Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
His eyes blurred with a deathly and miasmal mist.
There was something . . . something miasmal about that city.
Conventional wisdom took it for a miasmal disease, traveling by air as some sort of lethal vapor - a killer smell.
"The Story of My Wife" is an important novel, but its greatness is miasmal.
No doubt it is still down the well - I know there was something wrong with the sunlight I saw above the miasmal brink.
The dark, miasmal prospect was unaltered.
The miasmal odor of the swamp was still in my nostrils, and the air was damp and chilly.
"There hasn't been such a miasmal landscape anywhere since the Devonian period on Caea.
They spurned the miasmal humors of what would become Florence, thinking it inconceivable that anyone would want to inhabit the valley below.
It was a fearsomely ancient place, and had begun to exude the faint miasmal odour which clings about houses that have stood too long.
Everywhere there was a brooding, palpable Power for which he could find no visual image: a Power that exhaled a miasmal slumber.
The removal of the slab revealed a black aperture, from which rushed an effluence of miasmal gases so nauseous that we started back in horror.
Zephandra Butolphi has this idea that you have repeat everything until it becomes one with the cosmic miasmal consciousness, so pages one, two and three read:
The miasmal atmosphere surrounding this topic now swirls through the halls of Congress, where legislators are trying to cope with DAT's impending arrival.
Los Vientos de Dois, the Winds of God, that blow away the mosquitoes and the miasmal mists and the swamp smells.
We followed in headlong pursuit; but, gasping painfully in the vitiated, miasmal air, we were soon compelled to slacken our pace without coming in sight of Octave.
More and more the atmosphere of that house enveloped and stifled me with poisonous, miasmal mystery; and I felt everywhere the invisible brooding of malignant incubi.
In 1690 an English clergyman, James Ovington, noted that few survived more than a couple of miasmal rainy seasons - "Two moussouns are the Age of Man."
IN the grim woods when all the bare black branches Creak out their curses like a gallows-tree, When the miasmal pestilence-light dances, A spectre-flame, through midnight's infamy.
Lack of food, miasmal land, confusion in leadershi hostility from Indians and rampaging epidemics bes newcomers, so that when the dreadful summer ende thirty-eight of the original group still lived.
She was going to have to do something about that, not just rebuilding homes, but bring hope back to the area as well That was the only real barricade against the return of the miasmal gangs.
Mound the northern pole steamed a morass of noisome growths and miasmal vapours, hissing before the onslaught of the ever-mounting waves that curled and fretted from the shuddering deep.
Then, simultaneous with Jordan's reminder that there were only six minutes left to penetration, Finch's voice, ethereal now as his mind entered deeper into the Cthonian's miasmal mentality, sounded again from Peaslee's handset: 'It's. . . strange!
This was thought to protect the doctor from miasmatic bad air.
There were a multitude of flying objects to be seen in the miasmatic air.
The disease was predominantly epidemic, i.e. due to miasmatic influences.
In a short time, one half of the apartment had been touched and befouled by this evil, miasmatic demon.
The sliding door, unused for years in the miasmatic tropical weather, squeaked and stuck halfway along its track.
The miasmatic position was that diseases were the product of environmental factors such as contaminated water, foul air, and poor hygienic conditions.
All this time Antwerp was only seven or eight miles away, but still the troops waited, suffering from miasmatic fever and dysentery.
In times past, intrigue and conspiracy had been a miasmatic plague afflicting every life in Taglios.
There are miasmatic exhalations then.
The masks were designed to protect them from putrid air, which (according to the miasmatic theory of disease) was seen as the cause of infection.
Medieval European doctors generally held the view that disease was related to the air and adopted a miasmatic approach to disease etiology.
He dissolved the purplish miasmatic net and tried to extend a sense of reassurance with his Talent, but the holder shivered even more.
The miasmatic theory advocated that disease was transmitted by smell and foul odors arising from purification of organic matter.
It was not a dignified position, particularly since I'd misstepped as mentioned earlier and was now conveying miasmatic matter on the bottom of my shoe.
The sight of the winsome figure smiling up at her dispelled them as the light of the sun sweeps away miasmatic vapours.
The miasmatic effluvia which rise from the river during the night bring on an intermittent fever, or paludism, often of great severity, accompanied by unendurable headaches.
Dr. Thomas Southwood Smith spent many years comparing the Miasmatic theory to Contagionism.
The miasmatic theory was first disproved by John Snow following an epidemic in Soho, central London in 1854.
These low places in the valleys were full of miasmatic odors, yellow fever, agues, and all the ills that usually pertain to the West Indian climate.
The invigorating breezes from Long Island Sound, and the absence of miasmatic marshes serve to make ours one of the most healthy cities in America.
The Lascars are suffering not from the buldoo-panee of their own miasmatic plains, whatever Mr Parley may maintain, but from the Spanish influenza!
THE NANO FLOWER Caves and passages were observed, oppressively miasmatic in the low infrared band.
There was always some exciting topic at the Capitol, or some huge slander was rising up like a miasmatic exhalation from the Potomac, threatening to settle no one knew exactly where.
Peirce was discharged from the volunteer service on November 4, 1864 due to the loss of his right arm and general nervous debility relating to miasmatic diseases, and returned to Assonet.
The sea was sick, stagnant, and foul, from its turbid waters arose a miasmatic vapour like a breath of decay, which clung clammily to the palate and dulled all the senses.