means like the time was fast
"The guard stood in place for a long time."
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This stood for Gone To Texas. It was a phrase people used when they packed up and left their homes headed west.
A sheaf is how you stack grain so that it sheds water and stays fresh until you need to use it. The stalks are placed vertically, leaning against one another to make a tall mushroom-shaped structure.
"Your sister Theresa, a college student, had a difficult time finding a job." You want to separate the phrase 'a college student' as an identifier. If you remove the phrase the sentence still makes sense.
(The idiom is "to stand rooted to the spot" meaning to be transfixed, unable to move, either by surprise, apprehension, fear, or awe.) He stood rooted to the spot as the giant boulder slowly rolled past him, missing him by inches.
Where Time Stood Still happened in 1988.
Where Time Stood Still was created in 1988.
Time stood still. = * In Portuguese = O tempo parou. * In Spanish = El tiempo se detuvo.
Madonna song
no. what a bummer, eh?
"Time stood still" refers to that sensation you have when you're very excited or very scared -- everything seems to move in slow motion and time seems to stop.
Time went fast
Alliteration and personification
Stood and Still
the time and season will be the same until the earth moves again
The infinitive phrase here is "to watch".
All Stood Still was created in 1980.