The girls are ready to display their skill in the trapeze in the circus. [noun]
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From the 9th to the 13th IINIINNINIhNN I??Ca century it was mostly provided with a separate piece by way of finish to the ends, and this in the 12th and 13th centuries was as a rule trapeze-shaped. [adjective]
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Trapeze at Hengler's.' [Please select]
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She is the famous aerial artist, whom you saw the other evening in her wonderful feats upon the trapeze. [Please select]
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"I bid to be the feller that acts on the trapeze." [Please select]
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He had practiced on the trapeze in the gymnasium, and had acquired additional skill under the tuition of Mlle. [noun]
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"Some time you will make an engagement as a trapeze performer, Christopher," said the lady to him one day. [Please select]
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"Then you don't think any the worse of me because I am a trapeze performer." [Please select]
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The trapeze act is always a popular one, especially in a country town like this. [Please select]
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He caught the rope which hung down from the trapeze, and quickly climbing up poised himself on his elevated perch. [Please select]
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Gripping a thread with her front tarsi, or fingers, she turns, one after the other, a number of back somersaults, like those of an acrobat on the trapeze. [Please select]
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