Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
No point in letting them all die of old age before they get back to the Coalsack with the news.
Rex stared beyond his arm, but it might as well have been pointing into a coalsack.
All the light had gone out of the day, and the office was as dark as midnight in a coalsack.
There was a time when a sound beating sent them back beyond the Coalsack to lick their wounds for two thousand years or better.
But something was glowing within the dark mass like a rare green star emerging from a coalsack nebula.
It's somewhat to the right of the coalsack."
"Just to the right of the Coalsack.
Soft laughter, the color of a coalsack nebula.
To the Wardaman, the Coalsack is the head of a "law man".
But the Coalsack area was a spacemark good for half a sector of the galaxy.
Space lanes led to the Coalsack and from the Rim to Betelgeuse.
The emu's head is the very dark Coalsack nebula, next to the Southern Cross.
And the Coalsack Nebula isn't a dust cloud at all; it's a hole in space.
The Coalsack is located at a distance of approximately 600 light years away from Earth, in the Crux.
"They had radio and radar twenty years ago, when Rock Morgan was here in the Coalsack.
But as the train approaches the Coalsack, Campanella disappears, leaving Giovanni behind.
The Coalsack is 600 light-years away and several of the named planets are mentioned as being variously 20, 60 etc. parsecs away.
The Coalsack is known as Humu (the "triggerfish"), because of its shape.
What chance has a decent merchant busy with profit and loss got to learn the cant of every race between Sinus and the Coalsack?
"There, the Coalsack.
Calculating its distance is difficult due to the proximity of the Coalsack Nebula, which obscures some of its light.
The Milky Way sprawled across no less than four vision-screens, and the distorted black nebula, the Coalsack, loomed large and near.
Fifteen other Coalsack Bluff fragments, attributed as possible remains of Cryobatrachus based on their small size alone, were described.
His most significant find in Antarctica was a maxilla of a Lystrosaurus on Coalsack Bluff.
Australian Aboriginal astronomy also describes dark cloud constellations, the most famous being the "emu in the sky" whose head is formed by the Coalsack.