Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Those twisted knots of bark formed something like a dreadful runnelled face, one eye widely, blackly open, the other drawn down in a hideous wink.
Then ... he whined deep in the back of his throat, jumped down into the pit and up onto the runnelled slab above the urn, and crept timidly between the spikes to a clear area at the head of the trench.
I open my mouth to try to sing the three-twist chant I can hear, and tears i didn't know before this were called tears roll in a runnelled crisscross down the thing that is my face and past my...lips?
I find myself able to place the words, in all their moving directness, right into the laibon's mouth as he spoke, with Ol Doinyo Lengai away in the distance looking like a steamed pudding, its runnelled slopes lightly coated with cream, poured from above but vitrified before reaching the base.
Dez was still on the transporter pad, just sitting up, his runneled face dripping with sweat.
At times the runneled deck was nearly dry, but that wasnt the typical condition, and it lasted only briefly.
As the motor home sped along the runneled driveway, Laura's shackles clinked ceaselessly, only half muffled by the sheet in which she was loosely wrapped.
The rot, Billy saw, had spread - dark lines now radiated out from the ruins of his nose and across most of his runneled left cheek. '
Four flats, sliding and shredding across loose gravel, down a runneled incline, allowed Martie less control than she might have had if the Ford were skating across ice.
From the red pommel stone to the tight black leather-bound handle and stout silver crosstree hilt, the rain ran down the razor-sharp edges, through the runneled blood channel to a pointed tip keen as a midwinter blizzard.
The editor snapped a gold Ronson to his cigarette, and in the growing dark they could all see how haggard his face was - the loose, crocodile-skinned pouches under the eyes, the runneled cheeks, the old man's jut of chin emerging out of that late-middle-aged face like the prow of a ship.