When Philip died David went to pieces, we just couldn't get through to him. |
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They haven't got the legs or the time to get to us, but the Aussies respond and the race begins to concertina up again. |
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I get a thrill from racing them in competitions but I have no interest in them mechanically. |
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This guy thinks we should get rid of the dime and replace it with an 18 cent piece. |
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But before I get to genuflecting villagers, let me talk about my role as a Pied Piper. |
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There was a concerted attempt by detectives to get answers that would lead inexorably to their preferred conclusion. |
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The fun aspect of the event was very much in evidence as the children did their best to get dressed up for the day. |
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Because the fungus roots form a felty layer under the grass, the grass itself can't get the moisture it needs and the grass in the rings dies. |
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Although the American is a terrific competitor, she does not get the most from her ability. |
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And so, basically that was one of the key pieces of evidence that investigators were trying to get a hold of here. |
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At the age of six I became a piecer. I regularly worked at the weaving machine till I could hardly get home. |
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Like a Pied Piper for pests, Su devised a simple method to get the termites to come out of hiding. |
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They're using cell phones as initiators to set off explosive devices when we get down on them. |
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Where's the incentive to develop your skills and show initiative when you don't get any reward for it? |
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What we get instead is an inequitable health system and the widening of the class divide. |
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From here on in, things get blacker, more humid, and even compellingly cinematic. |
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Because of the way institutions work, an engineer ends up working on one part of a system but doesn't get to stand back and see the big picture. |
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What he discovered was that while a company can have talented and competent employees, they can readily get in trouble. |
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World Cup winner Sir Geoff Hurst has urged youngsters to get off the couch and start taking part in competitive sport. |
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Typically, beneficiaries of such class action suits get piddling sums, often nothing more than a discount on their next purchase. |
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This is at its best in infancy and early childhood and is lost, as we get older. |
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He would then get up, grab at a piece of furniture, and throw it about the room. |
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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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As I get increasingly inebriated, I make friends to stumble from bar to bar with. |
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The problem is once you fall for the guy with the infectious laugh or the girl that takes your breath away, you have to get them to notice you. |
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Comparing across art forms may annoy but it is completely necessary to get a sense of scale. |
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Make sure there are places your dog can get stuck in or fall from and there is no sharp objects like nails or pins laying around. |
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He cried out and tried to get away, but the stranger pinioned him down with inhuman strength. |
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I think teenagers dare to be concerned with the most important issues and as they grow older they tend to get jaded. |
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The workers, so far from being emancipated, would continue to get the rough end of the pineapple, as they had from the beginning of time. |
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He'd throw the young fella up on his shoulders and use his ticket to get in. |
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It just shows that Children in Need is not something people get compassion fatigue about. |
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There's the odd mood swing, I'll suddenly get very depressed, sometimes in company, sometimes by myself. |
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He stops short of saying they for sure should get in, but the argument is a compelling one nonetheless. |
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But there, the plaintiffs' families could only get compensatory damages, for losses such as the victims' lost future income. |
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Then picture him waiting by the window to greet you every morning as you get to work. |
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This is a good time for you, the caregiver, to get things done, catch up on your rest, or indulge your own interests. |
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Scott didn't seem to get the picture, his brain still working on understanding what Jesse had just told him. |
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They are characters you can get underneath and they are all quite strong and feisty, but they are all flawed and frail. |
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But if not, at least get over there, check out the competition, and link someone, okay? |
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The man has often shown an ability to get himself out of apparently inextricable situations and get his point across. |
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We're all golfers, and we're all trying to improve, and we're always piddling around with trying to get a little bit better. |
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One of the things that happens when you get a fee simple is that you can dispose of a fee simple. |
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To stand a chance of being competitive competitors had to get through in 40 seconds. |
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For children, the ranges are similar, except infants and young children should get slightly more fat. |
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When the carers who come in every morning tried to get him to sit up, he complained of pain in his back. |
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The amount of weblogs that get a lot of traffic each day is pretty tiny in comparison with the number of weblogs in the world. |
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Many of them have to be re-homed and, whilst it's less of a problem for the younger cats, many of the older felines get left behind. |
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It's not much longer before I get fed up, decide to toss all good manners out of the window and have some fun. |
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You can still get good shots with the cheaper compact cameras, but great shots need great cameras. |
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The function was punctuated by felicitations as the stars took turns to get on to the stage and wish the movie success. |
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Children can get ringworm from touching infected animals such as dogs and cats. |
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A number of the women would also get involved with shoplifting to feed their drugs habits. |
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The best thing you can do for this youngster is to feed him up and then get him to sleep for a while. |
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There is enough 150-year-old whiskey resting underground where the old river queen sank to get 130,000 people pie-eyed. |
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Thus the southern sweep is possible as Vitter could even conceivably get a majority tomorrow. |
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I was hoping we would at least get some dates and times that would have helped pin things down. |
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Kipling had hoped that pince-nez would get him through, but only the imperial poet's influence got his son a commission. |
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Towards the end of the class, I needed a file from the teacher's comp, and took a disk to his office to get it. |
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Hollyhock landed in a low branch of a pine tree, and dangled there as she tried to find a way to get down. |
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How big does a business or a concern have to be though to get that bottom line impact? |
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Everyone is all concerned about what will happen to the stock market if Microsoft get broken up. |
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The last to get back to camp that day were the two companies of Mounted Infantry. |
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I asked her how long it had taken her to get her sea legs, but she said she'd been rather inebriated. |
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But the Egyptian fellah is thinking about where he's going to get his next paycheck to feed his family. |
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Of course, white-collar boxers have to get used the ineluctable fact that even the best fighters take their share of punches. |
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Now I'm not sure what's happening as I can't get through to them by fax or phone. |
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However, as Sue is a long-time reader rather than a passing commercial opportunist, we'll let her get away with it. |
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One of my compatriots is working on a plan to get us back to the level of protection before Hurricane Katrina. |
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When you have to do it in your head, you have to get really to the heart of the matter and try to eliminate the inessential details. |
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You get money only to compensate you for the actual losses you have suffered and will suffer in the future. |
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But the companies get a deduction, because the gains count as employee compensation, a deductible expense. |
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The girls were dancing about and the men were trying to get a feel as they walked by, and things were getting out of hand. |
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I've only tried to highlight broadly what the policy is about, but you need the company's literature to get the full picture. |
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Or maybe it was fortunate for Bryant that he's smart enough to let words fuel the fire and not get physical with Shaq. |
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This game allows the user to get the feel for being a corporate manager with ties to the Mob. |
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Another friend has always informed me that passion is good, indulge in it and get enjoyment and pleasure. |
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I realize that sounds completely revolting, but I think you get the picture. |
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I'll need to get a pickup to play electric, and I'll probably try and somehow combine it with my Dictaphone and laptop. |
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Although I did not get the performance I was expecting, it is still an excellent car and one I would be proud to have as a company car. |
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Your feckless neighbour, however, will get the full range of government help. |
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That means that 70 percent of all homes will still get the same old fear-mongering during four months of the year. |
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Well, later in the piece we get some indication of what our correspondent really thinks. |
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If we suddenly get an Indian summer or a rash of beautifully sunny autumnal mornings, people are taken by surprise. |
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It may be nasty, but when else will we ever get to see a man eat a snow cone soaked in his own piddle? |
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Will I get running water, a nice feather bed, perhaps a private stash of rum? |
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The indifferent weather is affecting the outcome of matches as batters are finding it hard to get any rhythm. |
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Where boys and girls score comparably on cognitive skills, boys get worse grades in the touchy-feely stuff. |
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It was the first live 500 I've been to, and I was able to get what it's like to race at Indy. |
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And it's on what we call a common, and I have common rights, and every year me and the commoners get together. |
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I really don't get this idea that giving less information to the compiler is somehow a good thing. |
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He would get appointed either a public defender or he would have some kind of indigent defense counsel that would be appointed for him. |
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Everything about him had been perfect beyond compare, and I had thought that if things were going to change, they were only going to get better. |
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In the middle of the confusion, the thieves try to get away with the mirror, only to break it to pieces in their fight to have the first glance. |
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He calls his servant to bring a pickaxe, and get up on the phrontistery, and knock in the roof about their ears. |
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That case, in combination with the more recent controversy, shows why it's time to get rid of broadcast indecency law forever. |
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He was fed up with having to worry about whether or not his actions or words were going to get him severely hurt. |
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I'd put a piccy up of the hideous painting, but I don't want to get my friend in trouble. |
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You can either help me get over it or you have the option to divorce me, take your pick. |
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The audience will also get the chance to judge the films and to select their favourite pick for the viewer's choice award. |
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Maybe I'll get fed up of this one and decide to install another and customise that before I try my own. |
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Most of them were probably indisposed right now anyway but I knew I had to get out of here. |
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Both get your hair styled, and while she has her makeup tweaked, you can go and feed the meter. |
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I had to get hold of the other satellite communications radio, which is on the right side of the vehicle closest to the enemy fire. |
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But they needed to adapt their individual styles to get the best from the workforce, he said. |
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Noah's eyes were slightly jealous, but he was so complaisant that I figured he'd get over it in a day. |
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With a population of three million and several hundred individually named streets, it's easy to get lost in Toronto. |
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The authors report that the Web made it easier to structure the course so students were able to get immediate and individualized feedback. |
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We get to that point in racing that commends horses to us by their winning or at least giving it their best shot. |
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Ideally, you will need to get recommendations about the amounts of food to feed your dog from your vet. |
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Our four-legged hero doesn't even get an extra carrot in his feedbag for his efforts. |
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But humans are nothing if not ingenious and when they wanted to get pie-eyed they never really needed a tavern. |
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At one point she pimps a young girl to a local pervert to get money for electricity. |
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From the look on their faces, they were probably arrogant, conceited punks who thought they could get any girl they wanted. |
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It was good to get out of the indoors for more than five minutes, and not need to wear wet weather gear. |
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You get grilled bread and a bowl of sweet and spicy pickled onion on your plate too. |
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Once you start analysing your own music or judging it through the eyes of others your bound to get yourself in a pickle. |
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Then, add fiat money and foreign exchange controls to the mix and it's no wonder investors and the press get so mixed up. |
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First, an indecorous alphabet, which I have no idea about, other than it features descriptions of words that don't normally get written about. |
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I was able to get close to the stage and could see his face and even in his state he still was unbelievable. |
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The beauty of class comps is that you get to be in front of a group of people and get maximum exposure in a short period of time. |
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He was a picklock in the widest sense. Keeping him out of a place he wanted to get into or look into was a remarkably difficult thing to do. |
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He told them all that he would get them free drinks from his cousin if they wanted, and they all jumped at the chance to be comped. |
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The Irish are the latest to get on the building bandwagon, which had been dominated by the Italians, Germans and Portuguese. |
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Now please don't get me wrong, I don't believe in spoiling kids at all, and I don't feel that I was raised as a pwoil pickney at all. |
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That's when the bonds first hit the market, sort of like when stocks get introduced through an initial public offering. |
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Will we become immune to it and eventually need a whole pill to get the same results? |
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I mean sometimes people get upset because we don't want to make something commercial. |
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We will have 24 hours to think about the game, to have a few drinks and commiserate with each other, and then tomorrow we will get back to work. |
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I just keep feeling the hair in the back there and trying to get all the hair on the back of my neck off. |
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Well, his millionaire dad stipulated in his will that the feckless Josh wasn't to get a penny of his inheritance unless he wrote a bestseller. |
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Alexia was about to get up when she was yanked backwards by her hair, she felt a knife at her throat and looked up. |
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We have to take children home aged 13 or 14 who are in drink and to be honest we never know what reaction we are going to get from the parents. |
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They don't dare to get to grips with the ineluctable dreariness of what is going on. |
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You can add an arbitrary constant to the indefinite integral, and still get the same derivative. |
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So it is extremely hard to get close to the car in front, let alone pass it. |
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In fact the evidence hints that they are as coolly fuzzy as ever, bands like this don't go away they just fester and get better in the process. |
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Restaurant experiences have helped consumers get accustomed to cheeses like feta and asiago, which were foreign to them just a few years ago. |
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You need to get them involved in an economic agenda where they can see the results of their labour commercialised. |
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Your skills are in demand like never before and chances are the situation is only to get better. |
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Come December and the shops get ready for the season and an air of festivity is all around. |
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You also get people fawning all over you because they've seen you on television. |
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I just came down here today to take in the buzz and get the feel of the atmosphere and it was great. |
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But they mocked it in a sufficiently understated manner that, if you'll indulge me, I'm going to try to get a little more mileage out of it. |
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To be honest, I believe it was more difficult to get the picture than to catch the carp. |
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If any one planning is the same trip on the same dates, i shall be more than happy to get a fellow traveller. |
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The downside is you don't have as much independence and the upside is I get everything done for me. |
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Perhaps the most compelling reason to buy a desktop computer is to get your choice of flat-panel displays. |
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So, if you want to get close, maybe try to feel out her worldview before you feel her up. |
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But let us hear Socrates out, and get a view of the full picture, as he argues that it would be wrong for him to escape into exile. |
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We had to use grenades to get at the Germans in the cement pillboxes, throwing them through the holes to knock their guns out. |
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The human faces look very realistic while the environment is as close as you get to the real thing in a computer game. |
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As good as their zone-blocking schemes and cutback style can be, when things get physical, they will usually lose. |
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We are committed to helping more people get the skills and confidence they need to start their own business. |
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Why not get it done to save all concerned an indeterminable, indefensible amount of time, money and credibility? |
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It took me a while to fetch the car and bring it up to the church to get my parents. |
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I've put out feelers to get someone right inside the Cunningham community coalition to explain to us how the miracle happened. |
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Was I just desperate to get physical with someone, it didn't matter who, because I hadn't in months? |
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The companies were very keen to get coronary heart disease prevention as an indication for the drugs. |
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That sort of behaviour could get her flogged, or at the vest least locked in a pillory for a while. |
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If there are any Indianans in the region who would like to get together, please contact me. |
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I had an ingrown toenail and I went to the foot doc to get it taken care of. |
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This is NOT a good time to get married or enter into a committed relationship. |
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Well, now you don't even need a pillock in charge of the remote control to get your parliamentary fix. |
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He did push his ward committeemen to get good vote returns, but I am virtually certain he never even hinted at doing that illegally. |
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He is trying to get his revenge on me for driving him out of the Party for being a Commo. |
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He says I need to get down on my stinking commo knees and apologise to the Yanks. |
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Gordon Brown will get a lot more respect by forgetting the flags and getting on with a more familiar agenda of common decency. |
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There's a commode beside my bed, and that's as far from my bed as I get in an average day. |
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Lieutenant Emerson was able to get the fire extinguished, then he feathered the propeller. |
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Now, I'd probably get bored by our lack of common interests and go out with a librarian instead. |
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We have tons in common, share a rather twisted sense of humor, and just get on so well together. |
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If you open up the commons for everyone to graze their sheep, one person is going to go get their whole flock. |
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It's a feather in his cap because when he goes in to negotiate funding again he can point to us and use that as leverage to get more money. |
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In fact, the whole con website is full of valuable info, including ways to get to the con that you probably didn't think of. |
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Some con artists have used this tactic to get financial information from students. |
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But when we actually get on TV, we are relatively feckless and ineffective. |
|
She will get a three-pound break in the weights for the Hollywood Turf Cup and will be ridden by regular pilot Alex Solis. |
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The institutional investors get the shares at a comparably low price, the value of which pops upward once the shares hit the open market. |
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I get more confessions from con artists than from any other kind of criminal. |
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Now, Mr. Morton, you have the conn and I have to get back to SickBay if I'm to be there when my son is born! |
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And if you could get him to nip round with a feather duster, I would be most grateful. |
|
The really clever ones manage to get hold of industrial-strength incendiaries, which sound as if the SAS have come to town on manoeuvres. |
|
The con artists are careful not to get ripped off themselves, and no transaction takes place without first checking the validity of the numbers. |
|
But great bowlers get date-stamped at the merest hint of decline, an ingrowing toenail, a whisper about fatigue or a wicketless match. |
|
Before enjoying the French-Continental cuisine, unwind at the piano bar and get ready for a live band at 9 PM nightly. |
|
Outside near the diner, they have removed all the benches in a bid to get students into the fabulous common room. |
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It's true, you can get this stuff in the US but I'd rather get a newspaper that comes with a real feuilleton. |
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If the outside edges appear to get sanded first, yet the middle part isn't affected, then you have a concave surface. |
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Part of me wishes that I could be like some of the loftier commentators and get all morally indignant about this. |
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He used his key to get in here and when he saw you feverous and unconscious, he refused to leave. |
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If they got running water to all these buildings that are obviously inhabitable, they could get the city cleaned up a lot faster. |
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I have tried a ton of cosmetic concealers, but I just can't get it to look right. |
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Jeff and I were one of the few friends that were lucky to get lockers next to each other. |
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He was so worried compromising piccies would get out he refused entry to anyone who wouldn't give their handsets in. |
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Some of them even light up on buses where you can't even get away from inhaling their second-hand smoke. |
|
When a scam involves millions of dollars, then the associations get involved, along with the banks and the Feds. |
|
Not only can you be sued if you lie in your advertising, but you can also get in trouble with the Feds. |
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The VHP had decided to launch an agitation to get its demand conceded by the Central government. |
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Well buy a few of them and stick your chocolate in that, it won't get warmer or go dead cold. |
|
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Mapping services, for instance, often provide driving directions that get you there via a slow, indirect route. |
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I will see my daughter married to a crocodile, to a tree, before you get a single pice! |
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My stuff was so hard to pick holes in, however, that almost all of it did eventually get published somewhere in the academic journals. |
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Government officials believe the radical step could help combat violent pimps and get prostitutes off Swindon's streets. |
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I could spend more time picking his column apart, but I won't because I think you get my general point. |
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I was always quite fat as a child, I used to get teased about it and picked on. |
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The ball blew all over the field and although it did favour the home side in the second half, they couldn't get the equalising goal. |
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Sort of more sudden way is to get nicotine through either the inhalant or the nasal spray. |
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They just said all they had to do was get a warrant for his arrest and go and pick him up. |
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Still, you do get a fair amount of critical comment in the newspapers and the print media. |
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There is something special that happens whenever actors get to communicate emotion through song and dance. |
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He tore open the package and produced the inhaler, a device he would get very used to in the coming years. |
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It is, in short, the ability to communicate, and it will get you a very long way in politics. |
|
As we get back on the ferry to go home, the captain shouts something indistinguishable and throws a small yellow missile at me. |
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We would have been happy to get highly commended but this result is tremendous and the lads can feel proud. |
|
One thing that stands out is the lousy re-election rates of senators who came to office by defeating incumbents to get their seats. |
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Helping me get my helmet off I noticed he was favoring his right arm and seemed to have a splint or cast on it under his suit. |
|
Parties and individuals have until Tuesday to get their Westminster nominations in. |
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The two would get together at each commencement to compare their graduate tallies. |
|
Anyone wanting to reproduce one of my poems will almost always get a speedy and favourable response to an inquiry. |
|
|
When good decisions are taken people get praised and they get commended, and rightly so. |
|
My vet is not very communicative or easy to get a call back once the initial treatment is set. |
|
Sometimes my Dad would get annoyed with the cricket commentary on TV, turn down the sound and listen to the commentary on the radio. |
|
They do not get into a taxi to be forced to commit indecencies on the taxi-driver. |
|
After the performance, the group held a dialog with visitors to get feedback on their performance. |
|
His education, he told me, was unlikely to get him a decent job and he had few friends. |
|
Many of the workers picketing the depot are themselves parents of children who have had to find alternate means to get to school. |
|
To get the downsides out of the way first, our test sample was very picky with the hard drives we used. |
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His job was to create the command post for the operation, start assembling troops, get people organised, find out who was missing. |
|
It's just a low-level bug that takes two or three days to incubate and two or three days to get over it. |
|
Many economists have in recent decades come to be persuaded that there is a way to get the political incubus off the economy's back. |
|
This diplomatic argy bargy will blow over once the Indons get over their elections. |
|
As your eyes get accustomed to the dark, you suddenly realize that you're completely surrounded by about 100 feet of industrial fencing. |
|
If we get divorced, is my wife entitled to any part of my home as community property? |
|
They had called us on the radio to let us know where we'd be on the ship so we could put our fenders out and get our lines ready. |
|
How do you get Indonesians to respect court decisions, when the Indonesian legal system has been so corrupt? |
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Methinks that my fear of not being able to get out again once I did go through inhibited me. |
|
His McGill ghetto apartment is infested with mice and, try as he might, he can't seem to get rid of them. |
|
He disliked piets very much, and used to get his apprentice to harry their nests. |
|
The big question is whether we will seize that opportunity or again let the transport debate get mired in political infighting and obfuscation. |
|
|
Thank you very much indeed for sharing your experience with us in terms of just trying to get an understanding as to how the system operates. |
|
In Australia, the common use for fentanyl is indeed an anaesthetic agent that's injected to knock a patient out before they get the gas. |
|
As you get to the more complicated and perplexing aspects of physical science you reach a quagmire in having a unified answer. |
|
A single-pointed approach is important when situations get complicated, confused or out of hand. |
|
To get multiple persons at the wrong end of the charge, one has to go to complicity, aiding and abetting, concert. |
|
It is possible to get drinking water supplies tested to make sure they comply with EC standards. |
|
These compliments and encouraging expressions keep students positive and help them get through the class without dragging. |
|
And the government is planning to make it an endorsable offence, so offenders will get three points on their licences. |
|
While I was waiting for him to call, I grew more and more afraid that he'd get angry at me for wasting his time with piffle. |
|
Or maybe, we fear that if we pause for even an infinitesimal second, someone else will grab our place and get ahead? |
|
Girls get backhanded by misogynist male pigs, women get into fistfights with each other, old flames line up on opposite sides of the battlefield. |
|
There's no chance of them doing me any favours, so I have every intention of returning the compliment if I get the chance. |
|
The few people who do go shooting on this land only get what is needed for the pot. |
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As I said at the beginning, United Future endorses this bill and would love to see it in place so that we can get the actions that are required. |
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They have spent much of the past 48 hours trying to get the sick, trying to get the infirm, trying to get the elderly off this island. |
|
Maybe he thought if that happened I would get pigeon-hearted and run away from this place. |
|
I was shocked at the ingenious methods people would use to get money to buy drugs. |
|
You will get a complimentary bottle of California wine and your service charge is waived in the Traveler. |
|
At most, I could get a complimentary bottle of wine, but inspiration came free, he said. |
|
Before actually coming strait to my house I had to drop by the school infirmary to get my hand taken care of and go in search for Sam's clothes. |
|
|
Pirates in two 25 ft rigid inflatable boats approached the liner and started shooting as they tried to get on board. |
|
But somehow, preventative medicine gets spun into an infringement on our God-given right to get drunk wherever and whenever we like. |
|
Also, keep your tyres correctly inflated and get your wheel alignment checked. |
|
In addition, infrequent and expensive transportation can make it difficult for patients to get care. |
|
Sea-dwelling cyanobacteria get their name from the bluish pigment, phycocyanin, which they use to capture light during photosynthesis. |
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Why not wait until all of the crew members have had a chance to get home and rested and compose themselves a bit? |
|
Well, for one, I'm piggybacking on his skill as a writer to get more sales of a book than I would have on my own. |
|
That was why they piggybacked on this event that gets international media coverage in order to get attention. |
|
Music making can't possibly get any more correct, or more pig-headedly dull than this. |
|
You get to see that stunt filmed and see how it was composited together to make the illusion. |
|
He shows them around the house and the two children get the first view of the pigman's pig collection. |
|
There was just enough of a gap to zip into the lane beside me and get back in front of the truck ahead. |
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I think he will probably have an influence on things but he's got to get into the Warrington methods and the English game first. |
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We are beginning to get a picture now that social research is influenced by a variety of factors. |
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The US also sees obstacles in the web of personal relations and influence peddling necessary to get business done. |
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There are plenty of bacteria, fungi, and other critters in a shovelful of soil or finished compost to get things cooking. |
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It took me about a few seconds to regain composure and get up from whatever I had fallen on. |
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The best way to avoid influenza or reduce its symptoms is to get a flu shot every year. |
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The other thing I've done today is register myself as an organisation in order to get me a catalogue for buying ammonium ferrous oxide crystals. |
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The second reflex, should you be fortunate enough to get your hands on the pigskin, is trying to put it away as quickly as possible. |
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If you want to live in a pigsty then don't do anything with your house, but if you want to make it nice for yourself you get penalised. |
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These festoons were one of the more common and accommodating species in the area, enabling me to get lots of nice shots. |
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Although the lowest of the three country tops of Scotland, Wales and England, Scafell Pike is perhaps the hardest to get to. |
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Where does all of this electronic information get stored and how do children process it? |
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You'll probably get a great deal both socially and informationally from a local bipolar self-help group. |
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If my grandma Muriel had a twin sister and liked to wear leopard print pillbox hats, I'd try to get her a gig like that. |
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Head to the first floor where the exhibitors have taken individual rooms to get you to see, touch, and feel the products. |
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John and James pike out leaving me and Rick to head up to the bar to get a couple of drinks before heading to bed. |
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Marc, get the air hammers plugged into the compressor and hand out ear plugs to everyone. |
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Following a breakup, a woman is likely to commiserate with her friends for a while and then get on with her life. |
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Music fans are happy that they continue to get the music they want, now, and publishers have the means to get compensated. |
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But what was she going to do to get herself out of the compromising situation? |
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You get along well with others because you don't make undue demands and your willingness to compromise often brings the concessions you want. |
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He did the same to get his master's degree in computer science from James Madison University. |
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People don't get Apergillus infections unless they have severely compromised immunity. |
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Not a word of apology or commiseration or anything, including common courtesy, did I get from her. |
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They get away with it because their opponents are, in fact, generally cynical compromisers or self-interest business boys. |
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But if that storm clears in time, the jets were going to get out with some infrared equipment and help with the search starting tomorrow. |
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Don't leave medicines or pills lying around where children and toddlers can get at them. |
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So what do the fans get from all this money that is injected into the game? |
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