The blade was roughly three feet long and was slightly slimmer than a regular double-edged sword. |
|
But it is a double-edged sword because if our prices are too high we are not going to get any pupils. |
|
On her back she wore a simple double-edged sword, but her strength hid the massive weight that it really was. |
|
The double-edged aspect of disorder in The Street is no-where more apparent than in its ambiguous evocation of gun violence. |
|
Therefore, all of LTC Leonhard's principles have a dual, double-edged nature. |
|
The problem with public information is that it's the proverbial double-edged sword. |
|
However the boom will be a double-edged sword for first-time buyers and those with larger mortgages who are at the mercy of interest rates. |
|
Afar men are known for the long, sharp, double-edged dagger, called a jile, that they wear at the waist. |
|
Reaching over to his left side, he drew his weapon of choice, a long double-edged sword. |
|
In her left hand she holds the scales of justice while in her right she brandishes her double-edged sword to punish the guilty. |
|
This facility with language aids the youth in their academic and career prospects, but it is a double-edged sword. |
|
It resembled an extremely long and wide double-edged knife, with an elaborate handle for improved grip. |
|
The sheathed and double-edged sword, or dodhar, lying across it, once belonged to Shivaji. |
|
Bear in mind, most jurisdictions prohibit the carrying of double-edged knives, and many do not allow concealed carry of fixed-blade knives. |
|
The very structure of the show becomes a double-edged sword. |
|
In them, it held a short double-edged sword and circular shield. |
|
There is no better emblem of the double-edged pleasure of seasonality than a backyard fig tree. |
|
Kay drew out his two-sided double-edged sword in a defensive motion. |
|
The last things on the trays that had come out of the wall were two incredible double-edged swords that had very intricate detailing on their handles. |
|
She notices the double-edged sword happening locally with the growing gentrification. |
|
|
In 1901, Gillette introduced his double-edged bladed disposable safety razor. |
|
It's also a double-edged sword that could hurt local Democrats and Republicans alike. |
|
He can wield energy as a weapon now, but it is already proving a double-edged sword. |
|
I don't mean to criticize the selling of genetics for sheep, but just one thing I want to point out is that it's almost a double-edged sword. |
|
The migration phenomenon has double-edged consequences for the countries of origin. |
|
A country's framework of policy and legislation on CSOs is considered by many as a double-edged sword. |
|
Thus, dissociation may be a double-edged sword, it may help in the short-term, but could place the victim at increased risk for later problems. |
|
The dominance of English as the language of the Internet is double-edged for all non-mother tongue English speakers. |
|
In this issue of the Encyclopaedia Shaolin, Sifu Aguilar desgrana how Damo Jian, the straight double-edged sword of Bodhidharma. |
|
Wiring the global village with information technology, however, has been double-edged. |
|
Among regular clergy, the orders of friars retained a slightly double-edged esteem among the laity as skilled confessors and dramatic preachers. |
|
Men of the armies fought with double-edged swords, battle-axes, lances, slings, and weapons of archery. |
|
Thanksgiving may be about family, but that comes with an intimidating collection of double-edged swords. |
|
He at times was so agile he became a double-edged sword, almost playing like a ruck rover. |
|
The blades were usually double-edged and up to 90 cm, or a little over, in length, but early single-edged sabres are also known. |
|
His mystifying style owes as much to African guitar as it does to the double-edged genre of math rock. |
|
Much of the fascination of early modern art, literature, and music lies in the double-edged nature of their aesthetic. |
|
Ah, but it's a double-edged sword, you see, and it always is for those ill-adjusted overemotional beings who make their living by playing tennis. |
|
It seems that the higher cognitive emotions cannot avoid being double-edged swords. |
|
Technical innovations, too, are a double-edged sword. |
|
|
Standing tall, black hood and mask concealing all but his yellow eyes, and carrying his deactivated double-edged saber, was the mastermind of this entire plan. |
|
Born in Lagos, the speed-fuelled capital of Nigeria, Femi rallied to the cause after his father's death in '97, leading a crusade against injustice and corruption with the double-edged sword of music and politics. |
|
The two swords interlocked with each other, creating a double-edged blade. |
|
It was a double-edged middle sword with a simple crosspiece and handle. |
|
While his defection may prove a double-edged sword for Labour, and it may even disrupt Ukip, it is really horrible for David Cameron. |
|
Pride and commitment to the RCMP can be a double-edged sword. |
|
A bayonet, on the other hand, is sharp, pointed, very long, double-edged and possesses the structural rigidity necessary to repeatedly harm human beings. |
|
I think that a longer sentence is a sort of double-edged sword. |
|
However, this is a double-edged sword because the moderation in new equipment prices is putting pressure on the value of used machinery, making a producer's trade-in worth less. |
|
However, leverage is a double-edged sword. |
|
But this can be a double-edged sword: insurance companies could also find that the capital markets become yet another alternative to draw policyholders away from the traditional market. |
|
So, as a short cut to happiness, drugs are double-edged swords. |
|
Management plans: an imposition or a double-edged sword? |
|
Recognition, however, was a double-edged sword. |
|
The notion of providing the Innu with programs and services equivalent to those available to status Indians on reserve has come to be a double-edged sword as far as the outposts program is concerned. |
|
Like most scientific inventions, television can be a double-edged weapon. |
|
It is not lost on O'Neill that he has made the most of whatever spondulicks he has been given to invest in players, but he recognises this as a double-edged sword. |
|
But this characteristic is a double-edged weapon which can sometimes lead the most novice bands to hastily bask in comfortable commonplaces. |
|
Their blood up, the Jacobites, most of them armed with small round shields, known as targes, and double-edged broadswords, hurtled down the slope. |
|
For those who embrace it, the long putter can be a double-edged sword, creating a tangle of emotions that is difficult to unknot. |
|
|
But this public awareness of ED has been a double-edged sword. |
|
As a tool of social activism, plague functions as a double-edged sword. |
|
So why does HND remain such a double-edged sword and what can be done to tackle the problem? |
|
Bonnie MacQueen has looked critically into the Girl Guide movement in British Columbia and feels that Guiding was a double-edged sword for women. |
|
It is important that Russia does not employ such double-edged measures in the future, and the European Union should not allow itself to become hysterical. |
|
A sword composed of a double-edged curved blade, a crosspiece and a hilt. |
|
An experimental vaccine tested in animals incites a double-edged immune reaction against the virus that causes genital herpes. |
|
Still, Botox injections and facelifts are a double-edged sword. |
|
The 'rolling scissors' cutter contains a double-edged razor blade which falls out easily. |
|
Verbal abuse is overt or subtle verbalizations ranging from profanity and openly hostile remarks about competency to double-edged comments, gossip and rumors. |
|