The big curved glass roofs cover atria full of olive and mulberry trees that are overlooked from individual workplaces. |
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After a few tests we were moved down the hall, past a room full of squalling babies, into our own apartment. |
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Here, the music becomes anguished yet mechanical, frighteningly repetitious and full of noises that seem only half-human in origin. |
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His advice is always timely, full of common sense and he never hesitates to kick me in the pants when necessary. |
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The middens from the city around the 8th century are full of shells from fresh water oysters. |
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But it is a small price to pay for such a great event, choc full of atmosphere and alive with positive energy. |
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Alas, it is true that Didion is a writer full of writerly tricks of a type that can be made fun of, rather like Hemingway. |
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His paintings are full of erasures, redrawn lines and strokes partially covered with translucent white paint. |
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This is a time full of lessons for those who day to day languish under the oppressive yoke of capitalism. |
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People can be spotted jostling around and vying with each other to have their bags full of commodities. |
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I line my bucket with them and when full of bits and pieces I tie up the last bag and put it in my wheelie bin, keeping the latter clean. |
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Yet despite its deeply inhospitable climate, the people of Wisconsin are full of the milk of human kindness. |
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Evans's writing is evocative and full of atmosphere, her plotting compelling and convincing. |
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After giving him a signal, Iggy ripped into a lightning-quick solo full of tremolo picking and whammy bar use. |
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Our star system is chock full of asteroids and comets, in every conceivable orbit and location. |
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She had a wall full of books on one side that went from murder to the latest fantasy fiction. |
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This was an excellent team performance based on a solid defence and an attack full of flair. |
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She pushed herself up into a sitting position and looked at Emily with wide eyes full of fear. |
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This unusual city with many different lanes, passages, bystreets is full of monumental palaces and sanctuaries. |
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Paddy who was a former miner was delighted with the birthday cake, in the shape of an old tram full of coal. |
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It may well be an immaculately written novel, correctly spelt, beautifully punctuated, and full of poetic language and noble ideas. |
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San Pedro Bay, the terminus for two major coastwise shipping lanes, is full of commercial and military traffic day and night. |
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They were both twenty, full of energy at times and seeking some adventurous diversion. |
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These days, you can't find an Advent calendar that isn't stuffed full of cheap chocolate with a picture of cartoon characters on it. |
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There are no uniforms and the children do not carry huge sacks full of books on their backs. |
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I just don't see how exactly pumping someone full of mind-altering drugs solves the original problem that is making them depressed. |
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There was a room full of about 250 women watching seven men get their kit off. |
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When I first saw the film, it was in a packed, small screening room, full of junketeers. |
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I packed my quiver full of arrows along with my armguard and left the palace. |
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It is full of atmosphere and un-earthly impressions, even when it is just words on a piece of paper. |
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Old stone foundations are visible in the winter, remnants of a time when life was rustic and full of hardship. |
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In De Natura Locorum he gives a diagram which shows light being refracted by a spherical glass container full of water. |
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Her voice is wonderfully low and husky, perfect for a night full of regret, anger and crying. |
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They are a genuinely friendly people, full of interest in the outside world and consummately wise in the ways of the desert. |
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Nearer to the station they came across a hut onshore with some stacked wood and a book full of margin notes. |
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Our fields are full of old spoons and forks and pieces of broken cups, saucers and plates. |
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But one class was still full of students, many still poring over math formulas written on the whiteboard. |
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Did you know those things are full of trans-fats and carbs that will clog your arteries and send you to an early grave? |
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The dining room is now full of building materials and equipment and I have the kitchen units and worktops to be delivered yet. |
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Business Link says the ICT marketplace is full of confusing acronyms, terms and ever-changing technologies. |
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Remember when the Internet was full of expensively generated content that cost you not a bean? |
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He has a romantic streak and, full of remorse and resentment, is deeply upset by the feud with his mother. |
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The postman's bag was still crammed full of letters, but minus a number of registered parcels which contained the foreign currencies. |
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They were fresh and flourishing, full of sap and vigor, though many of them had been born long before him. |
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At each stop, children visit with Santa Claus in the caboose before touring two more cars full of holiday displays. |
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It's full of punchy quotes and well-crafted reportorial scene-painting, of which this is an example. |
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Some stories are much too good to be true, tales so full of emotion and pathos that they compel a journalist to step back and reconsider. |
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We learnt to rely on air con, flyscreens and the enormous fridge full of cooling drinks. |
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At the end of the line, all they may have is a head full of adventurous mishaps to tell their grandchildren about. |
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There's also a freezer full of such frozen goods as okra, cut pigs' feet, snails, jute leaves, hot peppers, red snapper, and hard chicken. |
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It is a place that is full of spells and curses, where powerful charms work their magic, and everything is witchcraft and wizardry. |
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In fact, the narrative is full of loose ends and red herrings, and the episodic writing frequently loses momentum. |
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It is a policy wonk's beach reading, full of participation rates, reciprocities and tax credits. |
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The book is full of invented tales and wild exaggerations of documented events. |
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They must have found their teacher too sophisticated, too full of recondite allusions for them to follow. |
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In time, the pile of presents had been reduced to wrapping paper and a table full of varying things. |
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At times, he seems aloof and distant from them, and his accent is full of mid-Atlantic Euro-twang, not unlike some sort of cheesy disc jockey. |
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Sometimes with deals like this, you are punished with minute servings, but the bowl was full of juicy baby mushrooms. |
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Mostly it consists of sandy woodland and pristine marshes, full of red squirrels and sika deer. |
|
Lancaster is surrounded by wonderful landscapes and the area is full of people with a passion for the outdoors. |
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The lake view turned out to be a murky green puddle of water several feet deep, full of moss, slime, and a pack of vicious alligators. |
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He can also remember car number plates off pat and his room is full of junk that he can take apart, examine and rebuild. |
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Outside the classroom there's a shed full of heavy machinery used in training. |
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The two men had cited example after example of astrologically arranged marriages, full of astral promise, turning disastrous. |
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The title track, full of optimism and with knowing references to the band's past, is a marvellous way to start the new album. |
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One little piece of chocolate goes into a large casserole full of rich dark brown and russet chillies. |
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Do you have a tack room full of various bits, halters, lead ropes, lunge whips, lunge lines, and other training equipment or behavior modifiers? |
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At the far side of the green there was a huge open pit full of mature trees whose tops emerged only a few metres above the level of the green. |
|
Most Scottish rock pools are full of winkles, their round olive-green or brown shells as easy to pick as daisies on a lawn. |
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They've recharged their batteries after the Tottenham match and they are full of energy. |
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Although the celebration will be as muted as a saxophone full of scalloped potatoes considering his dismal last place finish in a field of two. |
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Our red boxes tell us what to do and our diaries are full of meetings, mostly pointless ones. |
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It is a new, all-on-one-level bingo hall full of people of all ages and buzzing with atmosphere, which we have lost here at the Rialto. |
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Staff from the arts centre had to collect three refuse bags full of rubbish that was left strewn about outside. |
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She would come back at dusk with arms full of small frogs, or large insects, with wild fruit and berries, or acorns and mushrooms. |
|
Packed full of button mushrooms and cooked in a mushroom stock, it was a generous size, soft and not over-cooked. |
|
This national celebration was full of knowing ironies and jokes within jokes within jokes. |
|
Lank in body, slender in limb, full of spirit, they reminded one of blooded horses. |
|
In her new novel, she weaves a complex tale full of unexpected plot twists and turns. |
|
I had one of those big old tennis bags full of old socks and shoes and nasty reeky things. |
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And you've got to appreciate a place that includes a shaker full of paprika alongside the salt and pepper on your table. |
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It was her first taste of sago and she was full of compliments for this dish, which was enhanced with palm sugar and coconut milk. |
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The generators which had been powerless now were buzzing and singing full of energy. |
|
Furthermore, many lacteals are dilated and full of chylomicrons when they should be empty in the fasting state. |
|
Lentils are miracle workers, packed full of goodness, grains are full of fibre and great energy boosters, and we all know what beans do for you. |
|
Sure, his side is full of young shavers, but surely they are old enough to be able to regulate their bladders by now, we hope. |
|
Boxing is full of stacked decks and unfair decisions but through it all, sometimes we just get a great fight. |
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And I'm betrothed to a man I hardly know and I'll have to go away and live with him in a land full of strangers. |
|
The room was full of Egyptians, sitting drinking black coffee with the red tarbooshes on their heads. |
|
It is easy to dismiss Ivanov, alongside Chekhov's other plays, as being full of melancholy middle class moaners who need a kick up the backside. |
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But a second half full of passion, belief, guts and mental toughness saw the Knights fight back to win in another mesmerising finale. |
|
I've realised that when I do this, I wake up full of the joys of spring, even when it's midsummer. |
|
No doubt others will pitch in tomorrow, but the Indy, which has the exclusive on this, is full of the joys of spring. |
|
Personally, I'm generally full of the joys of spring, even in the depths of winter. |
|
Ten or 15 years ago, this would have been a very different book, full of the referential jokiness of postmodernism. |
|
At a certain point the old system is full of too many contradictions to sustain itself. |
|
This island is allegedly full of monsters, but not one person we know has been taken. |
|
The curtains rose to a stage packed full of instruments and, in the centre, a magnificent grand piano. |
|
Similarly, my local library is full of books in Asian languages but no books in Gaelic. |
|
Economic theories have been axiomatized, and articles and books of economics are full of theorems. |
|
|
He turned and began to fire his machine gun wildly before he was blasted full of holes. |
|
This is blues rock cranked up to 70's stadium level, full of sass and attitude. |
|
More than ever, and never more than at that moment, she found herself cast adrift in a land full of strangers, with strange ways and customs. |
|
In the afternoon I went to the baths but found the water dirty and full of the most dreadful greasy-haired cads. |
|
When Pablo showed me a series of notebooks full of English vocabulary lists and self-created grammar drills, I had to agree. |
|
It is a handsome period recreation, full of action that is both exciting and plausible, and gives you a thing or two to think about. |
|
This book is full of aphorisms, bon mots and witticisms, nearly all to do with the absurdity of the world in which we live. |
|
The boy wonder really does know how to turn boxes of slop into chests full of wonga, but how will he continue with his shock horror portfolio? |
|
Chicken with a tarragon stuffing turned out to be mainly full of sausage meat and horrid. |
|
In conclusion, this book is a worthy effort with a clearly argued message, full of informative and entertaining details. |
|
The place is chock a block full of foreigners, and I'm not just talking Americans here. |
|
High street shops are crammed full of camel-coloured knits, trousers, coats and jackets. |
|
Ancient Greeks buried their dead with lacrimatories, vials full of mourners' tears. |
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A time when audiences full of the young and young at heart can embrace their innocence and enjoy the magic of theatre. |
|
The couple are allergic to package holidays full of welcome meetings, coach excursions and organised entertainment. |
|
From her tattered old dress and boots full of holes, Josie knew this girl must not have much money. |
|
Gnarled and wizened but full of life, they light every page on which they appear. |
|
It might be a little scary but it is also full of technical wizardry that creates some hauntingly weird images. |
|
The 80-acre farm now operates around the clock, and the cows are milked three times a day, filling two semitrailer tankers full of milk. |
|
The boxes are full of clothing, winter jackets, mittens and gloves, food and blankets. |
|
|
He hasn't sat on the board for a few years but it is still stacked full of 5 cronies with not a single independent to be seen anywhere. |
|
It's full of non-stop action, laughter, drama and is perfect for the very young and young at heart. |
|
If the fins in the rads are damaged, bent over, rotted away, full of dead flies or cow cack, the cooling system will suffer. |
|
My eyes are red and puffy, my skin is pale, and my hair is matted and full of knots. |
|
My uncle works in a children's bookshop in London, and has a fantastic flat full of books of all types. |
|
Children's literature has been full of fantasy elements since the year dot, but inexplicably, this is the one that has really taken off. |
|
He looks like he could knock you out, but his voice is full of youthful enthusiasm. |
|
Pots full of boiled fish and baskets hang from a string where cats could not reach, to be served with rice for the next meal. |
|
Naomh Eoin played a fantastic match, full of fire and passion, so much so they were in front for all but 17 minutes. |
|
Hellenistic literature displayed a mandarin artificiality full of recondite, learned allusions and a lively, realistic interest in everyday life. |
|
Patients with high blood pressure are advised to use pillows full of white chrysanthemum flowers, tea leaves or bamboo leaves. |
|
It was stocked full of hand made fishing flies, lures, fishing rods, fly-tying material and reels. |
|
The game was evenly poised and the stand was full of rumours and whispers of the developing situation at Mansfield Park. |
|
Between the stack and the vertical wall there are many large holes or caves full of groupers. |
|
The real leader is the drummer who makes a super testament to rock, full of passion and rapier wit. |
|
Here it was a complete wonderland full of white ice that covered the earth as far as the Eastern Mountains. |
|
She sorted through her books and repacked her backpack, poured a travel mug full of Irish Breakfast tea, and left for her day. |
|
Like Alice through the looking glass, the Russians have entered a French version of wonderland, full of bounty. |
|
She was full of wonderfully refreshing oddities that I am still learning to appreciate. |
|
They are also full of gossipy anecdotes recounted in his saucy and acerbic style. |
|
|
Though few have broken into the top echelons of power, the junior and middle management levels are full of women. |
|
This conjures up the image of Pentagon suits running around with briefcases full of cash, dispensing taxpayer largesse to anyone who asks for it. |
|
If I give them a bag of nickels and an ashtray full of cigarette butts, will they tell me my future? |
|
Struggling among the vines, Kearney reflected that they could report that a lot of trees had fallen down and the ground was full of large holes. |
|
It's full of happy kids, relaxed wrinklies, mums, dads and strolling couples. |
|
In Britain the grasping cheating ratbags use the cheapest possible paper, full of acid, that goes brown and falls apart after a couple of years. |
|
They were full of regret at missed opportunities and wrong-headed policies, but they were not angry. |
|
The note specifies a ridiculously convoluted plan to slip a briefcase full of money to the kidnappers. |
|
The backyard is full of viburnums, witch hazels, hydrangeas of all kinds, fothergillas, and other interesting shrubs. |
|
She cuts the potato into chip shapes with a knife, puts them in a pan full of cold oil and turns on the gas. |
|
The prince searches for her through the white night of St. Petersburg, his mind full of confusion, premonitions and anxiety. |
|
But beneath this razzmatazz lies a sporting discipline full of high-energy moves and world championships. |
|
Grass, trees, and flowers sprouted from the ground until the entire plain was full of life. |
|
Why is much contemporary Western tonal music so droneful, so full of ancient quotations or allusions? |
|
Strong, full of life, intelligent and lusty, he overwhelms the screen with his regal presence. |
|
One senses that it is a much-resisted process, full of compromises and awkwardnesses, but it proceeds nonetheless. |
|
On the other side of the fence, the upper part of the field was full of rabbit holes. |
|
The tiny animal suddenly had a huge mouth full of razor-sharp teeth and gobbled up the candy in one bite. |
|
They appear to be the result of a terrifying experiment involving monkeys, The Libertines, The Fall and a bathtub full of bad homemade whizz. |
|
Thomas and his accomplices empty the bags, which end of being full of rats, in the hallway of a low-rent apartment building. |
|
|
He rode in a gloom full of sighing like voices and full of dropping like footsteps. |
|
She sighed in a half frustrated and half nervous way, and Jason set a mug full of rum before her. |
|
A practical reason is that text full of minimally simple hiragana strokes looks like a carpet pattern, hard to read quickly. |
|
The Web is full of ordinary people from all over the planet wittering on about whatever they want to. |
|
The building was full of smoke, so I held my breath, kept down low and squirted the contents of the extinguisher. |
|
Six families were evacuated from their homes as the blaze destroyed a spinning room and warehouse full of acrylic fibres. |
|
Its tropical gardens are full of rare, luxuriant vegetation and exotic fragrance. |
|
I want to see the dasher boards full of advertising, the suites full of sponsors and the banners raised showing the club's great success. |
|
Today, the rack is full of magazines on every fitness subject and activity. |
|
Until recently, our committee was full of sayers, not doers, and we didn't exactly work overtime to encourage youngsters to flock to the club. |
|
We are running short of food, our uniforms are shabby and dull, our shoes are full of holes, and we are also short on ammunition. |
|
At eighteen, she was delightfully short, slightly buxom, and full of youthful vigor. |
|
Large stew pans, shown full of joints of meat, had straight sides and flat bases. |
|
Our grandparents' generation was full of savers who ferreted away money during the Great Depression and the war. |
|
The best dishes we sampled were meatballs similar to Greek keftedes, full of garlic and spices, in a thin but tasty tomato-based sauce. |
|
At the back of the restaurant is a grand old-fashioned teak pharmaceutical counter with banks of drawers and shelves full of bottles. |
|
Well, yes, I tried, but here I was, a few days short of 75, tumbling riotously out of the Joyce Theater and full of the joys of spring and dance. |
|
Tea or supper will not be a supermarket ready-meal full of additives, preservatives and artificial flavourings. |
|
The wallet was stuffed full of pictures, letters, keepsakes and prayer cards. |
|
Perhaps part of my indifference is that on the whole, the cast was full of unconvincing actors. |
|
|
She started by telling me how she could see my aura was full of negative energy and that she could rid me of it. |
|
At the age of 21, full of zeal and love, Richard was accepted as a junior agent in the Irish Church Missions. |
|
I got up, grabbing my bookbag full of stink bombs, whoopee cushions and other ultimate party starters. |
|
The handsome chap in the top photo is me first thing on Christmas Day, wide awake and full of the joys of spring. |
|
Maybe if you didn't stuff your fat face so full of keftedes and retsina Mark, you might be able to run around and score a few more goals. |
|
We know that those members over there are not full of the joys of spring, at all. |
|
He was young, bright, fair, full of life, with an open smile and a ready, quick wit. |
|
If his teammates are to be believed, he was capable of draining a bathtub full of beer and two bottles of rye in a single sitting. |
|
Or is it a triple CD packed full of interminable electronic bleeps and whooshes, both inaccessible and incomprehensible? |
|
There have been days when I've jumped out of bed full of the joys of spring, opened the mail and felt like crawling back under the duvet. |
|
Furthermore, many Web pages are busy places, full of navigation widgets and data entry fields. |
|
As Leo said, the saloon was soon full of miners, cowhands, and other people from around town. |
|
Mt Hotham had two inches of rain on the weekend, followed by wild weather full of hailstorms overnight. |
|
They are full of cracked or misaligned paving slabs or kerbstones, running fissures and uneven surfaces everywhere. |
|
Usually there is a boat full of tall men being coxed by a dwarf, but we've got a boat of midgets coxed by a six footer. |
|
He breathed shallowly trying to regain his breath, and let out a scream full of furry, hate, shame, humiliation, and pain. |
|
A time capsule full of treasures has opened a window into what life was like 113 years ago in Swindon. |
|
These operas were created between 1966 and 1976, each one full of workers, soldiers and slaves who were burning with revolutionary zeal. |
|
The Venezuelans should be here any minute and this lobby full of reporters is keyed up and ready to pounce. |
|
There is deep satisfaction to be had in spending a couple of hours picking punnets full of ripe, juicy fruit. |
|
|
This yard, however, had been transformed into a lush garden full of plump, red, juicy tomatoes. |
|
The costumes and set design are stylish and impressive, full of bright colors and wonderfully authentic period detail. |
|
The tones were full of that familiar but distinctive accent with its mix of urban West Midland and rural Salopian. |
|
Everyone was full of praise and admiration for the people who worked so hard to make this trip so memorable. |
|
We exited the lift and were taken through a pitch dark passage into a room full of cages where a strange lady talked to us. |
|
The factory is situated in a romantic garden and is full of nostalgic paraphernalia. |
|
A brave businesswoman who is scared stiff of sharks is set to take the charity plunge into a tank full of the fearsome fish. |
|
At a state dinner with India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, King was full of questions about Gandhi's philosophy and adherence to ahimsa. |
|
The actors appeared to lend a bit too much of energy to their characters, leading to a proscenium full of characters shouting their hearts out. |
|
There was also a closet full of fancy dresses made of silk, cotton, lace, satin, velvet, and lots of others! |
|
Reaching a final takes guts, but Dennis Wise's Lions did not enjoy a dramatic run full of victories against all odds. |
|
Its large lagoons, mangrove wetlands, and swamps full of wild orchids and rare birds are all protected by the National Trust. |
|
Get me a coffee table book that I can leaf through, full of gorgeous shots of squirrels being squirrelly, and sunsets unsurpassed. |
|
Pop music, much like a teenager with a dresser full of training bras and her first summer job, is going through a lot changes. |
|
The last 24 hours was redolent of the wider campaign, uncertain, fraught, divisive, full of brinkmanship with deeply unreliable signals emerging from both sides. |
|
I got in yesterday morning full of enthusiasm for re-arranging my bedroom. |
|
Beside the desk was a basket full of knitting needles and yarn. |
|
She loved a tidy house full of bright, beautiful objects like Crown Derby china, with everything neat and shipshape. |
|
Sure enough when we got to the clearing, it was full of gobblers. |
|
The school lunch was full of mincemeat so I couldn't eat it. |
|
|
The Spanish countryside, full of stone ruins and curving green hills, is a perfect hiking spot. |
|
He likes to ply me full of whiskey, fill and refill my glass. |
|
From here on, he was a philosopher, a sage, and his interviews were stuffed full of dicta, parables and eternal paradoxes. |
|
So before I go spouting off about bishops full of sound and fury, signifying nothing, I think I should give them time and stop being so all-fired distrustful. |
|
Just say the word and I'll open this door, beginning an incredible journey full of mystery, excitement, ninjas, laser guns, and sights that no man has ever seen. |
|
They were full of accounts of winter Sundays at a nearby country club that had just installed a rope tow and, even more maddening, of weekend ski trips to New Hampshire. |
|
She was a rambunctious girl of eleven full of curiosity and enthusiasm. |
|
He's my real-life boyfriend, so we have the emotional connectedness required to convince a cabstand full of strangers that we were a married couple on the brink. |
|
Confusion about what is and is not within the legitimate scope of medicine risks leading the profession into a future full of unmet expectations and knotty ethical quandaries. |
|
When she checks out the position vacancy board at a large local hospital, on a board full of positions advertised for nurses, only five are regular full-time. |
|
Also she has three vacuum cleaners, two lawnmowers, four rakes, eight sacks of topsoil, a pile of gravel up against the garage door, and a garage full of things. |
|
So I have four more blinds to hang, 32 more admissions files to read, and a yard full of leaves that cannot be raked today because it is already dark out. |
|
The intensity of the vocals gradually build, the tremolo becomes more wild, and when the orchestra begins to hit on the bridge she comes out street-smart and full of sass. |
|
It is a political document, full of contestable characterizations, but it provides some useful specifics to consider. |
|
In the late eighties, the television channel was besieged with complaints that its videos were too full of content inappropriate for younger kids. |
|
The chapel was nothing less of a party house full of monks and sisters laughing and having a good time, sloshing around jars, jugs, and other containers full of wine. |
|
It is full of adulatory references to the man who inspired him. |
|
Mentally, he is full of aggression, thrust, directness, essentially active, not passive. |
|
We're usually talking here about huge buildings stuffed full of crushers, agitators, thickeners, ball mills, conveyors, cyclones, screening plants and other vital equipment. |
|
Jacqueline Kennedy helped change all that in the 1960s, with her unflappable chic and wardrobe full of haute couture. |
|
|
The attackers sprayed a truck full of policemen with machine-gun fire. |
|
The first time we met this ragamuffin she was very shy, but this time she was so friendly, full of confidence and holding our hands as we walked around. |
|
Despite recent attempts at democracy and modernization, sark is full of quirks befitting its history. |
|
In previous exhibitions, her canvases always struck me as beautifully painted but excessively whimsical, full of details that seemed more interesting than the wholes. |
|
The film is full of sun-drenched vineyards and the glories of the grape. |
|
Mykela was remembered as a jolly little angel, full of life and mischief. |
|
Back at base, Alec arrives looking his usual jolly self, full of anticipation and excitement about the coming evening as he chats with the rest of the crew. |
|
Why am I cursed with supporting a club full of losers and jobsworths? |
|
Despite these problems, festival goers were full of praise for the event. |
|
With a name full of jargon jive and a cast of unknown comedians and aspiring actors, this marketed as a hip urban comedy sounds like a prescription for disaster. |
|
I was a bit worried that the pub would be full of trainspotters but at 7pm it was full of the usual commuter types having a last bevvy before going home. |
|
It is full of moral speechifying and erudite detail and has a convoluted plot replete with melodramatic deaths and wonderful recoveries and coincidences. |
|
They sashay along the red carpet, botox-smooth and silicone-enhanced, so blatantly vain and unabashedly full of themselves, spinning for scores of photographers. |
|
His mind was racing, full of a complex mix of worry and hope. |
|
The boy underneath me was staring at me with wide eyes full of fear. |
|
And I would rather work as a security guard for a sauna full of beautiful girls! |
|
I have no excuse but a lusty eye and a belly full of Dutch courage. |
|
And, like Adrien Brody before him, Chiwetel Ejiofor delivers an astonishing performance full of gravitas. |
|
The rice, which was full of button mushrooms and also appeared to have been cooked in a mushroom stock, was richer than the egg pilau but of the same quality. |
|
The smell of the damp wood smoke mingled with the rising smells of the wet trees and forest floor, and it was rich and pleasant to the nose, full of Spring and new life. |
|
|
All carried longbows and a quiver full of arrows behind their backs. |
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A basket full of warm, fluffy-soft, white French bread heralded the meal. |
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Petunia flowers are fragile though and all the heavy rain had rather decimated an enormous hanging basket full of them that hangs on the side of the car port. |
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The squad for Bremen next weekend is full of local interest. |
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His general public image was that of a true sage, a benevolent, white-haired wise man, full of sound advice for the guidance of the lives of ordinary people. |
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But if you dress up the idea in a forbidding vocabulary, full of neologisms and recondite references to philosophy, then you may have a prescription for academic stardom. |
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For all my posing I made straight As, had a mouth full of braces, and played the coronet and the flugelhorn in the school band. |
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The history of aeronautics is full of aircraft developed in secret. |
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In no time flat the available walls were full of public notices, goods and services for sale, community event posters and news from the animal shelter. |
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They had a small attic room in the roof which was full of old toys. |
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Wasn't the substitute's bench just packed full of World Class players? |
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The 1960s were full of ballrooms of no chance, lacquered townies and long stepping country men who came looking for their hearts delights under fat Harvest moons. |
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We see them play and they look so assured, but they're full of doubts. |
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They once would have seemed full of attitude, couched in almost illegible forms. |
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A man walked into a Georgia school with an AK-47 and a duffel bag full of ammunition. |
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The country's hospitals are full of women who were force-fed as children. |
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Men and women everywhere hawked government-controlled newspapers printed on a grayish, low-grade newsprint no doubt full of comparably dull propaganda. |
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I entered in on that commitment full of joy and wonder and love and hope. |
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This westernmost tip of County Galway, its small walled fields full of rushy bog and granite boulders, has always been a harsh place to scratch a living. |
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Technology had made some places rich powerful wonderlands full of wealth, while in other places the people had so little that they sometimes starved to death. |
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Spring is a wondrous time full of marvelous sights, sounds and smells. |
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And you know that lady has a closet full of drying kidskins. |
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This pub is lovely during the quieter hours and it's got some tasty wines on the wine list but when it's busy it's full of squealing, pretentious media types. |
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I slowly awaken from a deep sleep full of strange dreams, and it comes to my sleep-muddled attention that I definitely should not be waking up right now. |
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He felt bewitched, entranced by this woman full of life, brave and strong. |
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Insurgents seem to be able to strike anywhere, even at a U.N. guesthouse full of election workers in the middle of Kabul. |
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The table before him was full of pretty cups and saucers and flowers. |
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Their glass display counters are full of neatly arranged, creamy-looking biscuits, cakes, homemade sweets, delicious savouries and brightly coloured sweetmeats. |
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Wandering around Tribeca, you may stumble upon a decrepit elevator shaft that's full of curiosities. |
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My fridge is full of fabada and other typical Asturian foods. |
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But a note at the end asserts that this document was produced in three weeks flat after a Senate demand and was accordingly sloppy and full of errors. |
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Britain is full of knackered working parents who need childcare centres. |
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Rebecca used to be full of enthusiasm but now she doesn't want to know. |
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It held aspirin, sal Hepatica, cigarette papers and a Mason jar full of tobacco. |
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My eyes were tearing and my mouth was full of little particles. |
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It was full of dead Prussian Guards, big men, and dead Royal Welch Fusiliers and South Wales Borderers, little men. |
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When I was 18 years old, I kept a folder full of tear outs of your articles and saved them throughout the years. |
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In a night full of demagoguery, it was a bracing moment of realism. |
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It is a tribute to the past of bicycle racing and is full of antique equipment, faded photographs and videos of sprints and peletons past. |
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It's easy to overromanticize the Middle Ages, but they were full of plague and poverty. |
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