I did so hope Dallas would give the Kennedys a warm and very cordial welcome. |
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The hospital superintendent and staff try to extend a cordial welcome, but the Minister has no time for such trivialities. |
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He circles possibilities, though he feels it won't matter how his resume reads, what color tie he wears or how cordial he is in the interview. |
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So much so that, in meeting her, an edge of brittle insecurity appears faintly visible beneath her ageless face and coolly cordial manner. |
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Whether in Colmar in the heart of Alsace, or Mulhouse further south, or Selestat, Alsatians are warm and friendly, welcoming and cordial. |
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What cordial relations of amity or commerce are possible under such conditions? |
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He was cordial and invited me to his small private drawing room and library. |
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The drink is made using the root blended with ingredients like liquorice and ginger to create a cordial. |
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Many drinkers are as likely to order an elderflower cordial as a pint of beer down at the local. |
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He maintained cordial relations with the Moguls, the British, the Marathas and every power. |
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She forgives him after seeing his politeness and cordial manners during the meal they have together. |
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Thorncroft's Detox cordial helped quite a few sore heads and is a pleasant, thirst-quenching squash for summer. |
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If I speak to you less often and seem less cordial than before, do not be offended, I beg of you. |
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On the surface the discussions between the French and Belgians were cordial, but in reality each side was suspicious of the other. |
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Begin by placing the cordial container on a level surface to allow the sediment to settle. |
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In honour of the sheer trashiness of the occasion I was drinking champagne with raspberry cordial in it. |
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I did manage once to tip a measure from an unguarded bottle into my ginger cordial but I was not too impressed with the resulting cocktail. |
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So much so that, in meeting Streep, an edge of brittle insecurity appears faintly visible beneath her ageless face and coolly cordial manner. |
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Add a vanilla pod, a sprig of sweet cicely, lavender or elderflower cordial to rhubarb compote. |
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There were cookies and jelly candies, too, and a glass of the local verbena cordial, Verveine. |
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It involved a pint of milk, half a kilo of strawberries and a splash of sour cherry cordial to sweeten things up a bit. |
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We wish them a hearty and cordial welcome and long and peaceful lives in our parish community. |
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After years of cocktail bars making stuff tasting like paint stripper and red cordial these guys know how to do it right. |
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There are lines of communication and despite a few instances which might suggest otherwise, there's been a cordial relationship going on. |
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I've always had a very cordial and warm personal relationship with the President of the United States. |
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Top fields, friendly bookmakers and cordial entertainment will make it the place to be this Saturday. |
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There was no awkward moments at the office, and we maintained a cordial professional relationship and a warm friendship. |
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Could I first of all say a very warm and cordial welcome to you, Mr Justham, and indeed to your colleagues. |
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Yesterday's historic gathering at which political parties met in a warm and cordial environment is commendable and a breakthrough. |
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Both parents and teachers must try to create a friendly and cordial atmosphere for the children. |
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He put the brakes on her chair and slipped up the ramp quickly, chatting with the man behind the counter in a friendly and cordial manner. |
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The ministers claimed that the meeting was held in a very cordial manner and friendly manner. |
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He was a warm, cordial man, who immediately treated me like a long lost friend. |
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I am sure the delegates and the athletes will enjoy a friendly and cordial welcome from the people of Athy. |
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If your drink bottle contains sports drink or cordial, it will provide your body with an additional source of fuel. |
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Whatever your selection, the result will delight you every time you pour a glass of homemade fruit cordial. |
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I had a quiet night in last night with my folks who nearly drank us out of summer fruits cordial. |
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We order drinks, elderflower cordial for my wife, a nice cup of brain-bothering caffeine for me, and then our meals. |
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The Eels were treated to an afternoon tea of cake, fruit, cordial, tea and coffee and also became the proud owners of Parramatta baseball caps. |
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Scone sellers also often sold drinks made from cordial bought from a supermarket, mixed with ice inside a plastic cooler and sold by the cup. |
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Strained once again and finished up with a dose of vodka, my cordial was looking nice and smelling lovely. |
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Dislike welled up inside me, but I managed to keep my countenance and voice cordial. |
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The prince scowled and took on a dark expression that Merlin had not seen before on the cordial coyote. |
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There is no specific division between a wine glass and a goblet except that the latter is larger, but a very small glass is called a cordial. |
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Spoon over your blueberry jam, cover with your elderflower cordial, and top with a sprig of mint. |
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My parents have an elderflower tree in their backyard, and occasionally my dad makes cordial from it. |
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Place the berries in a small oven dish, sprinkle over 25g sugar and drizzle over the elderflower cordial. |
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Li was well known for his cordial guanxi with the Chinese communist government. |
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He established cordial or dissentious relationships with most of the great contemporary figures. |
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The email exchanges started out as cordial, if cold, but gradually grew more confrontational. |
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We are also aware of the importance to embrace the efforts of other civic organisations and we welcome the cordial respect and co-operation we have for each other. |
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Current squeezes are, however, allowed to be upset if what's going on is not a cordial friendship, but a leftover entanglement of feelings and manipulations. |
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Inness's painting was given a cordial reception by the newspaper critics if not the worshipful praise that often greeted the pictures he exhibited at this stage of his career. |
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Atheists are holding their annual convention in Salt Lake City, but things have been surprisingly cordial. |
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Not necessary that each individual has a written invitation, if you have been forgotten take a stroll to the meeting and you will be given a cordial welcome. |
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As early as 1 November 1858 Matthew and Robert Faulkner, who were licenced victuallers and cordial manufacturers in Adelaide, had to appear in the Court of Insolvency. |
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What I REALLY did was take three Nurofen and swig a mouthful of cordial. |
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In honour of the sheer trashiness of the occasion I was drinking champagne with raspberry cordial in it, which I observed this gay guy in a flat cap and waistcoat ordering. |
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Serve in a cordial or shot glass and garnish with shredded coconut or cinnamon. |
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The unprecedented stiffness of the reprimand is underlined by the fact that these two countries have long enjoyed one of the closest and most cordial ties. |
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As was the manner of his time, his relations with his innumerable mistresses were almost universally cordial, even when disembarrassing himself of them. |
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In 1983, my parents and I spent an extremely cordial afternoon with Friedel, Oscar, and their family in frankfurt. |
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Place the gooseberries, elderflower cordial and sugar in a medium-sized pan, add enough water to cover the fruit then place on the stove and bring to the boil. |
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As a child Mr Gawthorpe would often visit the park lodge where his uncle lived with his family, there to be plied with elderberry cordial in the summer. |
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As a matter of fact, it was a very cordial, very warm meeting. |
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Despite any partisan enmities, the two top politicos maintained a cordial relationship. |
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Today, thankfully, relations with the committee are somewhat more cordial. |
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She had added this information to her notebook, together with directions for making invisible ink and a cordial water that would use up the glut of strawberries in the garden. |
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After doing so, he turned on the radio, sat in his favourite chair in the drawing room, drinking a small glass of elderflower cordial, and listened to the programme. |
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Raising his own goblet, Father Oppius blessed the congregation and the meal with a great rolling of churchly phrases ending in a cordial Benedicite. |
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Not doubting at all that Your Beatitude would want to share these ideas, we beg you to accept the expression of our fraternal and cordial greetings. |
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A dog idly barked, adding to the majestic orchestra that played its beautiful music to the silent audience of nature, lulling everyone into a warm, cordial state of being. |
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The president and former president, who once despised each other, are cordial but far from friendly. |
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The Prime Minister said Pakistan and UAE have always maintained cordial relations and both sides value bilateral cooperation. |
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If Sandler does possess any deep-rooted mania, it's an overdependence on cordial communication. |
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As he emerges from the washroom tonight, flossed and brushed and boxered, it acknowledges his presence with a cordial flicker. |
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The relations between the Earl of Bellomont and Colonel Schuyler were formal, but not cordial from the first. |
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The sight of London warmed my heart with various emotions, such as a cordial man must draw from the heart of all humanity. |
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Richard, like his predecessors, had to win over these men by granting gifts and maintaining cordial relationships. |
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Even though Lord Stanley had served as Edward IV's steward, his relations with the king's brother, the eventual Richard III, were not cordial. |
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The Peace of Barcelona, signed between Charles V and the Pope in 1529, established a more cordial relationship between the two leaders. |
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Since its independence in 1947, India has maintained cordial relations with most nations. |
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It was soon rumoured that their cordial relations embraced more than politics. |
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Nevertheless, the centre has come to enjoy cordial relationships with the local community. |
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Polybius remained on cordial terms with his former pupil Scipio Aemilianus and was among the members of the Scipionic Circle. |
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Although the Tang had fought the Japanese, they still held cordial relations with Japan. |
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He also exchanged cordial and supportive letters with many reformers, including Philipp Melanchthon and Heinrich Bullinger. |
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I discovered by accident that the pink flowers of Black Elder in my garden produces lovely pink cordial. |
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The study found that stereotypes establish older people to avoid conflict, be less confrontational, and more cordial and patient. |
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After the briefing, an interactive session between the members of National Assembly Standing Committee and Flag Officers was held in a very cordial environment. |
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Ming China had cordial relations with Calicut, which was valuable as they tried to extend the tributary system to the states around the Indian Ocean. |
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Relations between King Henry and Montfort were cordial at first. |
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Subsequent relations between the two men were not to be so cordial. |
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He also received presents from and had cordial relations with the rulers of neighbouring and distant kingdoms such as the Omani, Witu and Yemeni Sultans. |
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In the past, when relations between the Commons and the Crown were less than cordial, this procedure was used whenever the House wanted to keep its debate private. |
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Richard I of England would end the Treaty of Falaise in exchange for money to fund his own crusade, setting a context for cordial relationships between the two kings. |
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However, the wool trade between England and Flanders was profitable and meant that the count and Henry favoured a cordial relationship between the two of them. |
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He is a most cordial lover of purity and truth, but the angular factiness of his pursuits has kept him at too cold a distance from the spirit world. |
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And one blackcurrant cordial producer, Pixley Berries, has noticed a rise in sales since the research was published in last month's edition of the clinical journal Rhinology. |
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