I guess I'll have to dig deep and tap those resources of grit and resilience within me. |
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Elephants are the only animals in Africa that dig deep holes in search of water. |
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I also had to dig deep trenches and lay plumbing from the house to the septic tank. |
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We are going there to get a result but we will really have to dig deep to come away from there with a victory. |
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So we are asking our readers to dig deep and take the total as high as possible in the coming days. |
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We are expecting this to be a close contest, and with the new signings all ineligible to play, they're going to have to dig deep to get the win. |
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At times like that you have just got to dig deep and hopefully things will come right on Saturday. |
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Once they survived Sanft's penalty, they had to dig deep to defend their own try line as Kirkcaldy tried to bludgeon their way through. |
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They have the moves, they have the power, but do they have that mental toughness to dig deep for 80 minutes? |
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The honourable Member invites me to dig deep into the soil of competence and its related terrain. |
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There are no two ways about it: enlargement will be expensive and some Member States will have to dig deep in their pockets. |
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Whether it actually works or not, the summons to dig deep within yourself is journey enough for our sopping wet heroes. |
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You had to dig deep into your personal resources to, you know, show the best of yourself. |
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Our employees dig deep for their communities each year, finding precious time and money to help those in need. |
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And those wishing to buy data from Earth observation satellites usually need to dig deep into their pockets! |
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It serves quite unobtrusively until required to dig deep for maximum performance. |
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They must, however, now dig deep into their pockets to make sure that these pledges are paid up. |
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Wheelspin is negligible as all four corners dig deep to fling the mid-size wagon forward without any hint of torque-steer or other maladies. |
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Kuznetsova was forced to dig deep into her experience pool to continue her route towards the Rogers Cup. |
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We're going to dig deep inside ourselves and find the strength to pay a collective homage to the great woman that she was. |
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I'm having to strike out there like a pioneer and dig deep, deep down to strike gold. |
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And yet, every year they dig deep to find money and precious hours to give to those in need. |
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We knew at the beginning that to take on this fight we would have to dig deep. |
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They express lived sentiments that dig deep into one's own poverty and launch us in the direction of hope and trust. |
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Spelthorne Borough Council is having to dig deep into its coffers to help finance a county-wide concessionary bus scheme, after Surrey County Council withdrew its support. |
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Most donors are ordinary people who dig deep into their pockets in order to help others. |
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Involving all Canadians in a just and compassionate response means that we must dig deep in our search for solutions and not stop until we find ones that work. |
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Who's ready to dig deep and whose legs will buckle under the strain? |
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If we are to raise their hopes and their prospects, we have to dig deep into the data, unroot entrenched prejudices and give every child an equal chance at life. |
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Ghana had anything but an easy ride on their way to the final, and needed to dig deep right from the word go to beat fellow favourites Mali 3-2 in their first match. |
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The most dangerous rootkits dig deep into a computer's operating system to hide the fact that certain software files exist or that the computer is performing certain functions. |
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We can dig deep to reach this water, but in many places springs of water simply bubble up, the water comes up on its own and invites us to quench our thirst. |
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The solutions Petrissage massage A good therapist will dig deep into the tissue, easing muscles back into place. |
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Managers ritually ask players to dig deep. |
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If you dig deep and work hard, success will come to you. |
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And for that reason, we have to dig deep to the roots of conflict. |
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The best thing we can give people is to take risks and to dig deep. |
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Mankind will one day dig deep to find it,' he said. |
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However, if it were to dig deep into its life force, its traditions and its roots, it has also known, from the very outset, how to project itself to the future and to introduce both formal and technical innovations. |
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Then in the second half England suffered several injuries, most seriously Henri Lansbury to concussion, and had to dig deep to hold on through eight added minutes. |
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Trees have roots that dig deep into the ground and yet reach towards the sky, affording them spiritual meaning and making them a symbol of the connection between the earth and sky. |
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The time to act is now and the international community must dig deep. |
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Shattering cliches, he intimates that resuscitation requires we confront fear, foreswear safety, and dig deep behind the mask. |
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The sea otter may pluck snails and other organisms from kelp and dig deep into underwater mud for clams. |
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So now's the time to dig deep and add one of JRC's famous big-name bivvies to your kit. |
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The guitar instrument gave her the opportunity to put on the rock star, dropping to her knees to dig deep for those power chords. |
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While Kruger enjoyed smooth progress, Siem got off to a nightmare start and had to dig deep to overcome double bogeys on each of the first two holes. |
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And Kydd has to dig deep into his reserves of courage and resource to stay alive as Artemis sights quarry, outsails even the fastest, and sinks anything that puts up a fight. |
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Boro had to dig deep into their reserves to overcome a resolute Hednesford and yet again it was the teenage terroriser James Armson who was the scourge of the opposition. |
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Djokovic was under siege but he continued to dig deep, saving five set points but on his sixth chance the 16-time grand slam champion moved two sets ahead. |
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Dig deep to help put these youngsters on the crest of a wave. |
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