Suspense and suspense come from the old French word suspense, delay and a Latin root meaning to hang up or interrupt. From Middle English suspense, suspense, from Anglo-Norman suspens (as in suspens) and suspens from Old French, from Latin suspense. These example sentences are automatically selected from various online news sources to reflect the current use of the word “suspense”. However, these two IDs are still under debate, a problem that adds to the suspense that is now increasing in Amphipolis.
A national Rose Bowl semifinal that was predicted to lack suspense ended up lacking suspense, unless you want to tell about the art exhibition. The suspense of waiting for the committee to decide who was the winner of the award was really hard to bear. For a while it almost seemed like I was about to do the same thing, and the suspense almost infuriated the girls. Middle English had a suspension for suspended, raised; jockstrap to hold something that hung from above.
This is where this editorial satire becomes an animated thriller, as Florence is forced to face the person she has become in her quest for fame.
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