10.Nevertheless, I'm glad that extroverted people appreciate being led by an introvert, who creates some order out of their, oftentimes, chaotic and incoherent maelstrom.
12.If, God forbid, we make any mistake, if we take a wrong step, and it will instantly drag Russia into this maelstrom and it's the largest nuclear arm power.
13.Is it not a serious thing to enter the maelstrom of interests, passions, and pleasures which make Paris a dangerous ocean for chaste love and purity of conscience?
14.I was about to explain how a comparatively small maelstrom could suck in the largest ship, when the curtain fell of its own accord, amid the shouts of the audience.
15.Maelstrom is also often used figuratively to refer to a situation resembling the turbulence of a maelstrom, as when there are a lot of confused activities or emotions.
16.He had been futile in longing to drift and dream; no one drifted except to maelstroms, no one dreamed, without his dreams becoming fantastic nightmares of indecision and regret.
17.When the core of a VERY massive star collapses, forming a black hole, the material just outside the core falls down, forming an incredibly hot swirling maelstrom called an accretion disk.
18.If you asked me at the time, I'd have said that we came up short for her in the end—that her birthday felt like an afterthought in the maelstrom of the campaign.
19.But it's less likely to cause a kind of financial maelstrom for the world economy than it was a few months ago. And I think that is one reason why it's not so high on the agenda.
20.It was precisely the odd absence of surprise in her that gave him the sense of her having been plucked out of a very maelstrom: the things she took for granted gave the measure of those she had rebelled against.