Are we all part of a shrinking world where we can count on our commonalities to keep the whole ball of wax in one piece? |
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According to the survey, most students will not be able to count on help from the Bank of Mum and Dad. |
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Thankfully, they can count on the support of others who have been there before. |
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You should at least be able to count on your seeds to be consistent, and so seed-saving should not be applied to hybrid varieties. |
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The home side were having the better of the dour exchanges and very nearly made it count on the stroke of half-time. |
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At this point, slang and idioms are not recognized, so don't count on your pick-up lines being quickly translatable in the bar. |
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You have to watch over things anyway, because people count on you to stake it out. |
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Once, the family could count on its extensive connections within the Turkish political Establishment. |
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If one person was hurting, he or she could pretty much count on having a good 4 or 5 people sticking close and offering an ear or a shoulder. |
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He can probably count on showers of cash from enthusiastic legions of small-dollar donors, and that's an important start. |
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You can always count on this one for some comedy capers as blindfolded people crash into things. |
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Maybe if he were personally supervising each disbursement, Western taxpayers could count on getting positive results for their money. |
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Well, I can count on one hand the amount of cross-court nicks that were hit during this event. |
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This is a Stableford team golf tournament, with teams of 4, of which 2 players' scores will count on each hole. |
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You can't always count on the US umbrella to protect you when it starts to rain. |
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But you can always count on some activity even mid week where other places are dead. |
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All three mainline parties can count on solid bedrock support of some minimum percentage of the electorate. |
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At the start of this season they had no coach and little idea of the number of players they could count on for the upcoming season. |
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You can count on us to find the answer, and to convey that information in an insulting, unfair and skewed manner. |
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We can count on less patience, less emollience, less nervous anxiety to please everyone. |
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If the love of God were as sloppy and sentimental and subjective as our own, we could never count on him to be consistent in anything. |
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You know there's a lot of speculations and I'm not about to do a body count on this side. |
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What he doesn't count on, however, is the children's mean-spirited ability to thwart every red-blooded male who has designs on their mother. |
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Don't count on this to be the case because Lady Luck will desert you in a flash. |
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Last fall's dramatic-series surprise was Las Vegas, all jiggle and surveillance cameras, a rush we could count on. |
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In the 1970s, you could always count on getting a few days off, usually in the summer months. |
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The only count on which he was found not guilty was of stealing a mobile phone and car radio from Mr Ducey. |
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And they can count on their defense and special teams to score only so many touchdowns. |
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They must count on wits and be quick on their feet in a gamble with destiny. |
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No detail is spared and the squeamish can count on skipping huge wodges of forensic jargon, which is no bad thing. |
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As more people count on Cyber Monday for big deals on holiday shopping, smaller retailers face stiff competition from big-box stores. |
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Two days after most fronts, coastal fishermen can count on better catches of speckled trout and reds, even croaker and sand trout. |
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Soldiers and their families could count on returning to the regimental home base over a career. |
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And as a labelmate to Sufjan Stevens and Shapes and Sizes, you could count on the sound to be a bit quirky. |
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Imagine being able to count on your club qualifying for the postseason through one-quarter century. |
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In poker, you need to know when you can count on someone behind you to bet for you. |
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These are 65 ideas to change your life, but don't count on them any more than you can count on the substantiality of the floors you tread. |
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It got so you could almost count on his walking in with the other latecomers. |
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Being the Internet, you can also not count on perfectly low latency connections all the time. |
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I ran out of fingers to count on during the World Cup hosts' 13-0 laugher over San Marino on Wednesday. |
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Do not count on postemergence herbicides to control weeds that have already emerged at planting. |
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Carol had to get two strikes and a good count on her fill ball in the 10th frame to win the tournament. |
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Then you can count on some no-name studio to produce rip-offs of those blockbusters. |
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There are no inns or hotels in the boundless grasslands, but one can always count on the Mongols for help. |
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The count on which he was convicted was the first count of a three count indictment. |
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You can always count on your peers, friends, and enemies for a good heckle. |
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Everyone I should have been able to count on, suddenly unreliable and inconstant, gone forever or drifting away. |
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Investors, no longer able to count on capital gains, are also demanding more secure returns. |
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Until then, Macau will continue to count on Hong Kong, an hour away via hydrofoil, which provided half of Macau's 10 million visitors last year. |
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Thanks to excellent scouting and research, teams can count on spotting a large baseline number of species. |
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It would be good for your studies if you advised the boulevardier that you are attending college, not bartending school, and he should no longer count on you to be his minder. |
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Anthony Kennedy, the one we usually count on for a little decency, voted to dismantle the ACA the last time. |
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In any case, neither Steele nor Blackwell can exactly count on a huge African-American turnout to win the chairmanship. |
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Or even to be able to count on the support of elected legislators who could, if they wished, censure you. |
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The one flavor you can always count on, however, is rich chocolate, the most chocolaty food imaginable. |
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He won, too, and the WFP was able to count on allies in every citywide post but the top job. |
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Many hundreds are flying, most powered with a 220-hp Continental radial, and you can count on them to leak oil, burn gas and give you more fun than is probably legal. |
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More than just reading skills are impaired, you can count on it. |
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The strange thing about this is that, with all the great promises of positive stories, we can count on one hand the very few that have kept their word. |
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If a citizen is wronged by any party, he or she can count on it that the Constitution and the Bill of Rights will protect him and justice will prevail. |
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Forest staff are proud of their reputation for providing exceptional grooming and you can usually count on lake effect snow to give them something to work with. |
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Clutching the mics are Priest and Sayyid of the late, lamented Antipop Consortium, so you can count on some crazy-assed brainiac rhymes over there. |
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I can at least count on my roomies to say something if I start to stink. |
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Which is why we not merely anticipate fresh disasters, of war or peace, but, contrary to all moral PC, firmly count on them for helping us continue to earn our daily bread. |
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Troops and their families count on high-quality education and responsive universal health care. |
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We will no longer be able to count on human nature to serve as a source of resistance to radical utopians because human nature will become more malleable. |
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In all this he could count on, as we can always count on, good old John Bull. |
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These seemingly disparate countries count on a tripe soup to ease the pain of a hangover. |
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You can pretty much count on 100-150 calories for each mix-mn. |
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For years he was the epitome of the strong, silent type, a defensive cyborg who could count on one hand the mistakes he made in his entire career. |
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Over the course of the day, in 2 hour increments, the number of voters having signed in was counted, and the voter count checked against the vote count on the machines. |
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But don't count on a mass conversion experience in German boardrooms. |
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That means we have to count on business investment to pick up the slack. |
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With our children's minds in these sort of hands, we can probably count on seeing at least a further generation with more than its quota of unkept women. |
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Of all the synagogues in Williamsburg, the rabbi can count on one hand how many will let him enter to pray. |
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Always, you can count on Clemens somehow, someway getting the job done. |
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Surely then we can safely raise their taxes, and count on them to work harder to recoup their losses? |
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Forbes came from a troubled background, had quite a lot on her plate with two children, had moved away from her family and had to count on friends. |
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Thanks to its perceived strategic importance, the kingdom can count on high-level support in the capital, especially at the White House, State Department and Pentagon. |
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I can't always count on my pre-work routine to go off without a hitch. |
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Farmers and tradesmen who could count on a surplus of income at the end of the year were able to educate their sons at grammar school, and even at university. |
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I don't count on him to fix every problem that I see, to make the changes I would make, to discipline and conciliate and comfort and honor where I would. |
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Even worse, Antonio can't count on the Duke to intercede on his behalf. |
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What he doesn't count on, however, is the resolve of the children, or the numerous interferences from the likes of Uncle Monty and Aunt Josephine. |
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If you find one at this price with a decent engine, you can count on the interior looking like a dog's bed and the paint will be oxidized or flaking off in sheets. |
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Over the years, she had come to count on him as one of the pillars in her life, just like her father, her deceased mother, and now, her darling little Bess. |
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Lam refused to estimate the number of electorate votes he could count on. |
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Unfortunately, the advertiser didn't count on dim-witted viewers. |
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Multiple regression of biface count on population and site count is questionable because of sample size and the rather wide dispersion of cases evident in crossplots. |
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You can count on some dynamite protest music, spoken in many tongues. |
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As opposed to those in institutional settings, residents in foster homes can count on a family environment and human affection. |
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The first time you meet that someone special, you can count on them one day being dead and in the ground. |
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But she didn't count on the market dropping on her, which pretty much beat up small-caps. |
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In the last two years, I could count on both hands the stories I've read. |
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And in all of this medley of extemporania, Nixon could count on the faithful support of the minority leader of the House, Mr. Gerald Ford. |
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I've been singing youthful, more baritonal roles for most of my life, but I can't count on them now. |
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The chair will then make an estimate of the count on each side and state what he or she believes the result to be. |
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The Orsini remained very powerful, and Pope Alexander VI could count on none but his 3,000 Spanish troops. |
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Our clients count on us for custom labels and decals that adhere to the highest international benchmarks for safety, reliability and quality. |
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The Prime Minister could count on the support of a hawkish majority in Parliament to support the invasion. |
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I look at all the seniors and we'll count on her, especially now that were in the nuts and bolts of the season, for her leadership ability. |
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You can count on federal fish mismanagers to continue their bizarre claims that red snapper and grouper stocks are severely overfished. |
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Martin is used to trying to sort out financial fankles but he didn't count on having to cope with emotional baggage attached to Morton. |
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It's been a fortnight of forevers since the Braves could count on a late-game comeback. |
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They also count on busloads of seniors during the week, and they face a balancing act of not offending one group to please another. |
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We'll take another blood count on Saturday but the way he's acting this morning I'd say it's rapidly coming right. |
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Mainers cannot count on an outside organization like the NRA to ride in and save the day. |
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Each one of his parkings of securities was a separate count on the indictment. |
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Russia could no longer count on receiving help from either Germany or France without there being a danger of British involvement in the war. |
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Catatonia could always count on a place in the gossip columns, too, thanks to the lagered-up antics of their boisterous lead-singer-about-town. |
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Or perhaps something unusual occurred in the current period that you can't count on to repeat itself. |
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I realise that for many of you, my splendid gingerness is one of the few things you can count on in an ever-changing world. |
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Edward could not succeed in his plans for Scotland if the Scots could count on French support. |
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Thus strategic self-demeaners often obtain their ends. The brazen-faced, the man with ko ga muchi can 'do well' if he can count on the embarrassability of others. |
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The versatile 3-layer raingear is as light and packable as a 2-layer rain shell, but features the reliability and durability that you can count on. |
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You can count on your fingers the number of capital cities I know. |
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Today, over 50,000 organizations and 3 million subscribers count on BlackBerry, dubbed 'crackberry' for its addictiveness, to receive and deliver email messages on the spot. |
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Meanwhile, the only clothing items that shoppers can count on from American supermarkets are panty hose, an item that fewer and fewer shoppers are wearing these days. |
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Don't count on being able to get back into the building after 5pm. |
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That meant Java's virtual machine could at least count on being able to run on the 80 percent of computers that connect to the World Wide Web using the Netscape browser. |
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Some women can count on hotflashes coming day or night as steady and as forceful as wheat coming out of the combine auger and into the truck bin during harvest. |
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I knew right at that moment that you were the kind of person who others could count on, a great foul-weather friend, someone who came through in the clutch. |
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