pull to a stopの例文
- The train pulls to a stop and a uniformed soldier requests that they all accompany him.
- It is raining as Benjamin pulls to a stop at an intersection not far from the house.
- Witnesses outside the garage saw a Cadillac sedan pull to a stop in front of the garage.
- Birdwell pulls to a stop in a broad pasture, watched by dozens of other cattle that linger in the shade.
- Allen pulls to a stop and invites us to scramble 20 feet or so up a small pile of granite boulders.
- As Barlow drives the car suddenly pulls to a stop leaving Barlow to try to diagnose the problem as traffic builds behind him.
- As the car pulls to a stop, two attendants lift me onto a gurney, then zip me through a maze of corridors.
- Berry, 51, said he was driving north on I-71 when he noticed a car pull to a stop on an overpass.
- After a while, he turns up a winding, unmarked road and pulls to a stop at what appears to be a townhouse in the woods.
- Berry, 51, said he was driving north on the I-71 highway when he noticed a car pull to a stop on an overpass.
- Jardie and his team pull to a stop on a Paris street where they have located Mathilde . " Le Bison " shoots her twice.
- Berry, 51, of Mansfield, said he was driving north on I-71 when he noticed a car pull to a stop on an overpass.
- The Spec Tran ambulette pulls to a stop at the curb and the driver, a young black woman with a warm smile, hurries around to pull back the wide side door.
- The opening scene finds a slinky brunette ( Laura Harring ) dressed up for a party in the backseat of a car that pulls to a stop on Mulholland Drive overlooking Los Angeles'glittering lights.
- On West 125th Street next to the Apollo Theater, Ms . Brown had the limo pull to a stop before a 100-foot-long " Chyna Doll " billboard, featuring a very foxy Foxy, clad only in a blue feather bikini.
- Lost in thought while walking back to the college, thinking about how " utterly foolish " she had been and wishing " to be the best of friends with all of the Alphas once more, " a car pulls to a stop in front of her.