fain (exact matches only)
Ruth Conklin keeps nine fainting goats at her 13-acre farm in Weirsdale, down a county road 20 miles south of Ocala.
"I haven't had that trouble with the fainters.
Shane shouted again, waving his arms and jumping from the top of the shed, which caused mild annoyance but no fainting.
The goats faint because of a genetic mutation in their muscle fibers, she explained to The Miami Herald.
A well cared for goat, faints and all, may live 15 years.
Sometimes, let's be real here, the analyst has not a faint clue but can craft a bon mot, provided he doesn't get caught crafting it.
Serious as all this was—he was, for a moment, as Colson suggests, the most compelling leader of the antiwar movement—there was something uneasy, and perhaps even faintly risible, about it, too, particularly the ill-disguised Kennedy playacting.
In a section marked "Hastig" ("Hurried"), for example, a restless right-hand pattern that faintly outlines a melody is supported by a chordal left-hand accompaniment.
From the spot, I could see the Caribbean sea and faint outlines of neighboring islands, hear the melodic chatter of the mourners.
The trophies on the bureau—both for swimming—gleamed faintly.
(Looking down on the very crown of his head, one would see faint black lines, like a claw print.
But then the faint brows began to lift, and Alistair thought he saw the light of recognition.
Otherwise: Curtains half-drawn against the moonlight, orderly dressing table, tousled sheets, and a faint smell of lust.
Reaching orgasm, she falls in a faint into the boat, which continues driving, threatening at any moment to sink.
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