Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Did you get scared when the Chinese fire lantern flew into the stage?
Jordan saw the lantern fly in an arc, then complete darkness fell around them.
The lantern flew through the air and smashed into the rock roof of the cave.
A figure flattened backward on the turf, out of The Shadow's reach, lantern flying one way, a gun another.
Like many lantern flies, their head has a scimitar-shaped process attached to it, but the function of it is unknown.
It was he who had knocked Nem down when they were discovered just before dawn, sending the man's lantern flying into the straw.
Scritch bellowed and brought his fist down so hard on the table the lantern flew up in the air almost as high as I did.
As Green Lantern flies off, Gordon tells district attorney Harvey Dent that he mistrusts vigilantes, especially those with that much power.
Even more convincing heads are found on some lantern flies, where the real head is well hidden and the false head has a huge eye-spot and bold 'antennae'.
Invertebrate finds included ants, bees, beetles, earwigs, caddis flies, crane flies, damsel flies, lantern flies, may flies, grasshoppers, leaf hoppers, mosquitoes, snails, and wasps.
They belong to the Fulgoridae, though they are not among the more well-known members of that family called "lanternbugs" or "lantern flies" (true bugs are only distantly related to true flies).
The video ends at night with Dixon stood in the park in the centre of a group of people, with skyscrapers in the backdrop, with an array of sky lanterns flying in the sky.
Even as he leaned quickly forward to peer more closely at the skiff, Roche of the Island felt himself pulled bodily out of their small boat, the lantern flying from his hand to douse itself hissing in the sea.
The fulgorid genus Fulgora contains three large Central and South American planthoppers known by a large variety of common names including lantern fly, peanut bug, peanut-headed lanternfly, alligator bug, machaca, and jequitiranaboia (the latter terms used in the Amazon region and elsewhere in Brazil).