Crossword clues for inpour
WordNet
Usage examples of "inpour".
Thunder rumbled while The Shadow strolled to the opened door and closed it against the inpour of rain.
Swift in its own right, abetted by the rapid inpour from the gulf, the speed-boat was an aquatic juggernaut.
Australian workers, was not understood by their comrades in the United Kingdom, who had to contend all their lives in free markets against the cut-throat competition of cheap labour, and who had also to put up with a steady inpour of East and South European cheap labourers.
Furtig tensed, ready to face the inpour when the weight of those outside would break through.
Back and still back went the outnumbered gray, many of whom were surrounded by the swirling currents of inpouring blue.
So heartened, he stumbled on to feel the healing of the moonflowers, as well as an inpouring of energy.
Garden, riders called the place, the area all around and northeast of Anveney, where the soil lay completely bare and prone to erosion, gullies leading to gullies leading to a wash that ran down to a river that ran through barren banks a long, long way before the inpouring of other streams began to put more life into Limitation River than death could take out.
In the long-gone time when the planets were cooling I believe Venus required far longer than earth, for the inpouring heat would retard its cooling.
Its relief was one of the first tasks which presented itself to the inpouring army corps.
To Imrhien, it seemed that they were stumbling forth into a blaze of glory, an inpouring of pure whiteness beyond which there was only more whiteness, brighter and more brilliant.
Fifth Insight revealed that we could end this conflict by receiving an inpouring of this energy from a higher source.
Prisoners, excited by the inpouring torrents, had roused to hear the noise of rescue.
In the fifth century came the inpouring of the Goths and Huns, and with them the sacking and plunder of the land.
California and the remarkable inpouring of men that followed, meant very much to the United States.
High windows just below ceiling level allowed an inpouring of dramatic, downward rays of light.