(1) Beneath the beetle brow and the thinning combover, however, lurked a singular songwriting talent.
(2) He takes out a glass case containing the beautiful beetle , with a golden shell, black spots, and antennae, just as he had originally said.
(3) Although most of the beetles were dead, a number were still quite active and one beetle climbed onto a film vial in the pan and took flight.
(4) In ancient Egypt they worshipped all kinds of creatures even insects and bugs like a scarab beetle .
(5) The hard sheath over the beetle 's wings has a waxy surface dotted with tiny nonwaxy bumps.
(6) This beetle 's black antennae are nearly as long as its body.
(7) He furrows his beetle brows and fixes his stare on the turf in front, indifferent to the periphery.
(8) They can easily slice right though a beetle 's hard armour.
(9) Over 1,000 species of beetle and spider have been found, many of which are dependent on the trees for their survival.
(10) This tiny black female beetle , the size of a poppy seed, is already spreading in the Great Smoky Mountains.
(11) Champ was prepared especially for the festival of Hallowe'en when large quantities of potatoes were pounded with a cylindrical wooden implement called a beetle .
(12) Oh, I pop down in the car frequently enough, park by the Spardis, grab some provisions and beetle off back home.
(13) Depending on the beetle pressure in a stand and individual susceptibility of baited trees, attacks may range from unsuccessful or no attack, to successfully mass attacked.
(14) Rare forms of beetle and fly have been known to live there, and it offers a breeding ground for otters.
(15) It worked perfectly - intensity of light was controlled by pressure on the beetle !
(16) Green June beetles also emerge in July and they also feed on ripe fruit.
(17) It's as insular as the most beetle-browed peasant in a village on a Russian steppe in the 12 th century.
(18) From sowing to pulling, retting to rippling, spinning to weaving, beetling to bleaching, a long, exhausting and sometimes dangerous business made a cloth so precious it was put under armed guard and cost thieves their lives.
(19) These versions of Mr Hyde invariably agree on what he looks like: simian, excessively hairy, thick-lipped, beetle-browed , swarthy, middle-aged, and physically massive.
(20) Encouraged by the romantic writers of the nineteenth century, we too find in the life of castle, cathedral, and beetling hilltop towns a poetic refuge from an industrialized world.