Most probably, but consistency has always been our bugbear so we must wait and see. |
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The major bugbear for anyone involved with Hearts is the continuing problems with Tynecastle Stadium. |
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Difficulties concerning preemption have proven to be the biggest bugbear for Lewis's theory. |
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Youth nuisance is the main bugbear in this town and we are working hard to stamp it out. |
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In fact, loading times are a real bugbear in Total Club Manager but this is a problem for the PlayStation 2, not the game itself. |
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This time our bugbear is the switch that allows you to alternate between playback, camera, movie modes. |
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Another perennial bugbear for innovative businesses has been the high cost of translating patents into all European languages. |
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Good management involves the reality of making decisions, a bugbear to persons who have not qualified themselves to cope. |
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The bureaucracy that is the bugbear of the Union also disrupts the implementation of regional policy. |
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The question of maximum or minimum harmonisation is still a bugbear and naturally voices have been raised in disagreement. |
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One bugbear of the manager of a small business is to maintain productivity. |
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I would also point out that the bugbear of any kind of legislation for me is always unintended consequences. |
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The bugbear is that our newspaper headline knowledge of events has made us accustomed to crises. |
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Not a big bugbear, just a minor irritation with no consequences. |
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Braintree councillors are concerned the town is becoming choked with traffic since the new A120 opened and fear the problem is proving a major bugbear for local residents. |
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Marie-Antoinette was a Habsburg, and thus from the moment of her arrival in France in 1770 the bugbear of the Richelieu-d'Aiguillon faction, which hated the Austrian alliance. |
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A bugbear of mine is the watery-blue sliders in the scroll bars. |
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The bugbear of the number of languages is not impossible to overcome. |
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The Zaydi tribesmen in the northern highlands particularly those of Hashid and Bakil, were ever the Turkish bugbear in all Arabia. |
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As for fan-out, which is usually such a bugbear in conventional full-colour production, is not an issue at all because there is no fount solution. |
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Cruz specifically set his sights on an analysis published on Monday by the data journalism website FiveThirtyEight, which Cruz incorrectly referred to as being part of the New York Times, a bugbear for the Fox News audience. |
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Things have improved but my biggest bugbear is that there are few people in any government who have actually worked in a SME, and know what it is like to pay VAT, rates and wages. |
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I asked Ed Miliband on Tuesday why I had not heard him mention immigration during his two visits to the constituency when it was so obviously so many people's number one bugbear. |
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What have I done to be made a bugbear of, and to be shunned and dreaded as if I brought the plague? |
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The word bugaboo, with a similar pair of meanings, may have arisen as an alteration of bugbear. |
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Planes have long been the bugbear of ecologists, because one aircraft alone emits the same amount of pollutants as 500 cars equipped with a catalytic converter. |
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Mistakes were more of a bugbear than melodramatics, rolling over against difficult opponents a greater concern than the rolling around in that Carroll incident. |
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Rally Trophy, released in 2001 for Microsoft Windows by Bugbear, concentrated on historic cars such as Alpine A110 and Lancia Stratos. |
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