The rubber stamp comes despite continued concerns over the plan's inclusion of a spur with railway lines leading into the Town Beach bay. |
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A main types of mineral phosphate, soft rock phosphate comes mostly from ancient sea deposits. |
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The F sharp Nocturne comes to life in a remarkable manner whilst the C sharp minor Etude also creates a palpable sense of mystery. |
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Just when we are entering the coldest, darkest time, along comes this liturgical shot in the arm. |
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Because it comes under the rubric of internet self-regulation, this kind of censorship is seen as less intrusive. |
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Also today, news comes that British holidaymakers heading for the United States face a five-hour wait to check in. |
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As we will see, when it comes to inflation, the federal reserve is caught between a rock and a hard place. |
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The Model 480 Kitchen Queen comes equipped with grates and a large ash pan for easy, clean ash removal. |
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It's when the breeze comes from the side, and slightly abaft of abeam, that a vessel can achieve its fastest point of sail. |
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On investor roadshows, he talks the talk when it comes to taking the painful steps needed to turn this into a take-me-seriously bank. |
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Even now, in our celebration of the Mass, the Liturgy of the Word comes before the Liturgy of the Eucharist. |
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Anvil pruners and loppers have a cutting blade that comes down on an anvil, cutting a stem as if it were laid on a chopping block. |
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But despite the uncertainty, the troops quickly dismissed suggestions that the waiting game may leave them unprepared if the call to arms comes. |
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Now comes the news that her shifty lawyer father has only 48 hours to raise a lot of money or face financial ruin and imprisonment. |
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While humans may experience the senses in some fundamental way, lingual evolution comes out of necessity and transition within specific cultures. |
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The fog causes Alec to lose his way, and the moonlight comes out when he returns to Tess sleeping. |
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Groundwater comes from an aquifer, an underground zone of saturated sand, gravel, or rock that yields significant quantities of water. |
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From somewhere in the distance comes an ominous rumble of thunder, barely perceptible over the nearby lawnmower. |
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Julien says he's a Communist, which means politics comes before rumpy pumpy. |
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Hydraulics on the wheel loaders comes equipped with a pilot valve system that permits fingertip control. |
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These nut-cases buy into every whackadoodle belief that comes down the pike. |
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I don't think the ground will make any difference to him, although he may not run if the ground comes up too firm. |
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From warblogs to personal diaries, genre comes out of story, out of content, and is not imposed upon it by form or format. |
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Every once in a while he has flings but when Michelle crooks her finger he comes running. |
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Selling does not start after a product comes out of the assembly line or the workshop. |
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However, the real problem comes when the dry season lasts longer than normal, because this supply of rainwater will run out. |
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The professionalism of the office comes through loud and clear, as does the commitment to excellence. |
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The author's enthusiasm and infectious desire to communicate his ideas comes across loud and clear. |
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You see people leaping out of the way as some great wad of canvas comes hurtling towards them. |
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She hops out into the garden, does a sort of discreet cough, and up comes a nice neat little wad of hair, no fuss, and no mess. |
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The delay comes as protests, including walkouts by hundreds of students opposed to the takeover, have mounted in recent weeks. |
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After we leave one of the passengers from the back coach comes forward to our coach and inquires where the diner is. |
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Now I don't say that everything the US does is better than us Brits, but when it comes to roadside diners, they lead the way. |
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Just then, this fire truck comes barrelling up in the rear view mirror full speed, sirens and lights ablaze and the dream ends. |
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Falling in love with Maria, he comes to question rigid definitions of masculine and feminine. |
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For the climbers there's ivy, sweet pea, clematis, honeysuckle, runner beans and nasturtium, which comes in yellows, saffrons and fiery reds. |
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The fact is that both the old parties are a disaster when it comes to managing Victoria's forests. |
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In an odd bit of casting, Kris Kristofferson has a walk-on as Karubi, Daena's father, who comes to a somewhat gruesome end. |
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The move comes as many shopkeepers in the area are complaining that traffic jams and the lack of parking spaces are driving customers away. |
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They've waffled on at length about it, but as is usual the action comes a generation later. |
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Like nearly everyone who comes to Cape Town, we couldn't wait to head straight up Table Mountain. |
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Today the Senate Democratic leader told me the White House seems to be waffling when it comes to the North Korea standoff. |
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This shirt, which comes in six solid colors, is woven in a waffle pattern and features a treatment that makes the silk truly washable. |
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Peters says emission trading deals have to be above-board and transparent, especially when it comes to price. |
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When it comes to recording the day, I can't help but wish they had pills for those who, in old age, lose the quality of loving kindness. |
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The neck comes a little too low for mother's taste, but father says I look beautiful in it. |
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Water comes up to the second floor, they are out of gasoline, and food supplies are running perilously low. |
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It comes to a pass in some families that certain members will most assuredly never get along. |
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I am a monster when it comes to Ropa Vieja, and I was craving it, so when it arrived I dug in. |
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Likewise, most of the water supply for the town of Sonoyta, as well as the nearby border town of Lukeville, comes from the groundwater aquifer. |
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The problem comes when you try to think algebraically, or arithmetically, about the Gauss problem. |
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It comes in a wand like a mascara brush, which you sweep over your brows to give colour to the hairs rather than the skin. |
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Animation far exceeds live action when it comes to a dubbed language track. |
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When it comes to makeover shows, it used to be a new frock or a lighter shade of lippy would suffice. |
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Stylish, comfortable and built for adventure, this long sleeve shirt comes with exclusive logos on the chest and the arm! |
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When she comes to see me, I will advise her that partisan politics in a lobby group such as Federated Farmers is not a very good idea. |
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Part god, part athlete, he dances astoundingly in a big solo that seems to take its shape in the air until he comes to rest. |
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Thankfully, it's also the absolute nadir of the album at large, so everything else comes up roses by comparison. |
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This sleepover, on Monday 15 December, comes complete with a light supper and breakfast rusks. |
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Argan oil, known as Moroccan gold, comes from the seeds of the argan tree, once widely grown in Morocco but now found only in the south. |
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And when it comes to romance, the Czechs certainly have no qualms about public displays of affection! |
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By the end of the story, Howland has hardly changed at all, and he comes out smelling of roses. |
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Another jab of pain comes from my stomach, reminding me to see why it hurts so much. |
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Heraldically, perhaps the nicest illustration of genteel, female armorial pride comes again from the Paston family. |
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I was surprised to learn that mere probably comes from Latin merus, though perhaps with some reinforcement from Germanic and Romance sources. |
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The more insidious threat comes from the long-term, low-level doses of radiation that the crew would take every day for several years. |
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The pungent smell that emanates from the market comes from the range of dried small animals like rock rabbits or even complete donkey legs. |
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Terry's as tactically astute as anyone I have worked with and when it comes to motivation he's one of the best. |
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But the man from the 14th lock on the Grand Canal is rooted in where he comes from. |
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The series comes in the wake of Stephen Poliakoff's drama Friends And Crocodiles. |
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When it comes to length, Danilo suggests those with curly locks keep hair short or very long. |
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The enhancement of online learning through interaction comes in both synchronous and asynchronous exchanges. |
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The likeable Welsh-born Liverpudlian ex-teacher always comes across as being very laid back. |
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The most nimble of all Jeeps, it comes with front and rear locking axles, giant tires, and extra low gear speeds. |
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When it comes to energy efficiency and insulation, the key issue is R-value cost per square foot. |
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The sauce comes in a round jar with a blue lid and is labelled pasta sauce arrabbiata chilli with a best before date up to June next year. |
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Most of us will consider a clean-air car only if it comes with generous dollops of comfort, convenience, and roominess. |
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Sometimes it comes to you, but at Leeds it got a bit silly towards the end. |
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He has certainly roughed it and it would be very unfair if someone else comes in and is appointed coach. |
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For my first post I wanted to tell you guys that when it comes to SEO, this is how I roll. |
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But there comes the day of reckoning when statements drop through the letter box and interest charges and penalty payments are revealed. |
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When Saturday comes Tracy and I will have been married twenty-two years to the day. |
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Anyways, when my appt comes around I tell the woman that I don't think I lost any weight. |
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Big money comes more quickly for athletes in other sports than it does in boxing. |
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The native language of the Garifuna comes from the Arawak and Carib languages of their island ancestors. |
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The young singer comes from a very talented musical family and everyone wishes her the best of luck on Sunday. |
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He gets himself invited to a party at Jenna's, hoping to try his luck at spin the bottle, but insists that Nicholas comes along. |
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Sepia comes from the Greek word for the rich reddish-brown pigment obtained from a fluid that is secreted by the cuttlefish from their ink sac. |
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If you're waiting up all night for a husband who comes home after the kids are in bed, you might feel you're missing out. |
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Jeff Jarvis takes another navel gaze at the warblogs, and comes up with some fine lint. |
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A mean, penetrating rain, the type that comes at you from all directions at once. |
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When it comes to carrying luggage, pack all your bags, no matter how much space they occupy. |
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Conrad Brooks stumbles on his lines so much he comes across like a one-legged man in a sack race. |
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I have about as much finesse when it comes to romance as a lumberjack has when cutting down a tree. |
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It comes with two lamps, one with 125 lumens output while the other offers 225 lumens. |
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He said we should uphold the principle of free speech while recognising that it comes with conditions attached. |
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Managers must meet tough criteria prior to certification but this invariably comes with a range of conditions and deadlines attached. |
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In the first half of this church sequence, Cole is playing with his soldiers in the choir loft when Malcolm comes in. |
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Another issue of absorbing interest, and still greater complexity, is that of how a composition comes into being, from conception to completion. |
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It is driven by gears rather than a belt, and also comes with a telescopic extendable wand which means it can get into tight corners and edges. |
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Perfectly timed for the coming cold comes a dose of relief for us northerners. |
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It comes on the heels of a successful November launch of a new round of global trade talks. |
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Under the pressure that comes with a major final Boswell's chest-on, round-arm action disintegrated and Somerset cruised to victory. |
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I just let the plants sit in the hot tap water until it comes to room temperature, and place in our cooler. |
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This goes some way to explaining why my cupboard is a bit bare when it comes to clothes. |
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The news comes in the wake of the club announcing its first new signing, goalkeeper Craig Dootson. |
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He plays John Smith, an English rogue and explorer who comes to the shores of America in chains. |
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But the desire for power comes from envy which is the root cause of all evil. |
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When it comes down to threats of physical violence against people who are doing their jobs, that is something we roundly condemn. |
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The news comes in the wake of two fatal road accidents in the Swindon area. |
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The cheerful officer takes over the station, just as a rogue Minbari warship comes looking for trouble. |
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He often comes home late and wakes up the little ones because he wants to spend time with them. |
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To confirm his worst fears, a yell comes out of the bathroom window upstairs, startling the few crows perched on the lone tree in their garden. |
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Major characteristics to consider when it comes to roguing are general plant stem and leaves, and pod wall colour at maturity. |
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Janice and Alison go to great lengths to ensure they sell the genuine article, which comes with a certificate of authenticity. |
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I suggest he goes outside, puts on his first pair of long trousers, and then comes back. |
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All this in a world where the biggest problem comes from terrorists and rogue states for whom treaties are meaningless. |
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Sometimes he takes a long time between balls and then, for a change, he simply turns and comes right at you. |
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Punch Drunk Love is quirky and stylish, but not in a manner that comes across as overly artsy or pretentious. |
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Forgive the caveman economics, but keeping the lights and heating on comes a long way ahead of saving the planet, in my book. |
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I listen to the sounds of the radiators ticking as the central heating comes on. |
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If you camp out somewhere, knowing full well that it's against the law, you can't really get too cranky about it when someone comes to roust you. |
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Tenet's departure comes after a series of political, military and intelligence fiascos for the Bush administration. |
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The incident comes in the wake of widespread calls to restrict the sale of fireworks to members of the public. |
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The review comes in the wake of two profit warnings from the group so far this year. |
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Something of Turner's seascapes, where everything appears to be roiling, comes through. |
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After the funeral comes the wake, the time for contemplation as the past releases its grip. |
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The constituent that comes before a head in a phrase to qualify its meaning has the function of modifier. |
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Whenever April Fool's Day comes around, my mental antennae tend to go on special alert. |
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Do photographs require us to be absolute literalists when it comes to interpretation of an event? |
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Fifteen minutes later, the machine comes back with a history of the Afghan hound in several languages, including Lithuanian. |
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Dinner, which comes in menus of up to eight superb courses, literally frolics on your tongue. |
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Finally, how do youth attitudes toward religion play our when it comes to their wallets and pocketbooks? |
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This year's finest traditional album, however, comes from a long-established artist who is still in remarkable, even startling form. |
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When payday comes, a clerk asks the applicant if hear she would like to roll the loan over to the next pay period. |
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When it comes to shampoo and soap, there are a lot of dog grooming products that cater specifically to long haired dogs. |
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Of course, it would be asking an awful lot to expect a Gold Cup from him now but we'll see how he comes along. |
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Five minutes after we are off the tracks comes a loaded freight train rolling at a solid clip. |
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The move comes in the week that British Airways announced it would be increasing fuel surcharges on its long-haul flights. |
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The Arunta name comes from the Arrernte Aboriginal people of Central Australia, the traditional owners of Mparntwe. |
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In order to do the thing, to the best of your ability and give you the flexibility for the uncertainty that always comes about in combat. |
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Christ comes to each of us, not to be a snack but to be the full meal for our lives, as He is the bread of life. |
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The lion's share of the cost of educating this nation's schoolchildren comes out of state treasuries. |
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When it comes to physical abnormality, the camera can be like an innocent, mercilessly truthful child. |
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In wet weather water comes down off Temple Lane onto the road and cars are known to aquaplane. |
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When it comes to salary, many business owners have no qualms about paying themselves a hefty amount. |
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The signings for the readers will come after the book comes out and is available to be bought in shops. |
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Not exactly, but I've always had a soft spot for that silky sheen that comes with fresh plaster. |
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The Lipizzaners were originally a Spanish breed, which were raised in the Slovene town of Lipica and this is where the name comes from. |
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The title of princess, and later Queen, comes with not only the joys of royalty, but with great responsibility and knowledge. |
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Your desire to take action comes from that very potent Mars that sits right on your Leo ascendant. |
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Though the policy has some ardent Republican supporters, the impetus all comes from him. |
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So too is the fragmentation of the FSA when it comes to command and control. |
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Until that day comes, cg Technology CEO Lee Amaitis might be the luckiest man in Las Vegas. |
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When it comes to the increasing number of rape allegations leveled at Bill Cosby, the smoke is becoming impenetrable. |
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The news comes one month after Sam's sister Holly Branson confirmed that she is expecting twins with her husband Fred Andrews. |
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In a sea of blazers and boring pantsuits comes Frederica Wilson, a newly elected Florida Democrat. |
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Well, this conversation comes from a hostile point of view where I have to answer for my belief system. |
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The awkward, PSA-worthy interaction comes across as a consent role-play, rather than a believable, exciting first kiss. |
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But Flagg, too, comes apart in his machinations, bent ever more fully on political domination. |
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All this data comes from numbers crunched by Professor Emmanuel Saez, director of the Center for Equitable Growth at Berkley. |
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Until they do, berry utilizes her star quality to keep us riveted and awaiting whatever twist comes next. |
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We'll wait on the beets until the next crop comes in with fresh tops. |
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One and all, they come shaking their tin cups at election time then run like the wind when a critical vote comes up. |
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Of the lesser-known Olympic sports, the biathlon, in which you ski and shoot, comes with a host of extreme physical demands. |
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Liberal Democrats like to blow their bugles about how all the big money in politics comes from rich Republicans. |
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Dr. Robertson also twists the facts when she comes to the defense of Dr. Robert Eckel. |
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Once a PSA test comes back with an abnormal result, a biopsy is required to make a diagnosis. |
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Of course, the Vatican insists that there is really no such thing as a free lunch when it comes to the road to heaven. |
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The first hint that James Holmes suffers from bipolar disorder comes from the alleged shooter himself. |
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Since then, of course, he has sold everything that comes off the desk in the study in Birmingham to Hollywood. |
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Young has a distinctive sound, whether arco or pizzicato, and this comes to the fore in the soulful and passionate performances in his conversations with pianist Walton. |
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The name comes from 17th-century water privileges, The Blackburn Privilege and The Union Factory Privilege. |
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This is perhaps unsurprising when it comes to men and women who must be somewhat of a blank slate. |
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That comes a few hours after the jobs report from Friday morning, one of the bleakest yet. |
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The Japan Times on March 6, 2010, reported that in folklore the fish comes to the beach as an omen of an earthquake. |
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And since Hollywood is all about blockbuster family entertainments now, about half of our nude content comes from television. |
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In passages such as these, his most distinctive, Thackeray comes perilously near abnegating his responsibility as a human being, let alone as a moralist or satirist. |
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They can hear the sound of his boat's motor, growing louder as it comes over the horizon. |
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Our society has a major issue with quickly categorizing people when it comes to body image. |
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Franken's prominence comes at a time in which Republicans have struggled to find an easy Democratic bogeyman. |
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You know, a novel comes not from a decision but a frisson, a sort of shiver that goes through you. |
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Musical rhythms from symphonic masterpieces are translated into sequences of stripes and colours, livening up an inspired line of clothing that comes with a CD as a free gift. |
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This comes in a tube with a wand and you apply it like a lip gloss. |
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Challenging Moroccan authority anywhere in the country often comes at a price and protests, while not illegal, are frowned upon. |
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When a new heifer comes in to milk, we halter and tie her tight to one of the large, heavy U-bolts cemented against the wall in our tie stall barn. |
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On the bright side, the trend among Silicon Valley post-Snowden has been positive when it comes to user privacy. |
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When it comes to influence, conservatives have the broadsheet opinion war won. |
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The full monty comes in at a sleek six volumes, and reads like three Wars And Peaces. |
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When it comes to roots music, the first thing people think of in relation to Chicago is the blues, but there has always been a country presence as well. |
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He comes to power like Fidel Castro and enters Time magazine with a burp gun. |
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One figure after another comes to center stage, dances a number, and exits. |
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She comes to realize a celebrated artist who is in Toronto for a book signing is the daughter she gave up for adoption more than 30 years earlier. |
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Sadly, it appears the American press often doesn't need any outside help when it comes to censoring themselves. |
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Eaten all over India, kulfi comes in such flavors as pistachio, cardamom, mango, and saffron. |
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When it comes to videos of the carnage that has cost at least 200,000 lives in Syria, few sources have been completely reliable. |
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When Apple Watch comes out early next year, it will be cooler and more relevant than any Rolex or Cartier. |
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However, this comes at a time when cash-strapped Greeks are relying on free or subsidized medical care in greater numbers. |
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But inhale the fumes of Republican rhetoric more deeply, and a more mind-blowing reality comes into focus. |
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Into it comes Celeste Tyree, a child of the black middle class from Detroit and the University of Michigan. |
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In her hands, celluloid comes off as a medium that allows for old-fashioned rumination, with some of the slowness of oil paint. |
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Behind the cab, the loadspace comes with the same dimensions as before. |
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Just because we are loath to see such ruthless selection in everyday life does not mean we should fear it when it comes to choosing those who are to govern us. |
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And anyway, when everything comes up roses it won't matter why we did it. |
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Somehow, he still comes up smelling of roses, and sought after. |
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But, as Gabor comes closer to death, the sad story carries with it the strains of a Greek tragedy. |
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When August comes around and Bovell more than likely mounts the medal rostrum in Athens, he will find himself under a kind of scrutiny he's never experienced. |
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From the mean streets of Galway comes one of the darkest and most underrated Irish crime writers. |
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I join Wingnut outside when a gangly boy comes up the driveway with a guitar and a backpack slung over his shoulder. |
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Every time the question of black teenagers comes up, someone blames 'gangsta rap' for their problems. |
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For a lot of these guys, a good percentage of their income comes from the garage and comes from legitimate means. |
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In Colorado, Gardner too comes across as likeable, apparently a new thing for conservatives. |
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Good bunker play comes from good technique, not the loft of the club. |
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An aquamanile comes with a bowl or a basin to collect the water. |
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Almost no one comes to ride the airboats or stare at the leathery monsters in the gator pit. |
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In fact, when it comes to foreign-born residents, America looks fairly average. |
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What comes as a surprise is how bereft the chattery, clear-eyed Sylvia is when Henry disappears. |
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If gentleman's Quarterly comes by for a photo spread, Palmer won't have to put a single sock in a hamper. |
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No matter how far they rove or how big and strong they grow, there comes a day when they abandon the sea and seek again their high mountain place of birth. |
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Consequently, our geopolitical competitors see us as weak when it comes to exercising collective will. |
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It is to this place that those whom Jesus raises from the dead will go as well as those who have eaten the bread of life which comes down from heaven. |
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Universities that want their bread buttered on both sides when it comes to affirmative action would do better to apply more fiber than fat in their reasoning. |
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The soft, milky, aquamarine colour comes from the blue-green algae that thrives in the lagoon and white Silica mud, which carpets the bottom with a light natural sediment. |
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The graceful 1st action scene comes after a talky first 15 minutes. |
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Jeff's undeterred, and, using binoculars and the long lens of his camera to get a close-up look at what's going on, comes to believe the salesman is acting suspiciously. |
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The latest salvo comes from Gershom Gorenberg, responding to Jonathan Safran Foer, with whom he largely agrees. |
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Look lively gentlemen, here comes part of the welcoming committee. |
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At first blush, the winning idea can seem a bit loony, but as it comes into focus its transformative value gets clearer and clearer to more people. |
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It's a testament to the writers, then, and to the actor's loopily charismatic performance, that Vincent comes off as charming and magnetic as he does. |
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I will loosely characterize an elite reporter as one who comes from a managerial or professional family and has attended a highly selective university. |
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In addition to its lactogenic properties, goat's rue comes from the same family as fenugreek and is also considered to have anti-diabetic properties. |
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Yet, when it comes to rugger, league is still king in Australia. |
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This chiaroscuro portrait, intended only to sell underwear, comes alarmingly close to capturing the man. |
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Probably the worst return for your money comes from the lotteries. |
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The way the cars are parked, there's only inches either side of you and you're worrying in case a child or a dog comes running out from between the cars. |
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The Irish language comes from a dialect called the Q-Celtic. |
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Most of her stock, she says, comes from Denmark and Germany and she travels to fairs and trade-shows both at home and abroad to see what is available and to buy. |
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The sun's blaring in my eyes, sweat's trickling down my back in runnels, and he comes walking up the hill, a heavy jacket zipped up to the neck on this hot August day. |
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More often than not, this female ninja comes to us via a writer who has gorged on graphic novels for most of his life. |
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Who uses the word mingle when it comes to associating with gangs? |
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Its wider associate membership comes to perhaps 1,000,000 people. |
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Flitz Metal Polish comes in a bottle or pre-moistened towelettes, contains no ammonia or abrasives and removes tarnish, rust, water stains, fingerprints and oxidation. |
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Erythronium dens-canis is the true dog's tooth violet, the name comes from the shape of the corm, and has rose coloured flowers on 10 cm stems and purple marked leaves. |
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Their show, which comes to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this month, is a collision between lowbrow Las Vegas dazzle and highbrow European aesthetics. |
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Of course, when it comes to grading acting performance, age shouldn't be anything but a number. |
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The decision to send the jets, famous for their vertical take-offs and landings, comes as Afghanistan faces a tense period in the run-up to elections. |
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She comes from a groovy village in the hills above Todmorden. |
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Still, Horowitz faces stiff competition when it comes to becoming a man in the grandest fashion. |
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Reynolds acknowledged that much of his appeal comes from being the grandson of R.J. Reynolds. |
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The assumption that feminism comes in a neat, Xeroxable package is Gravely outmoded and vacuous. |
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When it comes to soothing the fevered brow, there are few more calming sights than the early-morning view across the world-renowned golf links of St Andrews. |
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Even at its closest, Sedna comes no nearer to the Sun than 76 astronomical units, each AU equaling the average distance of the Earth from the Sun. |
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Just as Janet Yellen looks like she has the Fed chairmanship in the bag comes talk of Roger Ferguson. |
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Until someone comes up with rock-hard evidence, we ought to refuse them. |
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But there's also a lot of gray area when it comes to how products are marketed. |
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When it comes to super low-rise pants, it's a case of beauty before age! |
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With Great Power may come great responsibility, but with super speed and red leather pants comes the party. |
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Whatever comes in the coming days is called by the greed of Sony Pictures Entertainment. |
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A publicist for one Hollywood eveningwear company says that this particular stylist comes to their atelier before the Oscars and borrows the entire collection. |
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Elisha tells Namaan to come, and when he comes, it is with all the Aramean horses and chariots that have otherwise been deployed so bloodily on the battlefield. |
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The corporate raider said in a statement last week it intends to sell off or liquidate the business if no buyer comes forward, with the potential loss of 50 jobs. |
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The Athenian king comes over demanding to know what is happening. |
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The diminutive luchador comes up through the floor of the stage and launches high into the air, setting the tone for the fast-paced action that is about to take place. |
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This Karinya influence comes as a result of interaction between original speakers of an Arawakan language living in the Lesser Antilles and incoming Karina from South America. |
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When it comes to nutrition, this man is a walking encyclopedia. |
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A majority of these meteorites comes from collisions in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. |
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At the same time, its versatility comes from the fact that not only is apricot a warming color, but it's also quite a cheerful color, recalling spring and summer days. |
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One topic that comes up among the members, she says, is dealing with loss years later. |
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When they get to the ATM, they just push a button and a QR code comes up on the screen. |
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In the art world, it is fostered by an incessant rain of numbers in the media whenever an art star comes to its attention. |
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But the price of artistic freedom comes at the expense of professional protection. |
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It comes out of the drawer, the attic, the trunk of your car with the first tease of spring. |
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The hard, attritional fight comes in holding the ground often relatively cheaply taken. |
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It comes back to this idea that autism or disability is just around the corner but never in the room. |
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Now comes the perfect storm of avian, swine, and human flu, just in time for a national health plan. |
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Industry experts claim an increase in awareness amongst men when it comes to styles, design, and price regarding their underwear. |
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He puts a bagel in the conveyer toaster, but it never comes out the other end. |
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So obviously when a character becomes iconic, you have to deal with the baggage that comes with it. |
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The gang does bait two officers with Noah, but another car comes tearing in and whisks them both away. |
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Its nuclear program is a bald-faced attempt at regional hegemony, one that comes closer to fruition with each passing day. |
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The model Ireland Baldwin is less ambiguous but even more defiant when it comes to her relationship with the rapper Angel Haze. |
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When it comes to mating, the banded mongoose likes to keep things in the family. |
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When it comes to shooting locations, the bankrupt cities of America have a lot to offer filmmakers. |
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Obama's surprise visit to Afghanistan comes as his battle plan faces a crucial test. |
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For James, journalism was bearing witness, especially when it comes to frontline coverage. |
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Fine art experts say the one-ton andesite carving comes from Indonesia and was formerly part of a German collection. |
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Through the process of seafloor spreading, new ocean crust continually comes into being here. |
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But this is the sort of mentality that comes to the fore in a bubble. |
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Since the name, Dromio, comes from Erasmus's Mother Bombie, a considerable privileging of foolery is to be expected. |
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This move comes six months after the acquisition by GL TRADE of Misys' trading businesses, notably that on SETS and SEAQ in London. |
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It comes six years after the Lafarge Cement company began using meat and bone meal from cows and sheep as a sustainable waste-derived fuel. |
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Fletcher said building seawalls always comes to mind wherever severe erosion occurs. |
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There is a big boogieman running around and scaring people when it comes to the internet. |
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Headland's unvarnished depiction of women comes amid a boomlet of similarly themed movies and television shows. |
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That figure, however, comes strictly from traditional bootlegs of DVDs and videos, Glickman acknowledged. |
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Support comes from another veteran band Seether Tour begins March 12 at Edinburgh. |
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They've been highly focused all week on the next job, the next challenge, and that comes against Bosnia. |
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The movie comes out and agrees with you, and from then on makes self-destructing fun of itself in clever and amusing ways. |
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When it comes to mass-market area rugs, American Rug Craftsmen leaves its competitors on the floor. |
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A possibility that comes to mind is the grammatical distinction between count and mass nouns. |
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