Word: faintings
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...this shuttle is on time, please don't faint...
...genius leaps across the centuries. When he seeks explanations, for example, of the faint glow between the horns of the crescent moon or the origin of fossils, he is nearly a century ahead of the scientific thought of his day. He correctly attributes lunar light to solar rays reflected from the Earth. Like Galileo, he risks ecclesiastical wrath by rejecting the belief that fossils were deposited on mountaintops by Noah's flood (because, he argues, a deluge would have scattered them helter-skelter rather than leaving them in orderly assemblages). And though his mind-set remains medieval, he demonstrates...
Without some poetry to dip into, after all, those in line at a vehicle-inspection station would presumably spend their time drumming impatiently on their steering wheels, muttering imprecations against bureaucracy and trying to decide whether the sound of their idling engine included a faint but ominous ping...
...swung by Jupiter in November 1973, Pioneer took the first close-up photographs of the giant planet and its moons, detected and mapped its immense magnetic field and intense radiation belts, analyzed its turbulent atmosphere and discovered that it was encircled by a faint Saturn-like ring...
Questioning his patient, Bayne finally deduced that a prescription drug she was taking had caused her heart to slow, decreasing the flow of oxygen to her brain and sending her into a faint. That settled, he administered a stimulant called atropine to strengthen her heartbeat. Total elapsed time from pew to recovery: eight minutes, just about as long as it would have taken to get her to the emergency room in an ambulance...