Sentence examples for uproot off from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Bruce Martin was bowled by a beauty from Anderson that held its line to uproot off stump before Finn removed Watling and Trent Boult in the space of five balls to complete a fine morning's work for England.

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The Nottinghamshire player, whose brilliant hundred helped England beat Sri Lanka in the T20 World Cup, played almost a lone hand in his 41-ball knock until Malinga uprooted his off stump.

Miller struck John Dewes before uprooting his off stump.

The risen one still offers life to those who will look for evidence of his gardening - hope, friendship, healing, reunion, restoration - to all who have been uprooted, cut off, to those who are parched and withered, to those who lie wasting in the desert.

It hardly mattered for with his first delivery of the innings, Morris produced something that squared Root up, went past his bat and uprooted the off-stump.

It was Aravind who led the way though, prolonging Glenn Maxwell's wretched run of form by uprooting his off-stump with the Australian on one, and then dismissing Wriddhiman Saha and David Miller in his third over.

Out at the telescope, the ranking Australian (Sam Neill) and his crew decide not to tell NASA in Houston that they have lost contact with the ship and struggle with high winds that could uproot and carry off a dish antenna that is 210 feet across.

Yet early in the novel one of Mary Beth's large landscaping jobs ("six tiers of shrubs, a small copse of flowering plum and pear, a long hedge of weigela") is vandalized, the plantings uprooted and carried off overnight.

India 74-5 (Sharma b Starc 1) Excellent stuff this from Australia and Mitchell Starc opens the 12th over by uprooting Sharma's off peg, the ball ricocheting into the stumps off his pads.

First he had Tom Fell caught at first slip by Jim Allenby and then, three balls later, he uprooted Alex Gidman's off stump with a delivery which left the batsman late.

Various kinds of disturbances frequently occur in forests; for example, canopy trees (a tree whose crown is part of the greater canopy) may be uprooted or broken off by strong winds (windthrows), or they may be killed by diseases or cut down by humans.

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