Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
He shook hands with Francis and walked unstably out.
The soul lives unstably in the body, and is capable of mysterious transformations.
The little creature, rocking unstably on his wobbly legs, seemed not to see any of them for a moment.
In both cases, an interface between two substances grows unstably, creating a serious challenge for scientists who need to make predictions.
Spring is warm and temperatures rise quickly but unstably, and hail is common.
The transmitting key lay underneath the frame that rested unstably above it, teetering a little in the wind.
He clambered unstably back into the squib, stumbled to the control board and awkwardly reseated himself.
When materials crystallize or solidify under certain conditions, they freeze unstably, resulting in dendritic forms.
The means employed include worrying various ratios of the stadium to the unstably defined "schoenus", or using a truncated passage from Pliny.
Frozen people stood erect, strange, silent, self-conscious-looking dummies hung unstably in mid-stride, promenading upon the grass.
The official exposition of British "Liberalism" to-day still wriggles unstably because of these conflicting constituents, but on the whole the Whig strand now seems the weaker.
Something knifed him in the 326 i CAPTAIN QUAD side-busted ribs-and his neck creaked unstably as he swiveled it around to look.
Attempting to destroy an escapee whom Beverly has taken in, Bong inadvertently knocks Howard into a vat, which changes him, unstably, into a mouse--showering changes his form multiple times.
Beckett's failing narrators manage in their torrents of words only unstably to sustain in existence on a strange edge of death and silence, adrift in 'who knows what profounds of mind'(Beckett 1984: 288).
After going to Savoy as ambassador, he went to England in September 1529 to take over the post of resident ambassador there from Don Íñigo de Mendoza, a post that had been rather unstably occupied since the forced withdrawal of Louis of Praet in 1525.