Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
No chance: the music was just this side of the pain barrier.
It may well indeed be that many will see this as a pain barrier through which they do not want to go.
There was nothing else to help him through the pain barrier before the blessing of death.
For seven years he played through the pain barrier with the condition that seemed likely to end his career.
He clenched his jaw as the pain barrier seemed to break with every passing second.
Despite this, she was still designing costumes for movies and going through the pain barrier to get her work done.
We have not yet been able to supersede the pain barrier of the necessary translation.
The pain barrier was not a barrier for her; she could go beyond it.
It's that support that can help you make the extra effort through the pain barrier.
There's no doubt you'll go through the pain barrier on the wa.
At 16-17 miles my hamstrings were starting to burn slightly, and I knew the pain barrier was close.
You see, where is our pain barrier?
We have reached the pain barrier here.
Instead she has developed a strict routine for short haul trips to get her across her pain barrier.
Lleyton Hewitt hurdles over the pain barrier into third round 4.
Where is the pain barrier?
Best in Travel 2010 has 10 magical marathons that'll have you admiring the view (as you push through the pain barrier).
But the boy - a victim of the growth-stunting disease achondraplasia - had to go through the pain barrier to achieve it.
His players will run through the pain barrier without question, but his players are feeling the pain of sustained combat.
Treeknee says that some Skillmasters used a pain barrier to keep their students from experimenting on their own.
Well do I understand now why the Skillmasters of old might put a pain barrier between the Skill and a wilful student.
The pain barriers appear just as in marathon running and, as in other endurance sports, many people withdraw, suffering from either dehydration or cramp.
The muscle is giving me some grief but as long as there is no long-term damage then I am willing to play through the pain barrier.'
"Pain Barrier" (2003)