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Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Newsletter |
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This is Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Newsletter! |
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Every month Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Newsletter features a group of phrases from the Phrase Thesaurus. Sybrina's Phrase Thesaurus is packed full of descriptive phrases on every subject ...and much more.
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I hope you enjoyed this month’s issue of Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Newsletter.
Please feel free to browse the for previous phrases and articles. |
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Redistribution of Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Newsletter |
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ARTICLES & TOOLS OF INTEREST |
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CONTESTS & ANTHOLOGIES/CONFERENCES & SEMINARS |


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You just read a few of the 25,000+ phrases from some of Minor Sub-categories in the Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Tool. · The tool contains 8 MAIN CATEGORIES! They are “Physical Attributes”, “Moving Parts”, “Body In Motion”, “Emotions”, “Colors”, “Daily Activities” , “Expressions of Speech”, and “Earth Views”. · It also contains 250 Major Sub-categories such as “Hair” under Physical Attributes, “Hands” under Moving Parts, and “Embarrassment” under Emotions.
So if you’ve hit a brick wall with your writing...or you can’t get the creative juices flowing… If you wish you had a better way with words...or you just enjoy reading unique, descriptive phrases, this is the tool for you.
Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Tool is available in PDF format for just $12.95 - no shipping, no handling, no tax. Adobe Acrobat PDF files work with all operating systems and the viewer is available for download free. |
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FEATURED PHRASES FROM SYBRINA’S PHRASE THESAURUS |
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Visit these other Sybrina Publishing Sites and affiliates. |


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Copyright ©2000-2010, Sybrina Publishing. All rights reserved. This is a Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Newsletter publication for subscribers - http://www.sybrina.com or http://www.phrasethesaurus.com |

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Each month, someone’s work will be published in Sybrina’s Phrase Thesaurus Newsletter. It could easily be you. Don’t be shy. Send something in to share with all of our readers.
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PUBLISH YOUR WORK “HERE” FEATURE
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EARTH VIEWS —SKYSCAPES |
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SS1-1 (SKYSCAPES - MORNING) lustrous yellows in the east
SS1-3 (SKYSCAPES - SUNNY) blue and fleecy sky
SS1-4 (SKYSCAPES - SUNSET) the sun's disc bisected the horizon |
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SS1-5 (SKYSCAPES - NIGHT) the midnight velvet of the sky
SS1-6 (SKYSCAPES - CLOUDS) clean-cut white clouds
SS1-7 (SKYSCAPES - SHADE) unrelieved shades of gray |
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Jagged black clouds hung ominously in the southwest. Another storm was building in the south. The Wind was getting stronger. Jess Patrick was still forty miles from home, and he knew the storm was only minutes away. He turned the radio on to get the weather report, but there was only static. He switched the radio off and slowed down. The pickup was shaking, and he was afraid a gust might suck him off the road. Jess, he’d gone to Enid Oklahoma for machinery parts. He had taken in a farm show while he was there. All the while he was there it had been sunny. When he headed north, the sky was still clear. Just south of the Kansas-Oklahoma border, clouds began to form and thicken. Having lived in Kansas all his life, he knew how quickly a storm could form in the spring of the year. The sunny day had become dark and threatening within a thirty minute time span. To the west, a dark rotating cloud dipped out of the sky and moved slowly toward the ground. He pulled off to the side of the road and glanced behind him to be sure another twister wasn't forming behind him. The funnel touched the ground, and it picked up dirt and debris as it slowly moved northest, and in its path stood a farmstead. The swirling black monster approached the farmstead, and as it passed over the barn and outbuildings it devoured them turning them into kindling, and when the twister left the farmstead behind, the two story white framed house remained miraculously intact. A herd of cattle stamped across the pasture, plowed through a five wire barbed wire fence, crossed the highway in front of him and continued across a wheat field. Jess had seen a tornado from a distance before, and had experienced the aftermath on its fury, but he had never so close to one before.
CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE |
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“The Storm” By LeRoy Bohrer |
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Great webpage from Daily Writing Tips for misused words.
Double VS. Single Quotation Marks? - Read about it at Writer’s Block.
Stephen King’s Top 7 Tips for Becoming a Better Writer by Henrik Edberg. |
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2010 Gellhorn-Sargentich Law Student Essay Competition—Must be a law school student to submit. $500.00 Prize and travel— Deadline April 30, 2010.
The 32nd Nimrod Literary Awards Competition—$2,000.00 and Publication—Deadline April 30, 2010.
FailBetter Tenth Anniversary Novella Contest. $500.00 Prize—Deadline May 15th, 2010 |
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