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38 Sentences With "poor creature"

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

"The pain was slowly torturing the poor creature," she added.
The footballers began running their play and the poor creature instantly regretted its decision.
Watch the video ... Golding justifies his actions by saying he doesn't want the "poor creature" to go to waste.
Our head sinks into a soft pillow while some poor creature shrieks in pain as its face is chewed off.
And the best method of avoiding them is to see some poor creature being attacked and turn the other way.
It snatched the poor creature in its jaws and hurled it toward the shore, among bodysurfing and boogie-boarding youngsters.
Orwell didn't want to shoot the poor creature, whose "must," or frenzied state, had passed and who was peacefully eating grass.
The poor creature made an impressive showing, but it's only fitting that the small arms ultimately did the T-Rex in.
It snatched the poor creature in its jaws and hurled it toward the shore, in between body-surfing and boogie-boarding youngsters.
She understood then that the poor creature that had been so casually killed was the mother of the little kitten, who was probably the last of the litter.
The beautiful delicate wings so full of colour when all of a sudden an Indian man grabbed a butterfly by the wings and starting waving the poor creature in front of his elderly mother's face.
Until I reached my teenage years and lost my ability to suspend disbelief, it was the nisse who laid out a present for me each morning in December (so nice of my mother to relieve the poor creature of his duty.) These little gifts are called kalendergaver, or calendar presents.
Click here to view original GIFImage: YouTubeThe next time you get rejected, thank your lucky stars you're not a male widowbird, the poor creature who has to jump really high for a long time just to get a little bit of attention and, if all goes according to plan, some action.
He made kimchi and sauerkraut in huge mason jars he monitored on the kitchen counter like a mad botanist; he once spent an hour describing the plot of Against Nature to me in exquisite detail, including his favorite scene, in which the eccentric and vile antihero encrusts a tortoise's shell with exotic jewels and the poor creature, "unable to support the dazzling luxury imposed on it," dies from the weight.
You poor creature, we really feel sorry for you! Better lock yourself up and throw away the key.
She is a poor creature, huddled in a dark corner. Yet, when she lifts her face, Shankaran sees Shivkami. Old, worn out, with a horrible gash on her face, where Muniyandi had hacked her, before killing himself. Shankaran's life has come full circle.
" Getting no response, he said, "Oh, what's the use? Turn him over to the police." As police held Schrank, Roosevelt looked down at him, and said, "You poor creature." Roosevelt ordered, "Officers, take charge of him, and see that there is no violence done to him.
Contains my favourite line in all Christie: 'Poor creature, she's a Swede.' Impeccably clued, with a clever use of the Cyrillic script (cf. The Double Clue). The solution raised the ire of Raymond Chandler, but won't bother anyone who doesn't insist his detective fiction mirror real-life crime.
Davidov and other Russian campaign participants record wholesale surrenders of starving members of the even before the onset of the frosts. Caulaincourt describes men swarming over and cutting up horses that slipped and fell, even before the poor creature had been killed. There were even eyewitness reports of cannibalism. The French simply were unable to feed their army.
This would be sung by a male choir and orchestrated for Afenginn, obviously, and a brass band. In November, the long anticipated movie “Elgen kommer” (“The Moose comes”) by Jacob Remin premiered in Filmhuset in Copenhagen with Afenginn responsible for the music and some of the hype surrounding this poor creature. Read more about the moose here.
Sir Crisp Gascoyne was convinced that a miscarriage of justice had occurred. Not everybody was satisfied with the verdict. The trial judge Sir Crisp Gascoyne and some of his colleagues on the bench found Canning's story extremely unlikely. Gascoyne had been disgusted by Canning's supporters, who while outside the court had prevented witnesses from giving evidence, and he was particularly sympathetic to Mary Squires, whom he named "the poor creature".
On reaching the top, Indra asked him to abandon the dog before entering the Heaven. But Yudhishthira refused to do so, citing the dog's unflinching loyalty as a reason. Indra said he let his family die, but Yudhishthira said he could not prevent their deaths, but to abandon a poor creature was a great sin. It turned out that the dog was his god-father Dharma Deva in disguise.
A depiction of the 1786 assault on George III by Margaret Nicholson. The King took pity on her, shouting out: "The poor creature is mad, do not hurt her. She has not hurt me." Portrait by Sir alt=George wearing the red jacket of an 1800 British army general with the star of the Order of the Garter, white breeches, black knee- high boots, and a black bicorne hat.
Lex Luthor experiments with the crystals by adding a small particle to water, and the resulting citywide power failure releases numerous villains and genetic creatures including Bizarro. Bizarro begins a rampage throughout Metropolis, destroying buildings and attacking citizens. Though Bizarro is of equal might, Superman is a much more experienced warrior. In the end, Superman defeats Bizarro, but does not kill him because he knows that the poor creature is incapable of understanding his actions.
The infant Johnson did not cry, and there were concerns for his health. His aunt exclaimed that "she would not have picked such a poor creature up in the street". The family feared that Johnson would not survive, and summoned the vicar of St Mary's to perform a baptism. Two godfathers were chosen, Samuel Swynfen, a physician and graduate of Pembroke College, Oxford, and Richard Wakefield, a lawyer, coroner, and Lichfield town clerk.
Happy the Dog whimpers again but instead, Elmer pounds a cake on to Happy's head, leaving the poor creature to run frantically around until the cake finds itself all over the baby. Cookie shames her baby brother, and Elmer, with Happy, stalks away to the car. Elmer manages to start the car engine, much to the fright of Buddy and Cookie by hitting a pedal that reads “starter”. He hits it, but then he reads the pedal.
The arrival of the nightingale and her singing provides the creatures in the bog a pleasant break who admire her sweet voice. The frog approaches her and appreciates her like a critic making her feeling flattered. He manipulates her making her sing for him in a concert and earns money by selling tickets. The poor creature does not know how she is being manipulated by the frog and sings till she has lost her voice and health.
Upon birth, Johnson did not cry and, with doubts surrounding the newborn's health, his aunt claimed "that she would not have picked such a poor creature up in the street". As it was feared that the baby might die, the vicar of St Mary's was summoned to perform a baptism. Two godfathers were chosen: Samuel Swynfen, a physician and graduate of Pembroke College, and Richard Wakefield, a lawyer, coroner, and Lichfield town clerk. Johnson's health improved and he was placed in the nursing care of Joan Marklew.
Michel says the Chinese, not > only admire the cat in porcelain, but also value it for culinary reasons. > The cats are regarded as special morsels and enjoyed particularly with > noodles or with rice. This cat is bred particularly for the purpose of meat > production, and is a preferred Chinese morsel; this is not unusual if one > considers that the Chinese consume much the sight of which revolts the > stomachs of Europeans. The poor creature is confined in small bamboo cages > and fattened like a goose on plentiful portions.
Amelia Underwood reacts to this by exclaiming "Let the poor creature go! Though he is neither human nor Christian, he is still one of God's creatures and has a right to his liberty!" An example of how lightly sex, including incest and homosexuality, is treated at the End of Time can be found in the early chapters of An Alien Heat. In the chapter "A Conversation with the Iron Orchid" Jherek has sex with his mother, and in the chapter "Carnelian Conceives a New Affectation" he has a same-sex encounter with Lord Jagged.
" According to Time magazine, "The Pumpkin Eater of the nursery rhyme put his wife in a pumpkin shell, and there he kept her very well. Giving a wry contemporary twist to Mother Goose, Penelope Mortimer's vivid first-person novel suggests that the poor creature then swiftly developed shell shock. In this slow, strong, incisive film version of the book, the ironing out of a well-kept wife's unkempt psyche is portrayed with harrowing perception by Anne Bancroft." New York Herald Tribune reviewer Judith Crist commented that Bancroft's character "seems a cow-like creature with no aspirations or intellect above her pelvis.
The Dragon explained that it had to stop by a village and brought rain for all the people, and therefore it was held back. Then, on its way to the finish, it saw the helpless Rabbit clinging onto a log, so it did a good deed and gave a puff of breath to the poor creature so that it could land on the shore. The Jade Emperor was astonished by the Dragon's good nature, and it was named as the fifth animal. :As soon as it had done so, a galloping sound was heard, and the Horse appeared.
Then with > uncommon brutality they took the poor creature from her house, stripped her > quite naked, and after tying her hands and legs together threw her in a > horse pond. She was then taken out, and in this shameful condition exhibited > for the sport of an inhuman mob. As she did not sink they concluded she > really was a witch, and several returning the following day determined to > discipline her in this cruel manner until they should put an end to her > wretched existence. The posse was not sufficiently strong, so she escaped > for that time.
Johnson's birthplace in Market Square, Lichfield Johnson was born in Lichfield at 4:00 pm on Wednesday, 18 September 1709 at the family home above his father's bookshop, near Market Square, across from St Mary's Church. His mother was 40 when she gave birth, a matter for sufficient concern that George Hector, a "man-midwife" and a surgeon of "great reputation", was brought in to assist during the birth. The baby was named Samuel, after Sarah's brother Samuel Ford. He did not cry and, with doubts surrounding the newborn's health, his aunt claimed "that she would not have picked such a poor creature up in the street".
There are several versions of the fable in Greek sources and a late Latin version recorded by Avianus. It concerns a fir tree that boasted to a bramble, 'You are useful for nothing at all; while I am everywhere used for roofs and houses.' Then the Bramble answered: 'You poor creature, if you would only call to mind the axes and saws which are about to hew you down, you would have reason to wish that you had grown up a Bramble, not a Fir-Tree.'Aesop's Fables, George Fyler Townsend, Fable 86 The moral of the story is that renown is accompanied by risks of which the humble are free.
It appeared in evidence that the poor creature had been reduced to > extreme poverty and that the family to whom she belonged, eight in number, > were in the same pitiful condition. She had been recommended to the Ladies > of the Presentation, by Rev. George Usher, as a fit object for relief, and > accordingly she and her two sisters received a daily breakfast at that > excellent Institute. They met Mr Usher on the Rahoon road about a fortnight > ago, but famine had so preyed upon her feeble constitution, that, on the > morning of Wednesday, she was unable to taste food of any description – so > that on the post mortem examination made by Doctor Staunton, there was not a > particle found in her stomach.
As a running gag, starting in the episode "Dammit Janet!", Chris is regularly tormented by the Evil Monkey, who lives in his closet, though whenever he complains about it to anyone, they often laugh along with him instead thinking it is a joke, after which the monkey appears with a malevolent grimace and points at Chris in a threatening manner. In "Hannah Banana", Chris proves the monkey's existence to the family, though ends up becoming friends with him after the monkey (who appears not to be evil at all, but just a poor creature who was depressed after his ex-wife cheated on him with another monkey) helps him write out a book report and pass. The simian explains his frightening mannerisms as a result of various conditions and unintended actions.
Edward Bentham had a wide circle of friends in the academic world, but he also had his critics, and he seems to have made a long term enemy of William King, the Master of St Mary Hall (college), who after his death described Bentham waspishly as "Half a casuist, half lawyer, half Courtier, half Cit, Half Tory, half Whig (may I add, half a Wit?)". After his death there were many, including his brother James, who went into print with the opinion that he should have advanced further in his career than he did, but there are signs elsewhere that he lacked some of the ambition and political skill necessary for such advancement, "a very honest, virtuous, good man; a good husband and father, and an excellent brother, but ...[a] poor creature ... in conversation, manner, and behaviour...a plodding, industrious man, bred under his cousin John Burton of Eton," according to the antiquary William Cole who evidently knew him. The criticisms are more quotable, and more quoted, than the plaudits, but it is nevertheless clear that Edward Bentham was also widely admired and liked.

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