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22 Sentences With "flung away"

How to use flung away in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "flung away" and check conjugation/comparative form for "flung away". Mastering all the usages of "flung away" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The Soyuz module then flung away violently from the rocket core.
What's more, the explosion often isn't super effective when the corpse is flung away from any other foes huddled around it.
The black hole sucks in the one particle with negative energy while the positive particle is flung away from the black hole.
Just ask Dennis Bergkamp, a footballer from the Netherlands dubbed "the non-flying Dutchman", who gained contractual permission to miss far-flung away matches, or Whoopi Goldberg, an American actor, who used to tour America by bus.
In her first outleap of jealous indignation and disgust, when quitting the hateful room, she had flung away all the mercy with which she had undertaken that visit.
All three are knocked down by the arrival of the flood waters and Curdie tries to rescue the princess and not get thrown over the battlement edges by the goblin prince. With some help from Irene, Froglip is flung away and everyone is saved.
As he explains how he found Morph, the X-Men enter. The Nasty Boys immediately attack, Ruckus' scream blasting them out of the facility. Wolverine battles Hairbag, while Rogue fights Slab. Gorgeous George apprehends Gambit and attempts to rip him apart, but is flung away by Rogue.
In 1914, Frank Clark set out to stop Old Ephraim. He set many traps in Old Ephraim's favorite wallows, but the traps were always removed, un-sprung, or flung away. Although Clark seldom saw the bear, dead sheep around the herd indicated its presence. Despite Clark's efforts, Old Ephraim killed more and more sheep without being stopped.
Virabhadra saw this and started pacing towards him. By Vishnu's Maya, a thousand more beings, just like him in attire, issued out from his body for battling. Meanwhile, Mahakali, Katyayani, Chamunda, Ishani, Mundamalini and others were wreaking havoc in the field and producing alarming sounds. Virabhadra rotated on his spot and flung away the best of his weapons in all ten directions.
Jael took great pleasure in prancing around revealing everyone's darkest secrets, but when he focused his attention on Bucky, his grip on the other hunters was broken. Sam quickly began an exorcism, but was flung away by Jael. Dean picked up the exorcism and then Max and Alicia Banes when Dean was knocked out, but they were defeated as well. Jael finally forced Bucky to admit that it was in fact Bucky who killed Asa and not Jael.
Peter seems unconvinced, but Nathan begins to believe him, pointing out that it's the only explanation to his newfound abilities. Sylar then takes control of Matt and attempts to convince Nathan that by touching him he can learn the whole truth; Sylar reveals to Matt that by touching him, he can transfer back to his original body. Peter attempts to keep Nathan away, only to have him flung away by telekinesis, as Nathan wishes to touch him. The guard learns of their presence and enters the room.
Its companion had already entered its white dwarf stage when US 708 entered its red giant phase. Their respective orbits changed as its companion took gas from the outer layers of US 708. Then its companion acquired enough mass to go supernova, which triggered US 708 being flung away at its high velocity, not by the black hole at the center of our galaxy. The team behind the new observations suggests that it was orbiting a white dwarf roughly the mass of the Sun with an orbital period of less than 10 minutes.
He had little success; too many members knew of Bonnet's efforts. National Labour MP and diarist Harold Nicolson later wrote, "In those few minutes he flung away his reputation." The seeming delay gave rise to fears that Chamberlain would again seek a settlement with Hitler. Chamberlain's last peacetime Cabinet met at 11:30 that night, with a thunderstorm raging outside, and determined that the ultimatum would be presented in Berlin at nine o'clock the following morning—to expire two hours later, before the House of Commons convened at noon.
The wooden parts grew so hot that the windmill was in danger of catching fire. Meanwhile, a crowd of onlookers had gathered outside, eager to see Seppmann's curiosity finally in operation and surprised that it seemed to be running so fast it might tear itself apart. In desperation Seppmann tossed something into the gears, but it shattered and a piece was flung away with such force that it shot a hole through the rim of Seppmann's hat. At last Seppmann and Hegley were able to unfurl some of the sails and halt the mill.
For an up-to-date account of the role of black holes in structure formation, see ; a brief summary can be found in the related article . Matter falling onto a compact object is one of the most efficient mechanisms for releasing energy in the form of radiation, and matter falling onto black holes is thought to be responsible for some of the brightest astronomical phenomena imaginable. Notable examples of great interest to astronomers are quasars and other types of active galactic nuclei. Under the right conditions, falling matter accumulating around a black hole can lead to the formation of jets, in which focused beams of matter are flung away into space at speeds near that of light.
In this sense, the space where the rings lie is neutral: there are no further forces upwards or downwards (out of the plane of the rings), nor inwards or outwards (changing the radius within the rings). This example is a bit confusing, as, properly speaking, the stable, unstable and neutral manifolds do not divide up the coordinate space; they divide up the phase space. In this case, the phase space has the structure of a tangent manifold: for every point in space (a 3D position), there is the collection of "tangent vectors": all possible velocities a particle might have. Some position-velocity pairs are driven towards the center manifold, others are flung away from it.
At large scale, it is unsafe to "charge all reagents and mix", as is done in laboratory scale. This is because the amount of reaction scales with the cube of the size of the vessel (V ∝ r³), but the heat transfer area scales with the square of the size (A ∝ r²), so that the heat production-to-area ratio scales with the size (V/A ∝ r). Consequently, reactions that easily cool fast enough in the laboratory can dangerously self-heat at ton scale. In 2007, this kind of erroneous procedure caused an explosion of a -reactor used to metalate methylcyclopentadiene with metallic sodium, causing the loss of four lives and parts of the reactor being flung away.
If the break occurred at the counterweight side of the elevator, the lower portion, now including the "central station" of the elevator, would begin to fall down and would continue down to reentry if no part of the cable below failed as well. Depending on the size, it would either burn up on re-entry or impact the surface. A mechanism to immediately sever the cable below the station would prevent reentry of the station and result in its continuation in a high and slightly modified orbit. Simulations have shown that as the descending portion of the space elevator "wraps around" Earth, the stress on the remaining length of cable increases, resulting in its upper sections breaking off and being flung away.
For example, on 14 August 1668 he wrote: "At home I find Simpson putting up my new chimney-piece in our great chamber which is very fine, but will cost a great deal of money, but it is not flung away". Of special interest is the fact that Pepys had Simpson build bookcases, or as Pepys called them 'book presses', for his growing collection of books. These are now preserved at the Pepys Library at Magdalene College in accordance with the stipulations of Pepys's will. Pepys wrote on 17 August 1667 : So took up my wife and home, there I to the office, and thence with Simpson, the joyner home to put together the press he hath brought me for my books this day, which pleases me exceedingly.
Barry won a fourth National League medal in 1974 after a 6-15 to 1-12 defeat of Limerick, however, he became embroiled in controversy in Cork's opening game against Waterford in the 1974 Munster Championship. Just before half-time, with Cork struggling, Martin Geary of Waterford pulled a ball to the Cork net. Barry broke his stick in the exchanges and as the umpire, Jim Kirby of Limerick, stepped up to wave the green flag, Barry flung away the heavy end of his goalie hurley in disgust and caught the umpire high on the thigh. He received a red card and was sent off the field, with Cork going on to lose the game by 4-09 to 3-08 and Barry receiving a two-month suspension.
But the winds had failed; and so, too, the > smart captain of the Flying Fish evidently thought had the Sailing > Directions. The Sailing Directions advise the navigator to cross the calm > belt in as straight a line as the winds will allow, not fearing the land > about Cape St. Roque, or the current that is supposed to sweep round it. > Nickels, forgetting that the charts are founded on the experience of great > numbers, being tempted, turned a deaf ear to the caution, and flung away > three whole days and more of most precious time dallying in the doldrums. He > spent two days about the parallel of 3 degrees north, and his ship left the > doldrums, after this waste of time, nearly upon the same meridian at which > she entered them. She was still in 34 degrees, the current keeping her back > just as fast as she could fan east.
Steerpike might be called the antagonist of the Gormenghast trilogy, but in truth he is more of an anti-hero; the first book for example is largely focused on him, only covering the first year of the eponymous hero Titus's life. Steerpike could also be considered an archetypal Machiavellian schemer: a highly intelligent, ruthless character willing to justify any and all means to reach his end. In the books, Mervyn Peake describes his personality as follows: > if ever he had harboured a conscience in his tough narrow breast he had by > now dug out and flung away the awkward thing — flung it so far away that > were he ever to need it again he could never find it. High-shouldered to a > degree little short of malformation, slender and adroit of limb and frame, > his eyes close-set and the colour of dried blood, he is climbing the spiral > staircase of the soul of Gormenghast, bound for some pinnacle of the itching > fancy — some wild, invulnerable eyrie best known to himself; where he can > watch the world spread out below him, and shake exultantly his clotted > wings.

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