I am not saying for a moment that every woman who is left to bring up a child on her own is incapable. |
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You will be able to bring up the scoreboard, click to bring up a mouse cursor, and click on the name of the player you want to mute. |
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She quit her job as a ward sister in 1991 to bring up her children but found she missed nursing. |
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His lawyer told him he could not understand why the Justice Department would bring up a charge on the technicality of one misdated check. |
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He was able to bring up his gun quickly enough and started blasting at whoever or whatever was in that direction. |
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Bobby Abreu worked the count full then hit a bleeder up the middle to bring up Alex Rodriguez. |
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Females stay with their mothers, forming a group of related animals that co-operate to bring up and feed the latest litters of cubs. |
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So the great war hero is going to bring up unfounded accusations against George Bush. |
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You also have to make sure the task bar is unhidden in order to bring up the on-screen keyboard. |
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I will bring up the common theme of unrequitedness in this weblog many times, and hopefully people will relate. |
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Patients are unable to control bowel and bladder functions, and some bring up their meal right in the middle of feeding. |
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I've helped bring up the brats children of friends etc., although obviously that's no real comparison with the real thing. |
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Also, he knew he needed bodily nourishment to bring up his declining health. |
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Let's all make a solemn oath to never again bring up how the drivers would have finished under the old points system. |
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An autobiography is an attempt to bring up all the facts, and to stick to them, faithfully and chronologically. |
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Birds that bring up young cuckoos are unable to distinguish between parasitic nestlings and their own. |
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The result of your search will bring up a list of job summaries and links to full job descriptions. |
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I have chosen to stay at home to bring up my daughter and any other children that I may choose to have. |
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He says that Caroline is not fit to bring up children and that his daughters are not staying in that immoral environment. |
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There aren't that many more sure-fire ways to ensure your own mockery than to bring up UFOs in a serious conversation. |
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One of the most painful ways to wound your partner with guilt is to bring up past hurts and wrongs. |
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At the age of six his father passed away leaving his mum, Helen, to bring up four young children. |
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I hope I am making myself clear, because you bring up a good point with this, for me. |
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One day the Norwegian mine clearers bring up a huge metal mechanised flail, beat the mines out of the earth and lay out a football pitch. |
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They offered over a hundred daily comic strips and once you'd set up a free account, one single URL would bring up all of your faves on one page. |
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A good art critic is able to bring up for discussion the issues and implications that are inherent in a film, book, or album. |
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He could react to the start signal, bring up the 625, blast six bowling pins off the table, reload, and take two more in under six seconds. |
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If you read your e-mail remotely using SSH and a text-based client, it then is possible to bring up in-line images over the same xterm window. |
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Lucinda pressed a few buttons on her console, bring up menus, pressing buttons and inputting data. |
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Some people believe that to bring up the incident will revive bad memories and interethnic animosity. |
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When I bring up the software and open a drawing, my crosshairs are invisible. |
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Several of the function keys will bring up dialog boxes in which to enter data. |
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As a preface to discussing specifics, I need to bring up some general issues surrounding theories of literary dependence. |
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Consider that if this is a guy you'd marry, this is a guy with whom you should be able to bring up tricky prickly stuff, scary though it is. |
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However, the Soviet forces quickly managed to construct new defensive positions and bring up fresh forces. |
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We don't bring up to these issues to provoke people to throw a massive revolt or to propagandise political left views. |
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So obviously something more is needed to help bring up a person's proportion and symmetry. |
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Sadly, in a lot of cases, parents are failing to bring up their children with good family and moral values. |
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He and Anne helped their daughter Emma bring up their grandson, Tom, when she was ill with depression. |
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But the drastic measures were attacked last night as the latest attempt to dictate to parents how they should bring up their children. |
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Dorothy started work at Silsden textile firm Knox's, left to bring up daughter June Gorthorpe, then became a dinner lady at Grange Middle School. |
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Customers are kindly asked not to bring up the horrific accident which left Mike with discolored white scar tissue around his eyes. |
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The wells were starting to bring up muddy brown water and clothes had to be washed in yesterday's dishwater. |
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How wonderful it is to see the mother duck struggling to bring up her young brood of ducklings on Clifton Backies. |
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The family did not bring up the question of paternity even though she went on to have five more children. |
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Today Tesco and Sainsbury's local stores are helping to bring up some down-at-heel neighbourhoods. |
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He said a dredge is being used to bring up wreckage submerged under 11m of water. |
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He didn't bring up one single argument in respect to the abortion of a budget that was tabled this year. |
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The end, which is to bring up well-behaved, considerate and law-abiding citizens, justifies the means a thousand-fold. |
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When it didn't bring up any helpful information she asked me what it was going to be used in. |
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The wheel horses, Joe described, are the largest pair, and bring up the rear. |
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A certain flower or a, a whiff of smoke can bring up experiences long forgotten. |
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A few hours later, he was stroking the last ball of the day to the boundary to bring up a century. |
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It's well-known that, in the status race, mothers bring up the rear, ranking equally with the disabled and the elderly. |
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Scanlon, whose husband left her to bring up children aged three and one, said most parents worried about whether they could cope. |
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The birds and other animals, including deer, have moved back, like their human counterparts, to bring up their families. |
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She's going to be tired and irritable, and bound to bring up the subject of who earns the bread. |
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The question is how can she bring up the topic tactfully, without hurting her father? |
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We can delegate the authority to train and bring up our children to someone else but never the responsibility. |
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Now you're asking us whether you should bring up a child with your atheist teachings and dogma? |
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I want to ask you first, Ron, about polls because Roger and Karen get testy with me when I bring up polls. |
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The blue marlin and its cousins, the white marlin, swordfish and sailfish, bring up the rear. |
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At any rate, because of that feeling, it pains me somewhat to bring up this. |
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Browsing to a team will by default bring up the 1st team squad, with the reserves and youth players brought up by a tick box in a drop-down menu. |
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If something isn't immediately obvious, putting the cursor over it will bring up a tool tip telling you all relevant information. |
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Find a nice girl and settle down, bring up some children, get a steady job in management. |
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Ireland may follow Wales' example and launch an initiative based on Wales' groundbreaking campaign to encourage parents to bring up their children bilingually. |
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It is very easy, I think, for the Government to bring up some basically extremely spurious reasons why this moratorium should be continued, but there is no logic to it. |
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I was debating whether to bring up Chuck Norris or scientology first, and I went with Chuck Norris. |
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Young mothers struggle alone to bring up a growing proportion of children in relative poverty and more and more old people live out their days in uncared-for solitude. |
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I also think this fear and tension is helping to bring up a normally only latent or dormant aggression and anger that's always been around in our culture. |
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Sorry to bring up smoking again, but smoking reduces your resistance to bugs, lowers the body's ability to expel the mucus and lengthens recovery time. |
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Probably the book could do with more of that kind of assistance, but that would bring up another trade-off with completeness and analytical depth. |
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If you wanted bananas, he would bring up a bunch of about thirty small green ones from the village for threepence, and put in the kitchen they slowly ripened, a few at a time. |
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A house that's that energy-efficient is going to be easy to bring up to a comfortable condition with a simple wood stove or pellet stove with a battery that can operate a fan. |
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With the policies of pre-emption being much debated, perhaps it is unfashionable to bring up a crisis that is rapidly reaching the point of no return. |
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The stern anchor is easy to bring up but when fishing from a boat with a cabin or cuddy it can be a little difficult to retrieve the front anchor. |
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Today most women in her position would show their errant husband the door and not many, if any, would agree to bring up the child her husband fathered to the local barmaid. |
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It was a glorious way to bring up the century for the season. |
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Young women who have children out of wedlock are much less likely to marry as they age and much more likely to bring up their children in a single-parent family. |
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She was taken out of poverty in a back-to-back house in Bradford, where her divorced mum had to bring up six children, into middle-class affluence. |
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Many people do not want to move but want more room to bring up their kids, or to make minor home improvements or tackle climate change through microgeneration. |
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Owner Tim Price, 45, a warehouseman from Rodbourne, is proud of the pup he and daughter Leanne have helped bring up since he was just eight weeks old. |
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Their madrassa had a good maulvi who told her that the madrassa can bring up orphans but her mama would not let them go there because of what people would say. |
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Set up a protocol so that an NFC client on one phone will bring up the corresponding NFC server on the other when the two phones are bumped together. |
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His brother Robin, 33, crewed the boat at the last minute and left a pregnant wife to grieve and to bring up a child who will never know his father. |
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The supervisor is quite approachable, so don't hesitate to bring up any problems you have. |
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Might either of the two bring up the malignant problems experienced by the Eurozone? |
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What better way to bring up a serious issue without commandeering the meal? |
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A force operates to awaken the hidden material to bring up the actual experience. |
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It took far, far longer than it should have, to bring up two packets of cheesy puffs. |
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You plunge your hand exploringly into the drawer, and bring up a long roll wound thickly with twine of all kinds and colors. |
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Another point I'd like to bring up is the use of fronters. These are people who prospect for you. |
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On the death of his wife in 1821, his sister in law, Elizabeth Branwell, came from Penzance, Cornwall to help him bring up the children. |
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Both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were determined to bring up their children in a natural and loving environment. |
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The war with France had closed the Spanish Road for Spain, making it difficult to bring up reinforcements from Italy. |
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He ran off to France leaving her with all the debts and three children to bring up. |
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I was made a war widow at 29 and paid plenty of tax because I had to go out to work to bring up two children. |
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However, sometimes a hairball can cause an upset stomach and the cat will bring up just food or mucous. |
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Operators can right-click on any data point of interest and bring up a control chart or histogram. |
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She left work to bring up the family, then returned to work part time at Midland Cylinder Rebores Ltd, until retirement. |
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When scientists bring up the subject of liquid chromatography, complexity and high cost are two things that immediately come to the mind. |
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Expectorants that help to bring up phlegm can make you feel sick, drowsy and give you a headache. |
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San Franciscans pucker their lips up and their eyes go slitty when you bring up burritos. |
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The language you use displays on the status bar, and it only takes one click to bring up the dialogue box that changes the language to Canadian English. |
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But Oram stood firms to patiently bring up his half-century before smashing 25 from the final over to help New Zealand post a defendable 212 for nine. |
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To bring up the propellant in good time to load for the next broadside, many safety doors were kept open that should have been shut to safeguard against flash fires. |
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There is a demographic catastrophe happening in Europe that nobody wants to talk about, that we daren't bring up because we are so cagey about not offending people racially. |
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But every time she went to an interview the employer would bring up her nonmusicality, and ask probing questions that had nothing to do with the job or her skills. |
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Although Lennox's profile decreased for a period because of her desire to bring up her two children outside of the media's glare, she continued to record. |
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In support of Perth, Charles Edward Stuart would bring up the second line. |
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As for the guides, they were debarred from the pleasure of discourse, the one being placed in the van, and the other obliged to bring up the rear. |
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