Henry may have fiddled and diddled, but at least he did not go out of his way to slag off an entire nation. |
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South Asia, where many people are illiterate, ignorant of their rights, and thus easily diddled, is the home of this system. |
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He was diddled out of his legacy, started with nothing but red ink in Adelaide, and now owns half the world. |
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I seem to recall she was the one who diddled me out of 10 quid some time back. |
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It was no big deal loading the program, and I diddled around with it for an hour or so. |
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We fought World War Two for three struggling years while you diddled about not sure whether to trade with or bomb the Germans. |
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What we want now is a bit of a focus by the estate agencies on how they can make sure that the environment doesn't get diddled in this process of opening our water market. |
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Disgust and anger were widespread in the labour movement this week as more workers were diddled out of their entitlements in a corporate sleight-of-hand. |
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Non-exempt patients who pay the full £5.65 charge for such items are in effect being diddled by the state. |
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To build a case from this that it had diddled any clients would be difficult. |
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Senior ministers are said to have diddled taxpayers out of some €100m while handsomely lining their own pockets. |
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Families who had applied for tickets, only to have their money returned months later because none were available, felt diddled. |
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More than 17,000 small businesses diddled employees of their superannuation last financial year, the Australian Taxation Office reported, last week. |
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Your blogger called the commission to ask what that means exactly, and to find out if a specific official or friend of an official felt they had been diddled out of their money. |
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