and the dorsal fin was falling over somewhat, " he said.
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Her family want her to have specialist surgery, selective dorsal rhizotomy, in the United States next year.
The 1943 French comic book, "Red Rackham's Treasure, " included a shark-like submarine with dorsal fins and a tail.
We'll forget what it's like to flex those dorsal muscles, to consciously decipher a thorny stretch of prose.
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Passengers emerge onto the decks, leaning over the rail in the hope of spotting a telltale dorsal fin.
Quite often people think it's a shark because of the big dorsal fin.
There is a thinner engine cover, which has a slight dorsal fin appearance.
The bones of its wings were articulated on the dorsal side, giving the creature a slithery softness across its belly.
The mammals have smaller triangular dorsal fins than dolphins, which also make "more of a commotion" than porpoise when hunting.
The star of the show is a whole rouget, served dorsal fin upward as if the fish were still swimming.
The dolphins can be identified by their dorsal fins, and some have even been given names, like Curly, Strange and White.
The brain's second reading pathway, the dorsal stream, is turned on when we have to pay conscious attention to a sentence.
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We heard the expelling of air through a blowhole and tracked down a humpback, watching as her dorsal fin arched out of the water.
The whales are jet-black in color and have no shark-like dorsal fin.
Unusual sentences with complex clauses and odd punctuation tend to require more conscious effort, which leads to more activation in the dorsal pathway.
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Borrowman pointed out a distinctive pale-grey saddle patch behind the dorsal fin and identified the orca as one he sees frequently: a 43-year-old male known as A38.
Facebook billionaire investor, Peter Thiel, clips off a small piece of cartilage, musician, Imogene Heap, plants an electric tag just below the dorsal fin.
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If you watch closely, you can see them from the shores of Istanbul: The sudden flash of a dark grey dorsal fin cutting through the water.
The truly nasty fluttering of the gills was achieved by another man, out of shot, pumping air through a tube into bladders on Mr Chapman's dorsal fin.
The bottlenose dolphins were moving in several groups of 15 to 20, their dorsal fins and barrel shaped torsos flashing in the sun as they came up for air.
Every few seconds, the creature's head or dorsal fin would poke through the murky waters, creating ripples and drawing murmurs from onlookers, who stood in the cold with cameras.
Her ability to walk has been achieved through extensive physiotherapy and Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy (SDR) surgery, developed by Dr Park, paediatric neurosurgeon at the St Louis Children's Hospital in Missouri.
The same science that grew an ear on a rodent's dorsal could one day save the 6, 200 people in the U.S. who die every year awaiting transplants of organs like the liver, heart and lung.
But after a lifeboat rescue, the endearing creature - which looks like a giant head, and has a parrot-like beak, no tail and two giant dorsal fins - is settling down to life at the Blue Planet Aquarium in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire.
Had anyone seen the child during these two- and three-hour sessions, bringing his soles together and in to train the pectineus, bobbing slightly and then holding a deep cross-legged lean to work the great tight sheet of thoracolumbar fascia that connected his pelvis to his dorsal costae, he would have appeared to that person either prayerful or catatonic, or both.
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