Are you upset that he occasionally forgets to screw the top back on the toothpaste tube? |
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She stated that she had no concern with David using the oven then but has now because he forgets when he takes his medication. |
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Like much of its genre, this satire spends so much effort tying itself in rhetorical knots, it almost forgets to make a point. |
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A person can pretend to be happy only so many times before that person forgets how it feels to be authentically happy. |
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The eccentric drunk's largesse solves the girl's problems, but when the scatterbrain forgets he gave her the money, she is arrested for thieving. |
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When Joe appears, she forgets herself and jumps to her feet, dropping the blanket and exposing her condition. |
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However, what he forgets is that the English language is changing it all the time whether we like it or not. |
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He has prospered after building a successful business, but he never forgets the needs of the Bangladeshi. |
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Making it worse is the fact that whenever the band forgets itself and goes into Dire Straits mode, his voice starts edging towards reediness. |
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He never forgets any slight delivered upon him, and exacts revenge whenever and wherever possible. |
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Indeed, they maintain an impressive dignity when the audience forgets itself and shakes with laughter. |
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Before anyone forgets, the fresh-faced teenager was still playing in the Under 19s this time last month. |
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It can be compared to an overflowing rubbish-bin, which our brain, this amnesiac dustman, chronically forgets to empty. |
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But Mr. Mill forgets that, till you change the character of the Irish cottier, peasant-proprietorship would work no miracles. |
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That was one bit of trouble but everybody forgets that I was found not guilty in my verdict. |
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Like new students of body-building, he is so focused on getting big guns and eye-popping pecs that he forgets all about his lower half. |
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But on the way down to the dressing station, he forgets to stoop low where an old sniper is working. |
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He forgets that democracy is a system in which the people choose their leaders. |
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In England a player forgets to take a drug test and gets an eight-month ban. |
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Why should anyone care if Hollywood occasionally forgets to be hypercritical about American history? |
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Cheered by dynastic thoughts, he forgets his disdain for the wedding-favour, a chaplet of carnations, he is obliged to wear. |
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Moreover, it is very striking that Camper, dazzled by the visual aspect, completely forgets the role played by music in the films. |
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The author is so keen to break out of the straitjacket of conventional narrative that he forgets to include a plot. |
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He conveniently forgets that attitudes to the development did not divide on party political lines. |
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Occasionally he even forgets he is supposed to be promoting his next television drama and becomes outspoken. |
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Not being pressed to come up with arguments or evidence to support them, one forgets the arguments and fails to obtain the evidence. |
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It forgets the fact that millions of bosoms are thrust in people's faces every single day in the tabloid papers. |
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But also the moralist forgets that morality cannot be imposed or legislated or begotten by an act of will. |
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But while he speaks of war-time heroes and exploratory pioneers, he forgets about another interesting lifetime. |
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Susan is on the phone to Libby and cooking tea, and is so caught up in this that she forgets to notice a bottle of cooking oil being tipped onto the lit gas burner. |
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Mary has 18 grandchildren and 13 great grandchildren and she says she has an awful lot of birthdays to remember but she never forgets any of them. |
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Often, the driver forgets to disengage the flasher after it has served its purpose, resulting in further confusion since turning indicators are rendered useless. |
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The person who thinks frequently of heaven but forgets the miseries of the earth where he lives is simply hoodwinking himself. |
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It's so busy being hyper-reverentially Pinteresque that it forgets to deliver up the play. |
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But he forgets that in all the passages adduced by Thörnell both members of the asyndeton appear without any attribute. |
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Snowed under with work, Leni forgets to organise a fill-in for her women's gymnastics group. |
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In course of time man gains other identities and forgets his original identity and hence this instruction of recollecting oneself as I am. |
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Our society dominated by hastiness and unrest forgets the fundamental questions about vocation, the dignity and destiny of man. |
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One night, a lone wolf forgets his fear of humanity and gives in to his curiosity. |
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Bente finds Ponto Pro so easy to wear that she often forgets to take it off. |
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But when gramps wants to start a memory box and forgets his way around the forest path, Zach begins to worry. |
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But too busy in the bedroom of another of his concubines, forgets all about it. |
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The entrance antiphon states that the Lord forgets and forgives the sins of those who convert. |
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Because the man of the Way forgets himself as the snowflake vanishes in the spring wind. |
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If she forgets, though, and glances back again, it will still be in there, furtively watching, crying. |
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She tends to be nippy when she's worried but forgets all her woes when she sees the rice box. |
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Of course, he has, but what he forgets to mention is that at the very same time, he is taking money out of the taxpayers' pockets. |
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Arman vilifies the consumer society which mistreats the object, throws it away, forgets it. |
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Ms Shulman does well to bring the poems back to life, but in the course of overstretching her argument she forgets about the man. |
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I prefer it when Byrne forgets about consensus-building, and offers himself up in all his unadulterated idiosyncracy. |
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And the things it forgets, the apotheoses and apocalypses it lets sift through its mesh! |
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For example, we might have a clock-in with no corresponding clock-out, if the person forgets to clock out when leaving. |
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It is necessary to distinguish the difference on this point, which is very delicate: He who forgives forgets the offense! |
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Now when Greta occasionally forgets her manners, the owner can stop this nonsense by standing in her kitchen doorway with the can in her hands so that Greta can see it. |
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She forgets that she is first and foremost an artist, and behaves at best as a craftswoman, at worst as a robot. |
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Now she panics whenever she forgets names and dates, which makes her feel worse. |
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Everything said in court is written down so that no one forgets and this written record is called tteessttiimmoonnyy. |
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After all, Allira often forgets about the people in Africa and their problems. |
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Sadly, I know the government is very vocal about what it has done for seniors, but it forgets to mention those who have lower incomes. |
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We have a very strong auto industry in Oshawa, but what the member conveniently forgets is our support for the aerospace industry in Quebec. |
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However, what he forgets to mention is the increase in just about everything else. |
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If the user forgets the Windows password, or the system administrator resets it, the credentials are lost too. |
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Conversely, management often forgets or refuses to explain the necessity of certain policies and procedures. |
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Having fallen into temptation, if forgets the mission which it brought to earth and arises performing deeds which are contrary to the law. |
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Everyone forgets that they offer a valuable function for clients, providing access to capital to the stock and bond market. |
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When Betty Bee sets her stinger deep into your skin she forgets she has a barb attached to her stinger that prevents her from pulling it out of her victim. |
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A thorough-paced antiquary not only remembers what all other people have thought proper to forget, but he also forgets what all other people think is proper to remember. |
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Then the president gives the speech, the prognosticators chew it over for a couple of days, and everyone forgets about it. |
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First, she forgets to address him by name, then, on the redo, forgets to shake his hand. |
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He occasionally forgets a name, he loses his train of thought when there are distractions, and he has walked away from six pairs of expensive sunglasses. |
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We are not talking here about irresponsible or inferior countries and this is something that the Union often forgets, in its sometimes arrogant navel-gazing. |
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How different is the conduct of he who forgets to keep vigil and pray! |
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Oh, how different is the conduct of he who forgets to pray and keep watch! |
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A Europe that forgets its roots cannot have a future. |
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He keeps his music fresh but never forgets his roots. |
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The evening so obsesses her that she forgets Charbon. |
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But it is also, and primarily, the portrait of a certain mentality which forgets that strong relationships and virtues always pass through the heart. |
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If a patient forgets to inhale a dose, instruct the patient to inhale another as soon as they remember unless it is near the time for their next dose. |
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People ramble, they bicker, they refuse to follow a logical sequence, they base their thinking on misguided assumptions, they interrupt, they talk so long that everybody forgets the point they started out to make. |
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The one who forgets such existence is conditioned. |
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Everyone forgets things, but if you have the diagnosis, whenever you forget something you'll think, 'It's because I'm sick.' It pathologizes everything. |
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He often forgets most important matters of State, has to be reminded more than once of pressing audiences and shows visible signs of mental aberration. |
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Even if a sensible person forgets his mortality for a time, he can, when death approaches, quickly remember the condition of his life and face death unperturbedly. |
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In our current materialist world, one forgets how much the religious feeling was long-lived in France, particularly in the last quarter of the XIX century. |
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He forgets his anniversary, he's in the doghouse, but he pulls out of it with a romantic dinner. |
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He that thinks that diversion may not lie in hard labour, forgets the early rising and hard riding of huntsmen. |
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If just one in a thousand forgets to shut a gate or can't be bothered, that's a hundred times we have to go out and round up our sheep. |
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The Elephant's Tea Party builds on an apt metaphor for bereavement, there's an elephant in the room, and the theme, an elephant never forgets. |
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She forgets that on the Internet, scepticism should be your rule of thumb. |
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If he takes his beeper off and puts it on a counter, he usually forgets it at the end of the case. |
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The current Prime Minister is on record on numerous occasions before he became Prime Minister as saying that he advocated Senate reform, but he blithely forgets about it now. |
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Sheikh Hassan forgets we have more seat time in racing a turbine Mystic offshore boat than anyone. |
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And, lest I forget, or anyone else forgets, the only reason Sabey is in this invidious position is because the evidence against him was handed to the police by his employers, Rupert's Murdoch's News Corporation. |
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It's only a surprise because one forgets in between times. |
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Her powerful spirit helper, the poohegan, or Canada jay confuses the hunter so he forgets his commitment to his other wife and son. |
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Once your child is able to join in singing, do not drown out your child's voice but sing along softly in the background and be ready to prompt your child if he forgets what comes next. |
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She may look like what she is an artificial person, but her actions and gestures are so convincingly human that John soon forgets she's only virtual. |
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She even sometimes forgets about her to-do lists. |
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Impatience with the superficialities of spin makes it essential that Gordon Brown forgets about false smiles, weak jokes and pastel-coloured ties. |
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Listening to them play, one forgets the extreme technical complexity of their pieces and their musical virtuosity, which are outshone by their generosity and their commitment. |
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A scatterbrain who always forgets to regenerate your troll? |
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Security software and passwords add an extra level of complication in use, for example the additional processes that need to be employed when an enumerator forgets their password. |
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For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like to a man beholding his natural face in a glass: for he beholds himself, and goes his way, and straightway forgets what manner of man he was. |
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The most important thing, she says, is to keep the conversation going, whether it's at home or in the public eye – so that no one forgets that the mystery still hasn't been solved. |
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Cut out, pruned, swaddled, reworked and mastered, nature forgets its perfection to the benefit of an abstract artifice, which gives way to thought and vacuity. |
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He forgets to mention that the old Dixiecrat faction of the Democratic Party became a central element of the GOP in those red states where racism still thrives. |
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Although Ryan disclaims class mixing as a panacea and asserts that his project is merely meliorist, he forgets that magical thinking takes over on the ground. |
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All a land clearer needs is a calloused skin and a dumb philosophy which refuses to recognize weariness and forgets man's right to pursue happiness. |
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Mr Roberts creates his own biblical references, and totally forgets the Church's national and worldwide role as an eradicator of injustice to the poor. |
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