0 present participle of pull --
1 to move something towards yourself, sometimes with great physical effort: --
2 to take something out of or away from a place, especially using physical effort: --
5 to injure a muscle by stretching it too much: --
The examiner can test these by standing behind the patient and, after a warning, pulling suddenly against the shoulders.
Instead, our results suggest that convective drawdown plays a role by pulling lithosphere toward the zone of maximum shortening.
Others were jostling for a chance of pulling the chariot, for this is deemed to be an act of religious merit.
The scarce seromuscular tunic of the vesical placental vessels often makes them go unnoticed during the pulling manoeuvres, since they collapse as veins.
The troops systematically targeted altar rails, pulling them down and burning them and removing the communion table back into the body of the church.
Cars and more pick-vips started pulling off the main road into the carpark.
Of the remaining third, one stopped pulling the chains altogether for 5 days and another for 12 days after witnessing the shock of the object.
The result is a feeling of gravity pulling the sound towards a single point between the two spatial anchors.