I think it's going to be a very dicey situation for the foreseeable future. |
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Keeping your personal relationship on even keel during this emotionally dicey period could prove difficult. |
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Such dicey practices as insider trading and front-running have long been rampant in Moscow's bourses. |
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This has fixed the chain-jumping problem, though the gears are still a bit dicey. |
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And also this Kabul situation, when they get near there, is going to be also very dicey. |
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Lots of people write to ask about detecting the subtle signs of a potentially dicey relationship. |
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Having to saddle up a mud-encrusted bike and ride hell-bent in inky blindness is a dicey proposition. |
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Talking politics is dicey business, particularly with somebody you don't know. |
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The transport system still seems dicey, and armed insurgents rule the roads. |
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Here are a few more questions Goldman suggests homebuyers ask themselves before deciding on a dicey neighborhood. |
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Forced labor, in the midst of a war against authoritarianism, was a dicey matter. |
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They negotiate the dicey line between mimicry and mockery partly by dint of fascination with details. |
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The nation also has further to go to convince investors that its capital markets will remain open if things get dicey. |
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Her work's on epidurals, pain relief in childbirth and how very dicey it is getting the needle into the right place. |
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Even now, years into the Internet revolution, e-shopping remains a dicey business. |
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Even when an airplane is firmly on the ground, control of a tricycle or taildragger at 60 knots can be dicey. |
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Being a non-citizen has become a dicey prospect for many immigrants in the past few years. |
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The streets are still littered with bicycle traffic, making the coexistence with cars a dicey proposition at best. |
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Taking more than a day and several iterations of a story to acknowledge it is where things get dicey. |
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There was the time Harold helped the boys, fixing that dicey scene with Walter Winchell. |
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But when Fallows stops reporting and starts theorizing about trade, things get pretty dicey. |
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Waiting? is a hilarious behind-the-scenes look at the restaurant industry, full of frustrated waiters, tightfisted tippers and dicey food. |
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As the BBC wrote a few days ago, a Mars landing is a pretty dicey affair. |
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It is always a little dicey to throw around the word propaganda. |
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Regarding what went down at Fed Square, all I can say is that the people in question didn't get the help they needed and things got a little dicey. |
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This unit is subject to attack and has a certain round trip time, so rearming units in the middle of combat at a distant front line can be a dicey proposition. |
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Here lately, things have maybe gotten a little bit more dicey, I guess. |
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Asian Internet companies proved especially dicey for many reasons. |
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When the Princeton graduate, who majored in electrical engineering and computer science, decided to make the leap on to the internet he knew it would be dicey. |
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I will always remember that because we were in some pretty dicey financial situations then. |
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I ask about school performance and behavioral concerns, which can sometimes be dicey. |
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In Washington, DC, turning left on a main road can be dicey if drivers are not patient. |
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We all know how dicey it becomes when we are exhausted doing something as simple as working on our computers. |
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The issue of numbers of child protection institutions in Sierra Leone is a dicey one. |
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The bleak, snowy hills of Scotland are the setting for a slicey, dicey Roman invasion against the dashing, plucky Celtic tribes. |
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Shouting calls for help while attempting to maintain her footing along the slick trails was a dicey job indeed. |
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However, Oberg also stated that the complications of market intrusion make such initiatives dicey. |
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Certainly credit standards will be tightened and the financing of inputs may be dicey for some. |
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Her botched and dicey decision could have caused irreparable damage to the environment. |
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After flying for half an hour or so, my friend in the front seat called me on the intercom and said he was sick, getting dicey and wanting to vomit. |
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If the U.S. loses to Germany and one of Portugal or Ghana get a win, however, things get dicey. |
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While robotic surgery may sound dicey, for Klatt, it meant less risk. |
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It was… Like many formerly dicey aspects of life in New York City, riding a bicycle has, in recent years, been undergoing a government-sponsored sanitization. |
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But they lost that bid because three-quarters of the places at the failing school were empty, and the local authority planned to roll a number of dicey primaries into a single big one. |
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Some 20 Indian movies a year are partly filmed on British soil, usually around London but sometimes as far afield as the Scottish Highlands, which occasionally doubles as Kashmir when the real thing is too dicey. |
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Predicting the future is always dicey, but no matter what the future holds, a solid understanding of the industry and a well-developed business plan will improve your odds of success. |
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Timing is dicey, but this is likely to occur later in the crop year. |
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Prior to that those of us who travelled through British Columbia had to dip down into the United States if we did not want to go over dicey gravel roads. |
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Growing peaches can be a dicey business in Nova Scotia. |
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Managing the strung-out supply chain gets dicey, too. |
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This is a dicey point and it is the difficulty I have with the NDP motion. |
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The facilitators found out that discussing sexually transmitted diseases with students in conservative countries can be dicey. |
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If you were in the business of selling dicey meat, the invention of the telephone rocked your world. |
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Some more birds were scared off by the dicey smell. The man was dying gradually. |
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Environmentally speaking, however, ocean travel can be a dicey proposition: every year, the industry consumes millions of tons of fuel and produces almost a billion tons of sewage. |
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Devouring the flesh of animals killed on roadways can be a bit dicey. |
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The weather looks a little dicey this morning. I hope it doesn't rain. |
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