Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
But we're at a level that's so much higher than ever before, no one's panicking.
You should remain calm at all times, and leave the panicking to those who really know what's going on.
They decided to wait an hour before panicking, then another hour.
And anyway, I'm not so sure that panicking will do them any good."
It's not panic-there's no panicking when you're near the President.
The players had the composure to deal with a one-goal lead without panicking.
I'll do the panicking for both of them.
While they were busy panicking, I dropped Rachel into the water with the others.
The notion of Lucius panicking was simply too silly to contemplate.
Once more the battle lines were assembled, the Kadmians on the right panicking and fleeing the field.
It might account for his panicking and error.
So for one night, at least, the Phillies, smiled the smiles of believers, leaving the panicking to others.
Panicking, Vic saw a pillar box ahead, and a quiet-looking side street.
According to Janelle, Mara was panicking that time and didn't know what to do.
"Very often, you can create a bigger problem by panicking people in an evacuation than by leaving them in place."
This 'shock tactic' approach, the product of financial panicking, makes for neat, 'safe', lightweight entertainment.
Busch does not seem capable of panicking.
With the comm systems down, we're going to have to rely on runners, and I don't want them having to fight their way through panicking crowds.
One hundred and three crew members had been beamed in groups with no one panicking, the most critically wounded coming up first, the dead last.
"In his panicking, he remembered me."
"At least no one's panicking, because Forsee is considered competent, and his contract dispute can probably be resolved monetarily."
Trust Wootton to be panicking again, thought Dexter, determined to disguise his dislike of the man.
It could be due to whales panicking and surfacing too rapidly in an attempt to escape the sonar pulses.
Lori Speight, the first vice president, added that "the panicking and calling to arms" of the past had a ripple effect that hurt the schools.
With their panicking, struggling masses they clogged and smothered what little resistance Tanus was still capable of offering.